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Hormel buying No. 2 peanut butter Skippy for $700M

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NEW YORK – Hormel Foods apparently has a hankering for a peanut butter and bacon sandwich. The company primarily known for Spam and other cured, smoked and deli meats said Thursday that it's buying Skippy, the country's No. 2 peanut butter brand, for about $700 million.

Skippy, which was introduced in 1932 and is a staple in American pantries, is intended to increase Hormel's presence in the center of the supermarket where nonperishable foods are sold. It also gives the Austin, Minn.-based company a stronger footing in international markets. Skippy is sold in about 30 countries and is the leading peanut butter brand in China, where Hormel has been trying to build up its Spam business for the past several years.

Hormel, which also makes canned chili, sausages and pepperoni, currently gets the vast majority of its sales in the U.S., with only about 4 percent of revenue coming from abroad. Now the company is hoping that Skippy, its biggest-ever acquisition, will help it grow at home and overseas.

In a conference call with analysts, CEO Jeffrey Ettinger noted that peanuts and peanut oil are popular in China. And although peanut butter is not a household staple there, he said it is growing rapidly.

Back at home, Ettinger said peanut butter is already regarded as a convenient and affordable source of protein and that Hormel would apply its innovation skills and "take Skippy out of the jar" to use it with other products. Currently, there are 11 varieties of Skippy in the U.S., including low-fat and natural varieties.

Hormel noted that Skippy is the leading brand in the faster-growing subcategory of natural peanut butter. It estimated the overall peanut butter category at $2 billion. Jif, owned by J.M. Smucker Co., is the largest brand.

Ettinger also said that Spam, which was also introduced in the 1930s, gave the company experience in handling iconic brands.

Although Ettinger said Skippy was "a good fit" with its other packaged foods, he said the company still needed to figure out how to handle its merchandising of Skippy in stores, such as whether to display it next to other items.

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