Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN) - May 12, 2025
In today’s edition of the Daily Stock Report, we are going
to explore Tyson Foods (TSN). This is the first time we have highlighted TSN in
our daily commentary. Tyson Foods fell to the yellow zone with a Red SMAX in
the SIA S&P 500 Index Report back on August 2, 2022, at a price of $87.51.
As we see in the relative strength matrix position chart, Tyson Foods has
further fallen to the red unfavored zone and still resides there today. The
shares did rally back to the yellow zone recently but did not re-enter our
green favored zone, succumbing to relative strength pressure and falling right
back into the red zone. As of Friday’s close, the shares are at $55.30 which
represents a 37% drop since August 2, 2022.
This is another great example on the value of staying away
from investments in the red unfavored zone. Many advisors may instinctively
look for names in the unfavored zone with the mentality that the shares are
oversold and a “value buy” is in play. However, “value buys” may in fact be
“value traps” and the shares may continue to fall further in price which is, in
fact, what has occurred here. This reinforces SIA’s methodology not to pursue a
“contrarian” mindset as names in the unfavored zone are not exhibiting any
relative strength as the sellers are in control and not many market
participants are looking at the name. The SIA Charts relative strength rankings
help advisors identify stocks that are not just outperforming peers or index
benchmarks, but in this case also underperforming peers or index benchmarks
with such underperformance often signaling deteriorating investor expectations
for company or sector growth. Currently, TSN resides in the #372 spot out of
505 positions in the SIA S&P 500 Index report.
Let’s dive in and see what the candlestick chart looks like
to consider what may lie ahead for Tyson Foods. In early 2022, we see the investment
bumped its head at the $90 level twice in February and April of 2022. Then a
precipitous drop of price materialized with a strong and steady downtrend in
place before the shares finally found a bottom at the $42 area back in October
of 2023. A rally had then emerged up until September of last year, when the
rally ran out of steam at the $65 level which is now followed by another
pullback and potential consolidation pattern. The Company reported their latest
quarterly earnings last week which the market did not take too kindly to, and
we see the last candlestick form rather bearish – as the closing price of the
candle is lower than the opening price of the candlestick. It will be
interesting to see if the selling pressure will subside once the latest
quarterly earnings news gets “baked in” to the price. Currently, we can see
support at the $53.00 area which is at the lower end of this trading range
while resistance is clustered at the top of this range at approximately $65 -
$66 area.
In looking at the Point and Figure chart we also see the investment
hit its head at the $90.98 level twice in 2022, and the sharp fall in the
shares materializing up until November of 2023. Coincidentally, the rally that
ensued stalled at the long-term downtrend line (red line) at $64.98 in
September of last year. This is the power of Point and Figure Charting, wherein
long-term trend lines (both downtrend lines and uptrend lines) can act as
resistance and support levels which you can’t see in a line or candlestick
chart; helping you identify where a rally can potentially stall, as in this case.
On the flip side, we see the shares approaching their long-term uptrend line at
$54.37 so this will be an area to watch to see if the shares can find support
at its long-term uptrend line (green line). If the shares fail to hold here,
next possible support is at $48.28 to $49.24 area. To the upside, resistance is
at its 3-box reversal of $60.03 and, above that, $64.98. With a SMAX score of 2
out of 10, TSN is not exhibiting much near-term strength against the asset
classes.
Tyson Foods is the largest U.S. producer of processed
chicken and beef. It's also a large producer of processed pork and
protein-based products under the brands Jimmy Dean, Hillshire Farm, Ball Park,
Sara Lee, Aidells, State Fair, and Raised & Rooted, to name a few. Tyson
sells 81% of its products through various U.S. channels, including retailers
(47% in fiscal 2021), food service (32%), and other packaged food and
industrial companies (10%). In addition, 11% of the company's revenue comes
from exports to Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Europe, China, and Japan.
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