Plus a scalable plan to supply safe, sustainable chicken to the world
- A resurgence of African swine fever and avian flu once again threatens China’s pig herds and chicken flock, and could spell potential disaster for economic recovery and stability
- Given the size and reach of the Chinese economy, the danger of butterfly effects on world food prices highlights the importance of global food safety
- Consumers – both in China and the West – are increasingly choosing health and sustainability, so we believe there’s a market opportunity to offer a healthier meat-protein choice
- In light of this, we present “Chickenwing Farms” a hypothetical investment plan for a superior sustainable poultry farming business
- Our aim is to demonstrate a 10X-profitable way to cultivate chicken that’s safe-to-eat, sustainably and humanely, yet also scalably in a way that can secure the world’s meat-protein supply
Setting the scene – a virus is back!
The last time African swine fever swept across China in 2018 and 2019, it wiped out half of the country’s pig herd.
The impact of the virus rocketed retail pork prices in China from an average of 20-25 yuan per kg in 2018 to a record high of 60 yuan per kg by February 2020.
This pig catastrophe created a ripple effect on the prices of pork and other animal proteins in major markets around the world, exacerbated by the US-China trade dispute and the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.
In summer 2020 it seemed the virus had been defeated, with Chinese farmers reporting by autumn that pig herds had been largely rebuilt.
Unfortunately, it seems optimism was misplaced. The virus has returned, if in fact it ever left.
Multiple media outlets have reported that several Chinese provinces are seeing a resurgence of the swine fever virus, including Sichuan province which produces about 9% of China’s total pork supply.
Fear of the virus has led to panic and confusion in the pig industry with farmers prematurely taking pigs to slaughter in hopes of stemming a repeat of the 2018-2019 epidemic.
As a result, by last month wholesale pork prices had collapsed to 15 yuan per kg.
But there’s an expectation that overall food prices will rebound sharply this winter when demand for meat is higher and the current pork stocks are used up. These wild swings of inflation and deflation are not helpful as China and the entire world continues to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic – if anything, global society is begging for a return to calm and normalcy.

A pivot to chicken
As pork supplies fluctuate and prices rise, the logical thing to do is for consumers to pivot to an alternative protein source – this is exactly what’s been happening in China over the past 24 months.
According to OECD data, Chinese consumers still consider pork the most important meat protein, consuming 24.4 kg of pork per capita in 2019, far beyond the 14 kg of chicken and 4.1 kg of beef and veal consumed that same year.
Those same figures also show that pork consumption fell nearly 19.5% in 2019 and 6.8% in 2020. Meanwhile, demand for chicken jumped almost 5% in 2018, 14% in 2019, and 1.2% in 2020.
In fact, since 2010, as pork demand has fallen by nearly 2.3% on average each year, demand for chicken has risen nearly 3%.
And while consumption of all meat protein shrank in 2020 due to the contractionary economic effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, there is much optimism that Chinese demand for chicken will continue to grow.
After all, chicken has long been a staple in the south of China. And across the OECD, average per capita chicken consumption was 31.3 kg in 2019, more than twice that of China’s.
A bump of 5% in chicken demand from the 2019 figures across the country would deliver a marginal demand increase of nearly 980 million kg, with an estimated wholesale value of 12.7 billion yuan (~$1.97 billion).

In 2019, the total addressable market for the three main commodity meat products (pork, chicken and beef) in China in wholesale value was a mind-boggling 1.6 trillion yuan (~$251 billion).
Pork made up the largest proportion at around 1 trillion yuan (~$158 billion), while chicken contributed about 255 billion yuan (~$39 billion).
Domestically-produced beef and veal, while making up only 9.6% of total demand given its status as a niche product not widely eaten across the country, nonetheless was worth around 342 billion yuan (~$53 billion) given its high unit value.
Unfortunately, the base volume of demand for beef in China is too low for real scalability.
Interesting to note, the increase in demand for chicken has necessitated large imports from Brazil and the USA because domestic producer growth has been unable to keep up. As much as 8% of the chicken consumed in China in 2020 was imported.
Roadblocks to more domestic chicken
This reliance on imports exists because there are two major limitations to the ramp-up of domestic chicken production to satisfy the growing demand.
The first barrier is increasingly stringent environmental regulations.
Traditionally-run poultry farms are immensely polluting to the local watershed and foul-smelling. People want more chicken but N-I-M-B-Y, especially when you can smell them from a kilometre away.
The second barrier is more malignant – as pork producers are dealing with African swine fever, poultry farmers themselves are facing their own avian flu panzootic.
Millions of chickens have been culled around Asia over the past two years, including in several provinces in China, in an attempt to stop transmission.
This has caused billions in economic losses – but it’s imperative because, unlike African swine fever, avian flu is easily transmissible to humans with a 60% fatality rate. And worryingly, China has confirmed several human infections this year.
So clearly there is demand for chicken from Chinese consumers. But any ramp-up in poultry production would need to, at minimum, be able to account for these two problems.
The answer? A short-chain farming system
The way to overcome those problems is by adopting a short-chain poultry farm design.
The easiest way to understand a short-chain system is to think of a submarine. All the elements for living are enclosed inside an environmentally-controlled space – plus it’s also sealed to the outside so water can’t get in.
A short-chain poultry farm operates with the same closed system idea.
Input of resources (water and energy, whether electricity or from feed) is tightly regulated, and the outputs (waste water, methane gas, heat, compost, CO2, and droppings) are carefully captured and either recycled for reuse or sold.
Not only does this process make rearing chicken a very efficient operation, it also limits potential infection by external vectors, such as avian flu or bacterial infections since there’s no way for them to get into the system.
So chickens raised this way need up to 98% less pharmaceutical support (for example, antibiotics and antivirals).
The impact on the surrounding environment is also limited – since all waste is captured for reuse, next-door neighbours would hardly smell the place.
Integrating the facility design also significantly reduces the footprint required for raising the same number of animals.

Short-chain farm design
A short-chain poultry farm consists of a modular design with a total construction footprint of about 5,000 sq meters, including four growing modules to one processing facility.
Each module (which is further divided into rooms and vertical racks) at maximum capacity has space to accommodate 250,000 animals over a 40-42 day growing cycle.
Annual production is approximately 7 million animals (average 2.7 kg per animal for just short of 19 million kg annual total yield).
During the growing stages, human intervention is kept to a minimum to minimise the possibility of contamination, with the control room placed outside of the enclosed loop.
Environmental monitoring, feed, and facility and animal management are automated with data analysis and intelligent farming to continuously optimise operations.
Based on those capacity figures, we can start to build out our plan for Chickenwing Farms.

Chickenwing Farms, a development plan that can’t even keep up with China’s demand
Our long-term goal is to develop and operate a series of short-chain poultry farms within or adjacent to every major urban population in the country, supplying high-quality “natural” chicken (mostly sans antibiotics and definitely without growth hormones) to local populations.
There is plenty of SOM to accommodate Chickenwing Farms’ long-term growth. Even a 5% growth from the 2019 demand level equates to 980 million kg new demand per year.
This would require more than 51 facilities of our design to fully supply, given our capacity per farm is about 19 million kg.
Our target is to have 10 farms up and running within 5 years. That’s already enough for a massively profitable operation.
Given that poultry demand is highest in southeast China, our first facilities will be established at cities in Guangdong, Fujian, Zhejiang, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Anhui provinces, (total population of 403 million), followed by Sichuan, Chongqing, Beijing, Tianjin (total population of 151.5 million).
The exact development plan and locations would be adjusted according to the attractiveness of grants and subsidies – land, construction credits, equity and loans – offered by districts surrounding major markets that we solicit through bake-offs.
In terms of sales channel, there’s sufficient demand on a B2B level for all of the produce to be wholly consumed by major quick service restaurant chains operating in China.
In fact, Hong Kong-listed Yum China, which operates the KFC chain in China, recently took a 5% stake in one of its chicken suppliers in order to assure itself of supply, highlighting the excess demand in the market.
So selling B2B would form a minimum floor for sales and require very little in the way of customer acquisition costs.
But given the boom of multiple direct-to-consumer grocery delivery and community group buying in China (Hema, Pinduoduo, Meituan, etc), it’s also possible to build a high-yielding B2C channel, bypassing the supermarkets completely with a comparatively little capital or resources.
Long-term, this would be an exciting proposition to build and bring to market a new chicken brand that stands for healthy sustainability, and it would allow us to capture more downstream income by selling direct to consumers.

Capital required and use of funds
The investment needed by Chickenwing Farms for its first facility is about 120 million yuan (~USD18.5 million), with future farms expected to require up to 20%-25% less cap-ex due to experience and improved equipment sourcing.
The 120 million yuan would be allocated for use as follows:
- 32 million yuan (~27%) for land and construction (gross floor area of approx. 30,000 sq meters) including: hatchery; four growing rooms; and, a slaughter/processing facility
- 64 million yuan (~53%) for equipment and facilities, including: climate and environmental system; solar power system; incubation equipment; growing equipment; slaughterhouse, food processing and cold chain; surveillance system
- 24 million yuan (~20%) for working capital
Financial Snapshot
Assuming forecast revenues based on 13 yuan per kg (which is the average 2019 white-feathered broiler dressed wholesale price in China), each facility would generate 245.7 million yuan (~$38 million) in annual revenue and 61.4 million yuan (~$9.5 million) on 25% operating margin.
Payback would be about 3.3 years from the start of chicken production.
The first facility would be financed primarily by new equity (plus city grants, if any), additional locations could be financed by equity plus an increasing ratio of reinvestment of retained profits and commercial loans as market circumstances allow.

Growth is achieved by expanding the network of facilities across the country with a medium-term target of 10 facilities giving the business sufficient scale for a satisfactory exit.
With 10 facilities, we are producing around 189 million kg of chicken, 2.46 trillion yuan in sales and 614 million yuan (~$95 million) in operating profit.
You promised 10X investor returns
I did promise good returns.
Going back to Yum China, in March it acquired a 5% stake in Fujian Sunner Development, a chicken farmer listed on the Shenzhen stock exchange, for an estimated 1.86 billion yuan (~300 million), for a valuation of about 37 billion yuan (~5.7 billion).
These types of deals will accelerate in number as the shift to chicken consumption in China continues and QSR and other food service operators need to secure their upstream chicken supplies, giving investors strong potential exit opportunities through both IPO and M&A.

Looking at a snapshot of comparable companies, the average EV/EBITDA ratio of a group of chicken/food supply companies is about 10.09X, or a slightly higher 12.93X if we just look at the average of three Chinese comparables – Wen’s Foodstuffs Group, Sunner Development, and New Hope Liuhe.
For Chickenwing Farms, with 10 fully operational growing facilities, the business would produce some 189 million kg of chicken per year, which at current wholesale price equates to sales of 2.46 billion yuan (~$380 million) and operating income of 614 million yuan (~$95 million).
Multiplying by the global industry average EV/EBITDA gives an estimated valuation in excess of 6.2 billion yuan (~$960 million).
Multiplying by the slightly higher China industry average gives Chickenwing Farms an estimated valuation of 7.94 billion yuan (~$1.23 billion).
Yippee, we’re a unicorn! And early investors would manage 10X or more on their capital.
Are you sure Chinese consumers want this?
Chickenwing Farms is a hypothetical project, but the numbers are real – they come from a friend’s plan that I looked at earlier this year.
I think this highlights something interesting – that reliable investor returns are available in the “sustainable” space, for well though-out enterprises in a deep market like China.
But not only China because these themes resonate through other developed markets too. The trend of consumers towards increasingly “healthy choices” will only accelerate in coming years.
According to McKinsey’s China Consumer Report 2021, post Covid-19 Chinese consumers are showing key changes that exhibit an accelerating maturity in their spending and consumption habits – including an increasing propensity for healthy choices and a flight to quality.
Furthermore, the McKinsey study found almost a third of consumers reported they are “spending more on fresh foods, in keeping with a heightened focus on healthy living”, while a similar percentage of consumers are “focused on … healthy eating”.
So yes, it’s pretty clear that, Chinese consumers want this. Let’s give them Chickenwing!

Joseph Lo is a serial entrepreneur, startup and growth strategy advisor, and venture investment professional
This article is the sole property of Joseph Lo, Joe Quietly Ruminates Blog. All Rights Reserved.












































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