Diamond Foods

Diamond Foods, Inc.
Type Public company
Traded as NASDAQDMND
Industry Consumer packaged goods
Headquarters Stockton, California, U.S.
Area served Products sold in over 100 countries
Key people Michael J. Mendes
Chairman, President and CEO
Products Pringles, Kettle Brand chips, Emerald snack nuts, Pop Secret popcorn, and Diamond of California snack and culinary nuts.
Revenue 2010: $680,162 MM
2009: $570,940 MM
2008: $531,492 MM
Operating income 2010: $52,230 MM
2009: $45,840 MM
2008: $23,881 MM

Diamond Foods is a packaged food company with offices in San Francisco and Stockton, California. It began as an agricultural marketing cooperative and converted in July 2005 to a public company, specializing in marketing nuts, particularly walnuts. Its globally distributed brands include Kettle Brand chips, Emerald snack nuts, Pop Secret popcorn, and Diamond of California snack and culinary nuts.

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History

The company was founded in 1912 as Diamond Walnut Growers, Inc., a member-owned Californian agricultural cooperative association. In July 2005, Diamond Walnut Growers converted to a Delaware corporation and completed its initial public offering of Diamond Foods stock.

Diamond Walnut was the location for the longest union strike in U.S. history as of 2010. The strike began in 1991 and ended in 2005.[1]

Timeline

Diamond Foods brands

Diamond Foods has five product lines:

Each of the snack product lines has “better-for-you” options including 100-calorie packs, 94% Fat Free popcorn and both baked potato chips with 65% less fat than traditional potato chips and a reduced fat chip with 40% less fat.

Production

The company has 1467 full-time employees in offices and facilities in California, Oregon, Wisconsin, Indiana, Tennessee, Alabama and the United Kingdom.

Diamond does not grow any of its own crops; the company purchases raw material from domestic and international sources. Diamond products are processed and packaged at facilities in Stockton, California; Salem, Oregon; Fishers, Indiana; Van Buren, Indiana; Beloit, Wisconsin; Robertsdale, Alabama; and Norwich, United Kingdom.

Acquisitions

In 2008, Diamond Foods purchased Pop Secret from General Mills.

In 2010, Diamond Foods purchased the potato chip company Kettle Foods for $615 million.[3]

In April 2011, Procter & Gamble agreed to the $2.35Bn (1.5Bn stock and 850M debt assumption) sale of the Pringles company to Diamond Foods, which on completion will more than triple the size of its snack business.[4]

References

External links