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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549
FORM 10-K
(Mark One)
     
þ   ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the fiscal year ended June 24, 2010
     
o   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the transition period from                      to                     
Commission file number 0-19681
JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in its Charter)
     
Delaware
(State or Other Jurisdiction of Incorporation or Organization)
  36-2419677
(I.R.S. Employer Identification Number)
1703 North Randall Road
Elgin, Illinois 60123

(Address of Principal Executive Offices, Zip Code)
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code: (847) 289-1800
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:
     
Title of Each Class   Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered
Common Stock, $.01 par value per share   The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC
(NASDAQ Global Market)
Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act: Yes o þ.
Indicate by check mark if the registrant is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or Section 15(d) of the Act: Yes o No þ.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes þ No o.
Indicate by check mark if disclosure of delinquent filers pursuant to Item 405 of Regulation S-K (229.405 of this chapter) is not contained herein, and will not be contained to the best of Registrant’s knowledge, in definitive proxy or information statements incorporated by reference in Part III of this Form 10-K or any amendment to this Form 10-K þ.
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See definitions of “large accelerated filer”, “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.
             
Large accelerated filer o   Accelerated filer þ   Non-accelerated filer o (Do not check if a smaller reporting company)   Smaller reporting company þ
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes o No þ.
The aggregate market value of the voting Common Stock held by non-affiliates was $120,253,089 as of December 24, 2009 (7,859,679 shares at $15.30 per share).
As of August 26, 2010, 8,048,949 shares of the Company’s Common Stock, $.01 par value (“Common Stock”) and 2,597,426 shares of the Company’s Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value (“Class A Stock”), were outstanding. The Class A Stock is convertible at the option of the holder at any time and from time to time (and, upon the occurrence of certain events specified in the Restated Certificate of Incorporation, automatically converts) into one share of Common Stock.
Documents Incorporated by Reference:
Portions of the Company’s definitive Proxy Statement for its Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held November 3, 2010 are incorporated by reference into Part III of this Report.
 
 

 


 

PART I
Item 1 — Business
a. General Development of Business
     (i) Background
John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. was formed as a corporation under the laws of the State of Delaware in 1979 as the successor by merger to an Illinois corporation that was incorporated in 1959. As used throughout this annual report on Form 10-K, unless the context otherwise indicates, the terms “we”, “us”, “our” or “our Company” refer collectively to John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. and its wholly-owned subsidiary, JBSS Properties, LLC. Our fiscal year ends on the final Thursday of June each year, and typically consists of fifty-two weeks (four thirteen week quarters). References herein to fiscal 2011, 2010, 2009 and 2008 are to the fiscal years that will end, or ended, June 30, 2011, June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively.
We are one of the leading processors and marketers of tree nuts and peanuts in the United States. These nuts are sold under a variety of private labels and under the Fisher, Orchard Valley Harvest and Sunshine Country brand names. We also market and distribute, and in most cases manufacture or process, a diverse product line of food and snack products, including peanut butter, natural snacks and trail mixes, sunflower seeds, sesame sticks and other sesame snack products.
Our Internet website is accessible to the public at http://www.jbssinc.com. Information about us, including our code of ethics, annual reports on Form 10-K, quarterly reports on Form 10-Q, current reports on Form 8-K and any amendments to those reports are made available free of charge through our Internet website as soon as reasonably practicable after such reports have been filed with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”). Our materials filed with the SEC are also available on the SEC’s website at http://www.sec.gov. The public may read and copy any materials we file with the SEC at the SEC’s public reference room at 450 Fifth St., NW, Washington, DC 20549. The public may obtain information about the reference room by calling the SEC at 1-800-SEC-0330.
Our headquarters and executive offices are located at 1703 North Randall Road, Elgin, Illinois 60123, and our telephone number for investor relations is (847) 289-1800, extension 4612.
     (ii) Orchard Valley Harvest Acquisition
On May 21, 2010, we acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities of Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. (“OVH”) located in Modesto, California. The aggregate purchase price was $32.8 million, funded from excess availability in our bank credit facility. The purchase price may be increased up to $10.1 million, contingent upon performance of the acquired business for the 2010 and 2011 calendar years. OVH is a leading supplier of branded and private label nut and dried fruit products in the produce category, an area in which we previously had a minimal presence. The OVH acquisition (i) expands our portfolio and market presence into the store perimeter beyond the traditional nut aisles, (ii) establishes a platform to build a truly national produce nut program, and (iii) broadens our product breadth and production capabilities. Based upon OVH’s financial results for calendar 2009 and 2008, disclosed in our Form 8-K/A filed on August 3, 2010, our sales would have been approximately $50 — $60 million higher for those periods. While we expect the OVH acquisition will improve our financial performance, there can be no assurances that the OVH acquisition will not have a negative impact (or no impact at all) on our financial performance. See Part I, Item 1A – “Risk Factors.”
b. Segment Reporting
We operate in a single reportable operating segment that consists of selling various nut products through multiple distribution channels.

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c. Narrative Description of Business
     (i) General
As stated above, we are one of the leading processors and marketers of tree nuts and peanuts in the United States. Through a deliberate strategy of capital expenditures and complementary acquisitions, we have built a generally vertically integrated nut processing operation that enables us to control almost every step of the process for pecans, peanuts and walnuts, including procurement from growers, shelling, processing, packing and marketing. Vertical integration allows us to enhance product quality and, in most crop years, to capture additional processing margins with respect to pecans, peanuts and walnuts. Our vertically integrated business model typically has worked to our advantage. Our generally vertically integrated model, however, can under certain circumstances result in poor earnings or losses. See Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors”.
Our products are sold through the major distribution channels to significant buyers of nuts, including food retailers, industrial users for food manufacturing, food service companies and international customers. Selling through a wide array of distribution channels allows us to generate multiple revenue opportunities for the nuts we process. For example, whole cashews could be sold to food retailers and cashew pieces could be sold to industrial users. We process and sell all major nut types consumed in the United States, including peanuts, pecans, cashews, walnuts and almonds in a wide variety of package styles, whereas most of our competitors focus either on fewer nut types or narrower varieties of packaging options. We process all major nut types, thus offering our customers a complete nut product offering.
     (ii) Principal Products
Our principal products are raw and processed nuts. These products accounted for approximately 85.2%, 89.2% and 91.8% of our gross sales for fiscal 2010, fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2008, respectively. The nut product line includes peanuts, almonds, Brazil nuts, pecans, pistachios, filberts, cashews, English walnuts, black walnuts, pine nuts and macadamia nuts. Our nut products are sold in numerous package styles and sizes, from poly-cellophane packages, environmentally friendly packages, composite cans, vacuum packed tins, plastic tubs and plastic jars for retail sales, to large cases and sacks for bulk sales to industrial and food service customers. In addition, we offer our nut products in a variety of different styles and seasonings, including natural, blanched, oil roasted, dry roasted, unsalted, honey roasted, flavored, spicy, butter toffee, praline and cinnamon toasted. We sell our products domestically to retailers and wholesalers as well as to industrial, food service and contract packaging customers. We also sell certain of our products to foreign customers in the retail, food service and industrial markets.
We acquire a substantial portion of our peanut, pecan and walnut requirements directly from domestic growers. The balance of our raw nut supply is purchased from importers, traders and domestic processors. In fiscal 2010, the majority of our peanuts, pecans and walnuts were shelled at one of our four shelling facilities, and the remaining portion were purchased shelled from processors. See “Raw Materials and Supplies” and Item 2(b) “Properties — Manufacturing Capability, Utilization, Technology and Engineering” below.
We manufacture and market peanut butter in several sizes and varieties. We also market and distribute, and in many cases process and manufacture, a wide assortment of other food and snack products. These other products include snack mixes, salad toppings, natural snacks, trail mixes, dried fruit and chocolate and yogurt coated products sold to retailers and wholesalers; baking ingredients sold to retailers, wholesalers, industrial and food service customers; bulk food products sold to retail and food service customers; an assortment of sunflower seeds, snack mixes, almond butter, sesame sticks and other sesame snack products sold to retail supermarkets, vending companies, mass merchandisers and industrial customers; and a wide variety of toppings for ice cream and yogurt sold to food service customers.
     (iii) Customers
We sell our products to approximately 950 customers through the consumer, industrial, food service, contract packaging and export distribution channels. The consumer channel supplies nut-based products, including consumer-packaged and bulk products, to retailers across the United States. We sell products through the consumer

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channel under our Fisher, Orchard Valley Harvest and Sunshine Country brands, as well as under our customers’ private brands. The industrial channel supplies nut-based products to other manufacturers to use as ingredients in their final food products such as bakery, confection, cereal and ice cream. The food service channel produces nut-based products that are customized to the specifications of chefs, national restaurant chains, food service distributors, institutions and hotel kitchens. We sell products through the food service channel under our Fisher brand and our customers’ own brands. Our contract manufacturing channel produces nut-based snacks for manufacturers under their brand name. Finally, our export distribution channel distributes our complete product portfolio to approximately 100 customers worldwide, supplying both industrial food ingredients and the retail channel under the Fisher brand and our international customers’ own brands.
Net sales to Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. accounted for approximately 19% of our net sales for fiscal 2010, fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2008. Net sales to Target Corporation accounted for approximately 12% of our net sales for fiscal 2010.
     (iv) Sales and Distribution
We market our products through our own sales department and through a network of approximately 100 independent brokers and various independent distributors and suppliers.
We distribute products from our Illinois, Georgia, California, North Carolina and Texas production facilities and from public warehouse and distribution facilities located in various other states. The majority of our products are shipped from our production, warehouse and distribution facilities by contract and common carriers.
In the Chicago area, we operate an outlet store at our production facility and at one other location. These stores sell bulk foods and other products produced by us and other vendors.
     (v) Marketing
Marketing strategies are developed by distribution channel. Private label and branded consumer efforts are focused on building brand awareness, introducing new products, attracting new customers and increasing consumption in the snack, baking nut and produce categories. Industrial and food service efforts are focused on trade-oriented marketing.
Our consumer promotional campaigns include advertisements (e.g., newspaper, radio, on-line and television), coupon offers and co-op advertising with select retail customers. We also conduct integrated marketing campaigns using multiple media outlets for the promotion of the Fisher brand, including sports marketing. Additionally, shipper display units are utilized in retail stores in an effort to gain additional temporary product placement and to drive sales volume.
Industrial and food service trade promotion includes attending regional and national trade shows, trade publication advertising and one-on-one marketing. These promotional efforts highlight our processing capabilities, broad product portfolio, product customization and packaging innovation. Additionally, we have established a number of co-branding relationships with industrial and food service customers.
Through participation in several trade associations, funding of industry research and sponsorship of educational programs, we support efforts to increase awareness of the health benefits, convenience and versatility of nuts as both a snack and a recipe ingredient among existing and future consumers of nuts.
     (vi) Competition
Our nuts and other snack food products compete against products manufactured and sold by numerous other companies in the snack food industry, some of whom are substantially larger and have greater resources than us. In the nut industry, we compete with, among others, Planters, Ralcorp Holdings, Inc., Diamond Foods, Inc. and numerous regional snack food processors. Competitive factors in our markets include price, product quality, customer service, breadth of product line, brand name awareness, method of distribution and sales promotion. The combination of our generally vertically integrated operating model with respect to pecans, peanuts and walnuts, our product quality, product offering, brand strength and distribution model generally enable us to compete effectively

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in each of these categories, but see Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors” below.
     (vii) Raw Materials and Supplies
We purchase nuts from domestic and foreign sources. In fiscal 2010, all of our walnuts, almonds and peanuts were purchased from domestic sources. We purchase our pecans from the southern United States and Mexico. Cashew nuts are imported from India, Africa, Brazil and Southeast Asia. For fiscal 2010, approximately 36% of our nut purchases were from foreign sources.
Competition in the nut shelling industry is driven by shellers’ ability to access and purchase raw nuts, to shell the nuts efficiently and to sell the nuts to processors. We shell all major domestic nut types, with the exception of almonds, and are among a select few shellers who further process, package and sell nuts to the end-user. Raw material pricing pressure and the high cost of equipment automation have contributed to a consolidation among shellers across all nut types, especially peanuts and pecans.
We are generally vertically integrated with respect to pecans, peanuts and walnuts and, unlike our major retail competitors who purchase nuts on the open market, we purchase a majority of our pecans, peanuts and walnuts directly from growers. There are risks associated with vertical integration such as susceptibility to market declines for pecans, peanuts and walnuts. See Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors” below.
We sponsor a seed exchange program under which we provide peanut seed to growers in return for a commitment to repay the dollar value of that seed, plus interest, in the form of farmer stock inshell peanuts at harvest. Approximately 58% of the farmer stock peanuts we purchased in fiscal 2010 were grown from seed provided by us. We also contract for the growing of a limited number of generations of peanut seeds to increase seed quality and maintain desired genetic characteristics of the peanut seed used in processing. Our peanut seed is not genetically modified.
The availability and cost of raw materials for the production of our products, including pecans, peanuts, walnuts, almonds, other nuts, roasting oil, sugar, dried fruit, seeds and chocolate, are subject to crop size and yield fluctuations caused by factors beyond our control, such as weather conditions, plant diseases, changes in customer demand and purchasing behavior of certain countries such as China. These fluctuations can adversely impact our profitability. For example, our costs to acquire raw peanuts and cashews in fiscal 2008 increased, in part, due to adverse weather conditions. Additionally, the supply of edible nuts and other raw materials used in our products could be reduced by any future product recalls or upon a determination by the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”) or any other government agency that certain pesticides, herbicides or other chemicals used by growers have left harmful residues on portions of the crop or that the crop has been contaminated by aflatoxin or other agents.
Due, in part, to the seasonal nature of the industry, we maintain significant inventories of peanuts, pecans and walnuts at certain times of the year, especially in the second and third quarters of our fiscal year. Fluctuations in the market price of pecans, peanuts and walnuts and other nuts may affect the value of our inventory and thus may also affect our gross profit and gross profit margin. See Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors”.
We purchase other inventory items such as roasting oils, seasonings, plastic jars, labels, composite cans and other packaging materials from related parties and third parties.
     (viii) Trademarks and Patents
We market our products primarily under private labels and the Fisher, Orchard Valley Harvest and Sunshine Country brand names, which are registered as trademarks with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as well as in various other jurisdictions. We also own several patents of various durations. We expect to continue to renew for the foreseeable future those trademarks that are important to our business.

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     (ix) Employees
As of June 24, 2010, we had approximately 1,350 full-time employees, including approximately 180 corporate staff employees. Due to the seasonality of our business, our labor requirements typically peak during the last quarter of the calendar year, at which time additional contract labor is generally used to supplement the full-time work force.
     (x) Seasonality
Our business is seasonal. Demand for peanut and tree nut products is highest during the last four months of the calendar year. Pecans and walnuts, two of our principal raw materials, are primarily purchased between August and February and are processed throughout the year until the following harvest. As a result of this seasonality, our personnel requirements rise during the last four months of the calendar year. Our working capital requirements generally peak during the third quarter of our fiscal year.
     (xi) Backlog
Because the time between order and shipment is usually less than three weeks, we believe that any backlog as of a particular date is not material to an understanding of our business as a whole.
     (xii) Operating Hazards and Uninsured Risks
The sale of food products for human consumption involves the risk of injury to consumers as a result of product contamination or spoilage, including the presence of foreign objects, insects, substances, chemicals, aflatoxin and other agents, or residues introduced during the growing, storage, handling or transportation phases. Although we (i) maintain what we believe to be rigid quality control standards and food safety systems, (ii) generally inspect our products by visual examination, metal detectors or electronic monitors at various stages of our shelling and processing operations for all of our nut and other food products, (iii) permit the USDA to inspect all lots of peanuts shipped to and from our peanut shelling facilities, (iv) maintain environmental pathogen programs, and (v) seek to comply with the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act by labeling each product that we sell with labels that disclose the nutritional value and content of each of our products, no assurance can be given that some nut or other food products sold by us may not contain or develop harmful substances. In order to mitigate this risk, we currently maintain product liability insurance of $1 million per occurrence, $2 million aggregate and umbrella coverage of up to $50 million. In an effort to mitigate some of the risks of product recalls, we obtained $5 million coverage for contaminated product insurance beginning in fiscal 2009.
Item 1A — Risk Factors
We face a number of significant risks and uncertainties, and therefore, an investment in our Common Stock is subject to risks and uncertainties. The factors described below could materially adversely affect our business, results of operations and financial condition. While each risk is described separately, some of these risks are interrelated and it is possible that certain risks could trigger the applicability of other risks described below. Also, the risks and uncertainties described below are not the only ones that we face. Additional risks and uncertainties not presently known to us, or that are currently deemed immaterial, could also potentially impair our business, results of operations and financial condition. Investors should consider the following factors, in addition to the other information contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, before deciding to purchase our Common Stock.
We Cannot Control the Availability of Raw Materials and Market Price Fluctuations
The availability and cost of raw materials for the production of our products, including peanuts, pecans, almonds, walnuts and other nuts are subject to crop size and yield fluctuations caused by factors beyond our control, such as weather conditions, natural disasters (including floods, droughts, frosts, earthquakes and hurricanes), plant diseases, changes in customer demand, changes in government programs and purchasing behavior of certain countries such as China. Additionally, any determination by the USDA or other government agencies that certain pesticides,

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herbicides or other chemicals used by growers have left harmful residues on portions of the crop or that the crop has been contaminated by aflatoxin or other agents or any future product recalls could reduce the supply of edible nuts and other raw materials used in our products. Furthermore, we are not able to hedge against changes in commodity prices because no appropriate futures or other market exists, and thus, shortages in the supply of and increases in the prices of nuts and other raw materials we use in our products (to the extent that cost increases cannot be passed on to customers) could have an adverse impact on our profitability. Furthermore, fluctuations in the market prices of nuts may affect the value of our inventories and profitability. We have significant inventories of nuts that would be adversely affected by any decrease in the market price of such raw materials. See Part II, Item 7 — “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations — Liquidity and Capital Resources”.
Significant Private Label Competitive Activity Can Lead to Price Declines
Some customer buying decisions are based upon a periodic bidding process in which the successful bidder is assured the selling of its selected product to the food retailer, supercenter or mass merchandiser until the next bidding process. Our sales volume may decrease significantly if our offer is too high and we lose the ability to sell products through these channels, even temporarily. Alternatively, we risk reducing our margins if our offer is successful but below our desired price points. Either of these outcomes may adversely affect our results of operations.
Our Inability to Successfully Manage the Price Gap Between our Private Label Products and Those of our Branded Competitors May Adversely Affect our Results of Operations
Although demand for private label products has increased as a result of recent economic conditions, our competitors’ branded products have certain advantages over our private label products primarily due to advertising and name recognition. When branded competitors focus on promotion and reduce their prices, the environment for private label products becomes more challenging because the price gaps between private label and branded products can become less meaningful.
At the retail level, private label products sell at a discount to those of branded competitors. If branded competitors continue to reduce the price of their products, the price of branded products offered to consumers may approximate the prices of our private label products. Further, promotional activities by branded competitors such as temporary price rollbacks, buy-one-get-one-free offerings and coupons have the effect of price decreases. Price decreases taken by competitors could result in a decline in our sales volumes.
A Shift to Branded Products Could Adversely Impact our Results of Operations
We have benefited from the increased demand for private label products under current economic conditions. Improved economic conditions in the future could cause a shift back towards branded products. While we have made investments in developing our Fisher and other brands and recently acquired the Orchard Valley Harvest brand, there can be no assurance as to the impact on us of a change in consumer preference on the results of our operations.
We Enter Into Fixed Price Commitments
The great majority of our industrial sales customers, and certain other customers, require us to enter into fixed price commitments with them. Such commitments represented approximately 15% of our annual net sales in fiscal 2010. In most cases, the fixed price commitments are entered into after our cost to acquire the nut products necessary to satisfy the fixed price commitments are substantially fixed. The commitments are for a fixed period of time, typically one year, but may be extended if remaining balances exist. However, sometimes we enter into fixed price commitments with respect to certain of our nut products before fixing our acquisition cost in order to maintain customer relationships or when, in management’s judgment, market or crop harvest conditions so warrant. To the extent we do so, however, these fixed price commitments may result in reduced or negative gross profit margins that have a material adverse effect on our results of operations.

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We have a Generally Vertically Integrated Model With Respect to Pecans, Peanuts and Walnuts
We have a generally vertically integrated nut processing operation that enables us to control almost every step of the process for pecans, peanuts and walnuts, including procurement from growers. Our vertically integrated model has in the past resulted, and may in the future result, in significant losses because we are subject to the various risks associated with purchasing a majority of our pecans, peanuts and walnuts directly from growers, including the risk of purchasing such products from growers at prices that later, due to altered market conditions, prove to be above market prices. Accordingly, because we purchase a majority of our pecans, peanuts and walnuts directly from growers using fixed price contracts, some of which are entered into before harvest, there is a possibility that after we enter into the fixed price contracts, market conditions may change, and we will be forced to sell these nuts at a loss.
We Operate in a Competitive Environment
We operate in a highly competitive environment. Our principal products compete against food and snack products manufactured and sold by numerous regional and national companies, some of which are substantially larger and have greater resources than us, such as Planters, Ralcorp Holdings, Inc. and Diamond Foods, Inc. For example, our Fisher brand has declined in market share in recent years in part because the companies who sell and market the other top branded nut products have committed significantly more resources to such brands when compared to the resources spent by us on our Fisher brand. Our retail competitors buy their nuts on the open market and are thus not exposed to the risks of purchasing raw pecans, peanuts and walnuts directly from growers at fixed prices that later, due to altered market conditions, prove to be above market prices. We also compete with other shellers in the industrial market and with regional processors in the retail and wholesale markets. In order to maintain or increase our market share, we must continue to price our products competitively, which may lower revenue per unit and cause declines in gross profit margin, if we are unable to increase unit volumes as well as reduce our costs.
We are Dependent Upon Certain Significant Customers
We are dependent on a few significant customers for a large portion of our total sales, particularly in the consumer channel. Sales to our five largest customers represented approximately 46%, 43% and 40% of gross sales in fiscal 2010, fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2008, respectively. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. alone accounted for approximately 19% of our net sales for fiscal 2010, fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2008. Target Corporation alone accounted for 12% of our net sales for fiscal 2010. In addition, Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc., the assets of which we recently acquired, relies on one customer for a significant portion of its sales. A loss of one of our largest customers or a material decrease in purchases by one of our largest customers would result in decreased sales and adversely impact our results of operations and cash flow.
We are Subject to Pricing Pressures
As the retail grocery trade continues to consolidate and our retail customers grow larger and become more sophisticated, our retail customers are demanding lower pricing and increased promotional programs. Further, these customers may begin to place a greater emphasis on the lowest-cost supplier in making purchasing decisions. An increased focus on the lowest-cost supplier could reduce the benefits of some of our competitive advantages, which include a focus on customer service and quality, and not merely price. Our sales volume growth could suffer, and it may become necessary to lower our prices and increase promotional support of our products, any of which would adversely affect our gross profit and gross profit margin.
Food Safety and Product Contamination Concerns Could Have a Material Adverse Effect on Us
If consumers in our principal markets lose confidence in the safety of nut products, particularly with respect to peanut and tree nut allergies, food borne illnesses or other food safety matters, this could adversely affect us. Individuals with nut allergies may be at risk of serious illness or death resulting from the consumption of our nut products, including consumption of other companies’ products containing our products as an ingredient. Notwithstanding existing food safety controls, we process peanuts and tree nuts on the same equipment, and there is no guarantee that our products will not be cross-contaminated. Concerns generated by risks of peanut and tree nut cross-contamination and other food safety matters, including food borne illnesses, may discourage consumers from

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buying our products, cause production and delivery disruptions, or result in product recalls. Product safety issues (i) concerning products not manufactured, distributed or sold by our Company, such as recent safety issues concerning salmonella found in peanut butter and (ii) concerning products we manufacture, distribute and sell, such as recent safety issues at our supplier concerning salmonella found in pistachios, may adversely affect demand for products in the nut industry as a whole, including products without actual safety problems. Decreases in demand for products in the industry generally could have a material adverse affect on our Company’s financial condition and results of operations. In addition, the cooling system at the Elgin, Illinois facility utilizes ammonia. If a leak in the system were to occur, there is a possibility that the inventory in cold storage at the Elgin, Illinois facility could be destroyed.
Product Liability and Product Recalls May Have a Material Adverse Effect on Us
We face risks associated with product liability claims and product recalls in the event our food safety and quality control procedures are ineffective or fail, we procure products from third parties that are or become subject to a recall, regardless of whether or not our food safety and quality control procedures are ineffective or fail, or our products cause injury or become adulterated or misbranded. In addition, we do not control the labeling of other companies’ products containing our products as an ingredient. A product recall of a sufficient quantity, a significant product liability judgment against us, or other safety concerns could cause our products to be unavailable for a period of time and could result in a loss of consumer confidence in our products. If these kinds of events were to occur, they would have a material adverse effect on the demand for our products and, consequently, our results of operations and cash flows.
We are Dependent on Certain Key Personnel
Our future success will be largely dependent on the personal efforts of our senior operating management team, including Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, Chief Executive Officer, Michael J. Valentine, Chief Financial Officer and Group President, James A. Valentine, Chief Information Officer and Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., Chief Operating Officer and President. In addition, our success also depends on the talents of Everardo Soria, Senior Vice President Pecan Operations and Procurement, Walter R. Tankersley, Jr., Senior Vice President Industrial Sales, Michael G. Cannon, Senior Vice President of Corporate Operations and Robert J. Sarlls, Senior Vice President of Consumer Sales, Strategy and Business Development. We believe that the expertise and knowledge of these individuals in the industry, and in their respective fields, is a critical factor to our growth and success. We have not entered into an employment agreement with any of these individuals, nor do we have key officer insurance coverage policies in effect. The loss of the services of any of these individuals could have a material adverse effect on our business and prospects if we were unable to identify a suitable candidate to replace any such individual. Our success is also dependent upon our ability to attract and retain additional qualified personnel, and there can be no assurance that we will be able to do so.
We are Subject to Government Regulation
We are subject to extensive regulation by the United States Food and Drug Administration, the USDA, the United States Environmental Protection Agency and other state, local and foreign authorities in jurisdictions where our products are manufactured, processed or sold. Among other things, these regulations govern the manufacturing, importation, processing, packaging, storage, distribution and labeling of our products. Our manufacturing and processing facilities and products are subject to periodic compliance inspections by federal, state, local and foreign authorities. We are also subject to environmental regulations governing the discharge of air emissions, water and food waste, the usage and storage of pesticides, and the generation, handling, storage, transportation, treatment and disposal of waste materials. Amendments to existing statutes and regulations, adoption of new statutes and regulations, increased production at our existing facilities as well as our expansion into new operations and jurisdictions, may require us to obtain additional licenses and permits and could require us to adapt or alter methods of operations at costs that could be substantial. Compliance with applicable laws and regulations may adversely affect our business. Failure to comply with applicable laws and regulations could subject us to civil remedies, including fines, injunctions, recalls or seizures, as well as possible criminal sanctions, which could have a material adverse effect on our business.

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Economic, Political and Social Risks of Doing Business in Emerging Markets May Have a Material Adverse Effect on Us
We purchase our cashew inventories from India, Africa, Brazil and Southeast Asia and some of our pecans from Mexico, which are in many respects emerging markets. To this extent, we are exposed to risks inherent in emerging markets, including:
    increased governmental ownership and regulation of the economy;
    greater likelihood of inflation and adverse economic conditions stemming from governmental attempts to reduce inflation, such as imposition of higher interest rates and wage and price controls;
    supply reduction in the United States from increased domestic demand in the emerging markets;
    potential for contractual defaults or forced renegotiations on purchase contracts with limited legal recourse;
    tariffs and other barriers to trade that may reduce our profitability; and
    civil unrest and significant political instability.
The existence of these risks in these and other foreign countries that are the origins of our raw materials could jeopardize or limit our ability to purchase sufficient supplies of cashews and other imported raw materials and may adversely affect our results of operations by increasing the costs of doing business overseas.
The Way in Which We Measure Inventory May Have a Material Adverse Effect on Us
We acquire our inshell nut inventories of pecans, peanuts and walnuts from growers and farmers in large quantities at harvest times, which are primarily during the second and third quarters of our fiscal year, and receive nut shipments in bulk truckloads. The weights of these nuts are measured using truck scales at the time of receipt, and inventories are recorded on the basis of those measurements. The nuts are then stored in bulk in large warehouses to be shelled or processed throughout the year. Bulk-stored nut inventories are relieved on the basis of continuous high-speed bulk weighing systems as the nuts are shelled or processed or on the basis of calculations derived from the weight of the shelled nuts that are produced. While we perform various procedures to periodically confirm the accuracy of our bulk-stored nut inventories, these inventories are estimates that must be periodically adjusted to account for positive or negative variations in quantities and yields, and such adjustments directly affect earnings. The precise amount of our bulk-stored nut inventories is not known until the entire quantity of the particular nut is depleted, which may not necessarily occur every year. Prior crop year inventories may still be on hand as the new crop year inventories are purchased. There can be no assurance that such inventory quantity adjustments will not have a material adverse effect on our results of operations in the future.
We are Subject to the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002
We are subject to the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 (the “Bioterrorism Act”). The Bioterrorism Act includes a number of provisions to help guard against the threat of bioterrorism, including new authority for the Secretary of Health and Human Services (“HHS”) to take action to protect the nation’s food supply against the threat of international contamination. The Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”), as the food regulatory arm of HHS, is responsible for developing and implementing these food safety measures, which fall into four broad categories: (i) registration of food facilities, (ii) establishment and maintenance of records regarding the sources and recipients of foods, (iii) prior notice to FDA of imported food shipments and (iv) administrative detention of potentially affected foods. There can be no assurances that the effects of the Bioterrorism Act and the rules enacted thereunder by the FDA, including any potential disruption in our supply of imported nuts, which represented approximately 36% of our total nut purchases in fiscal 2010, will not have a material adverse effect on our business, financial position or results of operations in the future.

10


 

Our Largest Stockholders Possess a Majority of Aggregate Voting Power, Which May Make a Takeover or Change in Control More Difficult; The Sanfilippo Group Has Pledged a Substantial Amount of their Class A Common Stock, Which Under Certain Circumstances Could Lead To an Event of Default Under the Company’s Credit Agreement
As of August 26, 2010, Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Marian Sanfilippo, Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., Lisa A. Evon, John E. Sanfilippo and James J. Sanfilippo (the “Sanfilippo Group”) own or control Common Stock (one vote per share) and Class A Common Stock (ten votes per share) representing approximately a 52.3% voting interest in our Company. As of August 27, 2009, Michael J. Valentine and Mathias A. Valentine (the “Valentine Group”) own or control Common Stock (one vote per share) and Class A Common Stock (ten votes per share) representing approximately a 24.4% voting interest in our Company. As a result, the Sanfilippo Group and the Valentine Group together are able to direct the election of a majority of the members to the Board of Directors. In addition, the Sanfilippo Group is able to exert influence on our business that cannot be counteracted by another stockholder or group of stockholders. The Sanfilippo Group is able to determine the outcome of nearly all matters submitted to a vote of our stockholders, including any amendments to our certificate of incorporation or bylaws. The Sanfilippo Group has the power to prevent a change in control or sale of our Company, which may be beneficial to the public stockholders, or cause a change in control which may not be beneficial to the public stockholders, and can take other actions that may be less favorable to our stockholders and more favorable to the Sanfilippo Group, subject to applicable legal limitations.
In addition, several members of the Sanfilippo Group that beneficially own a significant interest in our Company have pledged a substantial portion of the Company’s Class A Stock that they own to secure loans made to them by commercial banks. If a stockholder defaults on any of its obligations under these pledge agreements or the related loan documents, these banks may have the right to sell the pledged shares. Such a sale could cause our Company’s stock price to decline. Many of the occurrences that could result in a foreclosure of the pledged shares are out of our control and are unrelated to our operations. Because these shares are pledged to secure loans, the occurrence of an event of default could result in a sale of pledged shares that could cause a change of control of our Company, even when such a change may not be in the best interests of our stockholders, and it could also result in a default under certain material contracts to which we are a party, including an event of default under our Credit Agreement dated February 7, 2008, as amended.
We May Incur Material Losses as a Licensed Nut Warehouse Operator under the United States Warehouse Act
We store a large amount of peanut inventory on behalf of the United States government at various facilities. As a licensed United States Department of Agriculture Nut Warehouse Operator, we are responsible for delivering the loan value of the peanut inventory in our possession as represented on the warehouse receipt on demand. Because the inventory may be stored at our facilities for a significant period of time, the peanut inventory may decrease in value as a result of a decline in the quality of the peanut inventory or shrinkage in the peanut inventory. We are responsible for reimbursing the United States government for any such decline in value associated with quality issues or shrinkage in excess of an allowable amount that arise during our custody of such inventory. Accordingly, a significant decline in the value of the peanut inventory stored at our facilities for these circumstances could have a material adverse effect on us.
Essentially all of Our Real Property is Encumbered, Which Could Adversely Affect Our Ability to Obtain Additional Capital if Required
We returned to profitability in fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2010 and reduced our debt levels significantly. However, the new financing arrangements entered into in fiscal 2008 include a mortgage facility, which is secured by essentially all of our owned real property located in Elgin, Illinois, Gustine, California and Garysburg, North Carolina. Previously, the aforementioned properties were not encumbered. Because essentially all of our owned real property is now encumbered, such properties are not available as a means of securing further capital in the event that additional capital is required because of unexpected events, losses or other circumstances.

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General Economic Conditions Could Significantly Affect Our Financial Results
General economic conditions and the effects of a recession, including uncertainty in economic conditions and the potential for another economic downturn, could have a material adverse effect on our cash flow from operations, results of operations and financial condition. These conditions include higher unemployment, increased commodity costs, decreases in consumer demand, changes in buying patterns, a weakened dollar and general transportation and fuel costs. Maintaining the prices of our Company’s products, initiating price increases, including passing along price increases for commodities used in our Company’s products, and increasing the demand for our Company’s profitable products, all of which are important to our Company’s plans to increase its profitability, may be negatively impacted by economic conditions. Among other considerations, nuts and our other products are not essential products. Any of the foregoing could have a material adverse effect on us and our financial condition and results of operations.
The OVH Acquisition May Not Produce Expected Results
While we believe that the Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. (“OVH”) acquisition will prove to be successful and improve our financial performance, we cannot guarantee that the acquisition will not negatively impact (or have no impact on) our results of operations and financial position. Before the OVH acquisition, the last acquisition we completed was in 1995, so we do not have an established recent record of successfully integrating acquired businesses into our operations. Also, there are risks inherent with any acquisition such as maintaining the customer base, retaining key employees, the risk that expected synergies, operational efficiencies and cost savings from the OVH acquisition may not be fully realized or realized within the expected timeframe and the risk that unexpected liabilities may arise from the OVH acquisition. In addition, the process of integrating the acquired OVH business may cause interruption or slow down the operations of our existing businesses.
Item 1B — Unresolved Staff Comments
None.
Item 2 — Properties
We own or lease six principal production facilities. Our primary processing and distribution facility along with our headquarters is located at our facility in Elgin, Illinois that houses our primary manufacturing operations and corporate headquarters (the “Elgin Site”). The remaining principal production facilities are located in Bainbridge, Georgia; Garysburg, North Carolina; Selma, Texas; Gustine, California; and Modesto, California. In addition, we operate an outlet store out of the Elgin Site, and own one retail store in the Chicago area. We also lease space in public warehouse facilities in various states.
As described below in Part II, Item 7 — “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations — Liquidity and Capital Resources”, the Mortgage Facility (as defined below) is secured by mortgages on essentially all of our owned real property located in Elgin, Illinois, Gustine, California and Garysburg, North Carolina.
We operate in a single reportable operating segment that consists of selling various nut products through multiple distribution channels.
We believe that our facilities are generally well maintained and in good operating condition.
a. Principal Facilities
The following table provides certain information regarding our principal facilities:(1)

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                Date Company
                Constructed,
    Square   Types of       Acquired or
Location   Footage   Interest   Description of Principal Use   First Occupied
 
Bainbridge, Georgia(2)
  245,000   Owned   Peanut shelling, purchasing,
processing, packaging, warehousing
and distribution
  1987
 
               
Garysburg, North Carolina
  160,000   Owned   Peanut shelling, purchasing,
processing, packaging, warehousing
and distribution
  1994
 
               
Selma, Texas(3)
  300,000   Leased   Pecan shelling, processing, packaging,
warehousing and distribution
  1992
 
               
Gustine, California
  215,000   Owned   Walnut shelling, processing, packaging,
warehousing and distribution
  1993
 
               
Elgin, Illinois(4)
(Elgin Office Building)
  400,000   Owned   Rental Property   2005
 
               
Elgin, Illinois(5)
(Elgin Warehouse Building)
  1,001,000   Owned   Processing, packaging, warehousing,
distribution and corporate offices
  2005
 
               
Modesto, California
  100,000   Leased   Processing, packaging, warehousing
and distribution
  2010
 
(1)   In addition to the properties listed in the table, we own land in Elgin, Illinois, which we originally anticipated using in connection with our facility consolidation project (the “Old Elgin Site”). For a description of the Old Elgin Site, see Part II, Item 7 “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations — Real Estate Matters”.
 
(2)   The Bainbridge facility is subject to a mortgage and deed of trust securing $4.28 million (excluding accrued and unpaid interest) in industrial development bonds. See Part II, Item 7 “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations — Liquidity and Capital Resources”.
 
(3)   The sale of the Selma, Texas properties to related party partnerships was consummated during the first quarter of fiscal 2007. See Note 1 to the Consolidated Financial Statements - “Property, Plant and Equipment”.
 
(4)   The Elgin Office Building (part of the Elgin Site) was acquired in April 2005, and 41.5% of the Elgin Office Building was leased back to the seller through April 2008. The lease was not renewed. Approximately 25% of the Elgin Office Building is currently being leased to other third parties. The remaining portion of the office building may be leased to third parties; however, there can be no assurance that we will be able to lease the unoccupied space. Further capital expenditures will be necessary to lease the remaining space, including the space previously rented by the seller of the Elgin Site.
 
(5)   The Elgin Warehouse Building (part of the Elgin Site) was acquired in April 2005 and was expanded from 653,000 to 1,001,000 square feet and was modified to our specifications. Our Chicago area distribution operation was transferred to the Elgin Warehouse Building in July 2006 and our corporate headquarters were relocated to the Elgin Warehouse Building in February 2007. The majority of our Chicago area processing activities were transferred to the Elgin Warehouse Building during fiscal 2007, with the remaining activities transferred in fiscal 2008 and the first quarter of fiscal 2009.

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b. Manufacturing Capability, Utilization, Technology and Engineering
Our principal production facilities are equipped with modern processing and packaging machinery and equipment.
The Elgin Site was designed to our specifications with what we believe to be state-of-the-art equipment. The layout is designed to efficiently move products from raw storage to processing to packaging to distribution. The majority of processing operations at our previous Chicago area facilities were transferred to the Elgin Site during fiscal 2007, with the remaining operations transferred in fiscal 2008 and the first quarter of fiscal 2009. Also, the Elgin Site is designed to accommodate an increase in production capacity of 25% to 40% in part because the Elgin Site provides substantially more square footage than the aggregate space previously available in our Chicago area facilities.
The Selma facility contains our automated pecan shelling and bulk packaging operation. The facility’s pecan shelling production lines currently have the capacity to shell in excess of 90 million inshell pounds of pecans annually. For fiscal 2010, we processed approximately 55 million inshell pounds of pecans at the Selma, Texas facility.
The Bainbridge facility is located in the largest peanut producing region in the United States. This facility takes direct delivery of farmer stock peanuts and cleans, shells, sizes, inspects, blanches, roasts and packages them for sale to our customers. The production line at the Bainbridge facility is almost entirely automated and has the capacity to shell approximately 120 million inshell pounds of peanuts annually. During fiscal 2010, the Bainbridge facility shelled approximately 40 million inshell pounds of peanuts.
The Garysburg facility has the capacity to process approximately 60 million inshell pounds of farmer stock peanuts annually. For fiscal 2010, the Garysburg facility processed approximately 20 million pounds of inshell peanuts.
The Gustine facility is used for walnut shelling, warehousing and distribution. This facility has the capacity to shell in excess of 50 million inshell pounds of walnuts annually. For fiscal 2010, the Gustine facility shelled approximately 45 million inshell pounds of walnuts.
The Modesto, California facility is used primarily for the OVH produce business.
Our Bainbridge, Georgia, Garysburg, North Carolina, Selma, Texas and Gustine, California facilities shell peanuts, process peanuts purchased directly from farmers, shell pecans and shell walnuts, respectively. The annual utilization rates for these activities at each facility is outlined above. In addition, the Bainbridge, Georgia, Garysburg, North Carolina, Selma, Texas and Gustine, California facilities are equipped to handle the processing, packaging, warehousing, distribution, and in the case of our Bainbridge, Georgia and Garysburg, North Carolina facilities, the purchasing, of nuts. Furthermore, at our Elgin Site, we process, package, warehouse and distribute nuts. We currently have more than sufficient capacity at our facilities to handle the aforementioned operations.
Item 3 — Legal Proceedings
We are a party to various lawsuits, proceedings and other matters arising out of the conduct of our business. Currently, it is management’s opinion that the ultimate resolution of these matters will not have a material adverse effect upon our business, financial condition, results of operation or cash flows.
Item 4 — (Removed and Reserved)

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EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF THE REGISTRANT
Pursuant to General Instruction G(3) of Form 10-K and Instruction 3 to Item 401(b) of Regulation S-K, the following executive officer description information is included as an unnumbered item in Part I of this Report in lieu of being included in the Proxy Statement for our annual meeting of stockholders to be held on November 3, 2010:
Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, Chief Executive Officer, age 47 Mr. Sanfilippo has been employed by us since 1991 and in November 2006 was named our Chief Executive Officer. Mr. Sanfilippo served as our Executive Vice President Sales and Marketing from January 2001 to November 2006. He served as our Senior Vice President Sales and Marketing from August 1999 to January 2001. Mr. Sanfilippo has been a member of our Board of Directors since August 1999. He served as General Manager West Coast Operations from September 1991 to September 1993. He served as Vice President West Coast Operations and Sales from October 1993 to September 1995, and Mr. Sanfilippo served as Vice President Sales and Marketing from October 1995 to August 1999.
Michael J. Valentine, Chief Financial Officer, Group President and Secretary, age 51 Mr. Valentine has been employed by us since 1987. In November 2006, Mr. Valentine was named our Chief Financial Officer and Group President and, in May 2007, Mr. Valentine was named our Secretary. Mr. Valentine served as our Executive Vice President Finance, Chief Financial Officer and Secretary from January 2001 to November 2006. Mr. Valentine served as our Senior Vice President and Secretary from August 1999 to January 2001. He has been a member of our Board of Directors since April 1997. Mr. Valentine served as our Vice President and Secretary from December 1995 to August 1999. He served as an Assistant Secretary and the General Manager of External Operations for us from June 1987 and 1990, respectively, to December 1995. Mr. Valentine’s responsibilities also include peanut, imported nut and other ingredient procurement and contract packaging business.
Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., Chief Operating Officer, President and Assistant Secretary, age 42 Mr. Sanfilippo has been employed by us since 1992. In November 2006, Mr. Sanfilippo was named our Chief Operating Officer and President and, in May 2007, Mr. Sanfilippo was named our Treasurer and held that position until January 2009. Mr. Sanfilippo served as our Executive Vice President Operations, retaining his position as Assistant Secretary, which he assumed in December 1995 from 2001 to November 2006. Mr. Sanfilippo became a member of our Board of Directors in December 2003. He became our Senior Vice President Operations in August 1999 and served as Vice President Operations from December 1995 to August 1999. Prior to that, Mr. Sanfilippo was the General Manager of our Gustine, California facility beginning in October 1995, and from June 1992 to October 1995 he served as Assistant Treasurer and worked in our Financial Relations Department. Mr. Sanfilippo is responsible for overseeing our non-peanut shelling operations, including plant operations and procurement.
James A. Valentine, Chief Information Officer, age 46 Mr. Valentine has been employed by us since 1986 and in November 2006 was named our Chief Information Officer. He served as our Executive Vice President Information Technology from August 2001 to November 2006. Mr. Valentine served as Senior Vice President Information Technology from January 2000 to August 2001 and as Vice President of Management Information Systems from January 1995 to January 2000.
Michael G. Cannon, Senior Vice President, Corporate Operations, age 57 Mr. Cannon joined us in October 2005 as Senior Vice President of Operations. Previously, he was Vice President of Operations at Sugar Foods Corp., a manufacturer and distributor of food products, from 1995 to October 2005. Mr. Cannon is responsible for the production operations for all of our facilities.
Thomas J. Fordonski, Senior Vice President, Human Resources, age 57 — Mr. Fordonski joined us in August, 2007 as Vice President of Human Resources and was promoted to Senior Vice President of Human Resources in January 2010. Previously, he was Director of Human Resources for Continental AG, a German-based global manufacturer of electronic automotive equipment. Prior to that, Mr. Fordonski spent 25 years at Motorola, Incorporated, with his career culminating as the Director of Human Resources for the global supply chain in the messaging and cellular communications business. He is responsible for leading the human resources activities and functions.

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Robert J. Sarlls, Senior Vice President, Consumer Sales, Strategy and Business Development, age 47 — Mr. Sarlls joined us in May 2009 as Vice President of Strategy and Business Development and was promoted to Senior Vice President of Consumer Sales, Strategy and Business Development in January 2010. Previously, Mr. Sarlls was a Director at RBC Capital Markets, the investment banking arm of the Royal Bank of Canada. Prior to that, he was a Member of Strategic Food Capital Partners, a firm which provided food industry focused advisory services to the private equity community. Prior to that, Mr. Sarlls spent eight years and was a Vice President with Rabobank International, a global leader in providing financing and advisory services to the food and agribusiness industry, where he focused on domestic and international mergers & acquisitions. Mr. Sarlls is responsible for leading our Company’s sales to food, drug, mass and specialty retailers in the United States, as well as refining and executing our Company’s business strategies and spearheading domestic and international new business opportunities.
Everardo Soria, Senior Vice President, Pecan Operations and Procurement, age 53 Mr. Soria has been with us since 1985. He was named Director of Pecan Operations in July 1995 and was named Vice President Pecan Operations and Procurement in January 2002. Mr. Soria was named Senior Vice President Pecan Operations and Procurement in August 2003. He is responsible for overseeing the procurement of pecans and for the shelling of pecans at our Selma, Texas facility.
Walter (Bobby) Tankersley Jr., Senior Vice President, Industrial Sales, age 58 Mr. Tankersley has been employed by us since January 2002 and is responsible for directing the sales of the industrial distribution channel which includes pecans, almonds, walnuts, macadamias, peanuts, cashews and hazelnuts. He has over 30 years of experience in the nut industry where he was previously Vice President of Sales & Marketing at the Young Pecan Company and Director of Industrial Sales at the Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Company. In addition to sales, he is responsible for procurement of almonds, walnuts, macadamias and pistachios as well as providing commodity analysis, crop forecasts, and consumption trend analysis for various nut commodities.
Jose Cabanin, Vice President, International Sales, age 54 Mr. Cabanin joined us in May 2008 as Vice President of International Sales. From 2005 to 2008, he was the Vice President of International Sales at Home Products International, a leading manufacturer of storage and organizational products sold throughout the United States, Canada and Latin America. From 1999 to 2005, he was the Senior Vice President of International Sales for Medline Industries, a privately held manufacturer and distributor of healthcare products. Mr. Cabanin is responsible for leading our international sales activities.
Brenda Cannon, Vice President, Food Safety/Quality, age 55 — Ms. Cannon has been employed by us since June, 2008 bringing over 30 years experience in the food industry to our company. Previously, she spent three years as the Director Food Safety/Quality at The Cheesecake Factory Bakeries, Inc. Prior to that she spent 14 years with Sugar Foods Corporation managing quality, food safety and R&D culminating as the Vice President of Food Safety/Quality and Technical Services. Ms. Cannon is responsible for developing, implementing and leading food safety and quality policies, procedures and programs at the corporate level and at the manufacturing sites.
John H. Garoni, Vice President, Foodservice Sales, age 65 Mr. Garoni has been employed by us since 1991 and was named Vice President of Foodservice Sales in August 2009. Mr. Garoni has over 25 years experience in the nut industry. Previously he was Vice President of Sales at Sunshine Nut Company (which we acquired in 1991), over Industrial and Foodservice Sales. Prior to that Mr. Garoni spent over 12 years as a District Manager with American Can/James River Corporation in Central and South Texas. He is responsible for directing the sales of our Foodservice distribution channel.
Frank S. Pellegrino, Vice President, Finance and Corporate Controller, age 36 Mr. Pellegrino joined us in January 2007 as Director of Accounting and was appointed Corporate Controller in September 2007. In January 2009, he was named Vice President Finance and Corporate Controller. Previously, Mr. Pellegrino was Internal Audit Manager at W.W. Grainger, a business-to-business distributor, from June 2003 to January 2007. Prior to that, he was a Manager in the Assurance Practice of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, where he was employed from 1996 to 2003. Mr. Pellegrino is responsible for our accounting functions.

16


 

William R. Pokrajac, Vice President, Risk Management and Investor Relations, age 56 Mr. Pokrajac has been with us since 1985. He served as our Controller from 1987 to August 2003 and as our Vice President of Finance from 2001 until September 2007, when he was named Vice President, Risk Management and Investor Relations. Mr. Pokrajac is responsible for our risk management and investor relation activities, and was named our Treasurer in January 2009.
Herbert J. Marros, Director of Financial Reporting and Taxation, age 52 Mr. Marros has been with us since 1995. Mr. Marros served as Assistant Controller from 1995 until 2003, when he was promoted to Controller. In September 2007, he was named Director of Financial Reporting and Taxation. Mr. Marros is responsible for our internal and external financial reporting and tax activities.
RELATIONSHIPS AMONG CERTAIN DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS
Jasper B. Sanfilippo, a director and former Chairman of the Board of our Company, is (i) the father of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr. and Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, executive officers and directors of our Company, (ii) the brother-in-law of Mathias A. Valentine, a director of our Company, and (iii) the uncle of Michael J. Valentine, an executive officer and a director of our Company and James A. Valentine, an executive officer of our Company. Michael J. Valentine, Chief Financial Officer, Group President and Secretary and a director of our Company, is (i) the son of Mathias A. Valentine, (ii) the brother of James A. Valentine, (iii) the nephew of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, and (iv) the cousin of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr. and Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo. Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, Chief Executive Officer and a director of our Company, is (i) the son of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, (ii) the brother of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., (iii) the nephew of Mathias A. Valentine, and (iv) the cousin of Michael J. Valentine and James A. Valentine. Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., Chief Operating Officer, President and a director of our Company, is (i) the son of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, (ii) the brother of Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, (iii) the nephew of Mathias A. Valentine, and (iv) the cousin of Michael J. Valentine and James A. Valentine. James A. Valentine, Chief Information Officer, is (i) the son of Mathias A. Valentine, (ii) the brother of Michael J Valentine, (iii) the nephew of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, and (iv) the cousin of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr. and Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo. Michael G. Cannon, an executive officer of our Company, is married to Brenda Cannon, also an executive officer of our Company. Timothy R. Donovan, a member of our Board of Directors, is a nephew by marriage of Jasper B. Sanfilippo and Mathias A. Valentine, both of whom are directors of our Company, and the first cousin by marriage of Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr., Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo, Michael J. Valentine and James A. Valentine, each of whom is an executive officer and certain of whom are also directors of our Company.
PART II
Item 5 — Market for Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder Matters
We have two classes of stock: Class A Stock and Common Stock. The holders of Common Stock are entitled to elect 25% of the members of the Board of Directors, rounded up to the nearest whole number, and the holders of Class A Stock are entitled to elect the remaining directors. With respect to matters other than the election of directors or any matters for which class voting is required by law, the holders of Common Stock are entitled to one vote per share while the holders of Class A Stock are entitled to ten votes per share. Our Class A Stock is not registered under the Securities Act of 1933 and there is no established public trading market for the Class A Stock. However, each share of Class A Stock is convertible at the option of the holder at any time and from time to time (and, upon the occurrence of certain events specified in our Restated Certificate of Incorporation, automatically converts) into one share of Common Stock.

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Our Common Stock is quoted on the NASDAQ Global Market and our trading symbol is “JBSS”. The following tables set forth, for the quarters indicated, the high and low reported sales prices for the Common Stock as reported on the NASDAQ Global Market.
                 
    Price Range of  
    Common Stock  
Year Ended June 24, 2010   High     Low  
4th Quarter
  $ 16.00     $ 12.12  
3rd Quarter
  $ 17.50     $ 14.29  
2nd Quarter
  $ 17.68     $ 10.88  
1st Quarter
  $ 12.50     $ 7.03  
                 
    Price Range of  
    Common Stock  
Year Ended June 25, 2009   High     Low  
4th Quarter
  $ 7.82     $ 4.01  
3rd Quarter
  $ 6.98     $ 4.10  
2nd Quarter
  $ 8.87     $ 4.30  
1st Quarter
  $ 10.75     $ 7.51  
As of August 18, 2010, there were 63 holders and 15 holders of record of our Common Stock and Class A Stock, respectively.
Under our Company’s Restated Certificate of Incorporation, the Class A Stock and the Common Stock are entitled to share equally on a share for share basis in any dividends declared by the Board of Directors on our common equity. However, our current financing agreements prohibit the payment of dividends other than in the form of Common Stock. Our Board of Directors has not declared dividends since 1995.
For purposes of the calculation of the aggregate market value of our voting stock held by non-affiliates as set forth on the cover page of this Report, we did not consider any of the siblings of Jasper B. Sanfilippo or Mathias A. Valentine, or any of the lineal descendants of either Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Mathias A. Valentine or such siblings (other than those who are executive officers of our Company or who have formed a group within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, with either Jasper B. Sanfilippo or Mathias A. Valentine) as an affiliate. See “Review of Related Party Transactions” and “Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management” contained in our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting and “Executive Officers of the Registrant Relationships Among Certain Directors and Executive Officers” appearing immediately before Part II of this Report.
Securities Authorized under Equity Compensation Plans
The following table sets forth information as of June 24, 2010, with respect to equity securities authorized for issuance pursuant to equity compensation plans previously approved by stockholders of our Company and equity compensation plans not previously approved by our Company’s stockholders.

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                    (c) Number of  
            (b) Weighted     securities remaining  
            average     available for future  
    (a) Number of     exercise price     issuance under equity  
    securities to be     of outstanding     compensation plans  
    issued upon     options,     (excluding securities  
    exercise of options,     warrants and     reflected in Column  
  warrants and rights     rights     (a))  
Plan Category 
                       
Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders — stock options
    327,690     $ 12.08       888,500 (1)
Equity compensation plans approved by stockholders — restricted stock units
    107,500             392,500 (1)
 
                       
Equity compensation plans not approved by stockholders
                 
 
(1)   Under our 2008 Equity Incentive Plan, as amended, a total of 888,500 equity based stock awards are available for distribution, 392,500 of which may be used for grants of Common Stock, restricted stock and restricted stock units.
Item 6 — Selected Financial Data
The following historical consolidated financial data as of and for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009, June 26, 2008, June 28, 2007 and June 29, 2006 were derived from our consolidated financial statements. The financial data should be read in conjunction with our audited consolidated financial statements and notes thereto, which are included elsewhere herein, and with Item 7 — “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations”. The information below is not necessarily indicative of the results of future operations. Our Board of Directors has not declared dividends since 1995. OVH results are included from May 21, 2010, the acquisition date.
Statement of Operations Data: (dollars in thousands, except per share data)
                                         
    Year Ended  
    June 24,     June 25,     June 26,     June 28,     June 29,  
    2010     2009     2008     2007     2006  
Net sales
  $ 561,633     $ 553,846     $ 541,771     $ 540,858     $ 579,564  
Cost of sales
    466,847       481,447       475,538       499,569       542,447  
 
                             
Gross profit
    94,786       72,399       66,233       41,289       37,117  
Selling and administrative expenses
    65,114       57,150       53,797       55,457       55,099  
Restructuring expenses
          (332 )     1,765              
Gain related to real estate sales
                      (3,047 )     (940 )
Goodwill impairment loss
                            1,242  
 
                             
Income (loss) from operations
    29,672       15,581       10,671       (11,121 )     (18,284 )
Interest expense
    (5,653 )     (7,646 )     (10,502 )     (9,347 )     (6,516 )
Debt extinguishment costs
                (6,737 )            
Rental and miscellaneous (expense) income, net
    (1,147 )     (1,277 )     (286 )     (629 )     (610 )
 
                             
Income (loss) before income taxes
    22,872       6,658       (6,854 )     (21,097 )     (25,410 )
Income tax expense (benefit)
    8,447       (259 )     (897 )     (7,520 )     (8,689 )
 
                             
Net income (loss)
  $ 14,425     $ 6,917     $ (5,957 )   $ (13,577 )   $ (16,721 )
 
                             
Basic earnings (loss) per common share
  $ 1.36     $ 0.65     $ (0.56 )   $ (1.28 )   $ (1.58 )
Diluted earnings (loss) per common share
  $ 1.34     $ 0.65     $ (0.56 )   $ (1.28 )   $ (1.58 )

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Balance Sheet Data: (dollars in thousands)
                                         
    June 24,     June 25,     June 26,     June 28,     June 29,  
    2010     2009     2008     2007     2006  
Working capital
  $ 49,149     $ 52,701     $ 42,863     $ 15,461     $ 22,617  
Total assets
    358,281       322,699       350,784       367,271       390,912  
Long-term debt, less current maturities
    42,680       49,016       52,356       19,783       5,618  
Total debt
    98,666       93,938       132,555       148,034       137,676  
Stockholders’ equity
    179,894       165,499       158,372       162,991       180,110  
Item 7 — Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations
The following discussion and analysis should be read in conjunction with the Consolidated Financial Statements and the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements. Our fiscal year ends on the final Thursday of June each year, and typically consists of fifty-two weeks (four thirteen week quarters). References herein to fiscal 2011 are to the fiscal year ending June 30, 2011. References herein to fiscal 2010 are to the fiscal year ended June 24, 2010. References herein to fiscal 2009 are to the fiscal year ended June 25, 2009. References herein to fiscal 2008 are to the fiscal year ended June 26, 2008. As used herein, unless the context otherwise indicates, the terms “Company”, “we”, “us”, “our” or “our Company” collectively refer to John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. and JBSS Properties, LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Our Company’s Credit Facility and Mortgage Facility, as defined below, are sometimes collectively referred to as “our financing arrangements.”
We are one of the leading processors and marketers of peanuts, pecans, cashews, walnuts, almonds and other nuts in the United States. These nuts are sold under a variety of private labels and under the Fisher, Orchard Valley Harvest and Sunshine Country brand names. We also market and distribute, and in most cases manufacture or process, a diverse product line of food and snack products, including peanut butter, candy and confections, natural snacks and trail mixes, sunflower seeds, corn snacks, sesame sticks and other sesame snack products. We distribute our products in the consumer, industrial, food service, contract packaging and export distribution channels.
We developed a five-year strategic plan during fiscal 2009 to help us achieve long-term profitable growth. Our long-term goals include (i) attaining recognition by global retailers, food service providers and consumers as a world class nut partner, (ii) attaining recognition as a high quality, well-run food business that utilizes our vast industry knowledge and innovation to achieve high growth and profitability, (iii) meeting the demands of nut consumers throughout the world, (iv) profitably increasing our market share in private brands by using innovation valued by our customers, (v) substantially increasing our presence in the food service distribution channel, (vi) providing the best total solution to retailers by increasing our presence beyond the traditional nut aisles of stores, (vii) utilizing our Fisher name recognition as a foundation for targeted sustained growth via value-added snack and baking products, and (viii) utilizing acquisitions, joint ventures and/or strategic alliances as they present themselves to grow our business and expand into new target markets. We have executed portions of this strategy during fiscal 2010, including a significant increase in private label business at a customer and consummating the Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. (“OVH”) acquisition which gives us a significant presence in the produce section of supermarkets.
We face a number of challenges in the future. Specific challenges, among others, include continuing to increase our profitability, intensified competition and fluctuating commodity costs, increased demand for pecans and walnuts in China, integrating the acquired OVH business into our operations and executing our strategic plan. We will focus on seeking additional profitable business to utilize the additional production capacity at our facility in Elgin, Illinois that houses our primary manufacturing operations and corporate headquarters (the “Elgin Site”). We expect to be able to continue to devote more funds to promote and advertise our Fisher brand in order to attempt to regain market share that has been lost in recent years. However, this effort may be challenging because, among other things, consumer preferences have shifted towards lower-priced private label products from higher-priced branded products as a result of current economic conditions. In addition, private label products generally provide lower margins than branded products. Also, we will continue to face the ongoing challenges specific to our business such as food safety and regulatory issues and the maintenance and growth of our customer base. See the information referenced in Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors”.

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Annual Highlights
We built upon the momentum of fiscal 2009 with significantly improved financial results in fiscal 2010. Our income before income taxes was $22.9 million for fiscal 2010 compared to $6.7 million for fiscal 2009. Prior to fiscal 2009, we experienced three consecutive years with losses before income taxes. The improvement in profitability is due primarily to (i) lower acquisition costs during the first half of fiscal 2010 for all major product types except walnuts, (ii) a 3.0% increase in sales volume, as measured in terms of pounds shipped, and (iii) executing portions of our five-year strategic plan.
Our net sales were $561.6 million for fiscal 2010, a $7.8 million, or 1.4%, increase over fiscal 2009. The increase was $3.8 million, excluding OVH sales from May 21, 2010, the acquisition date, to June 24, 2010. The increase was due to an overall sales volume increase of 3.0% partially offset by a 1.6% decrease in average selling price per pound. We have significantly increased the size of our sales and marketing leadership personnel in fiscal 2010 and have increased our promotional spending. We believe we now have the human and financial resources to execute our five-year strategic plan to grow our business.
On May 21, 2010, we acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities of OVH. The aggregate purchase price was $32.8 million, funded from excess availability in our Credit Facility (as defined below). The purchase price may be increased up to $10.1 million, contingent upon performance of the acquired business for the 2010 and 2011 calendar years. OVH is a leading supplier of branded and private label nut and dried fruit products in the produce category, an area in which we had a minimal presence. The OVH acquisition (i) expands our portfolio and market presence into the store perimeter beyond the traditional nut aisles, (ii) establishes a platform to build a truly national produce nut program, and (iii) broadens our product breadth and production capabilities. Based upon OVH’s financial results for calendar 2009 and 2008 disclosed in our Form 8-K/A filed on August 3, 2010, our sales would have been approximately $50 — $60 million higher. While we expect the OVH acquisition will improve our financial performance, there can be no assurances that the OVH acquisition will not have a negative impact (or no impact at all) on our financial performance. See Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors.”
Despite paying $32.8 million for the OVH acquisition, our total debt increased by only $4.7 million from June 25, 2009 to June 24, 2010. Our positive cash flow from operations of $42.1 million and our limited capital expenditures of $8.5 million allowed us to consummate the acquisition without incurring significant additional debt.
Results of Operations
The following table sets forth the percentage relationship of certain items to net sales for the periods indicated and the percentage increase or decrease of such items from fiscal 2009 to fiscal 2010 and from fiscal 2008 to fiscal 2009.
                                         
    Percentage of Net Sales     Percentage Increase/Decrease  
                            Fiscal 2010     Fiscal 2009  
    Fiscal 2010     Fiscal 2009     Fiscal 2008     vs. 2009     vs. 2008  
Net sales
    100.0 %     100.0 %     100.0 %     1.4 %     2.2 %
Gross profit
    16.9       13.1       12.2       30.9       9.3  
Selling expenses
    7.2       6.6       6.4       11.0       4.5  
Administrative expenses
    4.4       3.7       3.5       19.0       9.5  
Restructuring expenses
          (0.1 )     0.3             (118.8 )
Fiscal 2010 Compared to Fiscal 2009
Net Sales.
Net sales increased to $561.6 million for fiscal 2010 from $553.8 million for fiscal 2009, an increase of $7.8 million, or 1.4%. OVH net sales from May 21, 2010 to June 24, 2010 represented $4.0 million of the $7.8 million increase. Sales volume, measured as pounds shipped, increased by 3.0% for the same time period. Net sales, measured in dollars, increased in our consumer distribution channel and decreased in our industrial, food service, contract packaging and export distribution channels. Sales volume, measured in terms of pounds shipped, increased in the consumer and food service distribution channels and decreased in the industrial, contract packaging and export distribution channels.

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The following table shows a comparison of sales by distribution channel, and as a percentage of total net sales (dollars in thousands):
                                 
    Fiscal 2010     Fiscal 2009  
Distribution Channel
                               
Consumer
  $ 331,509       59.0 %   $ 317,097       57.3 %
Industrial
    78,255       13.9       79,147       14.3  
Food Service
    63,186       11.3       64,657       11.7  
Contract Packaging
    52,332       9.3       55,753       10.0  
Export
    36,351       6.5       37,192       6.7  
 
                       
Total
  $ 561,633       100.0 %   $ 553,846       100.0 %
 
                       
The following table shows an annual comparison of sales by product type as a percentage of total gross sales. The table is based on gross sales, rather than net sales, because certain adjustments, such as promotional discounts, are not allocable to product type.
                 
  Fiscal 2010     Fiscal 2009  
Product Type
               
Peanuts
    19.9 %     21.8 %
Pecans
    19.0       19.2  
Cashews & Mixed Nuts
    21.1       22.5  
Walnuts
    12.4       13.3  
Almonds
    11.5       11.3  
Other
    16.1       11.9  
 
           
Total
    100.0 %     100.0 %
 
           
Net sales in the consumer distribution channel increased by 4.5% in dollars and 6.4% in volume in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009. Private label consumer sales volume, excluding the effect of OVH private label sales, increased by 8.4% in sales volume, or $13.3 million in gross sales, in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009 primarily due to (i) a $31.5 million increase at a customer, primarily in snack and trail mixes and (ii) a $9.9 million increase in gross sales to a customer that was added during the last half of fiscal 2009. These increases were partially offset by (i) a loss of $17.9 million and $4.8 million in business at two former private label customers and (ii) a $7.7 million decline in business at a customer.
Fisher brand sales volume increased by 4.5% in sales volume, or $3.8 million in gross sales, in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009 primarily due to a $8.0 million increase in baking nut sales to a customer. This increase was partially offset by a $4.1 million decrease in overall Fisher snack sales.
Net sales in the industrial distribution channel decreased by 1.1% in dollars and 2.8% in volume in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009. For both the quarterly and annual comparisons, sales volume increases for almonds, macadamias and walnuts were offset by a decrease in pecan sales due to a limited supply of pecans available for sale through the industrial distribution channel.
Net sales in the food service distribution channel decreased by 2.3% in dollars, but increased 4.3% in volume in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009. The increase in volume is due primarily to a $2.0 million increase in peanut butter business at certain food service distributors.
Net sales in the contract packaging distribution channel decreased by 6.1% in dollars and 2.2% in volume in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009. The sales volume decrease is due to lower sales to our major contract packaging customer. This decrease was partially offset during the first half of fiscal 2010 by increased sales to a separate contract packaging customer.
Net sales in the export distribution channel decreased by 2.3% in dollars and 2.5% in volume in fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009. The decrease in volume is due primarily to lower walnut sales to industrial export customers.

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Gross Profit.
Gross profit increased 30.9% to $94.8 million for fiscal 2010 from $72.4 million for fiscal 2009. Gross profit margin increased to 16.9% of net sales for fiscal 2010 from 13.1% for fiscal 2009. The increase in the gross profit margin was due primarily to lower commodity costs during the first half of fiscal 2010 and improvements in manufacturing efficiencies. Gross profit margins improved on the sales of all major products except walnuts due to lower acquisition costs in the first half of fiscal 2010. Walnut gross profit margins declined in the fiscal year comparison because of higher acquisition costs during the last three quarters of fiscal 2010. We experienced some pressure on gross profit margin during the last half of fiscal 2010 due to higher tree nut costs because of increasing exports of United States origin nuts resulting from a weaker dollar and increasing demand for tree nuts in China, especially for walnuts and pecans.
Operating Expenses.
Selling expenses for fiscal 2010 were $40.5 million, an increase of $4.0 million, or 11.0%, from fiscal 2009. This increase is primarily due to (i) a $1.3 million increase in salaries due primarily to the expansion of our sales and marketing teams, (ii) a $1.0 million increase in incentive compensation expense due to improved operating results and a higher number of participants, and (iii) a $1.3 million increase in marketing and advertising expenditures. Administrative expenses for fiscal 2010 were $24.6 million, an increase of $3.9 million, or 19.0%, from fiscal 2009. This increase is primarily due to (i) a $0.8 million increase in compensation expense, (ii) a $2.1 million increase in incentive compensation expense from improved operating results and a higher number of participants, and (iii) a $0.7 million increase in legal and other advisory fees related to the amendment of our Credit Facility and transaction costs associated with the OVH acquisition. These increases were partially offset by a $0.6 million decrease in recall costs. While the OVH acquisition contributed to the increase in operating expenses for fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009, the effect was not significant. Amortization expense related to the OVH acquisition was $0.2 million in fiscal 2010.Total amortization expense related to intangible assets is expected to be $2.2 million for fiscal 2011. Operating expenses were reduced by $0.3 million during the first quarter of fiscal 2009 for the difference between our previously estimated cost of withdrawal from the multiemployer pension plan and the actual cost determined by the multiemployer pension plan.
Income from Operations.
Due to the factors discussed above, the income from our operations was $29.7 million, or 5.3% of net sales, for fiscal 2010, compared to $15.6 million, or 2.8% of net sales, for fiscal 2009.
Interest Expense.
Interest expense decreased to $5.7 million for fiscal 2010 from $7.6 million for fiscal 2009. The decrease is primarily due to lower average debt levels during fiscal 2010 compared to fiscal 2009.
Rental and Miscellaneous (Expense) Income, Net.
Net rental and miscellaneous (expense) income was an expense of $1.1 million for fiscal 2010 compared to an expense of $1.3 million for fiscal 2009. The net rental and miscellaneous expense is due to the vacancy rate at the office building located at the Elgin Site.
Income Tax Expense (Benefit).
Income tax expense was $8.4 million, or 36.9% of income before income taxes, for fiscal 2010 compared to income tax benefit of $(0.3) million, or (3.9)% of income before income taxes, for fiscal 2009. We eliminated the valuation allowance related to the potential realization of net operating loss carryforwards during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2009. Income tax expense should be at a normal rate for the foreseeable future. Our profitability will enable us to take advantage of the domestic manufacturing deduction for fiscal 2010, which has been included in our effective tax rate estimate.
Net Income.
Net income was $14.4 million, or $1.36 basic and $1.34 diluted per common share, for fiscal 2010, compared to $6.9 million, or $0.65 basic and diluted per common share, for fiscal 2009, due to the factors discussed above.

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Fiscal 2009 Compared to Fiscal 2008
Net Sales.
Net sales increased to $553.8 million for fiscal 2009 from $541.8 million for fiscal 2008, an increase of $12.1 million, or 2.2%. Sales volume, measured as pounds shipped, decreased by 1.8% for the same time period. Net sales, measured in dollars and sales volume, increased in our consumer and contract packaging distribution channels and decreased in our industrial, food service and export distribution channels.
The following table shows a comparison of sales by distribution channel, and as a percentage of total net sales (dollars in thousands):
                                 
    Fiscal 2009     Fiscal 2008  
Distribution Channel
                               
Consumer
  $ 317,097       57.3 %   $ 294,021       54.2 %
Industrial
    79,147       14.3       92,792       17.1  
Food Service
    64,657       11.7       68,132       12.6  
Contract Packaging
    55,753       10.0       47,441       8.8  
Export
    37,192       6.7       39,385       7.3  
 
                       
Total
  $ 553,846       100.0 %   $ 541,771       100.0 %
 
                       
The following table shows an annual comparison of sales by product type as a percentage of total gross sales. The table is based on gross sales, rather than net sales, because certain adjustments, such as promotional discounts, are not allocable to product type.
                 
  Fiscal 2009     Fiscal 2008  
Product Type
               
Peanuts
    21.8 %     20.1 %
Pecans
    19.2       22.6  
Cashews & Mixed Nuts
    22.5       20.8  
Walnuts
    13.3       14.7  
Almonds
    11.3       11.9  
Other
    11.9       9.9  
 
           
Total
    100.0 %     100.0 %
 
           
Net sales in the consumer distribution channel increased by 7.8% in dollars and 5.5% in volume in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008. Private label consumer sales volume increased by 7.3% in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008 primarily due to (i) a significant new customer for the last half of fiscal 2009; (ii) expansion of business at an existing customer; and (iii) a general increase in sales of private label products due to economic conditions. Fisher brand sales volume increased 3.2% for fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008 primarily due to an increase in inshell peanut sales to a customer partially offset by decreased sales to other customers.
Net sales in the industrial distribution channel decreased by 14.7% in dollars and 23.3% in sales volume in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008. The sales volume decrease is primarily due to (i) lower raw peanut sales to other peanut processors and oil processors resulting, in part, from a planned reduction in peanuts shelled at our Bainbridge, Georgia facility; (ii) increased price competition from processors who are directly aligned with nut growers; (iii) a decrease in the availability of our supply of tree nuts for the industrial distribution channel; and (iv) a decrease in demand in the industrial distribution channel for nuts, as fewer new products with nuts as ingredients are being developed.
Net sales in the food service distribution channel decreased by 5.1% in dollars and 4.1% in volume in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008. This decrease is primarily due to the effects of current economic conditions as consumers spent less money at restaurants during fiscal 2009, as compared to fiscal 2008.
Net sales in the contract packaging distribution channel increased by 17.5% in dollars and 6.7% in volume in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008. The significant sales volume increase is primarily due to increased business with our major contract packaging customer.

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Net sales in the export distribution channel decreased by 5.6% in dollars and 3.0% in volume in fiscal 2009 compared to fiscal 2008. The decrease in volume is primarily due to lower sales to our industrial export customers.
Gross Profit.
Gross profit increased 9.3% to $72.4 million for fiscal 2009 from $66.2 million for fiscal 2008. Gross profit margin increased to 13.1% of net sales for fiscal 2009 from 12.2% for fiscal 2008. We made a voluntary pistachio recall during the time period of March 31, 2009 through April 8, 2009 as a precautionary measure because such products may be contaminated with salmonella. This voluntary recall was a follow-up to the industry-wide voluntary recall of pistachios announced by Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella, Inc., and had a 0.3% percentage point effect on gross profit margin for fiscal 2009. The improvement was achieved largely due to (i) a decrease in redundant costs, as all Chicago area operations are now consolidated at the Elgin Site; (ii) a decrease in external contractor charges related to moving equipment from the previous Chicago area facilities to the Elgin Site; and (iii) improved efficiency variances. Gross profit margins improved on sales of almonds and walnuts due to lower acquisition costs and decreased on peanuts and cashews. Temporary delays in supplier shipments of peanuts and cashews along with lower-priced purchase contracts resulted in limited opportunities for purchasing these commodities at low costs. In order to fulfill our obligations to our customers, we purchased these commodities in the high-priced spot market during the first half of fiscal 2009.
Operating Expenses.
Selling expenses for fiscal 2009 were $36.5 million, an increase of $1.6 million, or 4.5%, from fiscal 2008. The increase is due primarily to a $2.8 million increase in advertising and promotion in our efforts to rejuvenate the Fisher brand and a $0.9 million increase in incentive compensation expense. These increases in selling expense were partially offset by a $1.2 million reduction in freight expense due to more customers picking up their orders at our facilities and lower fuel costs and savings resulting from our restructuring initiatives executed during fiscal 2008. Administrative expenses for fiscal 2009 were $20.7 million, an increase of $1.8 million, or 9.5%, from fiscal 2008. This increase is due primarily to a $0.6 million increase in incentive compensation expense and $0.5 million related to the pistachio recall. Operating expenses for fiscal 2008 included $1.8 million of restructuring expenses, primarily related to the estimated cost of withdrawal from a multiemployer pension plan. Operating expenses were reduced by $0.3 million during the first quarter of fiscal 2009 for the difference between our previously estimated cost of withdrawal from the multiemployer pension plan and the actual cost determined by the multiemployer pension plan.
Income from Operations.
Due to the factors discussed above, our income from operations was $15.6 million, or 2.8% of net sales, for fiscal 2009, compared to $10.7 million, or 2.0% of net sales, for fiscal 2008.
Interest Expense.
Interest expense decreased to $7.6 million for fiscal 2009 from $10.5 million for fiscal 2008. The decrease is primarily due to lower short-term interest rates on our Credit Facility compared to rates on our Prior Credit Facility (as defined below) which was in place during the majority of fiscal 2008 and also lower average debt levels.
Debt Extinguishment Costs.
Debt extinguishment costs of $6.7 million were recorded for fiscal 2008. As a result of our refinancing completed during the third quarter of fiscal 2008, we were required to pay a $1.0 million debt extinguishment charge to the lenders under the Prior Credit Facility, pay a $5.2 million debt extinguishment charge to the noteholders under the Prior Note Agreement and write off the $0.5 million in remaining unamortized balance of fees related to the Prior Credit Facility and Prior Note Agreement.
Rental and Miscellaneous (Expense) Income, Net.
Net rental and miscellaneous (expense) income was an expense of $1.3 million for fiscal 2009 compared to an expense of $0.3 million for fiscal 2008. The increase in net expense is due to lower rental income as a result of a higher vacancy rate at the office building located at the Elgin Site.
Income Tax Benefit.
Income tax benefit was $0.3 million, or (3.9)% of income before income taxes, for fiscal 2009 compared to $0.9 million, or 13.1% of income before income taxes, for fiscal 2008. The income tax benefit in 2009 varied from the federal statutory income tax rate primarily as we released a $3.0 million valuation allowance at the beginning of the

25


 

year associated with deferred income tax assets, which included federal and state net operating loss (“NOL”) carryforwards. Our operating results for fiscal 2009 and our currently expected future profitability led to the elimination of our $3.0 million valuation allowance as we currently believe it is more likely than not that the deferred income tax assets will be realized.
Net Income (Loss).
Net income was $6.9 million, or $0.65 basic and diluted per common share, for fiscal 2009, compared to a net loss of ($6.0) million, or ($0.56) basic and diluted per common share, for fiscal 2008, due to the factors discussed above.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
General.
The primary uses of cash are to fund our current operations, fulfill contractual obligations, pursue our strategic plan, repay indebtedness and potentially pay contingent earn-out liabilities. Also, various uncertainties could result in additional uses of cash. The primary sources of cash are results of operations and availability under our Credit Facility (as defined below). We continue to actively manage our working capital as a result of the current economic situation. We anticipate that expected net cash flow generated from operations and amounts available pursuant to the Credit Facility will be sufficient to fund our operations for the next twelve months. The increase in our available credit under our Credit Facility due to our improved financial performance has allowed us to consummate the OVH acquisition, devote more funds to promote our products, especially our Fisher brand, and to explore other growth strategies outlined in our strategic plan, including further acquisitions. To be consummated, any future acquisitions would generally require the approval of our lenders under the Credit Facility.
Cash flows from operating activities have historically been driven by net income but are also significantly influenced by inventory requirements, which can change based upon fluctuations in both quantities and market prices of the various nuts we buy and sell. Current market trends in nut prices and crop estimates also impact nut procurement.
Net cash provided by operating activities was $42.1 million for fiscal 2010 compared to $43.4 million for fiscal 2009. Despite improved operating results, we experienced this slight decrease due to various factors including (i) a $7.2 million increase in income taxes paid as we no longer have the benefit of federal net operating loss carryforwards, and (ii) an approximately $7.1 million increase in inshell walnut procurement costs. Assuming we continue to achieve profitability in future years, we would continue to not have the benefit of federal net operating loss carryforwards.
We repaid $4.1 million of long-term debt during fiscal 2010, $3.0 million of which was related to the Mortgage Facility. The net increase in our Credit Facility was $7.2 million, despite using $32.8 million to fund the OVH acquisition.
Total inventories were $114.4 million at June 24, 2010, an increase of $8.1 million, or 7.6%, from the balance at June 25, 2009. The increase is primarily due to $10.3 million of inventories acquired through the OVH acquisition on hand at June 24, 2010. Excluding OVH inventory, our inventories decreased 14.9% in pounds and 2.1% in dollars from June 25, 2009 to June 24, 2010.
Net accounts receivable were $42.1 million at June 24, 2010, an increase of $7.3 million, or 21.0%, from the balance at June 25, 2009. OVH sales are responsible for roughly half of this increase. The increase in net accounts receivable is due to higher sales in the month of June 2010 compared to June 2009. Accounts receivable allowances were $2.1 million at June 24, 2010 compared to $2.8 million at June 25, 2009. The decrease in accounts receivable allowances is due primarily to more efficient resolution of customer deductions.
Current economic conditions may continue to adversely impact demand for consumer products. These conditions could, among other things, have a material adverse effect on the cash received from our operations. See Part I, Item 1A — “Risk Factors”.

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Real Estate Matters.
In August 2008, we completed the consolidation of our Chicago-based facilities into the Elgin Site. As part of the facility consolidation project, on April 15, 2005, we closed on the $48.0 million purchase of the Elgin Site. The Elgin Site includes both an office building and a warehouse, and affords us increased production capacity, such that we are currently able to offer our services to existing and new customers on an expanded basis. We leased 41.5% of the office building back to the seller for a three year period which ended in April 2008. The seller did not exercise its option to renew its lease and vacated the office building. Accordingly, we are currently attempting to find replacement tenant(s) for the space that was rented by the seller of the Elgin Site. Until replacement tenant(s) are found, we will not receive the benefit of rental income associated with such space. Approximately 75% of the office building is currently vacant. There can be no assurance that we will be able to lease the unoccupied space and further capital expenditures may be necessary to lease the remaining space, including the space previously rented by the seller of the Elgin Site.
On March 28, 2006, JBSS Properties, LLC acquired title by quitclaim deed to the site that was originally purchased in Elgin, Illinois (the “Old Elgin Site”) for our facility consolidation project and JBSS Properties, LLC entered into an Assignment and Assumption Agreement (the “Agreement”) with the City of Elgin (the “City”). Under the terms of the Agreement, the City assigned to us the City’s remaining rights and obligations under a development agreement entered into by and among our Company, certain related party partnerships and the City (the “Development Agreement”). We subsequently entered into a sales contract with a potential buyer of the Old Elgin Site. The sales contract was terminated as the potential buyer was unable to secure financing. While the Old Elgin Site is available for sale and we are currently actively searching for new potential buyers, we cannot ensure that a sale will occur in the next twelve months. The Mortgage Facility is secured, in part, by the Old Elgin Site. We must obtain the consent of the Mortgage Lender prior to the sale of the Old Elgin Site. A portion of the Old Elgin Site contains an office building (which we began renting during the third quarter of fiscal 2007) that may or may not be included in any future sale. Our total costs under the Development Agreement were $6.8 million as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, (i) $5.6 million of which is recorded as a component of “Property, Plant and Equipment”, and (ii) $1.2 million of which is recorded as “Rental Investment Property”. We have reviewed the assets under the Development Agreement that are available for sale for potential impairment and concluded that the current fair value is not less than the carrying value.
Financing Arrangements.
On February 7, 2008, we entered into a Credit Agreement with a bank group (the “Bank Lenders”) providing a $117.5 million revolving loan commitment and letter of credit subfacility (the “Credit Facility”). Also on February 7, 2008, we entered into a Loan Agreement with an insurance company (the “Mortgage Lender”) providing us with two term loans, one in the amount of $36.0 million (“Tranche A”) and the other in the amount of $9.0 million (“Tranche B”), for an aggregate amount of $45.0 million (the “Mortgage Facility”). The Credit Facility and Mortgage Facility replaced our prior revolving credit facility (the “Prior Credit Facility”) and long-term financing facility (the “Prior Note Agreement”). We currently expect to be in compliance with all financial covenants under the Credit Facility and Mortgage Facility for the foreseeable future and we currently have full access to our new financing.
The Credit Facility is secured by substantially all of our assets other than real property and fixtures. The Mortgage Facility is secured by mortgages on essentially all of our owned real property located in Elgin, Illinois, Gustine, California and Garysburg, North Carolina (the “Encumbered Properties”). The encumbered Elgin, Illinois real property includes almost all of the Old Elgin Site that was purchased prior to the Elgin Site purchase.
On March 8, 2010, we entered into a First Amendment to the Credit Facility (the “First Amendment”). The First Amendment modified the Credit Facility to permit us to make aggregate acquisitions of up to $50 million in cash payable at closing and meeting specified other criterion including loan availability levels and pro forma financial covenant compliance. In addition, the First Amendment alters the borrowing base calculation, which is based upon accounts receivable, inventory and machinery and equipment (the “Borrowing Base Calculation”), to allow us increased availability from inventory under the Credit Facility during January, February, March, October, November and December, which are the months in which our Company purchases most of its inventory.

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The Credit Facility, as amended, matures on February 7, 2013. At our election, borrowings under the Credit Facility accrue interest at either (i) a rate determined pursuant to the administrative agent’s prime rate plus an applicable margin determined by reference to the amount of loans which may be advanced under the Borrowing Base Calculation, ranging from 0.00% to 0.50% or (ii) a rate based upon the London interbank offered rate (“LIBOR”) plus an applicable margin based upon the Borrowing Base Calculation, ranging from 2.50% to 3.00%. The face amount of undrawn letters of credit accrues interest at a rate of 2.00% to 2.50%, based upon the Borrowing Base Calculation. The portion of the Borrowing Base Calculation based upon machinery and equipment decreases by $1.5 million per year for the first five years to coincide with amortization of the machinery and equipment collateral. As of June 24, 2010, the weighted average interest rate for the Credit Facility was 2.95%. The terms of the Credit Facility contain covenants that require us to restrict investments, indebtedness, capital expenditures, and certain sales of assets, cash dividends, redemptions of capital stock and prepayment of indebtedness (if such prepayment, among other things, is of a subordinate debt). If loan availability under the Borrowing Base Calculation falls below $25.0 million, we will be required to maintain a specified fixed charge coverage ratio, tested on a monthly basis. All cash received from customers is required to be applied against the Credit Facility. The Bank Lenders are entitled to require immediate repayment of our obligations under the Credit Facility in the event of default on the payments required under the Credit Facility, a change in control in the ownership of our Company, non-compliance with the financial covenants or upon the occurrence of certain other defaults by us under the Credit Facility (including a default under the Mortgage Facility). As of June 24, 2010, we were in compliance with all covenants under the Credit Facility and we currently expect to be in compliance with the financial covenant in the Credit Facility for the foreseeable future. As of June 24, 2010, we had $51.6 million of available credit under the Credit Facility. We would still be in compliance with all restrictive covenants under the Credit Facility if this entire amount were borrowed.
We are subject to interest rate resets for each of Tranche A and Tranche B. Specifically, on the March 1, 2018 (the “Tranche A Reset Date”) and March 1, 2012 and every two years thereafter (each, a “Tranche B Reset Date”), the Mortgage Lender may reset the interest rates for each of Tranche A and Tranche B, respectively, in its sole and absolute discretion. If the reset interest rate for either Tranche A or Tranche B is unacceptable to us and we (i) do not have sufficient funds to repay amounts due with respect to Tranche A or Tranche B on the Tranche A Reset Date or Tranche B Reset Date, in each case, as applicable, or (ii) are unable to refinance amounts due with respect to Tranche A or Tranche B on the Tranche A Reset Date or Tranche B Reset Date, in each case, as applicable, on terms more favorable than the reset interest rates, then depending on the extent of the changes in the reset interest rates our interest expense could increase materially.
The Mortgage Facility matures on March 1, 2023. Tranche A under the Mortgage Facility accrues interest at a fixed interest rate of 7.63% per annum, payable monthly. As mentioned above, such interest rate may be reset by the Mortgage Lender on the Tranche A Reset Date. Monthly principal payments in the amount of $0.2 million commenced on June 1, 2008. Tranche B under the Mortgage Facility accrues interest, as reset on March 1, 2010, at a floating rate of the greater of one month LIBOR plus 5.50% per annum or 6.50%, payable monthly. The margin on such floating rate may be reset by the Mortgage Lender on each Tranche B Reset Date; provided, however, that the Mortgage Lender may also change the underlying index on each Tranche B Reset Date occurring on or after March 1, 2016. Monthly principal payments in the amount of $0.1 million commenced on June 1, 2008. We do not currently anticipate that any change in the floating rate or the underlying index will have a material adverse effect upon our business, financial condition or results of operations.
The terms of the Mortgage Facility contain covenants that require us to maintain a specified net worth of $110.0 million and maintain the Encumbered Properties. The Mortgage Facility is secured, in part, by the Old Elgin Site. We must obtain the consent of the Mortgage Lender prior to the sale of the Old Elgin Site. A portion of the Old Elgin Site contains an office building (which we began renting during the third quarter of fiscal 2007) that may or may not be included in any future sale (assuming one were to occur). The Mortgage Lender is entitled to require immediate repayment of our obligations under the Mortgage Facility in the event we default in the payments required under the Mortgage Facility, non-compliance with the covenants or upon the occurrence of certain other defaults by us under the Mortgage Facility. As of June 24, 2010, we were in compliance with all covenants under the Mortgage Facility. We currently believe that we will be in compliance with the financial covenant in the Mortgage Facility for the foreseeable future and therefore $28.6 million has been classified as long-term debt as of June 24, 2010. This $28.6 million represents scheduled principal payments due under Tranche A beyond twelve months of June 24, 2010.

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As of June 24, 2010, we had $4.3 million in aggregate principal amount of industrial development bonds (the “bonds”) outstanding, which was originally used to finance the acquisition, construction and equipping of our Bainbridge, Georgia facility. The bonds bear interest payable semiannually at 4.55% (which was reset on June 1, 2006) through May 2011. On June 1, 2011, and on each subsequent interest reset date for the bonds, we are required to redeem the bonds at face value plus any accrued and unpaid interest, unless a bondholder elects to retain his, her or its bonds. Any of the bonds redeemed by us at the demand of a bondholder on the reset date are required to be remarketed by the underwriter of the bonds on a “best efforts” basis. Funds for the redemption of the bonds on the demand of any bondholder are required to be obtained from the following sources in the following order of priority: (i) funds supplied by us for redemption; (ii) proceeds from the remarketing of the bonds; (iii) proceeds from a drawing under the bonds’ Letter of Credit held by the Bank Lenders (the “IDB Letter of Credit”); or (iv) in the event that funds from the foregoing sources are insufficient, a mandatory payment by us. Drawings under the IDB Letter of Credit to redeem the bonds on the demand of any bondholder are payable in full by us upon demand by the Bank Lenders. In addition, we are required to redeem the bonds in varying annual installments, ranging from $0.5 million in fiscal 2011 to $0.8 million in fiscal 2017. We are also required to redeem the bonds in certain other circumstances (for example, within 180 days after any determination that interest on the bonds is taxable). We have the option, subject to certain conditions, to redeem the bonds at face value plus accrued interest, if any. Since the bonds may be payable at the interest reset date of June 1, 2011, the entire aggregate balance of $4.3 million is classified as a current liability as of June 24, 2010.
In September 2006, we sold our Selma, Texas properties to two related party partnerships for $14.3 million and are leasing them back. The selling price was determined by an independent appraiser to be the fair market value which also approximated our carrying value. The lease for the Selma, Texas properties has a ten-year term at a fair market value rent with three five-year renewal options. Also, we have an option to purchase the properties from the partnerships after five years at 95% (100% in certain circumstances) of the then fair market value, but not less than the $14.3 million purchase price. The provisions of the arrangement are not eligible for sale-leaseback accounting and therefore the financing obligation is being accounted for similarly to the accounting for a capital lease, whereby $14.3 million was recorded as a debt obligation. No gain or loss was recorded on the transaction. As of June 24, 2010, $13.4 million of the debt obligation was outstanding.
Capital Expenditures.
We spent $8.5 million of capital expenditures, excluding amounts incurred in connection with the OVH acquisition, in fiscal 2010 compared to $5.9 million in fiscal 2009. We expect that total capital expenditures will be under $10 million during fiscal 2011.
Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements
As of June 24, 2010, we were not involved in any off-balance sheet arrangements, as defined in Item 303(a)(4)(ii) of Regulation S-K promulgated by the SEC.

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Contractual Cash Obligations
At June 24, 2010, we had the following contractual cash obligations for long-term debt (including scheduled interest payments), capital leases, operating leases, the Credit Facility and purchase obligations (amounts in this subsection in thousands):
                                         
    Total     Less Than 1 Year     1-3 Years     3-5 Years     More Than 5 Years  
Long-term debt obligations
  $ 87,109     $ 18,559     $ 12,186     $ 10,668     $ 45,696  
Capital lease obligations
    481       332       128       21        
Minimum operating lease commitments
    3,686       1,907       1,447       299       33  
Revolving credit facility borrowings
    40,437             40,437              
Purchase obligations
    134,340       134,340                    
 
                             
Other long-term liabilities reflected on our balance sheet
                                       
 
                             
Total contractual cash obligations
  $ 266,053     $ 155,138     $ 54,198     $ 10,988     $ 45,729  
 
                             
Amounts outstanding under our Credit Facility, while classified as current liabilities, are included in the 1 -3 years column based upon the term of the Credit Facility. The purchase obligations represent $134,340 of inventory purchases. Additionally, we have $10,604 of projected retirement obligations recorded on our balance sheet as of June 24, 2010. See Note 12 in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements for further details. Also, as a licensed United States Department of Agriculture Nut Warehouse Operator, we are responsible for delivering the loan value of the peanut inventory in our possession as represented on the warehouse receipt to the holder of the warehouse receipt on demand. We are responsible for any decline in the value of the peanut inventory due to a decline in quality or shrinkage. Based on current expectations and historical experience, no amounts related to a potential decline in the value of peanut inventory are included in the schedule above.
Critical Accounting Policies and Estimates
Our financial statements are prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. The accounting policies as disclosed in the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements are applied in the preparation of our financial statements and accounting for the underlying transactions and balances. The policies discussed below are considered by our management to be critical for an understanding of our financial statements because the application of these policies places the most significant demands on management’s judgment, with financial reporting results relying on estimation regarding the effect of matters that are inherently uncertain. Specific risks, if applicable, for these critical accounting policies are described in the following paragraphs. For a detailed discussion on the application of these and other accounting policies, see Note 1 of the Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements.
Preparation of this Annual Report on Form 10-K requires us to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, disclosures of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of our financial statements, and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. Actual results may differ from those estimates. See “Forward-Looking Statements” below.
Revenue Recognition.
We recognize revenue when persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists, title has transferred (based upon terms of shipment), price is fixed, delivery occurs and collection is reasonably assured. We sell our products under some arrangements, which include customer contracts that fix the sales price for periods typically of up to one year for some industrial customers and through specific programs consisting of promotion allowances, volume and customer rebates and marketing allowances, among others, to consumer and food service customers. Reserves for these programs are established based upon the terms of specific arrangements. Revenues are recorded net of rebates and promotion and marketing allowances. Revenues are also recorded net of customer deductions which are provided for

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based upon past experiences. Our net accounts receivable includes an allowance for customer deductions. While customers do have the right to return products, past experience has demonstrated that product returns have been insignificant. Provisions for returns are reflected as a reduction in net sales and are estimated based upon customer specific circumstances.
Inventories.
Inventories, which consist principally of inshell bulk-stored nuts, shelled nuts, dried fruit and processed and packaged nut products, are stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out) or market. Inventory costs are reviewed at least quarterly. Fluctuations in the market price of pecans, peanuts, walnuts, almonds and other nuts may affect the value of inventory and gross profit and gross profit margin. When expected market sales prices move below costs, we record adjustments to write down the carrying values of inventories to lower of cost or market. The results of our shelling process can also result in changes to our inventory costs, for example based upon actual versus expected crop yields. We maintain significant inventories of bulk-stored inshell pecans, peanuts and walnuts. Quantities of inshell bulk-stored nuts are determined based upon our inventory systems and are subject to quarterly physical verification techniques including observation, weighing and other methods. The quantities of each crop year bulk-stored nut inventories are generally shelled out over a ten to fifteen month period, at which time revisions to any estimates are also recorded.
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets.
We review held and used long-lived assets, including our rental investment property, to assess recoverability from projected undiscounted cash flows whenever events or changes in facts and circumstances indicate that the carrying value of the assets may not be recoverable. An impairment loss is recognized in operating results when future undiscounted cash flows are less than the assets’ carrying value and the underlying fair value is less than the carrying value. After an impairment loss, the carrying value would reflect the assets’ fair value.
We review assets available for sale, including the Old Elgin Site, each accounting period. An impairment loss is recognized in operating results when fair values are less than the assets’ carrying value. After an impairment loss, the carrying value would reflect the assets’ current fair value.
We did not record any impairment charges during fiscal 2010.
Goodwill.
We completed our acquisition of certain assets of OVH during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010. Goodwill, assigned to our single reportable operating segment, represents the excess of the cost of an acquired business over the net of the amounts assigned to assets acquired and liabilities assumed. Goodwill is subject to impairment analysis annually or more frequently if an event occurs or circumstances indicate the carrying amount may be impaired. We assess goodwill for possible impairment at year end using the two-step method in which the carrying amount of a reporting unit is compared to its fair value, utilizing income approach methods. If the carrying amount of a reporting unit exceeds its fair value, we perform a further analysis to determine the fair values of the underlying assets and liabilities of the reporting unit to determine whether the carrying amount of goodwill of the reporting unit has been impaired. We believe that the accounting estimate related to determining the fair value for goodwill impairment assessment is a critical accounting estimate because: (1) it is highly susceptible to change from period to period because it requires us to make assumptions about the future cash flows over several years in the future, and (2) the impact that recognizing an impairment would have on the assets reported on our balance sheet as well as our results of operations could be material. Management’s assumptions about future cash flows require significant judgment and actual cash flows in the future may differ significantly from those forecasted today.
We did not record any impairment charges to goodwill during fiscal 2010.

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Earn-out Liability.
Under terms of the OVH acquisition, future consideration of up to $10.1 million may be paid in addition to the $32.8 million cash purchase price paid on May 21, 2010. This future consideration is contingent upon the sales performance of the acquired business in the 2010 and 2011 calendar years. The following table summarizes the potential earnouts to be paid under terms of the Purchase Agreement. Retail sales include packaged sales to the consumer distribution channel. Net total sales are comprised of net retail sales plus net bulk sales of products.
         
    Earnout  
Earnout Measurement   Payment  
Calendar 2010 net retail sales greater than $25.5 million
  $ 79  
Calendar 2010 net total sales greater than $41.5 million and calendar 2010 net retail sales greater than $36.5 million
    5,000  
Calendar 2011 net total sales greater than $49.0 million and calendar 2011 net retail sales greater than $43.0 million
    2,500  
Calendar 2010 and calendar 2011 retail sales greater than $105.0 million
    2,500  
 
     
Total
  $ 10,079  
 
     
To determine our earnout liability, we assigned a probability factor for each of the four circumstances listed in the table above along with a present value factor based on our incremental borrowing rate. Due to the relatively short timeframe for the earnout payments, the sensitivity of the above amounts is almost entirely dependent on the probability factors.
We have established current and long-term liabilities of $4.4 million and $1.4 million, respectively, for the expected fair value of the future consideration, considering the probabilities that the sales performance levels will be attained. This expected fair value will be re-measured on a quarterly basis through the quarter ending December 29, 2011. Any quarterly change in the expected fair value will require an adjustment to the contingent consideration with the corresponding charge or credit to operating income for that quarter.
Introductory Funds.
The ability to sell to certain retail customers often requires upfront payments to be made by us. Such payments are frequently made pursuant to contracts that stipulate the term of the agreement, the quantity and type of products to be sold and any exclusivity requirements. If appropriate, the cost of these payments is recorded as an asset and is amortized as a reduction to net sales over the term of the contract. All contracts that are capitalized include refundability provisions. We expense payments if no written arrangement exists.
Related Party Transactions.
As discussed in Notes 1, 6 and 13 of the Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements, we lease space from related parties and transact with other related parties in the normal course of business. We believe that these related party transactions are conducted on overall terms, including levels of service and quality, that are competitive with other non-related entities at the time the transactions are entered into.
Income Taxes.
We account for income taxes using an asset and liability approach that requires the recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future tax consequences of events that have been reported in our financial statements or tax returns. Such items give rise to differences in the financial reporting and tax basis of assets and liabilities. A valuation allowance is recorded to reduce the carrying amount of deferred tax assets if it is more likely than not that all or a portion of the asset will not be realized. Any investment tax credits are accounted for by using the flow-through method, whereby the credits are reflected as reductions of tax expense in the year they are recognized in the financial statements. In estimating future tax consequences, we consider all expected future events other than changes in tax law or rates.

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We adopted accounting guidance for uncertainty in income taxes, on June 29, 2007. There were no material effects associated with the implementation of this accounting guidance. As of June 29, 2007, unrecognized tax benefits and accrued interest and penalties were not material. We recognize interest and penalties accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in the income tax (benefit)/expense caption in the statement of operations.
As of June 24, 2010, unrecognized tax benefits and accrued interest and penalties were not material. We recognize interest and penalties accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in the income tax (benefit)/ expense caption in the statement of operations.
We evaluate the realization of deferred tax assets by considering our historical taxable income and future taxable income based upon the reversal of deferred tax liabilities. As of June 24, 2010, we believe that our deferred tax assets are fully realizable.
Recent Accounting Pronouncements.
In June 2009, the FASB issued FASB Statement No. 168, “The FASB Accounting Standards Codification and the Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles — A Replacement of FASB Statement No. 162” (“Statement No. 168”). Under Statement No. 168, the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (“Codification”) became the single source of authoritative generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority of federal security laws are also sources of authoritative GAAP for SEC registrants. On the effective date of Statement No. 168, the Codification superseded all then-existing non-SEC accounting and reporting standards. All other non-SEC accounting literature not included in the Codification became nonauthoritative. The GAAP hierarchy was modified to include only two levels of GAAP — authoritative and nonauthoritative. Statement No. 168 was effective for financial statements issued for interim and annual periods ending after September 15, 2009. We began using the new Codification when referring to GAAP in the quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 24, 2009. The effect of adopting Statement No. 168 did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.
In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements” (“SFAS 157”). SFAS 157 establishes a common definition for fair value to be applied to GAAP requiring use of fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and expands disclosure about such fair value measurements. SFAS 157 is effective for financial assets and financial liabilities for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. Issued in February 2008, FSP 157-1 “Application of FASB Statement No. 157 to FASB Statement No. 13 and Other Accounting Pronouncements That Address Fair Value Measurements for Purposes of Lease Classification or Measurement under Statement 13” removed leasing transactions accounted for under Statement 13 and related guidance from the scope of SFAS 157. FSP 157-2 “Partial Deferral of the Effective Date of Statement 157” (“FSP 157-2”), deferred the effective date of SFAS 157 for all nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities to fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. In October 2008, the FASB issued FSP 157-3, “Determining the Fair Value of a Financial Asset When the Market for That Asset is Not Active” (“FSP 157-3”). FSP 157-3, which is effective immediately, clarifies the application of SFAS 157 in a market that is not active. The implementation of SFAS 157 for financial assets and financial liabilities, effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2009, did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial position and results of operations. After the Codification, all fair value measurement accounting is included as Topic 820. The implementation of Topic 820 for nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities, effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2010, did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial position and results of operations.
In December 2007, the FASB issued SFAS No. 141(R), “Business Combinations”, which replaces SFAS No. 141. The statement retains the fundamental requirements in SFAS No. 141 that the acquisition method of accounting (previously referred to as the purchase method of accounting) be used for all business combinations, but requires a number of changes, including changes in the way assets and liabilities are recognized as a result of business combinations. It also requires the capitalization of in-process research and development at fair value and requires the expensing of acquisition-related costs as incurred. In April 2009, the FASB issued FSP FAS 141(R)-1 which amends SFAS No. 141(R) by establishing a model to account for certain pre-acquisition contingencies. Under FSP FAS 141(R)-1, an acquirer is required to recognize at fair value an asset acquired or a liability assumed in a business combination that arises from a contingency if the acquisition-date fair value of that asset or liability can be

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determined during the measurement period. If the acquisition-date fair value cannot be determined during the measurement period, then the acquirer should follow the recognition criteria in SFAS No. 5, “Accounting for Contingencies”, and FASB Interpretation No. 14, “Reasonable Estimation of the Amount of a Loss — an interpretation of FASB Statement No. 5”. SFAS No. 141(R) and FSP FAS 141(R)-1 were effective for us beginning June 26, 2009, and will apply prospectively to business combinations completed on or after that date. After the Codification, all business combination accounting is included as Topic 805. We used Topic 805 to account for our acquisition of certain assets and assumption of certain liabilities of Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010.
In June 2009, the FASB issued SFAS No. 167, “Amendments to FASB Interpretation No. 46(R), (“SFAS 167”) which amended the consolidation guidance applicable to variable interest entities (“VIEs”). The SFAS 167 amendments are effective as of the first annual reporting period that begins after November 15, 2009, and for interim periods within that first annual reporting period. SFAS 167 replaces Interpretation 46(R)’s risks-and-rewards-based quantitative approach to consolidation with a more qualitative approach that requires a reporting entity to have some economic exposure to a VIE along with “the power to direct the activities that most significantly impact the economic performance of the entity.” The FASB also reminded its constituents that only substantive terms, transactions, and arrangements should affect the accounting conclusions under Statement 167. The SFAS 167 provisions were included in Accounting Standards Update No. 2009-17, “Topic 810 — Improvements to Financial Reporting by Enterprises Involved with Variable Interest Entities,” (“ASU 2009-17”). We are currently reviewing the provisions of ASU 2009-17, which is effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2011.
Forward-Looking Statements
The statements contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K, and in the Chief Executive Officer’s letter to stockholders accompanying the Annual Report on Form 10-K delivered to stockholders, that are not historical are “forward-looking statements.” These forward-looking statements, which generally are followed (and therefore identified) by a cross reference to Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors” or are identified by the use of forward-looking words and phrases such as “will”, “intends”, “may”, “believes” and “expects”, represent our present expectations or beliefs concerning future events. We undertake no obligation to update publicly or otherwise revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or other factors that affect the subject of these statements, except where expressly required to do so by law. We caution that such statements are qualified by important factors, including the factors described in Part I, Item 1A “Risk Factors”, that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements, as well as the timing and occurrence (or nonoccurrence) of transactions and events that may be subject to circumstances beyond our control. Consequently, results actually achieved may differ materially from the expected results included in these statements.
Item 7A — Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk
We are exposed to the impact of changes in interest rates, commodity prices of raw material purchases and foreign exchange. We have not entered into any arrangements to hedge against changes in market interest rates, commodity prices or foreign currency fluctuations.
We are unable to engage in hedging activity related to commodity prices, since there are no established futures markets for nuts. Approximately 36% of nut purchases for fiscal 2010 were made from foreign countries, and while these purchases were payable in U.S. dollars, the underlying costs may fluctuate with changes in the value of the U.S. dollar relative to the currency in the foreign country.
We are exposed to interest rate risk on our Credit Facility, our only variable rate credit facility because we have not entered into any hedging instruments which fix the floating rate. A hypothetical 10% adverse change in weighted-average interest rates would have had a $0.1 million impact on our net income and cash flows from operating activities for fiscal 2010. In addition, the interest rate on our Mortgage Facility resets in the future.

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Item 8 — Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Board of Directors and Stockholders of John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc.:
In our opinion, the accompanying consolidated balance sheets and the related consolidated statements of operations, stockholders’ equity, and cash flows present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. and its subsidiaries (the “Company”) at June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, and the results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended June 24, 2010 in conformity with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective internal control over financial reporting as of June 24, 2010, based on criteria established in Internal Control — Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission (COSO). The Company’s management is responsible for these financial statements, for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting, included in Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting appearing under Item 9A. Our responsibility is to express opinions on these financial statements and on the Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our integrated audits. We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material misstatement and whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. Our audits of the financial statements included examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements, assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, and evaluating the overall financial statement presentation. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our audits also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinions.
A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.
Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements. Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.
As described in Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting appearing under Item 9A, management has excluded Orchard Valley Harvest operations from its assessment of internal control over financial reporting as of June 24, 2010 because it was acquired by the Company in a purchase business combination on May 21, 2010. We have also excluded Orchard Valley Harvest operations from our audit of internal control over financial reporting. Orchard Valley Harvest operations total assets and total revenues represent less than 10% and 1%, respectively, of the related consolidated financial statement amounts as of and for the year ended June 24, 2010.
/s/ PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
Chicago, Illinois
August 25, 2010

35


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009
(dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                 
    June 24,     June 25,  
    2010     2009  
ASSETS
               
CURRENT ASSETS:
               
Cash
  $ 1,437     $ 863  
Accounts receivable, less allowances of $2,071 and $2,765, respectively
    42,074       34,760  
Inventories
    114,360       106,289  
Income taxes receivable
    104        
Deferred income taxes
    4,486       4,108  
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
    2,319       1,784  
 
           
TOTAL CURRENT ASSETS
    164,780       147,804  
 
           
PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT:
               
Land
    9,463       9,463  
Buildings
    101,421       100,482  
Machinery and equipment
    155,796       150,266  
Furniture and leasehold improvements
    3,969       6,231  
Vehicles
    632       676  
Construction in progress
    2,033       1,734  
 
           
 
    273,314       268,852  
Less: Accumulated depreciation
    140,353       134,648  
 
           
 
    132,961       134,204  
Rental investment property, less accumulated depreciation of $4,458 and $3,559, respectively
    31,242       32,141  
 
           
TOTAL PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT
    164,203       166,345  
 
           
Cash surrender value of officers’ life insurance and other assets
    7,723       7,981  
Goodwill
    5,454        
Intangible assets
    16,121       569  
 
           
TOTAL ASSETS
  $ 358,281     $ 322,699  
 
           
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

36


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS

June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009
(dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
                 
    June 24,     June 25,  
    2010     2009  
LIABILITIES & STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
               
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
               
Revolving credit facility borrowings
  $ 40,437     $ 33,232  
Current maturities of long-term debt, including related party debt of $253 and $234, respectively
    15,549       11,690  
Accounts payable, including related party payables of $301 and $687, respectively
    29,625       23,479  
Book overdraft
    2,061       5,632  
Accrued payroll and related benefits
    10,613       8,713  
Accrued workers’ compensation
    5,254       5,159  
Other accrued expenses
    12,092       7,149  
Income taxes payable
          49  
 
           
TOTAL CURRENT LIABILITIES
    115,631       95,103  
 
           
LONG-TERM LIABILITIES:
               
Long-term debt, less current maturities, including related party debt of $13,156 and $13,410, respectively
    42,680       49,016  
Retirement plan
    9,951       8,095  
Deferred income taxes
    4,569       3,634  
Other
    5,556       1,352  
 
           
TOTAL LONG-TERM LIABILITIES
    62,756       62,097  
 
           
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
               
STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY:
               
Class A Common Stock, convertible to Common Stock on a per share basis, cumulative voting rights of ten votes per share, $.01 par value; 10,000,000 shares authorized, 2,597,426 shares issued and outstanding
    26       26  
Common Stock, noncumulative voting rights of one vote per share, $.01 par value; 17,000,000 shares authorized, 8,166,849 and 8,140,599 shares issued, respectively
    82       81  
Capital in excess of par value
    101,787       101,119  
Retained earnings
    82,602       68,177  
Accumulated other comprehensive loss
    (3,399 )     (2,700 )
Treasury stock, at cost; 117,900 shares of Common Stock
    (1,204 )     (1,204 )
 
           
TOTAL STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
    179,894       165,499  
 
           
TOTAL LIABILITIES & STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
  $ 358,281     $ 322,699  
 
           
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

37


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS

For the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008
(dollars in thousands, except for earnings per share)
                         
    Year Ended     Year Ended     Year Ended  
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Net sales
  $ 561,633     $ 553,846     $ 541,771  
Cost of sales
    466,847       481,447       475,538  
 
                 
Gross profit
    94,786       72,399       66,233  
 
                 
Operating expenses:
                       
Selling expenses
    40,494       36,465       34,899  
Administrative expenses
    24,620       20,685       18,898  
Restructuring expenses
          (332 )     1,765  
 
                 
Total operating expenses
    65,114       56,818       55,562  
 
                 
Income from operations
    29,672       15,581       10,671  
 
                 
Other income (expense):
                       
Interest expense ($1,075, $1,092 and $1,109 to related parties, respectively)
    (5,653 )     (7,646 )     (10,502 )
Debt extinguishment costs
                (6,737 )
Rental and miscellaneous (expense) income, net
    (1,147 )     (1,277 )     (286 )
 
                 
Total other expense, net
    (6,800 )     (8,923 )     (17,525 )
 
                 
Income (loss) before income taxes
    22,872       6,658       (6,854 )
Income tax expense (benefit)
    8,447       (259 )     (897 )
 
                 
Net income (loss)
  $ 14,425     $ 6,917     $ (5,957 )
 
                 
 
                       
Income (loss) per common share (basic)
  $ 1.36     $ 0.65     $ (0.56 )
 
                 
Income (loss) per common share (diluted)
  $ 1.34     $ 0.65     $ (0.56 )
 
                 
 
                       
Weighted average shares outstanding — basic
    10,642,824       10,618,240       10,610,272  
 
                 
Weighted average shares outstanding — diluted
    10,725,108       10,635,277       10,610,272  
 
                 
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

38


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY

For the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008
(dollars in thousands)
                                                                         
                                                    Accumulated Other              
    Class A Common Stock     Common Stock     Capital in Excess of     Retained     Comprehensive     Treasury        
    Shares     Amount     Shares     Amount     Par Value     Earnings     Loss     Stock     Total  
     
Balance, June 28, 2007
    2,597,426     $ 26       8,123,349     $ 81     $ 100,335     $ 67,810     $ (4,057 )   $ (1,204 )   $ 162,991  
Net loss
                                            (5,957 )                     (5,957 )
Pension liability amortization, net of income tax benefit of $209
                                                    389               389  
Pension liability adjustment, net of income tax benefit of $255
                                                    474               474  
 
                                                                     
Comprehensive loss
                                                                    (5,094 )
 
                                                                     
Stock option exercises
                    11,250               72                               72  
Tax benefit of stock option exercises
                                    6                               6  
Stock-based compensation expense
                                    397                               397  
Balance, June 26, 2008
    2,597,426     $ 26       8,134,599     $ 81     $ 100,810     $ 61,853     $ (3,194 )   $ (1,204 )   $ 158,372  
Net income
                                            6,917                       6,917  
Pension liability amortization, net of income tax benefit of $222
                                                    412               412  
Pension liability adjustment, net of income tax benefit of $45
                                                    82               82  
 
                                                                     
Comprehensive income
                                                                    7,411  
 
                                                                     
Stock option exercises
                    6,000               36                               36  
Stock-based compensation expense
                                    273                               273  
Adoption of new accounting rule for life insurance arrangements
                                            (593 )                     (593 )
Balance, June 25, 2009
    2,597,426     $ 26       8,140,599     $ 81     $ 101,119     $ 68,177     $ (2,700 )   $ (1,204 )   $ 165,499  
Net income
                                            14,425                       14,425  
Pension liability amortization, net of income tax benefit of $219
                                                    406               406  
Pension liability adjustment, net of income tax expense of $678
                                                    (1,105 )             (1,105 )
 
                                                                     
 
Comprehensive income
                                                                    13,726  
 
                                                                     
Stock option exercises
                    26,250       1       177                               178  
Stock-based compensation expense
                                    491                               491  
Balance, June 24, 2010
    2,597,426     $ 26       8,166,849     $ 82     $ 101,787     $ 82,602     $ (3,399 )   $ (1,204 )   $ 179,894  
 
                                                     
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

39


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS

For the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008
(dollars in thousands)
                         
    Year Ended     Year Ended     Year Ended  
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Cash flows from operating activities:
                       
Net income (loss)
  $ 14,425     $ 6,917     $ (5,957 )
Depreciation and amortization
    15,825       15,922       15,742  
(Gain)/loss on disposition of properties
    (85 )     138       (8 )
Deferred income tax expense/(benefit)
    557       (474 )     (466 )
Stock-based compensation expense
    491       273       397  
Change in current assets and current liabilities, excluding impact of OVH acquisition:
                       
Accounts receivable, net
    (2,169 )     (336 )     1,600  
Inventories
    2,574       20,743       7,127  
Prepaid expenses and other current assets
    1,573       (192 )     (442 )
Accounts payable
    3,988       (1,876 )     4,091  
Accrued expenses
    1,774       1,586       1,313  
Income taxes receivable/payable
    (153 )     271       6,490  
Other, net
    3,257       442       (270 )
 
                 
Net cash provided by operating activities
    42,057       43,414       29,617  
 
                 
Cash flows from investing activities:
                       
Purchases of property, plant and equipment
    (8,481 )     (5,912 )     (11,569 )
Proceeds from disposition of assets
    148       97       112  
Purchase of assets of Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc.
    (32,772 )            
Cash surrender value of officers’ life insurance
    (135 )     (205 )     (205 )
 
                 
Net cash used in investing activities
    (41,240 )     (6,020 )     (11,662 )
 
                 
Cash flows from financing activities:
                       
Borrowings under revolving credit facilities
    233,559       162,548       70,859  
Repayments of revolving credit borrowings
    (226,354 )     (197,264 )     (92,940 )
Initial borrowing under new revolving credit facility
                82,031  
Payment of amounts outstanding under prior revolving credit facility
                (65,283 )
Issuance of long-term debt
                45,000  
Debt issuance costs
                (3,273 )
Principal payments on long-term debt
    (4,055 )     (3,901 )     (55,353 )
(Decrease)/increase in book overdraft
    (3,571 )     1,334       (717 )
Issuance of Common Stock under option plans
    157       36       72  
Tax benefit of stock option exercises
    21             6  
 
                 
Net cash used in financing activities
    (243 )     (37,247 )     (19,598 )
 
                 
Net increase (decrease) in cash
    574       147       (1,643 )
Cash:
                       
Beginning of period
    863       716       2,359  
 
                 
End of period
  $ 1,437     $ 863     $ 716  
 
                 
Supplemental disclosures of cash flow information:
                       
Interest paid, net of interest capitalized
  $ 4,968     $ 7,208     $ 10,456  
Income taxes paid, excluding refunds of $29, $141 and $6,675, respectively
    7,586       347       107  
Capital lease obligations incurred
    146             207  
The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial statements.

40


 

JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(dollars in thousands, except per share data)
NOTE 1 — SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
Basis of Presentation and Consolidation
Our consolidated financial statements include the accounts of John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc., and its wholly-owned subsidiary, JBSS Properties, LLC. Our fiscal year ends on the last Thursday of June each year, and typically consists of fifty-two weeks (four thirteen week quarters). The accompanying consolidated financial statements and related footnotes are presented in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America (“GAAP”).
Management Estimates
The preparation of financial statements in conformity with GAAP requires management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenues and expenses during the reporting period. Significant estimates include reserves for customer deductions, allowances for doubtful accounts, the quantity and valuation of bulk inventories, accruals for workers’ compensation claims, income tax accruals, earn-out payments related to an acquisition and various other accrual accounts. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivable are stated at the amounts charged to customers, less: (i) allowances for doubtful accounts, and (ii) reserves for estimated cash discounts and customer deductions. The allowance for doubtful accounts is calculated by specifically identifying customers that are credit risks. Account balances are charged off against the allowance when we feel it is probable the receivable will not be recovered. The reserve for estimated cash discounts is based on actual payments. The reserve for customer deductions represents known customer short payments and an estimate of future credit memos that will be issued to customers related to rebates and allowances for marketing and promotions based on historical experience. Included in accounts receivable as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009 are $1,155 and $1,121, respectively, relating to workers’ compensation excess claim recovery.
Inventories
Inventories, which consist principally of inshell bulk-stored nuts, shelled nuts and processed and packaged nut products, are stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out) or market. Inventory costs are reviewed each quarter. Fluctuations in the market price of pecans, peanuts, walnuts, almonds, cashews and other nuts may affect the value of inventory, gross profit and gross profit margin. When expected market sales prices move below costs, we record adjustments to write down the carrying values of inventories to lower of cost or market. The results of our shelling process can also result in changes to inventory costs, such as adjustments made pursuant to actual versus expected crop yields. We maintain significant inventories of bulk-stored inshell pecans, peanuts and walnuts. Quantities of inshell bulk-stored nuts are determined based on our inventory systems and are subject to quarterly physical verification techniques including observation, weighing and other methods. The quantities of each crop year bulk-stored nut inventories are generally shelled out over a ten to fifteen month period, at which time revisions to any estimates are also recorded.
We store a large amount of peanut inventory on behalf of the United States government at various facilities. As a licensed United States Department of Agriculture Nut Warehouse Operator, we are responsible for delivering the loan value of the peanut inventory in our possession as represented on the warehouse receipt to the holder of the warehouse receipt on demand. We are responsible for any decline in the value of the peanut inventory due to a decline in quality or shrinkage in excess of an allowable amount. No such declines in value are currently anticipated.

41


 

Property, Plant and Equipment
Property, plant and equipment are stated at cost. Major improvements that extend the useful life or add capacity are capitalized and charged to expense through depreciation. Repairs and maintenance are charged to expense as incurred. The cost and accumulated depreciation of assets sold or retired are removed from the respective accounts, and any gain or loss is recognized currently in operating income. Cost is depreciated using the straight-line method over the following estimated useful lives: buildings — 10 to 40 years; machinery and equipment — 5 to 10 years; furniture and leasehold improvements — 5 to 10 years; and vehicles — 3 to 5 years. Depreciation expense was $14,115, $14,105 and $14,063 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. No interest costs were capitalized for the last three fiscal years due to the lack of any significant project.
In September 2006, we sold our Selma, Texas properties to two related party partnerships for $14.3 million and are leasing them back. The selling price was determined by an independent appraiser to be the fair market value which also approximated our carrying value. The lease for the Selma, Texas properties has a ten-year term at a fair market value rent with three five-year renewal options. Also, we have an option to purchase the properties from the partnerships after five years at 95% (100% in certain circumstances) of the then fair market value, but not to be less than the $14.3 million purchase price. The financing obligation is being accounted for similar to the accounting for a capital lease whereby $14.3 million was recorded as a debt obligation, as the provisions of the arrangement were not eligible for sale-leaseback accounting. These partnerships are not considered variable interest entities subject to consolidation under current accounting literature, as the partnerships had substantive equity at risk at the time of entering into the Selma, Texas sale-leaseback transaction.
Impairment of Long-Lived Assets
We review held and used long-lived assets, including our rental investment property, to assess recoverability from projected undiscounted cash flows whenever events or changes in facts and circumstances indicate that the carrying value of the assets may not be recoverable. An impairment loss is recognized in operating results when future undiscounted cash flows are less than the assets’ carrying value and the underlying fair value is less than the carrying value. After an impairment loss, the carrying value would reflect the assets’ fair value.
We review assets available for sale, including the Old Elgin Site (as defined below), each accounting period. An impairment loss is recognized in operating results when fair values are less than the assets’ carrying value. After an impairment loss, the carrying value would reflect the assets’ current fair value.
We did not record any impairment charges during fiscal 2010.
Goodwill
We completed our acquisition of certain assets of OVH during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010. Goodwill, assigned to our single reportable operating segment, represents the excess of the cost of an acquired business over the net of the amounts assigned to assets acquired and liabilities assumed. Goodwill is subject to impairment analysis annually or more frequently if an event occurs or circumstances indicate the carrying amount may be impaired. We assess goodwill for possible impairment at year end using the two-step method in which the carrying amount of a reporting unit is compared to its fair value, utilizing income approach methods. If the carrying amount of a reporting unit exceeds its fair value, we perform a further analysis to determine the fair values of the underlying assets and liabilities of the reporting unit to determine whether the carrying amount of goodwill of the reporting unit has been impaired.
We did not record any impairment charges to goodwill during fiscal 2010.
Facility Consolidation Project/Real Estate Transactions
In April 2005, we acquired property to be used for the Elgin Site. Two buildings are located on the Elgin Site, one of which is an office building of which 41.5% was leased back to the seller through April 2008. The seller opted to not

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renew the lease, and we have yet to find replacement tenants. Approximately 75% of the office building is currently vacant. The other building, a warehouse, was expanded and modified for use as our principal processing facility and headquarters. The allocation of the purchase price to the two buildings was determined through a third party appraisal. The value assigned to the office building is included in rental investment property on the balance sheet. The value assigned to the warehouse building is included in property, plant and equipment.
The net rental expense from the office building included in rental and miscellaneous (expense) income, net, was an expense of $1,725, $1,864 and $867 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Gross rental income was $1,198, $1,159 and $2,324 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Expected future gross rental income under the office building operating lease is as follows for the years ending:
         
June 30, 2011
  $ 1,449  
June 28, 2012
    1,383  
June 27, 2013
    1,364  
June 26, 2014
    1,376  
June 25, 2015
    1,210  
Thereafter
    2,096  
 
     
 
  $ 8,878  
 
     
On March 28, 2006, JBSS Properties, LLC acquired title by quitclaim deed to the site that was originally purchased in Elgin, Illinois (the “Old Elgin Site”) for our facility consolidation project and JBSS Properties, LLC entered into an Assignment and Assumption Agreement (the “Agreement”) with the City of Elgin (the “City”). Under the terms of the Agreement, the City assigned to us the City’s remaining rights and obligations under a development agreement entered into by and among our Company, certain related party partnerships and the City (the “Development Agreement”). While we are currently actively searching for potential buyers of the Old Elgin Site, we cannot ensure that a sale will occur in the next twelve months. The Mortgage Facility is secured, in part, by the Old Elgin Site. We must obtain the consent of the Mortgage Lender prior to the sale of the Old Elgin Site. A portion of the Old Elgin Site contains an office building (which we began renting during the third quarter of fiscal 2007) that may or may not be included in any future sale. Our total costs under the Development Agreement were $6,806 as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, (i) $5,569 of which is recorded as a component of “Property, Plant and Equipment” and (ii) $1,237 of which is recorded as “Rental Investment Property.” These costs were incurred through fiscal 2006. We have reviewed the assets under the Development Agreement and concluded that no adjustment of the carrying value is required.
Introductory Funds
The ability to sell to certain retail customers often requires upfront payments to be made by us. Such payments are frequently made pursuant to contracts that stipulate the term of the agreement, the quantity and type of products to be sold and any exclusivity requirements. If appropriate, the cost of these payments is recorded as an asset and is amortized over the term of the contract. We expense payments if no written arrangement exists and amounts are not recoverable in the event of customer cancellation. Total introductory funds included in prepaid expenses and other current assets were $0 at June 24, 2010 and $1,092 at June 25, 2009. Amortization expense, which is recorded as a reduction in net sales, was $1,092, $1,390 and $1,252 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively.
Fair Value of Financial Instruments
The fair value of our fixed rate debt as of June 24, 2010, including current maturities, was estimated to approximate the carrying value of $31,000. The fair value of the fixed rate debt was determined using a market approach, which estimates fair value based on companies with similar credit quality and size of debt issuances for similar terms.
The fair value of the contingent consideration to be paid under terms of the OVH purchase agreement was determined using probability factors for specific earnout measurements discounted by our incremental short-term borrowing rate. Due to the relatively short timeframe of the earnout period (through calendar year 2011), the sensitivity of the determination of the fair value of the contingent consideration is almost entirely dependent upon

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the probability factors. Under the fair value measurement and disclosure provisions of ASC 820 for Level 3 inputs, we are required to re-measure the fair value of the contingent consideration on a quarterly basis and disclose the effect of the measurements on earnings for each quarterly period.
The carrying amounts of our other financial instruments also approximate their estimated fair values.
Revenue Recognition
We recognize revenue when persuasive evidence of an arrangement exists, title has transferred (based upon terms of shipment), price is fixed, delivery occurs and collection is reasonably assured. We sell our products under some arrangements which include customer contracts which fix the sales price for periods, typically of up to one year, for some industrial customers and through specific programs consisting of promotion allowances, volume and customer rebates and marketing allowances, among others, to consumer and food service customers. Revenues are recorded net of rebates and promotion and marketing allowances. While customers do have the right to return products, past experience has demonstrated that product returns have been insignificant. Provisions for returns are reflected as a reduction in net sales and are estimated based upon customer specific circumstances. Billings for shipping and handling costs are included in revenues.
Significant Customers
The highly competitive nature of our business provides an environment for the loss of customers and the opportunity to gain new customers. Net sales to Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. represented approximately 19% of our net sales for each of the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Net accounts receivable from Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. were $3,844 and $3,719 at June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively. Net sales to Target Corporation represented approximately 12% of our net sales for the year ended June 24, 2010. Net accounts receivable from Target Corporation were $3,604 and $3,354 at June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively.
Promotion and Advertising Costs
Promotion allowances, customer rebates and marketing allowances are recorded at the time revenue is recognized and are reflected as reductions in sales. Annual volume rebates are estimated based upon projected volumes for the year, while promotion and marketing allowances are recorded based upon terms of the actual arrangements. Coupon incentive costs are accrued based on estimates of product shipped to retailers at our measurement date and an estimate of redemptions to occur. We expense the costs of advertising, which include newspaper and other advertising activities, as incurred. Advertising expenses for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008 were $6,493, $5,149 and $2,346, respectively.
Shipping and Handling Costs
Shipping and handling costs, which include freight and other expenses to prepare finished goods for shipment, are included in selling expenses. For the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, shipping and handling costs totaled $13,970, $13,698 and $15,551, respectively.
Income Taxes
We account for income taxes using an asset and liability approach that requires the recognition of deferred tax assets and liabilities for the expected future tax consequences of events that have been reported in our financial statements or tax returns. Such items give rise to differences in the financial reporting and tax basis of assets and liabilities. A valuation allowance is recorded to reduce the carrying amount of deferred tax assets if it is more likely than not that all or a portion of the asset will not be realized. Any investment tax credits are accounted for by using the flow-through method, whereby the credits are reflected as reductions of tax expense in the year they are recognized in the financial statements. In estimating future tax consequences, we consider all expected future events other than changes in tax law or rates. We recognize interest and penalties accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in the income tax expense/(benefit) caption in the statement of operations.

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Segment Reporting
We operate in a single reportable operating segment that consists of selling various nut products through multiple distribution channels.
Earnings per Share
Earnings per common share are calculated using the weighted average number of shares of Common Stock and Class A Stock outstanding during the period. The following table presents the reconciliation of the weighted average shares outstanding used in computing earnings per share:
                         
    Year Ended     Year Ended     Year Ended  
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Weighted average shares outstanding — basic
    10,642,824       10,618,240       10,610,272  
Effect of dilutive securities:
                       
Stock options and restricted stock units
    82,284       17,037        
 
                 
Weighted average shares outstanding — diluted
    10,725,108       10,635,277       10,610,272  
 
                 
133,625 and 356,875 anti-dilutive stock options with a weighted average exercise price of $17.69 and $12.48 were excluded from the computation of diluted earnings per share for the years ended June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively. All outstanding options were excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share for the year ended June 26, 2008 due to the net loss for the year. Total options excluded from the calculation of diluted earnings per share were 470,440 for the year ended June 26, 2008 with a weighted average exercise price of $11.49.
Comprehensive Income (Loss)
We account for comprehensive income (loss) in accordance with ASC Topic 220, “Comprehensive Income”. This topic establishes standards for reporting and displaying comprehensive income (loss) and its components in a full set of general-purpose financial statements. The topic requires that all components of comprehensive income (loss) be reported in a financial statement that is displayed with the same prominence as other financial statements.
Recent Accounting Pronouncements
In June 2009, the FASB issued FASB Statement No. 168, “The FASB Accounting Standards Codification and the Hierarchy of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles — A Replacement of FASB Statement No. 162” (“Statement No. 168”). Under Statement No. 168, the FASB Accounting Standards Codification (“Codification”) became the single source of authoritative generally accepted accounting principles (“GAAP”) recognized by the FASB to be applied by nongovernmental entities. Rules and interpretive releases of the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) under authority of federal security laws are also sources of authoritative GAAP for SEC registrants. On the effective date of Statement No. 168, the Codification superseded all then-existing non-SEC accounting and reporting standards. All other non-SEC accounting literature not included in the Codification became nonauthoritative. The GAAP hierarchy was modified to include only two levels of GAAP — authoritative and nonauthoritative. Statement No. 168 was effective for financial statements issued for interim and annual periods ending after September 15, 2009. We began using the new Codification when referring to GAAP in the quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 24, 2009. The effect of adopting Statement No. 168 did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial statements.
In September 2006, the FASB issued SFAS No. 157, “Fair Value Measurements” (“SFAS 157”). SFAS 157 establishes a common definition for fair value to be applied to GAAP requiring use of fair value, establishes a framework for measuring fair value and expands disclosure about such fair value measurements. SFAS 157 is effective for financial assets and financial liabilities for fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2007. Issued in February 2008, FSP 157-1 “Application of FASB Statement No. 157 to FASB Statement No. 13 and Other Accounting Pronouncements That Address Fair Value Measurements for Purposes of Lease Classification or Measurement under Statement 13” removed leasing transactions accounted for under Statement 13 and related guidance from the scope of SFAS 157. FSP 157-2 “Partial Deferral of the Effective Date of Statement 157” (“FSP

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157-2”), deferred the effective date of SFAS 157 for all nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities to fiscal years beginning after November 15, 2008. In October 2008, the FASB issued FSP 157-3, “Determining the Fair Value of a Financial Asset When the Market for That Asset is Not Active” (“FSP 157-3”). FSP 157-3, which is effective immediately, clarifies the application of SFAS 157 in a market that is not active. The implementation of SFAS 157 for financial assets and financial liabilities, effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2009, did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial position and results of operations. After the Codification, all fair value measurement accounting is included as Topic 820. The implementation of Topic 820 for nonfinancial assets and nonfinancial liabilities, effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2010, did not have a material impact on our consolidated financial position and results of operations.
In December 2007, the FASB issued SFAS No. 141(R), “Business Combinations”, which replaces SFAS No. 141. The statement retains the fundamental requirements in SFAS No. 141 that the acquisition method of accounting (previously referred to as the purchase method of accounting) be used for all business combinations, but requires a number of changes, including changes in the way assets and liabilities are recognized as a result of business combinations. It also requires the capitalization of in-process research and development at fair value and requires the expensing of acquisition-related costs as incurred. In April 2009, the FASB issued FSP FAS 141(R)-1 which amends SFAS No. 141(R) by establishing a model to account for certain pre-acquisition contingencies. Under FSP FAS 141(R)-1, an acquirer is required to recognize at fair value an asset acquired or a liability assumed in a business combination that arises from a contingency if the acquisition-date fair value of that asset or liability can be determined during the measurement period. If the acquisition-date fair value cannot be determined during the measurement period, then the acquirer should follow the recognition criteria in Accounting for Contingencies”,”. SFAS No. 141(R) and FSP FAS 141(R)-1 were effective for us beginning June 26, 2009, and will apply prospectively to business combinations completed on or after that date. After the Codification, all business combination accounting is included as Topic 805. We used Topic 805 to account for our acquisition of certain assets and assumption of certain liabilities of Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010.
In June 2009, the FASB issued SFAS No. 167, “Amendments to FASB Interpretation No. 46(R), (“SFAS 167”) which amended the consolidation guidance applicable to variable interest entities (“VIEs”). The SFAS 167 amendments are effective as of the first annual reporting period that begins after November 15, 2009, and for interim periods within that first annual reporting period. SFAS 167 replaces Interpretation 46(R)’s risks-and-rewards-based quantitative approach to consolidation with a more qualitative approach that requires a reporting entity to have some economic exposure to a VIE along with “the power to direct the activities that most significantly impact the economic performance of the entity.” The FASB also reminded its constituents that only substantive terms, transactions, and arrangements should affect the accounting conclusions under Statement 167. The SFAS 167 provisions were included in Accounting Standards Update No. 2009-17, “Topic 810 — Improvements to Financial Reporting by Enterprises Involved with Variable Interest Entities,” (“ASU 2009-17”). We are currently reviewing the provisions of ASU 2009-17, which is effective for our first quarter of fiscal 2011.
NOTE 2 — INVENTORIES
Inventories consist of the following:
                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Raw material and supplies
  $ 54,990     $ 50,525  
Work-in-process and finished goods
    59,370       55,764  
 
           
Total
  $ 114,360     $ 106,289  
 
           

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NOTE 3 — ACQUISITION OF ORCHARD VALLEY HARVEST, INC.
On May 21, 2010, we acquired certain assets and assumed certain liabilities (the “Acquisition”) of OVH for a purchase price of $32,772. The purchase price may be increased up to $10,079, contingent upon performance of the acquired business for the 2010 and 2011 calendar years. The Acquisition has been accounted for as a business combination in accordance with Accounting Standards Codification (ASC) Topic 805, Business Combinations. As a result of the Acquisition, we expect to (i) expand our portfolio and market presence into the store perimeter beyond the traditional nut aisles, (ii) establish a platform to build a truly national produce nut program, and (iii) broaden our product breadth and production capabilities.
The total purchase price of $32,772 has been initially allocated to the fair values of certain assets acquired and certain liabilities assumed as follows:
         
Accounts receivable
  $ 5,145  
Inventories
    10,645  
Other assets
    2,130  
Property, plant and equipment
    3,408  
Intangible assets, including customer relationships, non-compete agreement and brand name (Note 4)
    16,170  
Goodwill
    5,454  
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities
    (2,911 )
Debt
    (1,432 )
Earn-out liability
    (5,837 )
 
     
Total
  $ 32,772  
 
     
The final allocation of the purchase price is in the process of being completed since it occurred late in the fiscal year. It is currently subject to final tax allocations and working capital adjustments being agreed to by the parties to the Acquisition.
Goodwill, which is tax deductible, arises from intangible assets that do not qualify for separate recognition and expected synergies from combining operations of OVH and the Company. There were no material contingencies recognized or unrecognized associated with the acquired business.
Under terms of the Purchase Agreement by and between us and OVH dated May 5, 2010 (the “Purchase Agreement”), future consideration from $0 up to $10,079 may be paid in addition to the $32,772 cash purchase price paid on May 21, 2010. This future consideration is contingent upon the future sales performance of the acquired business in the 2010 and 2011 calendar years. The following table summarizes the potential earnouts to be paid under terms of the Purchase Agreement. Retail sales include packaged sales to the consumer distribution channel. Net sales are comprised of retail sales plus bulk sales of products.
         
    Earnout  
Earnout Measurement   Payment  
Calendar 2010 net retail sales greater than $25,500
  $ 79  
Calendar 2010 net sales greater than $41,500 and calendar 2010 net retail sales greater than $36,500
    5,000  
Calendar 2011 net sales greater than $49,000 and calendar 2011 net retail sales greater than $43,000
    2,500  
Calendar 2010 and calendar 2011 net retail sales greater than $105,000
    2,500  
 
     
Total
  $ 10,079  
 
     
The earn-out liability recorded as of June 24, 2010 represents the fair value of the expected future payments, which was estimated by applying the income approach. The fair value is based on significant inputs that are not observable in the market, which ASC 820 refers to as Level 3 inputs. Key assumptions included a discount rate of 3.25% and a

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probability adjusted level of future sales performance levels for each periodic performance benchmark that triggers an amount payable under the agreement. Due to the relatively short timeframe for the earnout payments, the sensitivity of the above amounts is almost entirely dependent on the probability factors.
We have established a current and long-term liability of $4,411 and $1,426, respectively. This expected fair value will be re-measured on a quarterly basis through the quarter ending December 29, 2011. Any quarterly change in the expected fair value will require an adjustment to the contingent consideration with the corresponding charge or credit to operating income for that quarter.
The acquired business contributed revenues of $4.0 million for the period from May 21, 2010 through June 24, 2010. In 2010, the Company incurred $0.7 million of costs related to the Acquisition all of which were expensed and that are included in administrative expenses.
The following reflects the unaudited pro forma results of operations of the Company as if the acquisition had taken place at the beginning of fiscal 2009:
                 
    Year Ended     Year Ended  
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Net sales
  $ 614,336     $ 605,549  
Net income
  $ 18,241     $ 6,648  
Diluted earnings per share
  $ 1.70     $ 0.63  
The unaudited pro forma results have been calculated after applying our accounting policies and adjusting the results of OVH to reflect elimination of transaction costs and record additional depreciation, amortization and interest expense that would have been charged, assuming the fair value adjustment to property and equipment and intangible assets had been applied from June 27, 2008, all net of related income taxes. Transaction costs of $773 and incremental cost of sales related to the inventory fair value increase of $1,466 are excluded from the pro forma net income stated above for both fiscal 2010 and fiscal 2009.
NOTE 4 — GOODWILL AND INTANGIBLE ASSETS
Our recorded goodwill of $5,454 relates wholly to the OVH acquisition on May 21, 2010.
Intangible assets subject to amortization consist of the following:
                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Customer relationships
  $ 10,600     $  
Non-compete agreement
    5,400        
Brand names
    8,090       7,920  
 
           
Total intangible assets, gross
    24,090       7,920  
 
           
Less accumulated amortization:
               
Customer relationships
    (146 )      
Non-compete agreement
    (43 )      
Brand names
    (7,780 )     (7,351 )
 
           
Total accumulated amortization
    (7,969 )     (7,351 )
 
           
Net intangible assets
  $ 16,121     $ 569  
 
           
Customer relationships and the non-compete agreement relate wholly to the Acquisition. Customer relationships are being amortized on a straight line basis over seven years. The non-compete agreement is being amortized based upon the expected pattern of cash flow annual benefit over a five year period. The brand name consists primarily of the Fisher brand name, which we acquired in a 1995 acquisition. The Fisher brand name will become fully amortized in fiscal 2011. The remainder of the brand name relates to the Acquisition and is being amortized on a straight line basis over five years. Total amortization expense related to intangible assets was $618, $426 and $427

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for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Expected amortization expense for the next five fiscal years will be $2,203, $2,973, $3,070, $2,629 and $2,167 for fiscal 2011 through fiscal 2015.
NOTE 5 — REVOLVING CREDIT FACILITY
On February 7, 2008, we entered into a Credit Agreement with a new bank group (the “Bank Lenders”) providing a $117,500 revolving loan commitment and letter of credit subfacility (the “Credit Facility”). Also on February 7, 2008, we entered into a Loan Agreement with an insurance company (the “Mortgage Lender”) providing us with two term loans, one in the amount of $36,000 (“Tranche A”) and the other in the amount of $9,000 (“Tranche B”), for an aggregate amount of $45,000 (the “Mortgage Facility”).
The Credit Facility is secured by substantially all our assets other than real property and fixtures. The Mortgage Facility is secured by mortgages on essentially all of our owned real property located in Elgin, Illinois, Gustine, California and Garysburg, North Carolina (the “Encumbered Properties”). The encumbered Elgin, Illinois real property includes almost all of an Old Elgin Site (the “Old Elgin Site”) that was purchased prior to our purchase of the land in Elgin, Illinois, on which our Chicago area operations are now consolidated.
On March 8, 2010, we entered into a First Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of February 7, 2008 (the “First Amendment”). The First Amendment modified the Credit Agreement to permit us to make aggregate acquisitions of up to $50,000 in cash payable at closing and meeting specified other criterion including loan availability levels and pro forma financial covenant compliance. In addition, the First Amendment alters the borrowing base calculation, which is based upon accounts receivable, inventory and machinery and equipment (the “Borrowing Base Calculation”), to allow us increased availability from inventory under the Credit Facility during January, February, March, October, November and December, which are the months in which we purchase most of our inventory.
The First Amendment also increased the interest rates charged to us, such that borrowings under the Credit Facility now accrue interest at a rate determined pursuant to the administrative agent’s prime rate plus an applicable margin determined by reference to the amount of loans which may be advanced under the Borrowing Base Calculation, ranging from 0.00% to 0.50% (up from (0.50%) to 0.00%), or a rate based on the London interbank offered rate (“LIBOR”) plus an applicable margin based upon the Borrowing Base Calculation, ranging from 2.50% to 3.0% (up from 2.00% to 2.50%). Similarly, the face amount of undrawn letters of credit now accrues interest at a rate of 2.00% to 2.50% (up from 1.50% to 2.00%), based upon the Borrowing Base Calculation. In addition, the First Amendment provides that in the event that loan availability under the Borrowing Base Calculation falls below $25,000 (up from $15,000), we will be required to maintain a specified fixed charge coverage ratio, tested on a monthly basis.
The Credit Facility matures on February 7, 2013. The portion of the Borrowing Base Calculation based upon machinery and equipment will decrease by $1,500 per year for the first five years to coincide with amortization of the machinery and equipment collateral. As of June 24, 2010, the weighted average interest rate for the Credit Facility was 2.95%. The terms of the Credit Facility contain covenants that require us to restrict investments, indebtedness, capital expenditures, acquisitions and certain sales of assets, cash dividends, redemptions of capital stock and prepayment of indebtedness (if such prepayment, among other things, is of a subordinate debt). If loan availability under the Borrowing Base Calculation falls below $25,000, we will be required to maintain a specified fixed charge coverage ratio, tested on a monthly basis. All cash received from customers is required to be applied against the Credit Facility. The Bank Lenders are entitled to require immediate repayment of our obligations under the Credit Facility in the event of default on the payments required under the Credit Facility, a change in control in the ownership of our Company, non-compliance with the financial covenants or upon the occurrence of certain other defaults by us under the Credit Facility (including a default under the Mortgage Facility). As of June 24, 2010, we were in compliance with all covenants under the Credit Facility and we currently expect to be in compliance with the financial covenant in the Credit Facility for the foreseeable future. As of June 24, 2010, we had $51,600 of available credit under the Credit Facility. We would still be in compliance with all restrictive covenants under the Bank Credit Facility if this entire amount were borrowed.

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NOTE 6 — LONG-TERM DEBT
Long-term debt consists of the following:
                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Mortgage facility (Tranche A), collateralized by real property, due in monthly principal installments of $200 plus interest at 7.63% per annum from June 2008 to February 2023 with a final principal payment of $600 in March 2023
  $ 31,000     $ 33,400  
Mortgage facility (Tranche B), collateralized by real property, due in monthly principal installments of $50 plus interest at LIBOR plus 5.50% per annum from June 2008 to February 2023 with a final principal payment of $150 in March 2023
    7,750       8,350  
Industrial development bonds, collateralized by building, machinery and equipment with a cost aggregating $8,000
    4,280       4,720  
Selma, Texas facility financing obligation to related parties, due in monthly installments of $109 through September 1, 2031
    13,410       13,644  
Equipment loan, collateralized by machinery and equipment, monthly installments of $46 through December 2012
    1,340        
Capitalized equipment leases
    449       592  
 
           
 
    58,229       60,706  
Less: Current maturities
    (15,549 )     (11,690 )
 
           
Total long-term debt
  $ 42,680     $ 49,016  
 
           
We are subject to interest rate resets for each of Tranche A and Tranche B. Specifically, on the March 1, 2018 (the “Tranche A Reset Date”) and March 1, 2012 and every two years thereafter (each, a “Tranche B Reset Date”), the Mortgage Lender may reset the interest rates for each of Tranche A and Tranche B, respectively, in its sole and absolute discretion. If the reset interest rate for either Tranche A or Tranche B is unacceptable to us and we (i) do not have sufficient funds to repay amounts due with respect to Tranche A or Tranche B on the Tranche A Reset Date or Tranche B Reset Date, in each case, as applicable, or (ii) are unable to refinance amounts due with respect to Tranche A or Tranche B on the Tranche A Reset Date or Tranche B Reset Date, in each case, as applicable, on terms more favorable than the reset interest rates, then depending on the extent of the changes in the reset interest rates our interest expense could increase materially.
The Mortgage Facility matures on March 1, 2023. Tranche A under the Mortgage Facility accrues interest at a fixed interest rate of 7.63% per annum, payable monthly. As mentioned above, such interest rate may be reset by the Mortgage Lender on the Tranche A Reset Date. Monthly principal payments in the amount of $0.2 million commenced on June 1, 2008. Tranche B under the Mortgage Facility accrues interest, as reset on March 1, 2010, at a floating rate of the greater of one month LIBOR plus 5.50% per annum or 6.50%, payable monthly. The margin on such floating rate may be reset by the Mortgage Lender on each Tranche B Reset Date; provided, however, that the Mortgage Lender may also change the underlying index on each Tranche B Reset Date occurring on or after March 1, 2016. Monthly principal payments in the amount of $0.1 million commenced on June 1, 2008. We do not currently anticipate that any change in the floating rate or the underlying index will have a material adverse effect upon our business, financial condition or results of operations.
The terms of the Mortgage Facility contain covenants that require us to maintain a specified net worth of $110.0 million and maintain the Encumbered Properties. The Mortgage Facility is secured, in part, by the Old Elgin Site. We must obtain the consent of the Mortgage Lender prior to the sale of the Old Elgin Site. A portion of the Old Elgin Site contains an office building (which we began renting during the third quarter of fiscal 2007) that may or may not be included in any future sale (assuming one were to occur). The Mortgage Lender is entitled to require immediate repayment of our obligations under the Mortgage Facility in the event we default in the payments required under the Mortgage Facility, non-compliance with the covenants or upon the occurrence of certain other defaults by us under the Mortgage Facility. As of June 24, 2010, we were in compliance with all covenants under the Mortgage Facility. We currently believe that we will be in compliance with the financial covenant in the Mortgage

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Facility for the foreseeable future and therefore $28.6 million has been classified as long-term debt as of June 24, 2010. This $28.6 million represents scheduled principal payments due under Tranche A beyond twelve months of June 24, 2010.
We financed the construction of a peanut shelling plant with industrial development bonds in 1987. On June 1, 2006, we remarketed the bonds, resetting the interest rate at 4.55% through May 2011, and at a market rate to be determined thereafter. On June 1, 2011, and on each subsequent interest reset date for the bonds, we are required to redeem the bonds at face value plus any accrued and unpaid interest, unless a bondholder elects to retain his or her bonds. Any bonds redeemed by us at the demand of a bondholder on the reset date are required to be remarketed by the underwriter of the bonds on a “best efforts” basis. The agreement requires us to redeem the bonds in varying annual installments, ranging from $475 to $760 annually through 2017. We are also required to redeem the bonds in certain other circumstances, for example, within 180 days after any determination that interest on the bonds is taxable. We have the option at any time, however, subject to certain conditions, to redeem the bonds at face value plus accrued interest, if any.
In September 2006, we sold our Selma, Texas properties to two related party partnerships for $14.3 million and are leasing them back. The selling price was determined by an independent appraiser to be the fair market value which also approximated our carrying value. The lease for the Selma, Texas properties has a ten-year term at a fair market value rent with three five-year renewal options. Also, we have an option to purchase the properties from the partnerships after five years at 95% (100% in certain circumstances) of the then fair market value, but not to be less than the $14.3 million purchase price. The financing obligation is being accounted for similar to the accounting for a capital lease, whereby $14.3 million was recorded as a debt obligation, as the provisions of the arrangement are not eligible for sale-leaseback accounting. These partnerships are not considered variable interest entities subject to consolidation as the partnerships had substantive equity at risk at the time of entering into the Selma, Texas sale-leaseback transaction.
Aggregate maturities of long-term debt are as follows for the years ending:
         
June 30, 2011
  $ 15,549  
June 28, 2012
    3,304  
June 27, 2013
    2,970  
June 26, 2014
    2,740  
June 25, 2015
    2,749  
Thereafter
    30,917  
 
     
Total
  $ 58,229  
 
     
NOTE 7 — INCOME TAXES
The benefit provision for income taxes for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008 are as follows:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Current
  $ 7,890     $ 215     $ (431 )
Deferred
    557       (474 )     (466 )
 
                 
Total income tax expense (benefit)
  $ 8,447     $ (259 )   $ (897 )
 
                 
The reconciliations of income taxes at the statutory federal income tax rate to income taxes reported in the statements of operations for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008 are as follows:

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    June 24,     June 25,     June 26,  
    2010     2009     2008  
Federal statutory income tax rate
    35.0 %     35.0 %     (35.0 )%
State income taxes, net of federal benefit
    4.2       7.8       (6.9 )
Effect of ASC 715
                (3.8 )
Net change in valuation allowance for net deferred tax assets
          (45.5 )     30.9  
Domestic manufacturing deduction
    (2.0 )            
Other
    (0.3 )     (1.2 )     1.7  
 
                 
Effective tax rate
    36.9 %     (3.9 )%     (13.1 )%
 
                 
The deferred tax assets and liabilities are comprised of the following:
                                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
    Asset     Liability     Asset     Liability  
Current
                               
Accounts receivable
  $ 217     $     $ 211     $  
Employee compensation
    1,551             1,503        
Inventory
    302             287        
Workers’ compensation
    1,599             1,534        
Other
    817             573        
 
                       
Total current
  $ 4,486     $     $ 4,108     $  
 
                       
Long term
                               
Depreciation
  $     $ (11,481 )   $     $ (10,224 )
Amortization
    57                   (24 )
Capitalized leases
    595             319        
Goodwill
    280                    
Operating loss carryforwards
    668             2,757        
Retirement plan
    3,881             3,076        
Employee compensation
    1,131                    
Other
    300             462        
 
                       
Total long-term
  $ 6,912     $ (11,481 )   $ 6,614     $ (10,248 )
 
                       
Total
  $ 11,398     $ (11,481 )   $ 10,722     $ (10,248 )
 
                       
At the beginning of fiscal 2009, we had a valuation allowance of $3.0 million. Our deferred income tax assets included $2.4 million of state net operating loss (“NOL”) tax benefits ($1.6 million net of the federal effect) and $3.3 million of pretax federal NOL carryforwards for income tax purposes. The state NOL carryforward tax benefits relate to losses generated during the years ended June 26, 2008, June 28, 2007 and June 29, 2006, which generally have a carryforward period of approximately 12 years before expiration. The federal NOL carryforward relates to losses generated during the year ended June 26, 2008, which generally have a carryforward period of 20 years before expiration. As of June 26, 2008, our future profitability was uncertain, as we recorded losses before income taxes of $6,854, $21,097 and $25,410 for fiscal 2008, fiscal 2007 and fiscal 2006, respectively. We therefore provided a valuation allowance of $3.0 million related to our deferred income tax assets, to the extent such assets exceeded the deferred income tax liabilities that were expected to reverse in future periods. Based on our improved operating results for fiscal 2009 and our expected future profitability, we eliminated the beginning of the year valuation allowance during the fourth quarter of fiscal 2009 as we believed the weight of such evidence indicated it was more likely than not the net deferred income tax assets will be realized supporting our assessment of the realization of net deferred tax asset in future periods.
We adopted accounting guidance for uncertainty in income taxes, on June 29, 2007. There were no material effects associated with the implementation of this accounting guidance. As of June 24, 2010, unrecognized tax benefits and accrued interest and penalties were not material. We recognize interest and penalties accrued related to unrecognized tax benefits in the income tax (benefit) expense caption in the statement of operations. We file income tax returns with federal and state tax authorities within the United States of America. The Internal Revenue Service has concluded auditing our Company’s tax return for fiscal 2004, and there was no material impact to our Company.

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The Illinois Department of Revenue has concluded its audits of our tax returns through fiscal 2007, and there was no material impact to our Company. No other tax jurisdictions are material to us.
There have been no material changes to the amount of unrecognized tax benefits during fiscal 2010. We do not anticipate that total unrecognized tax benefits will significantly change in the future.
NOTE 8 — COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
Operating Leases
We lease buildings and certain equipment pursuant to agreements accounted for as operating leases. Rent expense under these operating leases aggregated $1,403, $1,269 and $2,032 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Aggregate non-cancelable lease commitments under these operating leases are as follows for the years ending:
         
June 30, 2011
  $ 1,907  
June 28, 2012
    971  
June 27, 2013
    476  
June 26, 2014
    173  
June 25, 2015
    126  
Thereafter
    33  
 
     
 
  $ 3,686  
 
     
Earnout Liability
As is discussed in Note 3, we have recorded a current and long-term liability of $4,411 and $1,426, respectively, for future contingent consideration that may be paid under terms of the Purchase Agreement.
Litigation
We are a party to various lawsuits, proceedings and other matters arising out of the conduct of our business. It is management’s opinion that the ultimate resolution of these matters will not have a material effect upon our business, financial condition, results of operations or cash flows.
NOTE 9 — STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
Our Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value (the “Class A Stock”), has cumulative voting rights with respect to the election of those directors which the holders of Class A Stock are entitled to elect, and 10 votes per share on all other matters on which holders of our Company’s Class A Stock and Common Stock are entitled to vote. In addition, each share of Class A Stock is convertible at the option of the holder at any time into one share of Common Stock and automatically converts into one share of Common Stock upon any sale or transfer other than to related individuals. Each share of our Company’s Common Stock, $.01 par value (the “Common Stock”) has noncumulative voting rights of one vote per share. The Class A Stock and the Common Stock are entitled to share equally, on a share-for-share basis, in any cash dividends declared by the Board of Directors, and the holders of the Common Stock are entitled to elect 25% of the members comprising the Board of Directors. Our Board of Directors has not declared dividends since 1995.
NOTE 10 — STOCK-BASED COMPENSATION PLANS
At our annual meeting of stockholders on October 30, 2008, our stockholders approved a new equity incentive plan (the “2008 Equity Incentive Plan”) pursuant to which awards of options and stock-based awards may be made to members of the Board of Directors, employees and other individuals providing services to our Company. A total of 1,000,000 shares of Common Stock are authorized for grants of awards, which may be in the form of options, restricted stock, restricted stock units, stock appreciation rights, Common Stock or dividends and dividend equivalents. A maximum of 500,000 of the 1,000,000 shares of Common Stock may be used for grants of Common

53


 

Stock, restricted stock and restricted stock units. Additionally, awards of options or stock appreciation rights are limited to 100,000 shares annually to any single individual, and awards of Common Stock, restricted stock or restricted stock units are limited to 50,000 shares annually to any single individual. During the second quarter of fiscal 2009, 46,500 restricted stock units were awarded to employees and members of the Board of Directors. During the second quarter of fiscal 2010, 61,000 restricted stock units were awarded to employees and members of the Board of Directors. The vesting period is three years for awards to employees and one year for awards to non-employee members of the Board of Directors. We are recognizing expenses over the applicable vesting period based upon the fair market value of our Common Stock at the grant date. As of June 24, 2010, all 107,500 restricted unit awards remain outstanding, 10,000 of which have vested, with a weighted average remaining life of 1.6 years. Also, 2,500 and 1,500 stock options were granted during fiscal 2010 and fiscal 2009, respectively, under the 2008 Equity Incentive Plan. The exercise price of the options was determined as set forth in the 2008 Equity Incentive Plan by the Compensation Committee of our Board of Directors, and must be at least the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. Except as set forth in the 2008 Equity Incentive Plan, options expire upon termination of employment or directorship. The options granted under the 2008 Equity Incentive Plan are exercisable 25% annually commencing on the first anniversary date of grant and become fully exercisable on the fourth anniversary date of grant. Options generally will expire no later than ten years after the date on which they are granted. We issue new shares of Common Stock upon exercise of stock options. As of June 24, 2010, 888,500 shares of Common Stock remain authorized for future grants of awards.
The 2008 Equity Incentive Plan replaced a stock option plan approved at our annual meeting of stockholders on October 28, 1998 (the “1998 Equity Incentive Plan”) pursuant to which awards of options and stock-based awards could be made. There were 700,000 shares of Common Stock authorized for issuance to certain key employees and “outside directors” (i.e., directors who are not employees of our Company). The exercise price of the options was determined as set forth in the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan by the Board of Directors and was at least the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant. Except as set forth in the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan, options expire upon termination of employment or directorship. The options granted under the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan are exercisable 25% annually commencing on the first anniversary date of grant and become fully exercisable on the fourth anniversary date of grant. Options generally will expire no later than ten years after the date on which they are granted. We issue new shares of Common Stock upon exercise of stock options issued pursuant to the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan. Through fiscal 2007, all of the options granted, except those granted to outside directors, were intended to qualify as incentive stock options within the meaning of Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code. Effective fiscal 2008, all option grants are non-qualified awards. The 1998 Equity Incentive Plan terminated on September 1, 2008. However, all outstanding options issued pursuant to the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan will continue to be governed by the terms of the 1998 Equity Incentive Plan.
The expected term of the awards was determined using the “simplified method” as stated in SEC Staff Accounting Bulletin No. 107 that utilizes the following formula: ((vesting term + original contract term)/2). Expected stock volatility was determined based on historical volatility for the 6.25 year-period preceding the measurement date. The risk-free rate was based on the yield curve in effect at the time options were granted, using U.S. treasury constant maturities over the expected life of the option. Expected forfeitures were determined based upon our expectations and past experiences. Expected dividend yield was based on our dividend policy at the time the options were granted.
We determine fair value of stock option awards using the Black-Scholes option-pricing model. The following weighted-average assumptions were used to determine the fair value of options granted for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Average risk-free interest rate
    3.0 %     2.5 %     3.7 %
Expected dividend yield
    0.0 %     0.0 %     0.0 %
Expected volatility
    50.4 %     52.8 %     54.3 %
Expected life (years)
    6.3       6.3       6.3  
Under the fair value recognition provisions of ASC Topic 718, stock-based compensation is measured at the grant date based on the value of the award and is recognized as expense over the vesting period. Stock-based compensation expense was $491, $273 and $397 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26,

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2008, respectively, and the related tax benefit for non-qualified stock options was $21, $0 and $6 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively.
Activity in our stock option plans was as follows:
                 
            Weighted  
            Average  
            Exercise  
    Shares     Price  
Outstanding at June 28, 2007
    353,690     $ 13.00  
Activity:
               
Granted
    151,500       7.98  
Exercised
    (11,250 )     6.40  
Forfeited
    (23,500 )     13.98  
 
             
Outstanding at June 26, 2008
    470,440     $ 11.49  
Activity:
               
Granted
    1,500       5.88  
Exercised
    (6,000 )     5.98  
Forfeited
    (84,000 )     9.58  
 
             
Outstanding at June 25, 2009
    381,940     $ 11.97  
Activity:
               
Granted
    2,500       15.19  
Exercised
    (26,250 )     6.22  
Forfeited
    (30,500 )     16.00  
 
             
Outstanding at June 24, 2010
    327,690     $ 12.08  
 
             
 
               
Exercisable at June 24, 2010
    270,565     $ 12.76  
Exercisable at June 25, 2009
    279,065     $ 12.74  
Exercisable at June 26, 2008
    238,690     $ 12.72  
The number of stock options vested, and expected to vest in the future, as of June 24, 2010, is not significantly different from the number of stock options outstanding at June 24, 2010, as stated above. The weighted average fair value of options granted was $7.90, $3.09 and $4.47 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. The total intrinsic value of all options exercised was $100, $0 and $16 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. All options granted during fiscal 2010, fiscal 2009 and fiscal 2008 were at exercise prices equal to the market price of Common Stock at the grant date.
As of June 24, 2010, there was $817 of total unrecognized compensation cost related to non-vested share-based compensation arrangements granted under our stock-based compensation plans. We expect to recognize that cost over a weighted average period of 0.9 years.
Exercise prices for options outstanding as of June 24, 2010 ranged from $4.06 to $32.30. The weighted average remaining contractual life of those options is 4.6 years, and 4.0 years for those exercisable. The total options vested during fiscal 2010 was $951. The aggregate intrinsic value of option awards at June 24, 2010 was $1,355, $996 for those exercisable. The options outstanding as of June 24, 2010 may be segregated into two ranges, as shown in the following:
                 
    Option Price Per Share Range  
    $4.06 - $11.30     $15.03 - $32.30  
Number of options
    197,065       130,625  
Weighted-average exercise price
  $ 8.27     $ 17.83  
Weighted-average remaining life (years)
    5.1       3.7  
Number of options exercisable
    142,440       128,125  
Weighted average exercise price for exercisable options
  $ 8.16     $ 17.88  

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NOTE 11 — EMPLOYEE BENEFIT PLANS
We maintain a contributory plan established pursuant to the provisions of section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code. The plan provides retirement benefits for all nonunion employees meeting minimum age and service requirements. We match 50% of the amount contributed by each employee up to certain maximums specified in the plan. Our contributions to the 401(k) plan were $548, $435 and $628 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively.
We contributed $236, $204 and $324 for the years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively, to multi-employer pension plans. We are presently unable to determine our respective share of either accumulated plan benefits or net assets available for benefits under the multiemployer plans. During the first quarter of fiscal 2009, we recorded a long-term liability of $868 for the withdrawal from the multiemployer plan for the step van drivers that were employed for our store-door delivery system that was discontinued during the third quarter of fiscal 2008. The total liability was $794 and $837 as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively. As of June 26, 2008, we recorded a $1,200 estimated liability for the withdrawal from the multiemployer plan for the step van drivers. The $332 difference between the previously estimated liability and the actual liability was recorded as a reduction in restructuring expense. See Note 16.
Our non-equity based incentive compensation plan includes a feature that holds back a portion of any incentive award declared that is above a specified maximum amount. Such held-back amount is accrued and will be paid to the participant only upon the continued favorable performance of our Company and the continued employment of the participant by our Company. Generally upon retirement, death, disability or termination by our Company for reasons other than for cause, any remaining amount held back is payable to the participant. The portion of the accrued amount not expected to be paid during fiscal 2011 is classified as a long-term liability.
NOTE 12 — RETIREMENT PLAN
On August 2, 2007, the committee then known as the Compensation, Nominating and Corporate Governance Committee (the “Committee”) approved a restated Supplemental Employee Retirement Plan (“SERP”) for certain executive officers and key employees, retroactively effective as of August 25, 2005. The restated SERP retroactively changed the plan adopted on August 25, 2005 to, among other things, clarify certain actuarial provisions and incorporate new Internal Revenue Service requirements. The SERP is an unfunded, non-qualified benefit plan that will provide eligible participants with monthly benefits upon retirement, disability or death, subject to certain conditions. Benefits paid to retirees are based on age at retirement, years of credited service, and average compensation. We use our fiscal year-end as the measurement date for obligation and asset calculations. Effective June 28, 2007, we adopted the recognition and disclosure provisions of SFAS No. 158, “Employers’ Accounting for Defined Benefit Pension and Other Postretirement Plans — an amendment of FASB Statement No. 87, 99, 106 and 123(R)” (“SFAS 158”), which required the recognition of the funded status of the SERP on the Consolidated Balance Sheet. The provisions of SFAS 158 are now included in ASC Topic 715, Compensation — Retirement Benefits. Actuarial gains or losses, prior service costs or credits and transition obligations that have not yet been recognized are now required to be recorded as a component of “Accumulated Other Comprehensive Loss” (“AOCL”).
The following table presents the changes in the projected benefit obligation for the fiscal years ended:
                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Change in projected benefit obligation
               
Benefit obligation at beginning of year
  $ 8,749     $ 9,043  
Service cost
    145       138  
Interest cost
    581       562  
Actuarial loss (gain)
    1,783       (128 )
Benefits paid
    (654 )     (866 )
 
           
Projected benefit obligation at end of year
  $ 10,604     $ 8,749  
 
           

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Components of the actuarial loss (gain) portion of the change in projected benefit obligation are presented below for the fiscal years ended:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Actuarial Loss (Gain)
                       
Change in bonus expectation
  $     $ 91     $  
Change in assumed pay increases
    95              
Change in discount rate
    1,611       (399 )     (267 )
Adjustment to projected retiree benefit
                (310 )
Other
    77       180       (152 )
 
                 
Actuarial loss (gain)
  $ 1,783     $ (128 )   $ (729 )
 
                 
The components of the net periodic pension cost are as follows for the fiscal years ended:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Service cost
  $ 145     $ 138     $ 138  
Interest cost
    581       562       575  
Recognized gain amortization
    (332 )     (324 )     (359 )
Prior service cost amortization
    957       957       957  
 
                 
Net periodic pension cost
  $ 1,351     $ 1,333     $ 1,311  
 
                 
Significant assumptions related to our SERP include the discount rate used to calculate the actuarial present value of benefit obligations to be paid in the future and the average rate of compensation expense increase by SERP participants.
We used the following assumptions to calculate the benefit obligations of our SERP as of the following dates:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Discount rate
    5.61 %     6.90 %     6.52 %
Rate of compensation increases
    4.50 %     4.50 %     4.50 %
Bonus payment
  60% - 70% of   60% - 70% of   60% of base,
 
  base,   base,   paid 3 of 5
 
  paid 3 of 5   paid 3 of 5   years
 
  years   years        
We used the following assumptions to calculate the net periodic costs of our SERP as follows for the fiscal years ended:
                         
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009     June 26, 2008  
Discount rate
    6.90 %     6.52 %     6.27 %
Rate of compensation increases
    4.50 %     4.50 %     4.50 %
Bonus payment
  60% - 70% of   60% of base,   60% of base,
 
  base,   paid 3 of 5   paid 3 of 5
 
  paid 3 of 5   years   years
 
  years                

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The assumed discount rate is based, in part, upon a discount rate modeling process that considers both high quality long-term indices and the duration of the SERP plan relative to the durations implicit in the broader indices. The discount rate is utilized principally in calculating the actuarial present value of our obligation and periodic expense pursuant to the SERP. To the extent the discount rate increases or decreases, our SERP obligation is decreased or increased, accordingly.
The following table presents the benefits expected to be paid in the next ten fiscal years:
         
Fiscal year        
2011
  $ 654  
2012
    652  
2013
    648  
2014
    641  
2015
    632  
2016 — 2020
    2,884  
The following table presents the components of accumulated other comprehensive loss:
                 
    June 24, 2010     June 25, 2009  
Unrecognized net gain
  $ 4,737     $ 6,852  
Unrecognized prior service cost
    (10,049 )     (11,006 )
Tax effect
    1,913       1,454  
 
           
Net amount recognized
  $ (3,399 )   $ (2,700 )
 
           
We expect to recognize $957 of the prior service cost offset by $216 of the net gain in net periodic benefit cost for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2011.
NOTE 13 — TRANSACTIONS WITH RELATED PARTIES
In addition to the related party transactions described in Notes 1 and 6, we also entered into transactions with the following related parties:
We purchase materials and manufacturing equipment from a company that is effectively owned by two members of our Board of Directors who are also executive officers and individuals directly related to them. Purchases from this related entity aggregated $11,000, $11,816 and $9,420 for the fiscal years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Accounts payable to this related entity aggregated $281 and $664 as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively.
In the past, we have purchased materials from a company that is 50% owned by an individual related to a member of our Board of Directors. Material purchases from this related entity aggregated $0, $295 and $330 for the fiscal years ended June 24, 2010, June 25, 2009 and June 26, 2008, respectively. Accounts payable to this related entity aggregated $20 and $23 as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009, respectively.
NOTE 14 — DISTRIBUTION CHANNEL AND PRODUCT TYPE SALES MIX
We operate in a single reportable operating segment through which we sell various nut products through multiple distribution channels.

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The following summarizes net sales by distribution channel for the fiscal years ended:
                         
    June 24,     June 25,     June 26,  
    2010     2009     2008  
Distribution Channel
                       
Consumer
  $ 331,509     $ 317,097     $ 294,021  
Industrial
    78,255       79,147       92,792  
Food Service
    63,186       64,657       68,132  
Contract Packaging
    52,332       55,753       47,441  
Export
    36,351       37,192       39,385  
 
                 
Total
  $ 561,633     $ 553,846     $ 541,771  
 
                 
The following summarizes sales by product type as a percentage of total gross sales. The information is based upon gross sales, rather than net sales, because certain adjustments, such as promotional discounts, are not allocable to product types.
                         
    June 24,     June 25,     June 26,  
    2010     2009     2008  
Product Type
                       
Peanuts
    19.9 %     21.8 %     20.1 %
Pecans
    19.0       19.2       22.6  
Cashews & Mixed Nuts
    21.1       22.5       20.8  
Walnuts
    12.4       13.3       14.7  
Almonds
    11.5       11.3       11.9  
Other
    16.1       11.9       9.9  
 
                 
Total
    100.0 %     100.0 %     100.0 %
 
                 
For all periods presented, the largest component of the “Other” product type is trail and snack mixes which include nut products.
NOTE 15 — VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS AND RESERVES
The following table details the activity in various allowance and reserve accounts.
                                 
    Balance at                        
    Beginning                     Balance at  
Description   of Period     Additions     Deductions     End of Period  
June 24, 2010
                               
Allowance for doubtful accounts
  $ 138     $ 22     $       160  
Reserve for cash discounts
    416       7,058       (7,076 )     398  
Reserve for customer deductions
    2,211       3,419       (4,117 )     1,513  
 
                       
Total
  $ 2,765     $ 10,499     $ (11,193 )   $ 2,071  
 
                       
 
                               
June 25, 2009
                               
Income tax valuation allowance
  $ 3,038     $     $ (3,038 )   $  
Allowance for doubtful accounts
    111       33       (6 )     138  
Reserve for cash discounts
    310       6,780       (6,674 )     416  
Reserve for customer deductions
    1,796       6,233       (5,818 )     2,211  
 
                       
Total
  $ 5,255     $ 13,046     $ (15,536 )   $ 2,765  
 
                       
 
                               
June 26, 2008
                               
Income tax valuation allowance
  $ 1,362     $ 1,676     $     $ 3,038  
Allowance for doubtful accounts
    183       60       (132 )     111  
Reserve for cash discounts
    225       6,065       (5,980 )     310  
Reserve for customer deductions
    2,751       5,089       (6,044 )     1,796  
 
                       
Total
  $ 4,521     $ 12,890     $ (12,156 )   $ 5,255  
 
                       

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NOTE 16 — RESTRUCTURING AND RELATED CHARGES
On January 22, 2008 and February 1, 2008 we announced two separate restructuring initiatives to reduce operating costs by eliminating underperforming products and the number of employees required as a result of our facility consolidation project, which we completed in August 2008. The initiatives focused on three primary areas:
Sales Profitability Review
We completed a sales profitability review and in connection therewith sales prices were increased to the extent feasible with respect to certain underperforming products. In addition, as part of this review, we discontinued approximately 1,200 products, which contributed to a decrease in our sales volume; however, absent other considerations and influences, our overall profitability is currently expected to increase for the near term. In order to achieve profitability for the long term we need to, among other things, achieve profitable volume growth. We reduced our total number of employees by approximately 80 as a result of these restructuring initiatives, which resulted in $325 of one-time severance expense recorded in the third quarter of fiscal 2008, all of which was paid in fiscal 2008. We anticipate no further restructuring or related charges related to the sales profitability review initiative.
Elimination of Store-Door Delivery System
We previously distributed our products to approximately 300 convenience stores, supermarkets and other retail customer locations through a store-door delivery system. Under this system, we used a fleet of step-vans to market and distribute nuts, snacks and candy directly to retail customers on a store-by-store basis. Store-door delivery sales were $2.5 million for calendar 2007 and have declined annually in recent years as fewer customers required this type of service. We ceased distributing products using the store-door delivery system on January 22, 2008. A majority of the store-door delivery system sales have migrated to our other distribution methods. In connection with the discontinuance of the store-door delivery system, we terminated nine employees. The store-door discontinuance required us to recognize a total estimated cost of $1,400 during fiscal 2008, $1,200 of which related to the estimated cost to withdraw from a multiemployer pension plan for the step-van drivers, $30 of which related to severance for the unionized route drivers, $133 of which related to accelerating depreciation for step-vans and $37 of which related to the termination of step-van leases. The multiemployer obligation was reduced from $1,200 to $868 during the first quarter of fiscal 2009 when the final determination was received.
Facility Consolidation Project
In August 2008, we completed the consolidation of all our Chicago area facilities into the Elgin Site. This consolidation has allowed us to eliminate redundant costs by being able to operate at a single facility. Due to the early completion of the consolidation, we ceased the use of one of our old facilities before the lease termination date. As a result, we recorded a lease termination charge of $173 during the second quarter of fiscal 2008.
Summary
We incurred the following restructuring expenses:
                 
    Year Ended     Year Ended  
    June 25,     June 26,  
    2009     2008  
Multiemployer pension withdrawal
  $ (332 )   $ 1,200  
Severance
          355  
Lease termination
          210  
 
           
Total
  $ (332 )   $ 1,765  
 
           
We did not incur any restructuring expenses for the fiscal year ended June 24, 2010.

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NOTE 17 — PRODUCT RECALL
On March 19, 2010, we announced a voluntary recall of certain bulk and packaged snack mix and cashew items containing black pepper as a precautionary measure because the product may be contaminated with salmonella. Our recall was a follow-up to the voluntary recall of black pepper announced by Mincing Overseas Spice Company, a supplier to us through a distributor, on March 5, 2010.
Our total estimated net costs associated with the recall are approximately $400. This total may be broken down as follows: (i) a $200 reduction in sales for shipments to customers; (ii) a $100 increase in cost of sales for recalled inventory in our possession; (iii) a $200 increase in administrative expenses for our customers’ lost profits and other miscellaneous expenses; and (iv) a $100 decrease in incentive compensation costs. As of June 24, 2010, our accrued liability for estimated product recall costs related to black pepper was $180.
During the time period of March 31, 2009 through April 8, 2009, we voluntarily recalled roasted inshell pistachios, raw shelled pistachios and mixed nuts containing raw shelled pistachios. The recall was made as a precautionary measure because such products may be contaminated with salmonella. Our recall was a follow-up to the industry-wide voluntary recall of pistachios announced by Setton Pistachio of Terra Bella, Inc. (“Setton”), one of our pistachio suppliers. We do not currently anticipate any further recalls related to purchases of pistachios from Setton.
Our total net costs associated with the recall, which were all recorded in the third quarter of fiscal 2009, were approximately $2,400. This total may be broken down as follows: (i) a $1,900 reduction in sales for shipments to customers; (ii) a $300 increase in cost of sales for recalled inventory in our possession; (iii) a $1,300 increase in administrative expenses for our customers’ lost profits and other miscellaneous expenses; and (iv) a $1,100 decrease in incentive compensation expenses. As of June 24, 2010, and June 25, 2009, our accrued liability for estimated product recall costs related to pistachios was $346 and $435, respectively.
We currently intend to pursue the recovery of our recall costs from Setton, Setton’s insurance and our own insurance; however, we can provide no assurance as to the likelihood, extent (if any) or timing of any such recovery.
NOTE 18 — SUPPLEMENTARY QUARTERLY DATA (Unaudited)
The following unaudited quarterly consolidated financial data are presented for fiscal 2010 and fiscal 2009. Quarterly financial results necessarily rely on estimates and caution is required in drawing specific conclusions from quarterly consolidated results.
                                 
    First     Second     Third     Fourth  
    Quarter     Quarter     Quarter     Quarter  
Year Ended June 24, 2010:
                               
Net sales
  $ 126,812     $ 180,070     $ 113,194     $ 141,557  
Gross profit
    23,874       32,736       13,553       24,623  
Income (loss) from operations
    9,710       15,382       (1,400 )     5,980  
Net income (loss)
    4,766       8,820       (1,900 )     2,739  
Basic earnings (loss) per common share
  $ 0.45     $ 0.83     $ (0.18 )   $ 0.26  
Diluted earnings (loss) per common share
  $ 0.45     $ 0.82     $ (0.18 )   $ 0.25  
Year Ended June 25, 2009:
                               
Net sales
  $ 134,824     $ 177,755     $ 113,789     $ 127,478  
Gross profit
    14,184       24,546       13,211       20,458  
Income (loss) from operations
    1,920       9,061       (658 )     5,258  
Net (loss) income
    (384 )     5,839       (2,489 )     3,951  
Basic and diluted (loss) earnings per common share
  $ (0.04 )   $ 0.55     $ (0.23 )   $ 0.37  
The third quarter of fiscal 2010 contained $0.6 million of costs related to a product recall broken down as follows: (i) $0.3 million reduction in sales; (ii) $0.1 million increase in cost of sales; (iii) $0.3 million increase in

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administrative expenses; and (iv) $0.1 million decrease in incentive compensation costs. The fourth quarter of fiscal 2010 includes results of the OVH acquisition from May 21, 2010 to June 24, 2010.
The first quarter of fiscal 2009 contained $0.3 million of reduction in restructuring expenses from the amount previously estimated. The third quarter of fiscal 2009 contained $3.5 million of costs related to a product recall broken down as follows: (i) $1.9 million reduction in sales; (ii) $0.3 million increase in cost of sales; and (iii) $1.3 million increase in administrative expenses. The fourth quarter of fiscal 2009 contained a $1.0 million reduction in the previously estimated product recall costs broken down as follows: (i) $0.2 million increase in net sales and (ii) $0.8 million reduction in administrative expenses. The fourth quarter of fiscal 2009 also includes an adjustment to release the beginning of year valuation allowance that is dependent on future taxable income of approximately $2.6 million ($1.0 million was expected to be used based on fiscal 2009 ordinary income and was included in the expected tax rate through the third quarter of fiscal 2009).

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Item 9 — Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and Financial Disclosure
None.
Item 9A — Controls and Procedures
Disclosure Controls and Procedures
Under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”) and Chief Financial Officer (“CFO”), we conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures, as such term is defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”), as of the end of the period covered by this Annual Report on Form 10-K. Based on this evaluation, our CEO and CFO concluded that, as of June 24, 2010, our disclosure controls and procedures were effective to provide reasonable assurance that information required to be disclosed by us in reports that we file or submit under the Exchange Act is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified in SEC rules and forms and is accumulated and reported to our management, including our CEO and CFO, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.
Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting
Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial reporting, as such term is defined in Exchange Act Rule 13a-15(f). Under the supervision and with the participation of our management, including our CEO and CFO, we carried out an evaluation of the effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of June 24, 2010, based on the Internal Control-Integrated Framework issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on this evaluation, our management has concluded that our internal control over financial reporting was effective as of June 24, 2010. We acquired certain assets of OVH on May 21, 2010. Because this acquisition was completed in the fourth quarter, we have excluded our OVH operations from this assessment on internal control over financial reporting as permitted by interpretative guidance from the Securities and Exchange Commission for newly acquired businesses. This OVH operation represents less than 10% of our total assets as of June 24, 2010 and less than 1% of our total net sales for the fiscal year ended June 24, 2010.
The effectiveness of our internal control over financial reporting as of June 24, 2010 has been audited by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, as stated in their report contained in this Annual Report on Form 10-K. As described in Management’s Report on Internal Control over Financial Reporting appearing above, management has excluded OVH operations from its assessment of internal control over financial reporting as of June 24, 2010 because it was acquired by the Company in a purchase business combination on May 21, 2010. OVH operations were also excluded from the PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP audit of internal control over financial reporting.
Changes in Internal Control over Financial Reporting
As a result of our acquisition of certain assets of OVH on May 21, 2010, our internal control over financial reporting, subsequent to the date of acquisition, includes certain additional internal controls relating to the OVH acquisition. Except as described above, there were no changes in internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the fourth fiscal quarter ended June 24, 2010 that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
Limitations on the Effectiveness of Controls
Our management, including our CEO and CFO, does not expect that the Disclosure Controls or our Internal Control over Financial Reporting will prevent or detect all errors and all fraud. A control, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable, not absolute, assurance that the control’s objectives will be met. Further, the design of a control must reflect the fact that there are resource constraints, and the benefits of controls must be considered relative to their costs. Because of the inherent limitations in all internal controls, no evaluation of controls can provide absolute assurance that all control issues and instances of fraud, if any, within our Company

63


 

have been detected. These inherent limitations include the realities that judgments in decision-making can be faulty, and that breakdowns can occur because of simple error or mistake. Controls can also be circumvented by the individual acts of some persons, by collusion of two or more people, or by management override of the controls. The design of any control is based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events, and there can be no assurance that any design will succeed in achieving its stated goals under all potential future conditions. Over time, controls may become inadequate because of changes in conditions or deterioration in the degree of compliance with associated policies or procedures. Because of the inherent limitations in a cost-effective control, misstatements due to error or fraud may occur and may not be detected.
Item 9B — Other Information
None.
PART III
Item 10 — Directors and Executive Officers of the Registrant
The Sections entitled “Nominees for Election by The Holders of Common Stock,” “Nominees for Election by The Holders of Class A Stock”, “Section 16(a) Beneficial Ownership Reporting Compliance” and “Corporate Governance—Board Meetings and Committees—Audit Committee” and “Corporate Governance—Independence of the Audit Committee” of our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting and filed pursuant to Regulation 14A are incorporated herein by reference. Information relating to the executive officers of our Company is included immediately before Part II of this Report.
We have adopted a Code of Ethics applicable to the principal executive, financial and accounting officers (“Code of Ethics”) and a separate Code of Conduct applicable to all employees and directors generally (“Code of Conduct”). The Code of Ethics and Code of Conduct are available on our website at www.jbssinc.com.
Item 11 — Executive Compensation
The Sections entitled “Compensation of Directors and Executive Officers”, “Compensation Discussion and Analysis”, “Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation” and “Compensation Committee Report” of our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting are incorporated herein by reference.
Item 12 — Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management
The Section entitled “Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management” of our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting is incorporated herein by reference.
Item 13 — Certain Relationships and Related Transactions, and Director Independence
The Sections entitled “Corporate Governance—Independence of the Board of Directors” and “Review of Related Party Transactions” of our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting are incorporated herein by reference.
Item 14 — Principal Accountant Fees and Services
The information under the proposal entitled “Ratify Appointment of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm” of our Proxy Statement for the 2010 Annual Meeting is incorporated herein by reference.

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PART IV
Item 15 — Exhibits and Financial Statement Schedules
     (a) (1) Financial Statements
The following financial statements are included in Part II, Item 8 “Financial Statements and Supplementary Data”:
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
Consolidated Statements of Operations for the Year Ended June 24, 2010, the Year Ended June 25, 2009 and the Year Ended June 26, 2008
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of June 24, 2010 and June 25, 2009
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders’ Equity for the Year Ended June 24, 2010, the Year Ended June 25, 2009 and the Year Ended June 26, 2008
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the Year Ended June 24, 2010, the Year Ended June 25, 2009 and the Year Ended June 26, 2008
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
     (2) Financial Statement Schedules
All schedules are omitted because they are not applicable or the required information is shown in the Consolidated Financial Statements or Notes thereto.
     (3) Exhibits
The exhibits required by Item 601 of Regulation S-K and filed herewith are listed in the Exhibit Index which follows the signature page and immediately precedes the exhibits filed.
     (b) Exhibits
See Item 15(a)(3) above.
     (c) Financial Statement Schedules
See Item 15(a)(2) above.

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SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
         
Date: August 26, 2010  JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
 
 
  By:   /s/ Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo    
    Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo   
    Chief Executive Officer   
 
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, this report has been signed below by the following persons on behalf of the Registrant in the capacities and on the dates indicated.
         
Name   Title   Date
 
       
/s/ Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo
 
Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo
  Chief Executive Officer
(Principal Executive Officer)
  August 26, 2010
 
       
/s/ Michael J. Valentine
 
Michael J. Valentine
  Chief Financial Officer and Group President and Director
(Principal Financial Officer)
  August 26, 2010
 
       
/s/ Herbert J. Marros
 
Herbert J. Marros
  Director of Financial Reporting and Taxation
(Principal Accounting Officer)
  August 26, 2010
 
       
/s/ Jasper B. Sanfilippo
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Jasper B. Sanfilippo
       
 
       
/s/ Mathias A. Valentine
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Mathias A. Valentine
       
 
       
/s/ Jim Edgar
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Jim Edgar
       
 
       
/s/ Timothy R. Donovan
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Timothy R. Donovan
       
 
       
/s/ Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr.
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Jr.
       
 
       
/s/ Daniel M. Wright
  Director   August 26, 2010
 
Daniel M. Wright
       

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JOHN B. SANFILIPPO & SON, INC.
EXHIBIT INDEX

(Pursuant to Item 601 of Regulation S-K)
     
Exhibit    
Number   Description
1-2
  Not applicable
 
   
3.1
  Restated Certificate of Incorporation of Registrant(13)
 
   
3.2
  Amended and Restated Bylaws of Registrant(12)
 
   
4.1
  Specimen Common Stock Certificate(3)
 
   
4.2
  Specimen Class A Common Stock Certificate(3)
 
   
5-9
  Not applicable
 
   
10.1
  Certain documents relating to $8.0 million Decatur County-Bainbridge Industrial Development Authority Industrial Development Revenue Bonds (John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Project) Series 1987, dated as of June 1, 1987(1)
 
   
10.2
  Tax Indemnification Agreement between Registrant and certain Stockholders of Registrant prior to its initial public offering(2)
 
   
10.3
  Indemnification Agreement between Registrant and certain Stockholders of Registrant prior to its initial public offering(2)
 
   
*10.4
  The Registrant’s 1998 Equity Incentive Plan(4)
 
   
*10.5
  First Amendment to the Registrant’s 1998 Equity Incentive Plan(5)
 
   
*10.6
  Amended and Restated John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Split-Dollar Insurance Agreement Number One among John E. Sanfilippo, as trustee of the Jasper and Marian Sanfilippo Irrevocable Trust, dated September 23, 1990, Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Marian R. Sanfilippo and Registrant, dated December 31, 2003(6)
 
   
*10.7
  Amended and Restated John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Split-Dollar Insurance Agreement Number Two among Michael J. Valentine, as trustee of the Valentine Life Insurance Trust, Mathias Valentine, Mary Valentine and Registrant, dated December 31, 2003(6)
 
   
*10.8
  Amendment, dated February 12, 2004, to Amended and Restated John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Split-Dollar Insurance Agreement Number One among John E. Sanfilippo, as trustee of the Jasper and Marian Sanfilippo Irrevocable Trust, dated September 23, 1990, Jasper B. Sanfilippo, Marian R. Sanfilippo and Registrant, dated December 31, 2003(7)
 
   
*10.9
  Amendment, dated February 12, 2004, to Amended and Restated John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. Split-Dollar Insurance Agreement Number Two among Michael J. Valentine, as trustee of the Valentine Life Insurance Trust, Mathias Valentine, Mary Valentine and Registrant, dated December 31, 2003(7)
 
   
10.10
  Development Agreement, dated as of May 26, 2004, by and between the City of Elgin, an Illinois municipal corporation, the Registrant, Arthur/Busse Limited Partnership, an Illinois limited partnership, and 300 East Touhy Avenue Limited Partnership, an Illinois limited partnership(8)
 
   
10.11
  Agreement For Sale of Real Property, dated as of June 18, 2004, by and between the State of Illinois, acting by and through its Department of Central Management Services, and the City of Elgin(8)
 
   
*10.12
  The Registrant’s Restated Supplemental Retirement Plan (10)
 
   
*10.13
  Form of Option Grant Agreement under 1998 Equity Incentive Plan(9)
 
   
*10.14
  Amended and Restated Sanfilippo Value Added Plan, dated April 29, 2010, filed herewith

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Exhibit    
Number   Description
10.15
  Credit Agreement, dated as of February 7, 2008, by and among the Company, the financial institutions named therein as lenders, Wells Fargo Foothill, LLC (“WFF”), as the arranger and administrative agent for the lenders, and Wachovia Capital Finance Corporation (Central), in its capacity as documentation agent(11)
 
   
10.16
  Security Agreement, dated as of February 7, 2008, by the Company in favor of WFF, as administrative agent for the lenders(11)
 
   
10.17
  Loan Agreement, dated as of February 7, 2008, by and between the Company and Transamerica Financial Life Insurance Company (“TFLIC”)(11)
 
   
10.18
  Mortgage, Security Agreement, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Fixture Filing, dated as of February 7, 2008, made by the Company related to its Elgin, Illinois property for the benefit of TFLIC(11)
 
   
10.19
  Mortgage, Security Agreement, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Fixture Filing, dated as of February 7, 2008, made by JBSS Properties, LLC related to its Elgin, Illinois property for the benefit of TFLIC(11)
 
   
10.20
  Deed of Trust, Security Agreement, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Fixture Filing, dated as of February 7, 2008, made by the Company related to its Gustine, California property for the benefit of TFLIC(11)
 
   
10.21
  Deed of Trust, Security Agreement, Assignment of Leases and Rents and Fixture Filing, dated as of February 7, 2008, made by the Company related to its Garysburg, North Carolina property for the benefit of TFLIC(11)
 
   
10.22
  Promissory Note (Tranche A), dated February 7, 2008, in the principal amount of $36.0 million executed by the Company in favor of TFLIC(11)
 
   
10.23
  Promissory Note (Tranche B) dated February 7, 2008, in the principal amount of $9.0 million executed by the Company in favor of TFLIC(11)
 
   
*10.24
  First Amendment to the Registrant’s 2008 Equity Incentive Plan(14)
 
   
*10.25
  The Registrant’s 2008 Equity Incentive Plan, as amended(14)
 
   
*10.26
  The Registrant’s Employee Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement(15)
 
   
*10.27
  The Registrant’s Non-Employee Director Restricted Stock Unit Award Agreement(15)
 
   
*10.28
  Form of Indemnification Agreement(16)
 
   
**10.29
  First Amendment to Credit Agreement dated as of March 8, 2010, by and among the Company, Wells Fargo Capital Finance, LLC (f/k/a Wells Fargo Foothill, LLC), as a lender and administrative agent and Burdale Financial Limited, as a lender(17)
 
   
10.30
  Purchase Agreement by and between John B. Sanfilippo & Son, Inc. and Orchard Valley Harvest, Inc. dated May 5, 2010, and signed by Stephen J. Kerr, John Potter and Matthew I. Freidrich, solely as the Trustee of the Payton Potter 2007 Irrevocable Trust(18)
 
   
11-20
  Not applicable
 
   
21
  Subsidiaries of the Registrant, filed herewith
 
   
22
  Not applicable
 
   
23
  Consent of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, filed herewith
 
   
24-30
  Not applicable
 
   
31.1
  Certification of Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended, filed herewith
 
31.2
  Certification of Michael J. Valentine pursuant to Section 302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended, filed herewith

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Exhibit    
Number   Description
32.1
  Certification of Jeffrey T. Sanfilippo pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, filed herewith
 
   
32.2
  Certification of Michael J. Valentine pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, filed herewith
 
   
33-100
  Not applicable
 
     
(1)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-1, Registration No. 33-43353, as filed with the Commission on October 15, 1991 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(2)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 1991 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(3)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 (Amendment No. 3), Registration No. 33-43353, as filed with the Commission on November 25, 1991 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(4)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the first quarter ended September 24, 1998 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(5)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the second quarter ended December 28, 2000 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(6)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the second quarter ended December 25, 2003 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(7)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the third quarter ended March 25, 2004 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(8)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 24, 2004 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(9)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended June 30, 2005 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(10)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended June 28, 2007 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(11)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated February 7, 2008 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(12)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the first quarter ended September 27, 2007 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(13)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the third quarter ended March 24, 2005 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(14)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the second quarter ended December 25, 2008 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(15)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated November 10, 2009 (Commission File No. 0-19681).

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(16)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated April 29, 2009 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(17)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated March 8, 2010 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
   
(18)
  Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Current Report on Form 8-K dated May 5, 2010 (Commission File No. 0-19681).
 
*   Indicates a management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement.
 
**   Confidential treatment has been requested for portions of this exhibit. These portions have been omitted and submitted separately to the Securities and Exchange Commission.

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