Enterprise Value (EV): $28.18B
The enterprise value (EV) is $28.18B as of Thursday, June 25, 2026.
TSN Enterprise Value (EV) Metrics
ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV)
$28.18B
TSN Competitors' Enterprise Value (EV)
| NAME | MARKET CAP | ENTERPRISE VALUE (EV) |
|---|---|---|
| Tyson Foods, Inc. (TSN) | $20.58B | $28.18B |
| Bunge Global S.A. (BG)vs › | $21.15B | $29.42B |
| General Mills, Inc. (GIS)vs › | $18.57B | $44.53B |
| Dollar Tree, Inc. (DLTR)vs › | $22.94B | $30.54B |
| Church & Dwight Co., Inc. (CHD)vs › | $23.38B | $22.15B |
| Constellation Brands, Inc. (STZ)vs › | $24.53B | $38.79B |
| Dollar General Corporation (DG)vs › | $26.29B | $46.15B |
| Hormel Foods Corporation (HRL)vs › | $14.06B | $15.25B |
| The Kraft Heinz Company (KHC)vs › | $27.20B | $47.25B |
| Brown-Forman Corporation (BF-B)vs › | $12.96B | $13.86B |
Enterprise Value Calculation
Market Cap
$20.58B
Total Debt
$8.83B
Cash
$1.23B
Enterprise Value
$28.18B
EV-Based Valuation Multiples
Why use EV instead of Market Cap?
- EV accounts for debt - an acquirer must pay or assume it
- EV deducts cash - the acquirer effectively receives it
- EV enables fair comparison of companies with different capital structures
- EV-based ratios (EV/EBITDA, EV/Sales) are capital structure neutral
Enterprise Value (EV) Formula & Definition
Enterprise Value represents the total value of a company as if you were to acquire it completely - paying for equity while assuming debt and receiving cash.
Expanded definitions: Investopedia, Wikipedia, Corporate Finance Institute
Enterprise Value (EV) FAQ
- What is the enterprise value (EV) for Tyson Foods, Inc. (TSN)?
- The enterprise value (EV) for TSN stock is $28.18B.
Related Metrics
About Tyson Foods, Inc.
Tyson Foods, Inc. operates as a prominent global food producer, encompassing a broad range of activities across four core divisions: Beef, Pork, Chicken, and Prepared Foods. Within its Beef and Pork segments, the company manages the entire process from live cattle and hogs to their transformation into various meat products. This includes fabricating whole carcasses into primary and secondary cuts, providing case-ready options, and producing fully cooked meats. Its Chicken division is responsible for raising and processing poultry, delivering a spectrum of fresh, frozen, and value-added chicken items, and also supplying breeding stock. Additionally, Tyson markets specialty by-products such as animal hides. The Prepared Foods unit focuses on manufacturing and distributing a diverse portfolio of frozen and refrigerated convenience foods. This extensive lineup features items like ready-to-eat sandwiches, flame-grilled burgers, deli staples such as pepperoni, bacon, and lunchmeats, hot dogs, breakfast sausages, turkey products, tortilla items, appetizers, snacks, complete meals, ethnic dishes, side dishes, breadsticks, and other processed meats. These products are sold under popular brands including Jimmy Dean, Hillshire Farm, Ball Park, Wright, State Fair, Aidells, Gallo Salame, as well as its proprietary Tyson and ibp labels. Tyson distributes its extensive product range through various channels globally. Its sales force directly serves grocery retailers, wholesalers, meat distributors, warehouse club stores, military commissaries, industrial food processors, chain restaurants and their distributors, live markets, and international export firms. The company also leverages independent brokers and trading companies to reach domestic distributors who cater to a wide array of food service operations, such as institutional cafeterias (e.g., plant and school), convenience stores, hospitals, and other vendors. Founded in 1935, Tyson Foods maintains its corporate headquarters in Springdale, Arkansas.
- Sector
- Consumer Defensive
- Industry
- Agricultural Farm Products
- CEO
- Donnie D. King