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<SEC-DOCUMENT>0000802481-01-500018.txt : 20020411
<SEC-HEADER>0000802481-01-500018.hdr.sgml : 20020411
ACCESSION NUMBER:		0000802481-01-500018
CONFORMED SUBMISSION TYPE:	10-K
PUBLIC DOCUMENT COUNT:		3
CONFORMED PERIOD OF REPORT:	20010929
FILED AS OF DATE:		20011123

FILER:

	COMPANY DATA:	
		COMPANY CONFORMED NAME:			PILGRIMS PRIDE CORP
		CENTRAL INDEX KEY:			0000802481
		STANDARD INDUSTRIAL CLASSIFICATION:	POULTRY SLAUGHTERING AND PROCESSING [2015]
		IRS NUMBER:				751285071
		STATE OF INCORPORATION:			DE
		FISCAL YEAR END:			0930

	FILING VALUES:
		FORM TYPE:		10-K
		SEC ACT:		1934 Act
		SEC FILE NUMBER:	001-09273
		FILM NUMBER:		1798472

	BUSINESS ADDRESS:	
		STREET 1:		110 S TEXAS ST
		STREET 2:		PO BOX 93
		CITY:			PITTSBURG
		STATE:			TX
		ZIP:			75686
		BUSINESS PHONE:		9038554208

	MAIL ADDRESS:	
		STREET 1:		110 SOUTH TEXAS ST
		STREET 2:		PO BOX 93
		CITY:			PITTSBURG
		STATE:			TX
		ZIP:			75686
</SEC-HEADER>
<DOCUMENT>
<TYPE>10-K
<SEQUENCE>1
<FILENAME>finalsep01.txt
<DESCRIPTION>ANNUAL K 2001
<TEXT>


                    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                          WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549


                                 FORM 10-K


             ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15 (D) OF
                    THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

               FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001

                       Commission File number 1-9273

                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
          (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)

DELAWARE                                                        75-1285071

(State or other jurisdiction of                           (I.R.S. Employer
incorporation or organization)			       Identification No.)


     110 SOUTH TEXAS, PITTSBURG, TX                              75686-0093
(Address of principal executive offices)                         (Zip code)

Registrant's telephone number, including area code:  (903) 855-1000

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12 (b) of the Act:

                                                   Name of each exchange on
TITLE OF EACH CLASS                                        WHICH REGISTERED

Class A Common Stock, Par Value $0.01               New York Stock Exchange
Class B Common Stock, Par Value $0.01               New York Stock Exchange

Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:  None

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 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  X  No

Indicate by check mark if disclosure of  delinquent filers pursuant to Item
405 of Regulation S-K 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.  [X]







<PAGE>



The  aggregate market value of the Registrant's Class B Common Stock, $0.01
par value,  and  Class  A  Common  Stock,   $0.01  par  value, held by non-
affiliates of the Registrant as of November 15, 2001, was  $133,152,552 and
$41,760,798, respectively.  For purposes of the foregoing calculation only,
all directors, executive officers and 5% beneficial owners have been deemed
affiliates.

27,589,250 shares of the Registrant's Class B Common Stock, $.01 par value,
were outstanding as of November 15, 2001.

13,523,429 shares of the Registrant's Class A Common Stock, $.01 par value,
were outstanding as of November 15, 2001.

DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE

Portions  of  the  Registrant's proxy statement for the annual  meeting  of
stockholders to be held January 30, 2002 are incorporated by reference into
Part III.






<PAGE>


                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION
                                 FORM 10-K
                             TABLE OF CONTENTS

                                  PART I
     PAGE
Item 1.  Business........................................................ 4
Item 2.  Properties......................................................22
Item 3.  Legal Proceedings...............................................26
Item 4.  Submission of Matters to a Vote of Security Holders.............27


                                  PART II
Item 5.  Market for Registrant's Common Stock and Related Security Holder
            Matters......................................................28
Item 6.  Selected Financial Data.........................................29
Item 7.  Management's Discussion and Analysis of Results of Operations and
         Financial Condition.............................................31
Item 7a. Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About Market Risk......38
Item 8.  Financial Statements and Supplementary Data
            (see Index to Financial Statements and Schedules below)......40
Item 9.  Changes in and Disagreements with Accountants on Accounting and
            Financial Disclosure.........................................40


                                 PART III
Item 10. Directors and Executive Officers of Registrant..................41
Item 11. Executive Compensation..........................................41
Item 12. Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial Owners and Management..41
Item 13. Certain Relationships and Related Transactions..................41


                                  PART IV
Item 14. Exhibits, Financial Statement Schedules and Reports on Form 8-K.41
Signatures...............................................................48


                INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SCHEDULES
Report of Ernst & Young LLP, Independent Auditors........................49
Consolidated Balance Sheets as of September 29, 2001 and
   September 30, 2000....................................................50
Consolidated Statements of Income for the years ended
   September 29, 2001, September 30, 2000 and October 2, 1999............51
Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity for the years ended
   September 29, 2001, September 30, 2000 and October 2, 1999............52
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows for the years ended
   September 29, 2001, September 30, 2000 and October 2, 1999............53
Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements...............................54
Schedule II - Valuation and Qualifying Accounts for the years ended
   September 29, 2001, September 30, 2000 and October 2, 1999............67

                                  PART I

ITEM 1. BUSINESS

GENERAL

   We are the second  largest producer of poultry in both the United States
and Mexico and have one  of  the  best  known  brand  names  in the poultry
industry. In the United States, WE PRODUCE BOTH PREPARED AND FRESH  CHICKEN
AND  TURKEY, WHILE IN MEXICO, WE PRODUCE EXCLUSIVELY FRESH CHICKEN. THROUGH
VERTICAL  INTEGRATION,  WE  CONTROL  THE  BREEDING, HATCHING AND GROWING OF
CHICKENS AND TURKEYS AND THE PROCESSING, PREPARATION, PACKAGING AND SALE OF
OUR PRODUCT LINES, WHICH WE BELIEVE HAS MADE US ONE OF THE HIGHEST QUALITY,
LOWEST-COST  PRODUCERS OF POULTRY IN NORTH AMERICA.  WE  HAVE  CONSISTENTLY
APPLIED A LONG-TERM BUSINESS STRATEGY OF FOCUSING OUR GROWTH EFFORTS ON THE
HIGHER-VALUE,  HIGHER-MARGIN  PREPARED  FOODS  PRODUCTS  AND  HAVE BECOME A
RECOGNIZED INDUSTRY LEADER IN THIS MARKET SEGMENT.  ACCORDINGLY,  OUR SALES
EFFORTS  HAVE  TRADITIONALLY  BEEN  TARGETED  TO  THE FOODSERVICE INDUSTRY,
PRINCIPALLY  CHAIN RESTAURANTS AND FOOD PROCESSORS.  SOME  OF  OUR  LARGEST
CUSTOMERS INCLUDE  WENDY'S(TM), STOUFFERS(TM), ARBY'S(TM), KFC(TM) AND WAL-
MART(TM). WE HAVE CONTINUALLY  MADE INVESTMENTS TO ENSURE THAT OUR PREPARED
FOODS  CAPABILITIES REMAIN STATE-OF-THE-ART  AND  HAVE  COMPLEMENTED  THESE
INVESTMENTS  WITH  A  SUBSTANTIAL  AND  SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
EFFORT. IN FISCAL 2001, WE SOLD 2.6 BILLION  POUNDS  OF DRESSED CHICKEN AND
296.1  MILLION  POUNDS OF DRESSED TURKEY AND GENERATED NET  SALES  OF  $2.2
BILLION AND EARNINGS BEFORE INTEREST, TAXES, DEPRECIATION AND AMORTIZATION,
("EBITDA")  OF  $147.7  MILLION.   IN  FISCAL  2001,  OUR  U.S.  OPERATIONS
ACCOUNTED FOR 85.4% OF OUR NET SALES, WITH THE REMAINING 14.6% ARISING FROM
OUR MEXICO OPERATIONS.

   On January 27, 2001, we acquired WLR Foods, Inc. (formerly Nasdaq: WLRF)
for $239.5 million and the assumption of $45.5 million of indebtedness. WLR
FOODS WAS THE SEVENTH  LARGEST  POULTRY  COMPANY  IN THE UNITED STATES WITH
$836.9  MILLION  OF  REVENUE  IN  CALENDAR YEAR 2000. THE  ACQUISITION  WAS
ACCOUNTED FOR AS A PURCHASE. THE WLR FOODS ACQUISITION PROVIDED US WITH (1)
CHICKEN  PROCESSING  FACILITIES IN THE  EASTERN  UNITED  STATES,  WHERE  WE
PREVIOUSLY HAD NO FACILITIES, WHICH CAN DELIVER POULTRY PRODUCTS WITHIN ONE
DAY TO MARKETS ACCOUNTING FOR APPROXIMATELY 40% OF THE U.S. POPULATION; (2)
SIGNIFICANT OPPORTUNITIES  TO  REALIZE  SYNERGIES BETWEEN WLR FOODS AND OUR
PRE-EXISTING CHICKEN OPERATIONS; AND (3)  DIVERSIFICATION  OF  OUR  REVENUE
STREAM INTO THE $8 BILLION TURKEY INDUSTRY, WHERE WE CAN CAPITALIZE ON  OUR
PREPARED  FOODS  PROCESSING EXPERTISE. TO DATE, WE ARE ACTIVELY INTEGRATING
THE WLR FOODS OPERATIONS  AND  HAVE  REALIZED  SIGNIFICANT  ANNUALIZED COST
SAVINGS AND BELIEVE OPPORTUNITIES FOR SIGNIFICANT ADDITIONAL  COST  SAVINGS
EXIST  AS  OUR  INTEGRATION EFFORTS CONTINUE. CURRENTLY, WLR FOODS' CHICKEN
SALES MIX CONSISTS MOSTLY OF LOWER MARGIN FRESH CHICKEN PRODUCTS.  HOWEVER,
WE INTEND TO CONVERT WLR FOODS' CHICKEN SALES INTO HIGHER MARGIN, FRESH AND
PREPARED CHICKEN  PRODUCTS.  BY CONSISTENT AND CONTINUED APPLICATION OF OUR
LONG-TERM BUSINESS STRATEGY TO  BOTH OUR RECENTLY ACQUIRED AND OUR EXISTING
FRESH CHICKEN MIX, WE BELIEVE THAT  OUR  OVERALL PRODUCT MIX WILL RETURN TO
THE LEVELS EXISTING PRIOR TO THE WLR FOODS ACQUISITION WITHIN THREE YEARS.

   OUR OBJECTIVES ARE (1) TO INCREASE SALES,  PROFIT  MARGINS  AND EARNINGS
AND (2) OUTPACE THE GROWTH OF, AND MAINTAIN OUR LEADERSHIP POSITION IN, THE
POULTRY INDUSTRY. TO ACHIEVE THESE GOALS, WE PLAN TO CONTINUE TO PURSUE THE
FOLLOWING  STRATEGIES  AND APPLY THESE STRATEGIES TO THE RECENTLY  ACQUIRED
WLR FOODS OPERATIONS:

   - CAPITALIZE ON ATTRACTIVE  U.S.  PREPARED  FOODS  MARKET.  We focus our
     U.S. growth initiatives on sales of prepared foods  to the foodservice
     market because it continues to be one of the fastest  growing and most
     profitable  segments  in the poultry industry. Products sold  to  this
     market segment require  further processing, which enables us to charge
     a premium for our products,  reduces  the  impact  of  feed ingredient
     costs  on  our  profitability  and improves and stabilizes our  profit
     margins. Feed ingredient costs typically  decrease  from approximately
     30-50%  of  total  production  cost  for  fresh  chicken  products  to
     approximately  16-25%  for  prepared  chicken  products. Our sales  of
     prepared chicken products to the foodservice market  grew  from $349.0
     million  in fiscal 1997 to $642.2 million in fiscal 2001, a compounded
     annual growth  rate  of 16.5%. In addition, these sales increased as a
     percentage of our total  U.S.  chicken  revenues  from  40.5% to 43.6%
     during  the  same five-year period. As a result of the acquisition  of
     WLR Foods, whose  operations  were  focused primarily on fresh chicken
     products, this percentage has decreased  to 43.6% from 56.5% in fiscal
     2000.  Over  the  last 24 months, we have invested  approximately  $79
     million to  expand  our prepared foods operations, which increased our
     prepared foods production  capacity  by  approximately 50%. We believe
     that  we  will  realize the benefits from this  additional  production
     capacity over the next 18 to 24 months and that these investments will
     be the primary investments  necessary  to  enable  us  to  return  the
     percentage  of  our  overall  product  mix derived from prepared foods
     products to the levels existing before the acquisition of WLR Foods.

      - EMPHASIZE CUSTOMER-DRIVEN RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY.  We have a long-
     standing reputation for customer-driven  research  and  development in
     designing   new   products   and   implementing   advanced  processing
     technology.   This  enables us to better meet our customers'  changing
     needs for product innovation,  consistent quality and cost efficiency.
     In particular, customer-driven research and development is integral to
     our growth strategy for the prepared  foods  market in which customers
     continue  to  place  greater importance on value-added  services.  Our
     research  and  development   personnel   often   work   directly  with
     institutional  customers  in developing products for these  customers,
     which we believe helps promote  long-term relationships. Approximately
     $248.0  million,  or  24.1%,  of  our  chicken  sales  to  foodservice
     customers in fiscal 2001 consisted of products that we did not sell in
     fiscal 1997.

     -    ENHANCE  U.S.  FRESH CHICKEN PROFITABILITY  THROUGH  VALUE-ADDED,
     BRANDED  PRODUCTS.   Our U.S. fresh chicken sales accounted for $612.5
     million, or 41.6%, of  our  U.S.  chicken  sales  for fiscal 2001.  In
     addition to maintaining the sales of mature, traditional fresh chicken
     products, our strategy is to shift the mix of our U.S.  fresh  chicken
     products  by  continuing  to  increase  sales of higher margin, faster
     growing products, such as marinated chicken and chicken parts. Most of
     our   fresh   chicken   products   are   sold  under   the   Pilgrim's
     Pride<reg-trade-mark>  brand name, which is  one  of  the  best  known
     brands in the chicken industry.

     - IMPROVE OPERATING EFFICIENCIES  AND  INCREASE  CAPACITY  ON  A COST-
     EFFECTIVE  BASIS.   As production and sales grow, we continue to focus
     on improving operating  efficiencies  by investing in state-of-the-art
     technology, processes and training and  our  total  quality management
     program. Specific initiatives include:

     - standardizing lowest-cost production processes across our various
     facilities;

     - centralizing purchasing and other shared services; and

     - upgrading technology where appropriate.

     In  addition,  we  have a proven history of increasing capacity  while
     improving operating  efficiencies  at  acquired properties both in the
     U.S. and Mexico. As a result, according  to  industry data, since 1993
     we have consistently been one of the lowest cost  producers of chicken
     in  the  U.S.,  and  we  also  believe we are one of the  lowest  cost
     producers  of  chicken  in Mexico.  With  respect  to  our  WLR  Foods
     acquisition, we have already  begun  realizing  significant  operating
     efficiencies by reducing administrative expenses and focusing  on live
     production   and  plant  operations,  sales,  marketing,  freight  and
     procurement. To  date,  we  have  realized significant annualized cost
     savings  with  WLR  Foods  and believe  additional  opportunities  for
     significant cost savings exist.

   - CONTINUE TO PENETRATE THE GROWING MEXICAN MARKET.  We seek to leverage
     our leading market position  and  reputation for freshness and quality
     in Mexico by focusing on the following four objectives:

     - to be one of the most cost-efficient  producers  and  processors of
       chicken in Mexico by  applying technology and expertise utilized in
       the  U.S.;

     - to  continually  increase our distribution of higher margin,  more
       value-added products to  national retail stores and restaurants;

     - to continue to build  and  emphasize brand awareness and capitalize
       on Mexican consumers' preference for branded  products  and  their
       insistence on freshness and quality; and

     - to ensure  that,  as  Mexican  tariffs  on  imported chicken  are
       eliminated by 2003, a significant portion of the chicken imported
       from the  U.S.  will  be distributed through our existing and
       planned distribution facilities.  The  location  of  our  U.S.
       operations in the Southwest gives us a strategic  advantage  to
       capitalize on exports of  U.S.  chicken  to Mexico.

   - LEVERAGE OUR RECENTLY  ACQUIRED  TURKEY OPERATIONS.  We seek to take
     advantage of our leading market position  and  reputation  as  a  high
     quality,  high  service  provider of chicken products to purchasers of
     turkey products by focusing on the following four objectives:

     - to  cross-sell  prepared turkey  products  to  existing  chicken
       customers;

     - to  develop  new  and   innovative   prepared  turkey  products  by
       capitalizing on our research   and development expertise;

     - to improve operating efficiencies in our  turkey  operations  by
       applying proven management  methodologies and techniques employed
       historically in our chicken operations; and

     - to capitalize on the unique opportunity to establish, develop and
       market turkey products  under  the  Pilgrim's  Pride<reg-trade-mark>
       brand name.

   - CAPITALIZE ON EXPORT OPPORTUNITIES.  We intend to continue to  focus
     on international opportunities  to  complement  our  U.S.  poultry
     operations  and  capitalize on attractive export markets. According to
     the USDA, the export of U.S. poultry products has grown 25.5% and 4.6%
     for chicken and turkey,  respectively,  from  1996  through  2000.  We
     believe  that  U.S. poultry exports will continue to grow as worldwide
     demand increases  for  high-grade, low-cost protein sources. According
     to USDA data, the export  market is expected to grow at 57.7% and 8.1%
     for chicken and turkey, respectively, from 2000 to 2005. Historically,
     we have targeted international  markets  to generate additional demand
     for our chicken and turkey dark meat, which is a natural by-product of
     our U.S. operations given our concentration on prepared foods products
     and the U.S. customers' general preference  for white meat. As part of
     this   initiative,   we  have  created  a  significant   international
     distribution network into  several markets, including Mexico, which we
     now utilize not only for dark  meat distribution, but also for various
     higher margin prepared foods and other poultry products. Historically,
     WLR Foods has utilized a direct  international sales force compared to
     our  primary use of export brokers.   Our  key  international  markets
     include  Canada,  Mexico,  Eastern Europe and the Far East. We believe
     that we have substantial opportunities  to  expand  our sales to these
     markets   by   capitalizing   on   WLR   Foods'  direct  international
     distribution  channels  supplemented  by our  existing  export  broker
     relationships. Exports accounted for approximately  5.1%  of  our  net
     sales in fiscal 2001.

   Our chicken products consist primarily of:

   (1)    Prepared  chicken  products,  which are products such as portion-
   controlled  breast  fillets,  tenderloins   and   strips,   delicatessen
   products,  frankfurters, salads, formed nuggets and patties and  bone-in
   chicken parts. These products are sold either refrigerated or frozen and
   may be fully  cooked,  partially  cooked  or  raw.  In  addition,  these
   products  are  breaded  or  non-breaded and either pre-marinated or non-
   marinated.

   (2) Fresh chicken, which is refrigerated  (non-frozen)  whole  or cut-up
   chicken  sold  to the foodservice industry either pre-marinated or  non-
   marinated.  Fresh  chicken  also  includes  prepackaged  chicken,  which
   includes various  combinations  of  freshly refrigerated, whole chickens
   and chicken parts in trays, bags or other  consumer  packs  labeled  and
   priced ready for the retail grocer's fresh meat counter.

   (3)  Export  and  other  products,  which are primarily parts and whole
   chicken, either refrigerated or frozen for U.S. export or domestic use.

   (4) Our Mexico products consist primarily  of  value-added products such
   as eviscerated chicken and chicken parts and basic  products such as New
   York  dressed (whole chicken with only feathers and blood  removed)  and
   live birds.

   Our turkey products consist primarily of:

   (1)  Prepared  turkey  products,  which  are  products  such  as  turkey
   sausages,  ground  turkey,  turkey hams and roasts, ground turkey breast
   products, frankfurters, salads and flavored turkey burgers. We also have
   an array of cooked, further processed deli products.

   (2)  Fresh  turkey,  which  includes  fresh  traypack  products,  turkey
   burgers, frankfurters and fresh and frozen whole birds, as well as semi-
   boneless  whole  turkey, which  has  all  bones  except  the  drumsticks
   removed.

   (3)  Export  and other  products,  which  are  parts  and  whole  turkey
   products, either  refrigerated  or  frozen,  and  frankfurters  for U.S.
   export or domestic use.

   Our chicken and turkey products are sold primarily to:

   (1)   Foodservice   customers,   which   are  customers  such  as  chain
   restaurants, food processors, foodservice distributors and certain other
   institutions. We sell to our foodservice customers products ranging from
   portion-controlled  refrigerated  poultry  parts   to  fully-cooked  and
   frozen, breaded or non-breaded poultry parts or formed products.

   (2) Retail customers, which are customers such as grocery  store chains,
   wholesale  clubs  and  other retail distributors. We sell to our  retail
   customers branded, pre-packaged  cut-up  and  whole  poultry,  and fresh
   refrigerated or frozen whole poultry and poultry parts in trays, bags or
   other consumer packs.





<PAGE>



   The  following table sets forth, for the periods since fiscal 1997,  net
sales attributable  to each of our primary product lines and markets served
with those products.  Consistent  with  our  long-term  strategy,  we  have
emphasized our U.S. growth initiatives on sales of prepared foods products,
primarily  to  the  foodservice  market,  because  this  product and market
segment  has  experienced,  and  we  believe  will  continue to experience,
greater  growth  than fresh chicken products. We based  the  table  on  our
internal sales reports  and  their  classification  of  product  types  and
customers.







<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>


                              	FISCAL YEAR ENDED
<CAPTION>
                       Sept. 29   Sept. 30,   Oct. 2,   Sept. 26   Sept. 27,
                        2001(a)      2000      1999     1998        1997
<S>                   <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>   <C>
                      (52 WEEKS)  (52 WEEKS) (53 WEEKS) (52WEEKS)  (52WEEKS)
U.S. Chicken Sales:                   (IN THOUSANDS)
   Prepared Foods:
      Foodservice      $642,220   $593,586   $528,566   $420,396    $348,961
      Retail            111,969     48,059     28,275     46,400      42,289
        Total Prepared
          Foods         754,189    641,645    556,841    466,796     391,250

   Fresh Chicken:
      Foodservice       387,836    202,297    205,997    220,804     259,349
      Retail            224,693    148,977    163,387    162,283     153,554
        Total Fresh
          Chicken       612,529    351,274    369,384    383,087     412,903

   Export and Other     105,622     57,468     37,271     64,469      56,784
        Total
          U.S.Chicken 1,472,340  1,050,387    963,496    914,352     860,937

MEXICO CHICKEN SALES    323,678    307,362    254,500    278,087     274,997
    Total Chicken
          Sales       1,796,018  1,357,749  1,217,996  1,192,439   1,135,934

U.S. TURKEY SALES:
   Prepared Foods:
      Foodservice        90,777         --         --         --          --
      Retail             48,407         --         --         --          --
          Total         139,184         --         --         --          --
Prepared Foods
   Fresh Turkey:
      Foodservice        18,614          --         --         --         --
      Retail             69,557          --         --         --         --
        Total Fresh
           Turkey        88,171          --         --         --         --

   Export and Other      11,480          --         --         --         --
        Total U.S.
           Turkey Sales 238,835          --         --         --         --

SALES OF OTHER
   U.S. PRODUCTS        179,859     141,690    139,407    139,106    141,715
   Total Net Sales   $2,214,712  $1,499,439 $1,357,403 $1,331,545 $1,277,649

(a)   The acquisition  of WLR Foods on January 27, 2001 has been accounted
for as a purchase,  and  the  results  of operations  for this acquisition
have  been  included in our consolidated results of operations since the acquisition date.

</TABLE>





<PAGE>


   The following table sets forth, since fiscal 1997, the percentage of net
U.S. chicken and turkey sales  attributable  to each of our primary product
lines and the markets serviced with those products.  We based the table and
related  discussion on our internal sales reports and their  classification
of product types and customers.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FISCAL YEAR ENDED
<S>                     <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
U.S. Chicken Sales:
 Prepared Foods:
    Foodservice          43.6%       56.5%      54.9%      46.0%       40.5%
    Retail                7.6         4.6        2.9        5.1         4.9
      Total Prepared
         Foods           51.2        61.1       57.8       51.1        45.4
 Fresh Chicken:
    Foodservice          26.3        19.2       21.3       24.2        30.1
    Retail               15.3        14.2       17.0       17.7        17.9
       Total Fresh
          Chicken        41.6        33.4       38.3       41.9        48.0
 Export and Other         7.2         5.5        3.9        7.0         6.6
Total U.S. Chicken
   Sales Mix            100.0%      100.0%     100.0%     100.0%      100.0%
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                       Sept. 29   Sept. 30,   Oct. 2,   Sept. 26   Sept. 27,
                        2001(a)      2000      1999     1998        1997
<S>                   <C>    <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>   <C>
U.S. Turkey Sales:
 Prepared Foods:
    Foodservice          38.0%        --        --         --          --
    Retail               20.3         --        --         --          --
       Total Prepared
          Foods          58.3         --        --         --          --
 Fresh Turkey:
   Foodservice            7.8         --        --         --          --
   Retail                29.1         --        --         --          --
       Total Fresh
          Turkey         36.9         --        --         --          --
   Export and Other       4.8         --        --         --          --
Total U.S. Turkey
   Sales Mix            100.0%        --        --         --          --

(a)  The acquisition   of  WLR Foods on January 27, 2001 has been accounted
for  as  a purchase, and the results  of operations  for  this acquisition
have  been  included in our consolidated results of operations since the acquisition date.

</TABLE>




<PAGE>


                               UNITED STATES

PRODUCT TYPES

  CHICKEN PRODUCTS

     PREPARED FOODS OVERVIEW.   During  fiscal  2001, $754.2 million of our
net  U.S.  chicken  sales  were in prepared foods products  to  foodservice
customers and retail distributors,  as compared to $391.3 million in fiscal
1997. These numbers reflect the strategic  focus for our growth. The market
for prepared chicken products has experienced, and we believe will continue
to  experience,  greater growth, higher average  sales  prices  and  higher
margins than fresh  chicken  products. Also, the production and sale in the
U.S. of prepared foods products  reduce  the  impact  of  the costs of feed
ingredients  on  our  profitability. Feed ingredient costs are  the  single
largest  component  of  our   chicken  cost  of  goods  sold,  representing
approximately 29.9% of our U.S.  cost  of  goods  sold  for  the year ended
September  29,  2001.  The production of feed ingredients is positively  or
negatively affected primarily by weather patterns throughout the world, the
global level of supply inventories and demand for feed ingredients, and the
agricultural policies of  the  United  States  and  foreign governments. As
further processing is performed, feed ingredient costs  become a decreasing
percentage  of  a product's total production cost, thereby  reducing  their
impact on our profitability. Products sold in this form enable us to charge
a premium, reduce  the impact of feed ingredient costs on our profitability
and improve and stabilize our profit margins.

     We establish prices  for our prepared chicken products based primarily
upon  perceived value to the  customer,  production  costs  and  prices  of
competing  products.  The  majority  of these products are sold pursuant to
agreements  with  varying terms that either  set  a  fixed  price  for  the
products or set a price  according  to  formulas  based  on  an  underlying
commodity market, subject in many cases to minimum and maximum prices.

      FRESH  CHICKEN  OVERVIEW.  Our fresh chicken business is an important
component of our sales  and  accounted for $612.5 million, or 41.6%, of our
total U.S. chicken sales for fiscal 2001.  In addition to maintaining sales
of mature, traditional fresh chicken products, our strategy is to shift the
mix of our U.S. fresh chicken  products  by continuing to increase sales of
higher  margin,  faster growing products, such  as  marinated  chicken  and
chicken parts.

     Most fresh chicken  products  are  sold to established customers based
upon certain weekly or monthly market prices reported by the USDA and other
public price reporting services, plus a markup, which is dependent upon the
customer's location, volume, product specifications  and  other factors. We
believe our practices with respect to sales of fresh chicken  are generally
consistent  with  those  of  our competitors. Prices of these products  are
negotiated daily or weekly and  are  generally  related  to  market  prices
quoted by the USDA or other public reporting services.

      EXPORT  AND  OTHER  CHICKEN  PRODUCTS OVERVIEW.  Our export and other
products consist of whole chickens and  chicken  parts  sold  primarily  in
bulk,  non-branded  form either refrigerated to distributors in the U.S. or
frozen for distribution  to  export  markets. In fiscal 2001, approximately
$105.6 million of our sales were attributable  to  U.S.  chicken export and
other.   These   exports   and   other  products  have  historically   been
characterized by lower prices and  greater  price  volatility than our more
value-added product lines.

  TURKEY PRODUCTS

      PREPARED  FOODS  OVERVIEW.   During fiscal 2001, $139.2  million,  or
58.3%, of our total turkey sales were  prepared  turkey  products  sold  to
foodservice  customers  and  retail  distributors.  Like  the  U.S. chicken
markets,  the  market for prepared turkey products has experienced  greater
growth and higher margins than fresh turkey products and the production and
sale of prepared  turkey  products  reduce  the impact of the costs of feed
ingredients  on our profitability. Feed ingredient  costs  are  the  single
largest component  of  our turkey division cost of goods sold, representing
approximately 29.5% of our  turkey  cost  of  goods  sold  in  fiscal 2001.
Similarly  with  the  chicken business, as further processing is performed,
feed ingredient costs become  a  decreasing percentage of a product's total
production cost, thereby reducing their impact on our profitability.

     We establish prices for our prepared  turkey  products based primarily
upon  perceived  value  to  the customer, production costs  and  prices  of
competing products. The majority  of  these  products  are sold pursuant to
agreements with varying terms that either set a fixed price  or are subject
to a market driven formula.

      FRESH  TURKEY  OVERVIEW.   Our  fresh turkey business is an important
component of our sales and accounted for  $88.2  million,  or 36.9%, of our
total  turkey  sales  in  fiscal  2001.  As is typical for the industry,  a
significant  portion of the sales of fresh  and  frozen  whole  turkeys  is
seasonal  in  nature,  with  the  height  of  sales  occurring  during  the
Thanksgiving and  Christmas  holidays.  In addition to maintaining sales of
mature, traditional fresh turkey products, our strategy is to shift the mix
of our fresh turkey products by continuing  to  increase  sales  of  higher
margin,  faster  growing  value-added  turkey products, such as deli meats,
ground turkey, turkey burgers and sausage, roasted turkey, frankfurters and
salads and a new line of flavored turkey burgers.

     Most fresh turkey products are sold  to established customers pursuant
to agreements with varying terms that either  set  a  fixed  price  or  are
subject  to  a market driven formula with some agreements based upon market
prices reported by the USDA and other public price reporting services, plus
a markup, which  is dependent upon the customer's location, volume, product
specifications and  other factors. We believe our practices with respect to
sales of fresh turkey are
generally consistent  with  those of our competitors with similar programs.
Prices of these products are generally negotiated daily or weekly.

     EXPORT AND OTHER TURKEY  PRODUCTS  OVERVIEW.   Our  export  and  other
products  consist  primarily  of  turkey parts sold primarily in bulk, non-
branded form frozen for distribution to export markets and refrigerated and
frozen frankfurters sold in a branded  form.  In fiscal 2001, approximately
$11.5  million,  or 5.1%, of our total turkey sales  were  attributable  to
export and other sales.  These exports and other products have historically
been characterized by lower  prices  and  greater price volatility than our
more value-added product lines.

MARKETS FOR CHICKEN PRODUCTS

     FOODSERVICE.  The majority of our U.S.  chicken sales are derived from
products sold to the foodservice market. This  market  principally consists
of  chain  restaurants,  food  processors  and  certain other  institutions
located  throughout  the  continental United States.  We  are  the  largest
supplier of chicken to Wendy's<reg-trade-mark> and
Stouffers<reg-trade-mark>, and we are a major supplier of chicken to Burger
King<reg-trade-mark>, Arby's<reg-trade-mark>, and  KFC<reg-trade-mark>. We
supply chicken products ranging from portion-controlled refrigerated
chicken parts to fully cooked and frozen, breaded or non-breaded chicken
parts or formed products.

     We believe Pilgrim s Pride is well-positioned  to  be  the  primary or
secondary supplier to many national and international chain restaurants who
require  multiple suppliers of chicken products. Additionally, we are  well
suited to  be  the  sole  supplier  for  many  regional  chain restaurants.
Regional  chain restaurants often offer better margin opportunities  and  a
growing base of business.

     We believe we have significant competitive strengths in terms of full-
line product  capabilities, high-volume production capacities, research and
development expertise  and  extensive distribution and marketing experience
relative to smaller and to non-vertically  integrated  producers. While the
overall chicken market has grown consistently, we believe  the  majority of
this  growth  in recent years has been in the foodservice market. According
to the National Chicken Council, during the 1996 through 2000 period, sales
of chicken products  to  the foodservice market grew at a compounded annual
growth rate of approximately  7.8%,  versus  3.3%  growth  for  the chicken
industry  overall.  Foodservice growth is anticipated to continue as  food-
away-from-home expenditures  continue  to  outpace  overall industry rates.
According  to  the  National  Restaurant  Association,  food-away-from-home
expenditures grew at a compounded annual growth rate of approximately  5.3%
during  the  1996  through  2000 period and are projected to grow at a 4.3%
compounded annual growth rate  from  2000  through  2010.  As a result, the
food-away-from-home  category  is  projected  by  the  National  Restaurant
Association  to  account  for  53%  of total food expenditures by 2010,  as
compared with 46% in 2000. Our sales  to the foodservice market from fiscal
1997 through fiscal 2001 grew at a compounded  annual  growth rate of 14.1%
and  represented 70.0% of the net sales of our U.S. chicken  operations  in
fiscal 2001.

     FOODSERVICE  -  PREPARED  FOODS.   THE  majority  of  our sales to the
foodservice market consist of prepared foods products. Our prepared chicken
products sales to the foodservice market were $642.2 million in fiscal 2001
compared to $349.0 million in fiscal 1997, a compounded annual  growth rate
of  approximately  16.5%.   We  attribute  this growth in sales of prepared
chicken products to the foodservice market to a number of factors:

     FIRST, there has been significant growth  in the number of foodservice
operators offering chicken on their menus and the  number  of chicken items
offered.

      SECOND,  foodservice  operators are increasingly purchasing  prepared
chicken products, which allow  them  to  reduce labor costs while providing
greater  product  consistency, quality and variety  across  all  restaurant
locations.

     THIRD, there is  a  strong need among larger foodservice companies for
an alternative or additional  supplier  to  our principal competitor in the
prepared  chicken products market. A viable alternative  supplier  must  be
able to ensure  supply,  demonstrate innovation and new product development
and provide competitive pricing.  We  have been successful in our objective
of becoming the alternative supplier of  choice  by  being  the  primary or
secondary  prepared  chicken  products  supplier  to many large foodservice
companies because:

   - We  are vertically integrated, giving us control  over  supply  of
     chicken and chicken parts;

   - Our further  processing  facilities  are particularly well suited to
     the high-volume production runs necessary to meet the capacity and
     quality  requirements  of the foodservice market; and

   - We  have  established  a reputation for dependable quality, highly
     responsive service and excellent technical support.

     FOURTH, as a result of the experience  and  reputation  developed with
larger  customers,  we  have increasingly become the principal supplier  to
mid-sized foodservice organizations.

     FIFTH, our in-house  product  development  group  follows  a customer-
driven  research and development focus designed to develop new products  to
meet customers'  changing  needs.  Our  research  and development personnel
often work directly with institutional customers in developing products for
these customers. Approximately $248.0 million, or 24.1%,  of  our  sales to
foodservice  customers in fiscal 2001 consisted of new products which  were
not sold by us in fiscal 1997.

     SIXTH, we  are  a  leader in utilizing advanced processing technology,
which  enables  us  to  better   meet  our  customers'  needs  for  product
innovation, consistent quality and cost efficiency.

      FOODSERVICE  -  FRESH  CHICKEN.    We   produce   and  market  fresh,
refrigerated  chicken  for  sale  to U.S. quick-service restaurant  chains,
delicatessens and other customers. These chickens have the giblets removed,
are usually of specific weight ranges,  and are usually pre-cut to customer
specifications.  They are often marinated  to  enhance  value  and  product
differentiation. By growing and processing to customers' specifications, we
are able to assist quick-service restaurant chains in controlling costs and
maintaining quality  and  size  consistency  of  chicken pieces sold to the
consumer.

     RETAIL.  The retail market consists primarily of grocery store chains,
wholesale clubs and other retail distributors. We  concentrate  our efforts
in this market on sales of branded, prepackaged cut-up and whole chicken to
grocery   store   chains   and   retail  distributors  in  the  midwestern,
southwestern, western and, since the  acquisition  of  WLR  Foods,  eastern
regions of the United States.  This regional marketing focus enables  us to
develop  consumer brand franchises and capitalize on proximity to the trade
customer in  terms  of  lower transportation costs, more timely, responsive
service, and enhanced product  freshness.  For  a  number of years, we have
invested  in  both trade and retail marketing designed  to  establish  high
levels of brand name awareness and consumer preferences.

     We utilize  numerous  marketing  techniques, including advertising, to
develop  and strengthen trade and consumer  awareness  and  increase  brand
loyalty   for    consumer    products    marketed   under   the   Pilgrim's
Pride<reg-trade-mark>  brand. Our founder,  Lonnie  "Bo"  Pilgrim,  is  the
featured spokesman in our  television,  radio  and print advertising, and a
trademark cameo of a person wearing a Pilgrim's  hat  serves as the logo on
all  of  our  primary  branded  products.  As  a  result of this  marketing
strategy,   Pilgrim's  Pride  is  a  well-known  brand  name   in   several
southwestern markets, including Dallas/Fort Worth, Houston and San Antonio,
Texas, Oklahoma  City, Oklahoma, Denver, Colorado, Phoenix, Arizona and Los
Angeles and San Diego,  California.  We  believe our efforts to achieve and
maintain  brand  awareness  and  loyalty  help   to   provide  more  secure
distribution  for  our  products.  We  also  believe our efforts  at  brand
awareness generate greater price premiums than  would otherwise be the case
in  certain southwestern markets. We also maintain  an  active  program  to
identify  consumer  preferences.  The program primarily consists of testing
new product ideas, packaging  designs  and methods through taste panels and
focus groups located in key geographic markets.

      RETAIL  - PREPARED FOODS.  We sell retail-oriented  prepared  chicken
products primarily  to  grocery  store  chains  located in the  midwestern,
southwestern,  western and, since the acquisition  of  WLR  Foods,  eastern
regions of the U.S.  We believe that our growth in this market segment will
remain relatively modest,  however, as we concentrate our efforts primarily
on the faster-growing, higher-margin foodservice market segment.

      RETAIL - FRESH CHICKEN.   Our  prepackaged  retail  products  include
various  combinations  of  freshly refrigerated, whole chickens and chicken
parts in trays, bags or other  consumer  packs labeled and priced ready for
the retail grocer's fresh meat counter. We  believe the retail, prepackaged
fresh chicken business will continue to be a  large  and  relatively stable
market,  providing opportunities for product differentiation  and  regional
brand loyalty.

     EXPORT  AND  OTHER  CHICKEN  PRODUCTS.   Our  export and other chicken
products  consist  of whole chickens and chicken parts  sold  primarily  in
bulk, non-branded form  either  refrigerated to distributors in the U.S. or
frozen for distribution to export  markets.  In  the  U.S., prices of these
products are negotiated daily or weekly and are generally related to market
prices quoted by the USDA or other public price reporting services. We also
sell U.S.-produced chicken products for export to Canada,  Mexico,  Eastern
Europe,  the  Far  East  and  other  world  markets.  Historically, we have
targeted  international  markets  to  generate additional  demand  for  our
chicken  dark meat which is a natural by-product  of  our  U.S.  operations
given our  concentration on prepared foods products and the U.S. customers'
general preference  for  white  meat.  We  have also begun selling prepared
chicken  products for export to the international  divisions  of  our  U.S.
chain restaurant  customers.  We  believe  that  U.S.  chicken exports will
continue  to  grow  as worldwide demand increases for high-grade,  low-cost
protein sources.  We  also  believe that worldwide demand for higher margin
prepared  foods  products  will   increase   over   the  next  five  years.
Accordingly,  we  believe  we  are  well positioned to capitalize  on  such
growth.   Also included in this categories  are   chicken  and  turkey  by-
products, which  are  converted  into  protein  products  sold primarily to
manufacturers of pet foods.

MARKETS FOR TURKEY PRODUCTS

     FOODSERVICE.  A portion of our turkey sales are derived  from products
sold to the foodservice market. This market principally consists  of  chain
restaurants,  food  processors,  foodservice distributors and certain other
institutions located throughout the  continental  United  States. We supply
turkey products ranging from portion-controlled refrigerated  turkey  parts
to   ready-to-cook  turkey,  fully  cooked  formed  products,  delicatessen
products  such  as deli meats and sausage, salads, ground turkey and turkey
burgers, frankfurters and other foodservice products.

     We believe Pilgrim's  Pride  is  well-positioned  to be the primary or
secondary  supplier  to  many national and international chain  restaurants
that require multiple suppliers  of  turkey  products. Additionally, we are
well suited to be the sole supplier for many regional chain restaurants.

     We believe we have significant competitive strengths in terms of full-
line product capabilities, high-volume production  capacities, research and
development expertise and extensive distribution and  marketing  experience
relative to smaller and to non-vertically integrated producers.

     FOODSERVICE - PREPARED FOODS.  The majority of our turkey sales to the
foodservice market consist of prepared turkey products. Our prepared turkey
sales  to the foodservice market were $90.8 million of our sales in  fiscal
2001. We believe that future growth in this segment will be attributable to
the same  six  factors  described  above relating to the growth of prepared
chicken sales to the foodservice market.

     FOODSERVICE - FRESH TURKEY.  We produce and market fresh, refrigerated
and frozen turkey for sale to foodservice  distributors,  restaurant chains
and other customers. These turkeys are usually of specific  weight  ranges,
and  are  usually  whole  birds  to customer specifications. They are often
marinated to enhance value and product  differentiation.  Our semi-boneless
turkey,   unique  to  Pilgrim's  Pride,  is  becoming  very  popular   with
cruiselines  and  other  customers  where  visual presentation of the whole
turkey is critical.

     RETAIL.  A significant portion of our turkey  sales  are  derived from
products  sold  to  the  retail  market. This market consists primarily  of
grocery store chains, wholesale clubs  and  other  retail  distributors. We
concentrate  our  efforts  in this market on sales of branded,  prepackaged
cut-up and whole turkey to grocery  store chains and retail distributors in
the eastern region of the United States.   This  regional  marketing  focus
enables us to develop consumer brand franchises and capitalize on proximity
to  the  trade customer in terms of lower transportation costs, more timely
and responsive service and enhanced product freshness.

     We utilize  numerous  marketing  techniques, including advertising, to
develop  and strengthen trade and consumer  awareness  and  increase  brand
loyalty   for    consumer    products    marketed   under   the   Pilgrim's
Pride<reg-trade-mark> and Wampler<reg-trade-mark>  brands.   We believe our
efforts to achieve and maintain brand awareness and loyalty help to provide
more secure distribution for our products. We also believe our  efforts  at
brand awareness generate greater price premiums than would otherwise be the
case  in  certain  eastern  markets.  We also maintain an active program to
identify consumer preferences. The program  primarily  consists  of testing
new  product ideas, packaging designs and methods through taste panels  and
focus groups located in key geographic markets.

     RETAIL  -  PREPARED  FOODS.   We  sell retail-oriented prepared turkey
products primarily to grocery store chains  located  in the eastern U.S. We
also sell these products to the wholesale club industry.

      RETAIL  -  FRESH  TURKEY.   Our  prepackaged retail products  include
various combinations of freshly refrigerated  and  frozen, whole turkey and
turkey  parts  in trays, bags or other consumer packs  labeled  and  priced
ready for the retail  grocer's fresh meat counter, ground turkey or sausage
and turkey burgers. We believe the retail prepackaged fresh turkey business
will  continue  to  be a large  and  relatively  stable  market,  providing
opportunities for product  differentiation  and regional brand loyalty with
large seasonal spikes in the holiday seasons.

      EXPORT  AND  OTHER TURKEY PRODUCTS.  Our export  and  other  products
consist of whole turkeys, turkey franks and turkey parts sold in bulk form,
either   non-branded   or    under    the    Wampler<reg-trade-mark>    and
Rockingham<reg-trade-mark> brands. These products are primarily sold frozen
either  to  distributors in the U.S. or for distribution to export markets.
In the U.S.,  prices  of  these products are negotiated daily or weekly and
are generally related to market  prices  quoted by the USDA or other public
price reporting services. We also sell U.S.-produced  turkey  products  for
export  to  Canada,  Mexico,  Eastern  Europe, the Far East and other world
markets.  Historically, we have targeted  international markets to generate
additional  demand for our turkey dark meat,  and  frankfurters  made  from
turkey dark meat,  which  is  a  natural  by-product of our U.S. operations
given our concentration of prepared foods products  and the U.S. customers'
general preference for white meat. We believe that U.S. turkey exports will
continue  to  grow  as worldwide demand increases for high-grade,  low-cost
protein sources. We also  believe  that  worldwide demand for higher margin
prepared  turkey  products  will  increase  over   the   next  five  years.
Accordingly,  we  believe  we  are  well positioned to capitalize  on  such
growth,  especially  in  Mexico  where  we  have  established  distribution
channels.

MARKETS FOR OTHER U.S. PRODUCTS

     We market fresh eggs under the Pilgrim's  Pride<reg-trade-mark>  brand
name  as  well  as  private labels in various sizes of cartons and flats to
U.S.  retail  grocery  and   institutional  foodservice  customers  located
primarily  in  Texas. We have a  housing  capacity  for  approximately  2.3
million commercial  egg  laying  hens  which  can  produce approximately 42
million  dozen eggs annually. U.S. egg prices are determined  weekly  based
upon reported  market  prices. The U.S. egg industry has been consolidating
over the last few years,  with the 25 largest producers accounting for more
than 54% of the total number  of egg laying hens in service during 2000. We
compete with other U.S. egg producers  primarily  on  the  basis of product
quality, reliability, price and customer service.


     In 1997, we introduced a high-nutrient egg called EggsPlus  . This egg
contains high levels of Omega-3 and Omega-6 fatty acids along with  Vitamin
E, making the egg a heart-friendly product. Our marketing of EggsPlus   has
received national recognition for our progress in being an innovator in the
functional foods  category.

   In  addition,  we  produce and sell livestock feeds at our feed mills in
Pittsburg  and  Mt. Pleasant,  Texas  and  at  our  farm  supply  store  in
Pittsburg, Texas  to  dairy farmers and livestock producers in northeastern
Texas, as well as engage in similar sales activities at our other U.S. feed
mills.
                                  MEXICO

BACKGROUND

     The Mexican market represented approximately 14.6% of our net sales in
fiscal  2001.  Recognizing   favorable  long-term  demographic  trends  and
improving economic conditions  in  Mexico, we began exploring opportunities
to produce and market chicken in Mexico.  In  fiscal 1988, we acquired four
vertically  integrated  chicken  production  operations   in   Mexico   for
approximately  $15.1 million. From fiscal 1988 through fiscal 2001, we made
acquisitions and  capital expenditures in Mexico totaling $240.5 million to
modernize our production  technology,  improve our distribution network and
expand  our  operations.  In  addition,  we  have  transferred  experienced
management personnel from the U.S. and developed  a strong local management
team.  As  a  result  of  these  expenditures,  we  have  increased  weekly
production  in  our  Mexican  operations  by  over 400% since our  original
investment  in  fiscal  1988.  We are now the second  largest  producer  of
chicken  in  Mexico.  We  believe  our   facilities   are  among  the  most
technologically advanced in Mexico and that we are one  of  the lowest cost
producers of chicken in Mexico.

PRODUCT TYPES

     While the market for chicken products in Mexico is less developed than
in the United States, with sales attributed to fewer, more basic  products,
the market for value-added products is increasing. Our strategy is  to lead
this  trend.  The products currently sold by us in Mexico consist primarily
of value-added  products  such as eviscerated chicken and chicken parts and
basic products such as New  York dressed (whole chickens with only feathers
and blood removed) and live birds.  We  have  increased our sales of value-
added products, primarily through national retail  chains  and restaurants,
and  it  is  our  business  strategy to continue to do so. In addition,  we
remain opportunistic, utilizing  our  low  cost production to enter markets
where profitable opportunities exist.

MARKETS

     We sell our Mexico chicken products primarily to large wholesalers and
retailers. Our customer base in Mexico covers  a broad geographic area from
Mexico City, the capital of Mexico with a population  estimated  to be over
20  million,  to Saltillo, the capital of the State of Coahuila, about  500
miles north of  Mexico  City,  and  from  Tampico  on the Gulf of Mexico to
Acapulco  on  the  Pacific, which region includes the cities  of  San  Luis
Potosi and Queretaro, capitals of the states of the same name.

      In  Mexico, where  product  differentiation  has  traditionally  been
limited, product  quality and price have been the most critical competitive
factors. The North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into effect on
January 1, 1994, requires  annual  reductions  in  tariffs  for chicken and
chicken products in order to eliminate those tariffs by January 1, 2003.

      While  the  extent  of  the  impact of the elimination of tariffs  is
uncertain,  we believe we are uniquely  positioned  to  benefit  from  this
elimination.  We  have  an  extensive  distribution network in Mexico which
distributes  products  to  19  of  the  32  Mexican   states,  encompassing
approximately  74%  of  the  total  population of Mexico. Our  distribution
network is comprised of eight distribution  centers utilizing approximately
126 company-owned vehicles. We believe this distribution network will be an
important asset in distributing our own, as well as other companies', U.S.-
produced chicken into Mexico.

COMPETITION

     The chicken and turkey industries are highly  competitive  and some of
our competitors have greater financial and marketing resources than  we do.
In  the  United  States  and  Mexico,  we  compete  principally  with other
vertically integrated chicken and turkey companies.

      In  general,  the  competitive factors in the U.S. chicken and turkey
industries  include price,  product  quality,  product  development,  brand
identification,  breadth  of product line and customer service. Competitive
factors vary by major market.  In  the  foodservice  market, competition is
based on consistent quality, product development, service and price. In the
U.S.  retail market, we believe that product quality, brand  awareness  and
customer  service  are  the  primary  bases  of  competition. There is some
competition with non-vertically integrated further  processors  in the U.S.
prepared food business.  We believe we have significant, long-term cost and
quality advantages over non-vertically integrated further processors.

      In  Mexico,  where  product  differentiation  has  traditionally been
limited, product quality and price have been the most critical  competitive
factors. The North American Free Trade Agreement, which went into effect on
January  1,  1994,  requires  annual reductions in tariffs for chicken  and
chicken products in order to eliminate those tariffs by January 1, 2003. As
such  tariffs are reduced, we expect  greater  amounts  of  chicken  to  be
imported  into  Mexico  from  the  U.S.,  which could negatively affect the
profitability  of  Mexican  chicken producers  and  positively  affect  the
profitability of U.S. exporters of chicken to Mexico.

     While the extent of the  impact  of  the  elimination  of  tariffs  is
uncertain,  we  believe  we  are  uniquely  positioned to benefit from this
elimination  for  two  reasons.  First, we have an  extensive  distribution
network in Mexico which distributes  products  to  19  of  the  32  Mexican
states,  encompassing  approximately 74% of the total population of Mexico.
We  believe  this distribution  network  will  be  an  important  asset  in
distributing our  own,  as  well as other companies', U.S.-produced chicken
into Mexico. Second, we have  the  largest U.S. production and distribution
capacities  near  the Mexican border,  which  will  provide  us  with  cost
advantages in exporting  U.S. chicken into Mexico. These facilities include
our processing facilities  in Mt. Pleasant, Pittsburg, Lufkin, Nacogdoches,
Dallas and Waco, Texas, and  distribution  facilities in San Antonio and El
Paso, Texas and Phoenix, Arizona.

OTHER ACTIVITIES

     We have regional distribution centers located  in  Arlington, El Paso,
Mt. Pleasant and San Antonio, Texas, Phoenix, Arizona, and  Oklahoma  City,
Oklahoma  that  distribute  our  own  poultry  products  along with certain
poultry   and   non-poultry  products  purchased  from  third  parties   to
independent  grocers   and   quick  service  restaurants.  Our  non-poultry
distribution business is conducted as an accommodation to our customers and
to achieve greater economies of scale in distribution logistics. The store-
door delivery capabilities for our own poultry products provide a strategic
service advantage in selling to quick service, national chain restaurants.

REGULATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL MATTERS

      The  chicken  and  turkey  industries   are   subject  to  government
regulation, particularly in the health and environmental  areas,  including
provisions relating to the discharge of materials into the environment,  by
the   Centers   for  Disease  Control,  the  United  States  Department  of
Agriculture,  the  Food  and  Drug  Administration  and  the  Environmental
Protection Agency in the United States and by similar governmental agencies
in Mexico. Our chicken processing facilities in the U.S. are subject to on-
site examination,  inspection  and regulation by the USDA. The FDA inspects
the production of our feed mills  in  the  U.S. Our Mexican food processing
facilities  and feed mills are subject to on-site  examination,  inspection
and regulation  by  a Mexican governmental agency, which performs functions
similar to those performed  by  the  USDA  and  FDA.  Since commencement of
operations   by  our  predecessor  in  1946,  compliance  with   applicable
regulations has  not  had  a  material  adverse effect upon our earnings or
competitive position and such compliance  is  not  anticipated  to  have  a
materially  adverse  effect  in  the  future.  We  believe  that  we are in
substantial compliance with all applicable laws and regulations relating to
the operations of our facilities.

     We anticipate increased regulation by the USDA concerning food safety,
by  the  FDA  concerning the use of medications in feed and by the EPA  and
various other state agencies concerning the disposal of chicken by-products
and wastewater  discharges.  Although  we do not anticipate any regulations
having a material adverse effect upon us,  a  material  adverse  effect may
occur.

EMPLOYEES AND LABOR RELATIONS

     As of September 29, 2001, we employed approximately 19,900 persons  in
the  U.S. and 4,600 persons in Mexico. Approximately 2,500 employees at our
Lufkin   and  Nacogdoches,  Texas  facilities  are  members  of  collective
bargaining  units  represented  by  the  United Food and Commercial Workers
Union. However, our Lufkin employees have recently filed a de-certification
petition, which is presently being reviewed by the National Labor Relations
Board.  None  of  our  other  U.S.  employees  have  union  representation.
Collective   bargaining  agreements  with the United  Food  and  Commercial
Workers  Union  expired  on August 10, 2001  with  respect  to  our  Lufkin
employees,  where  we are currently  operating  without  a  contract,   and
expires in October 2004   with  respect  to  our  Nacogdoches employees. We
believe that the terms of the Nacogdoches agreement  are  no more favorable
than those provided to our non-union U.S. employees. In Mexico, most of our
hourly  employees are covered by collective bargaining agreements,  as  are
most employees in Mexico. We have not experienced any work stoppage since a
two-day work  stoppage,  with  no  significant operation disruption, at our
Lufkin facility in May 1993. We believe  our  relations  with our employees
are satisfactory.

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

     Statements of our intentions, beliefs, expectations or predictions for
the  future,  denoted  by  the  words "anticipate," "believe,"  "estimate,"
"expect," "project," "imply," "intend,"  "foresee" and similar expressions,
are forward-looking statements that reflect  our current views about future
events and are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Such risks,
uncertainties and assumptions include the following:

   -   Matters   affecting   the  poultry  industry  generally,   including
       fluctuations in the commodity prices of feed ingredients, chicken
       and turkey;

   -   Management of our cash  resources,  particularly  in  light  of  our
       substantial leverage;

   -   Restrictions  imposed  by,  and  as  a  result of, our substantial
       leverage;

   -   Currency  exchange  rate  fluctuations, trade  barriers,  exchange
       controls, expropriation and other risks associated with foreign
       operations;

   -   Changes in laws or regulations  affecting our operations, as well as
       competitive factors and pricing pressures;

   -   Inability  to  effectively integrate  WLR  Foods  or  realize  the
       associated cost savings and operating synergies currently
       anticipated; and

   -   The impact of uncertainties  of  litigation  as  well as other risks
       described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

     Actual results could differ materially from those projected  in  these
forward-looking statements as a result of these factors, among others, many
of which are beyond our control.





ITEM 2.  PROPERTIES

  Chicken Operations

     BREEDING AND HATCHING

      We supply all of our chicks in the U.S. by producing our own hatching
eggs from domestic breeder flocks in the U.S. These flocks are owned by us,
and approximately  13.9% of them are maintained on 43 company-owned breeder
farms. In the U.S.,  we  currently  own  or contract for approximately 14.2
million square feet of breeder housing on  approximately 417 breeder farms.
In Mexico, all of our breeder flocks are maintained  on company-owned farms
totaling approximately 4.1 million square feet.

      We  own  eleven  chicken  hatcheries  in  the  United  States.  These
hatcheries are located in Nacogdoches, Center and Pittsburg, Texas, DeQueen
and  Nashville,  Arkansas, Broadway, Virginia, Concord, North Carolina  and
Moorefield, West Virginia,  where  eggs  are  incubated  and  hatched  in a
process  requiring 21 days.  Once hatched, the day-old chicks are inspected
and vaccinated  against  common  poultry  diseases  and  transported by our
vehicles  to  grow-out  farms.  Our eleven hatcheries in the U.S.  have  an
aggregate production capacity of  approximately  15.5  million  chicks  per
week.  In  Mexico,  we  own  seven  hatcheries,  which  have  an  aggregate
production capacity of approximately 3.5 million chicks per week.

     GROW-OUT

      We place our U.S. grown chicks on approximately 1,500 contract  grow-
out farms  located  in  Texas,  Arkansas,  Virginia,  West  Virginia, North
Carolina  and  Oklahoma,  some of which are owned by our affiliates.  These
contract grow-out farms contain  approximately  5,360  chicken  houses with
approximately 78.4 million square feet of growing facilities. Additionally,
we  own  and  operate  grow-out  farms containing approximately 390 chicken
houses with approximately 4.4 million  square feet of growing facilities in
the U.S., which account for approximately  5%  of  our  total  annual  U.S.
chicken capacity. On the contracted grow-out farms, the farmers provide the
facilities,  utilities  and  labor.  We supply the chicks, the feed and all
veterinary and technical services. Contract grow-out farmers are paid based
on live weight under an incentive arrangement.  In  Mexico,  we  place  our
grown  chicks  on  contract  grow-out  farms  containing  approximately 732
chicken  houses  with  approximately  10.2 million square feet  of  growing
facilities.  Additionally,  we own and operate  grow-out  farms  containing
approximately 632 chicken houses with approximately 9.2 million square feet
of growing facilities in Mexico,  which  account for approximately 56.5% of
our total annual Mexican chicken capacity.  Arrangements  with  independent
farmers in Mexico are similar to our arrangements with contractors  in  the
United  States.  The average grow-out cycle of our chickens is six to seven
weeks.

     FEED MILLS

     An important  factor in the production of chicken is the rate at which
feed is converted into body weight. The quality and composition of the feed
is critical to the conversion  rate.  Accordingly, we formulate and produce
our own feed. We purchase feed ingredients  on the open market. The primary
feed ingredients include corn, milo and soybean  meal,  which  historically
have been the largest component of our total production costs. In the U.S.,
we  operate  nine  feed mills located in Nacogdoches, Tenaha and Pittsburg,
Texas, Nashville and Hope, Arkansas, Harrisonburg, Virginia, Wingate, North
Carolina and Moorefield,  West  Virginia.  In  the  U.S., we currently have
annual feed requirements of approximately 3.4 million tons and the capacity
to  produce  approximately  6.1  million tons. We own four  feed  mills  in
Mexico, which produce all of the requirements  of  our  Mexico  operations.
Mexico's annual feed requirements are approximately 0.7 million tons with a
capacity  to  produce  approximately  1.0  million  tons.  In  fiscal 2001,
approximately  67%  of  the  feed  ingredients  used  by  us in Mexico were
imported  from the United States, but this percentage fluctuates  based  on
the availability and cost of local feed ingredient supplies.

     PROCESSING

     Once the chickens reach processing weight, they are transported in our
trucks to our  processing  plants.  These  plants  utilize  modern,  highly
automated  equipment  to  process and package the chickens. We periodically
review possible application  of  new  processing  technologies  in order to
enhance productivity and reduce costs. We have ten U.S. processing  plants,
two of which are located in Mt. Pleasant, Texas, and the remainder of which
are  located  in  Dallas, Nacogdoches and Lufkin, Texas, DeQueen, Arkansas,
Broadway and Alma,  Virginia,  Marshville,  North  Carolina and Moorefield,
West  Virginia.  These processing plants have the capacity,  under  present
USDA inspection procedures, to slaughter approximately 11.9 million head of
chicken per week,  assuming  a  five-day  work  week.  Our three processing
plants located in Mexico have the capacity to slaughter  approximately  3.3
million  head  of  chicken per week, assuming a six-day work week, which is
typical in Mexico.

  TURKEY OPERATIONS

     BREEDING AND HATCHING

     We purchase breeder  poults,  which  we  place with growers who supply
labor and housing to produce breeder flocks. These breeder flocks are owned
by  us, and approximately 16.2% of them are maintained  on  three  company-
owned  breeder  farms.   We currently own or contract for approximately 2.0
million square feet of turkey  breeder  housing on approximately 40 breeder
farms  which  produce  eggs  that  are taken to  the  company-owned  turkey
hatchery. Our breeder flocks provide  approximately 69% of our poult supply
for grow-out. We own and operate one turkey  stud  farm  with approximately
50,000 square feet, which houses 3,600 breeder males and supplies semen for
52% of our breeder production.  The balance of our poults  for grow-out are
purchased from third parties.

      We  own  and  operate  one  turkey  hatchery,  which  is  located  in
Harrisonburg,  Virginia, where eggs are incubated and hatched in a  process
requiring 28 days.   Once  hatched,  the  day-old  poults are inspected and
vaccinated against common poultry diseases and transported  by our vehicles
to  grow-out  farms.  Our  turkey   hatchery  has  an  aggregate production
capacity of approximately 450,000 poults per week.

     GROW-OUT

      We  place  our  turkey poults on approximately 350 contract  grow-out
farms located in Virginia,  West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Maryland and North
and South Carolina. These contract  grow-out  farms  contain  approximately
1,260 turkey houses with approximately 23.6 million square feet  of growing
facilities.  In addition, we own and operate a grow-out farm containing  20
turkey houses  with approximately 251,000 square feet of growing facilities
in the U.S., which  accounts  for  approximately  1.1%  of our total annual
turkey capacity. On the contracted grow-out farms, the farmers  provide the
facilities,  utilities  and  labor. We supply the poults, the feed and  all
veterinary and technical services.   Contract  grow-out  farmers  are  paid
based  on  live weight under an incentive arrangement. The average grow-out
cycle of our turkeys is 20 to 26 weeks.

     FEED MILLS

     An important  factor  in the production of turkey is the rate at which
feed is converted into body weight. The quality and composition of the feed
is critical to the conversion  rate.  Accordingly, we formulate and produce
our own feed. We purchase feed ingredients  on the open market. The primary
feed ingredients include corn, milo and soybean  meal,  which  historically
have been the largest component of our total production costs. We  own  and
operate  a turkey feed mill located in Harrisonburg, Virginia. We currently
have the capacity  to annually produce approximately 520,000 tons of turkey
feed at this mill. We  also  produce turkey feed when required at our other
three eastern division mills or purchase it on the open market.

     PROCESSING

     Once the poults reach processing  weight,  they are transported in our
trucks  to  our  processing  plants.  These plants utilize  modern,  highly
automated equipment to process and package  the  turkeys.  We  periodically
review  possible  application  of  new processing technologies in order  to
enhance productivity and reduce costs.  Our three turkey processing plants,
located in Harrisonburg and Hinton, Virginia  and New Oxford, Pennsylvania,
have  the capacity, under present USDA inspection  procedures,  to  process
approximately 450,000 turkeys per week, assuming a five-day work week.

PREPARED FOODS OPERATIONS

     We  operate  five prepared foods plants.  Four of these plants process
primarily chicken prepared  foods products and are located in Mt. Pleasant,
Waco,  Dallas and Nacogdoches,  Texas.  Substantially  all  of  our  turkey
prepared  foods  products  are processed in our plant located in Franconia,
Pennsylvania. In line with our  stated  business  strategy to capitalize on
the attractive U.S. prepared foods market, we have  increased  our prepared
foods  production  capacity  through  expansion and acquisitions. The  U.S.
prepared foods market continues to be one  of  the fastest growing and most
profitable  segments  in the poultry industry. Further  processed  prepared
foods products include  items  such  as  portion-controlled breast fillets,
tenderloins and strips, formed nuggets and patties, turkey hams and roasts,
salads and bone-in chicken parts. Prepared foods are sold frozen and may be
either fully cooked, partially cooked or raw,  breaded or non-breaded, pre-
marinated or non-marinated or smoked. We measure  our operating capacity of
our prepared foods plants on the basis of running two  shifts  per day, six
days per week.

     Our largest prepared foods plant is located in Mt. Pleasant, Texas and
was  constructed  in  1986  and has been expanded significantly since  that
time. This facility includes  281,000 square feet and employs approximately
2,300  people.  This  facility has  de-boning  lines,  marinating  systems,
batter/breading systems,  fryers,  ovens,  both  mechanical  and  cryogenic
freezers,  a  variety of packaging systems and cold storage including  four
fully-cooked lines  and  three  ready-to-cook/par-frying/Individually Quick
Frozen  ("IQF")  lines and one batter-breaded/IQF  line  and  eight  spiral
freezers. This facility  has  capacity to produce approximately 350 million
pounds of further processed product  annually and is currently operating at
full capacity.

      Our  Waco,  Texas prepared foods plant  was  purchased  in  1999  and
expanded in fiscal  year  2000 and again in fiscal 2001. It is functionally
equivalent to the Mt. Pleasant  plant  and includes 150,146 square feet and
employs  approximately  700 people. This state  of  the  art  facility  has
marinating systems, batter/breading systems, fryers, ovens, both mechanical
and cryogenic freezers, a  variety  of  packaging  systems and cold storage
including  two  fully-cooked  lines and two ready-to-cook  lines  and  four
spiral freezers. This facility  has  capacity  to produce approximately 270
million  pounds  of  further processed product annually  and  is  currently
operating at approximately 80% of capacity.

     Our Franconia, Pennsylvania  prepared  foods  plant  was  acquired  in
January  2001  and further processes chicken and turkey products, including
grinding, marinating,  spicing and cooking, producing premium delicatessen,
foodservice and retail products,  including  roast turkey, frankfurters and
salads.  This  facility  includes  approximately 170,000  square  feet  and
employs  approximately  775  people. Our  Franconia  facility  employs  the
batching system of production  as  opposed  to  line-production used in our
other plants. This plant has approximately 95 million annual pounds of oven
capacity, 26 million annual pounds of frankfurter  capacity  and 17 million
annual  pounds of salad capacity for a total capacity of approximately  138
million pounds  of  further  processed  product  annually  and is currently
operating at approximately 80% of capacity.

      Our Dallas, Texas prepared foods plant was constructed  in  1999  and
includes  84,000  square  feet  and  employs approximately 900 people. This
facility  has  de-boning  and portioning  capability,  marinating  systems,
batter/breading and frying  systems  and  IQF  capabilities.  This plant is
currently  running  one  par-frying line and one IQF production line,  each
with  a  spiral  freezer.  This   facility  has  the  capacity  to  produce
approximately 105 million pounds of  further processed product annually and
is currently operating at full capacity.

     Our Nacogdoches, Texas prepared foods  plant was constructed in fiscal
2001.  It is functionally equivalent to our Dallas,  Texas  prepared  foods
plant  and  includes  115,465  square  feet and employs approximately 1,850
people. This facility has de-boning and  portioning  capability, marinating
systems,  batter/breading  and  frying  systems and IQF capabilities.  This
plant is currently running one par-frying  line  with  a spiral freezer and
two  IQF lines each with a spiral freezer with capability  of  making  them
par-fry  lines  as  sales  dictate.  This  facility has capacity to produce
approximately 80 million pounds of further processed  product  annually and
is currently operating at approximately 80% of capacity.

  EGG PRODUCTION

     We produce table eggs at three farms near Pittsburg, Texas.  One  farm
is  owned  by  us,  while  two farms are leased from an entity owned by our
major stockholder. The eggs  are  cleaned,  sized,  graded and packaged for
shipment at processing facilities located on the egg  farms. The farms have
a  housing capacity for approximately 2.3 million producing  hens  and  are
currently housing approximately 1.9 million hens.

  OTHER FACILITIES AND INFORMATION

      We  operate  three  rendering  plants  that  convert by-products into
protein  products, located in Mt. Pleasant, Texas, Broadway,  Virginia  and
Moorefield,  West  Virginia.  These  rendering plants currently process by-
products from approximately 13.1 million  chickens  and 0.6 million turkeys
weekly into protein products. These products are used in the manufacture of
poultry and livestock feed and pet foods. We operate a commercial feed mill
in  Mt. Pleasant, Texas, which produces various bulk and  sacked  livestock
feed sold to area dairies, ranches and farms. We also operate a feed supply
store  in  Pittsburg,  Texas,  from  which  we sell various bulk and sacked
livestock  feed  products,  a majority of which  is  produced  in  our  Mt.
Pleasant commercial feed mill.  We  own  an  office  building in Pittsburg,
Texas,  which  houses our executive offices, an office building  in  Mexico
City, which houses our Mexican marketing offices, and an office building in
Broadway, Virginia,  which houses our Eastern Division sales and marketing,
research and development, and corporate activities.

     Substantially all of our U.S. property, plant and equipment is pledged
as collateral on our secured debt.

ITEM 3.  LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

   SINCE MARCH 23, 1999,  THE COMPANY HAS BEEN A PLAINTIFF IN TWO ANTITRUST
LAWSUITS IN U.S. DISTRICT COURT  IN  WASHINGTON, D.C. ALLEGING A WORLD-WIDE
CONSPIRACY  TO  CONTROL PRODUCTION CAPACITY  AND  RAISE  PRICES  OF  COMMON
VITAMINS SUCH AS A, B-4, C AND E.  ON NOVEMBER 3, 1999, A SETTLEMENT, WHICH
WAS ENTERED INTO AS PART OF A CLASS ACTION LAWSUIT TO WHICH THE COMPANY WAS
A MEMBER, WAS AGREED  TO  AMONG  THE  DEFENDANTS AND THE CLASS, WHICH WOULD
PROVIDE FOR A RECOVERY OF BETWEEN 18-20%  OF  VITAMINS  PURCHASED  FROM THE
DEFENDANTS  FROM 1990 THROUGH 1998.  ON MARCH 28, 2000, THE JUDGE PRESIDING
OVER THE CASE  ACCEPTED  THE  NEGOTIATED  SETTLEMENT  BETWEEN  THE PARTIES;
HOWEVER,  APPEALS  FROM  VARIOUS  SOURCES ARE IN PROCESS.  THE COMPANY  HAS
FILED DOCUMENTATION SHOWING THAT VITAMIN PURCHASES MADE DURING THE RECOVERY
PERIOD  TOTALED  APPROXIMATELY $14.9  MILLION.   DURING  FISCAL  2001,  THE
COMPANY RECEIVED $3.3 MILLION IN FINAL SETTLEMENT OF ITS CLAIM.

   IN JANUARY OF 1998,  SEVENTEEN  OF  OUR  CURRENT AND/OR FORMER EMPLOYEES
FILED  THE  CASE  OF  "OCTAVIUS  ANDERSON,  ET  AL.   V.   PILGRIM'S  PRIDE
CORPORATION"  IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN  DISTRICT
OF TEXAS, LUFKIN DIVISION CLAIMING PILGRIM'S PRIDE VIOLATED REQUIREMENTS OF
THE FAIR LABOR  STANDARDS  ACT.  THE SUIT ALLEGED PILGRIM'S PRIDE FAILED TO
PAY EMPLOYEES FOR ALL HOURS  WORKED.   THE  SUIT GENERALLY ALLEGED THAT (1)
EMPLOYEES SHOULD BE PAID FOR TIME SPENT TO PUT  ON,  TAKE  OFF,  AND  CLEAN
CERTAIN  PERSONAL  GEAR AT THE BEGINNING AND END OF THEIR SHIFTS AND BREAKS
AND (2) THE USE OF A  MASTER  TIME  CARD OR PRODUCTION "LINE" TIME FAILS TO
PAY EMPLOYEES FOR ALL TIME ACTUALLY WORKED.   PLAINTIFFS  SOUGHT TO RECOVER
UNPAID  WAGES PLUS LIQUIDATED DAMAGES AND LEGAL FEES.  APPROXIMATELY  1,700
CONSENTS  TO JOIN AS PLAINTIFFS WERE FILED WITH THE COURT BY CURRENT AND/OR
FORMER EMPLOYEES.  DURING  MARCH  2001,  THE  CASE WAS TRIED IN THE FEDERAL
COURT  OF  THE  EASTERN  DISTRICT  OF TEXAS, LUFKIN,  TEXAS.   THE  COMPANY
PREVAILED AT THE TRIAL WITH A JUDGMENT  ISSUED BY THE JUDGE, WHICH FOUND NO
EVIDENCE PRESENTED TO SUPPORT THE PLAINTIFFS'  ALLEGATIONS.  THE PLAINTIFFS
HAVE FILED AN APPEAL IN THE FIFTH CIRCUIT COURT  OF  APPEALS TO REVERSE THE
JUDGE'S  DECISION.  THE PLAINTIFF'S BRIEF WAS SUBMITTED  TO  THE  COURT  ON
NOVEMBER 5,  2001.   PILGRIM'S PRIDE'S RESPONSE TO THE PLAINTIFF'S BRIEF TO
THE FIFTH CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS IS DUE ON DECEMBER 5, 2001.  NEITHER THE
LIKELIHOOD OF AN UNFAVORABLE  OUTCOME NOR THE AMOUNT OF ULTIMATE LIABILITY,
IF ANY, WITH RESPECT TO THIS CASE  CAN  BE  DETERMINED  AT  THIS TIME.  THE
COMPANY DOES NOT EXPECT THIS MATTER, INDIVIDUALLY OR COLLECTIVELY,  TO HAVE
A  MATERIAL  IMPACT  ON  OUR  FINANCIAL  POSITION, OPERATIONS OR LIQUIDITY.
SUBSTANTIALLY SIMILAR SUITS HAVE BEEN FILED  AGAINST  FOUR OTHER INTEGRATED
POULTRY COMPANIES, INCLUDING WLR FOODS, ONE OF WHICH RESULTED  IN A FEDERAL
JUDGE  DISMISSING MOST OF THE PLAINTIFFS' CLAIMS IN THAT ACTION WITH  FACTS
SIMILAR TO OUR CASE.

   IN AUGUST OF 2000, FOUR OF OUR CURRENT AND/OR FORMER EMPLOYEES FILED THE
CASE OF "BETTY KENNELL, ET AL. V. WAMPLER FOODS, INC." IN THE UNITED STATES
DISTRICT  COURT  FOR  THE  NORTHERN  DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA, CLAIMING WE
VIOLATED REQUIREMENTS OF THE FAIR LABOR  STANDARDS ACT.  THE SUIT GENERALLY
MAKES THE SAME ALLEGATIONS AS ANDERSON V.  PILGRIM'S PRIDE DISCUSSED ABOVE.
PLAINTIFFS SEEK TO RECOVER UNPAID WAGES PLUS  LIQUIDATED  DAMAGES AND LEGAL
FEES.  APPROXIMATELY 150 CONSENTS TO JOIN AS PLAINTIFFS WERE FILED WITH THE
COURT BY CURRENT AND/OR FORMER EMPLOYEES.  NO TRIAL DATE HAS  BEEN SET.  TO
DATE, ONLY LIMITED DISCOVERY HAS BEEN PERFORMED.  NEITHER THE LIKELIHOOD OF
AN UNFAVORABLE OUTCOME NOR THE AMOUNT OF ULTIMATE LIABILITY, IF  ANY,  WITH
RESPECT TO THIS CASE CAN BE DETERMINED AT THIS TIME.  WE DO NOT EXPECT THIS
MATTER,  INDIVIDUALLY  OR  COLLECTIVELY,  TO  HAVE A MATERIAL IMPACT ON OUR
FINANCIAL POSITION, OPERATIONS OR LIQUIDITY.

   THE COMPANY IS SUBJECT TO VARIOUS OTHER LEGAL  PROCEEDINGS  AND  CLAIMS,
WHICH  ARISE  IN  THE  ORDINARY  COURSE OF ITS BUSINESS.  IN THE OPINION OF
MANAGEMENT, THE AMOUNT OF ULTIMATE  LIABILITY WITH RESPECT TO THESE ACTIONS
WILL NOT MATERIALLY AFFECT THE FINANCIAL  POSITION OR RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
OF THE COMPANY.

ITEM 4.  SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS

    Not Applicable






<PAGE>







                                  PART II

ITEM  5.  MARKET FOR THE REGISTRANT'S COMMON  STOCK  AND  RELATED  SECURITY
      HOLDER MATTERS

QUARTERLY STOCK PRICES AND DIVIDENDS

   High and  low  sales prices of and dividends on the Company's Class B
and Class  A common stock for the periods indicated were:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                      Prices            Prices
                       2001              2000               DIVIDENDS
QUARTER           HIGH      LOW     HIGH      LOW        2001       2000
<S>             <C> <C>  <C> <C>   <C> <C>  <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>
Class B Common Stock
First            $8.15     $6.03   $9.00     $6.25        $.01      $.01
Second           12.33      7.67    8.56      6.25         .01       .01
Third            12.55      9.43    8.31      6.75         .01       .01
Fourth           15.35     11.90    7.81      6.63         .01       .01

Class A Common Stock
First             5.72      4.46    7.00      4.63         .01       .01
Second            8.42      5.47    6.63      4.50         .01       .01
Third             8.74      6.63    6.13      4.06         .01       .01
Fourth          $10.98     $7.50   $5.69     $4.81        $.01      $.01
</TABLE>

   The  Company's  Class  B  common stock (ticker symbol "CHX") and Class A
common stock (ticker symbol "CHX.A")  are  traded  on  the  New  York Stock
Exchange.  The Company estimates there were approximately 21,800 and 23,925
holders  (including  individual participants in security position listings)
of the Company's Class  A  and  Class  B  common stock, respectively, as of
November 8, 2001.  See Note F-Common Stock,  of  the  Notes to Consolidated
Financial  Statements  for  additional  discussion of the Company's  common
stock.





<PAGE>


ITEM 6.                     SELECTED FINANCIAL DATA

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)    TEN YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001
                  2001(a)      2000       1999(b)       1998         1997
<S>            <C>     <C>  <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>  <C>    <C>
INCOME STATEMENT DATA:                early
Net Sales      $2,214,712   $1,499,439   $1,357,403   $1,331,545  $1,277,649
Gross margin      213,950      165,828      185,708      136,103     114,467
Operating income
   (loss)          94,542       80,488      109,504       77,256      63,894
Income (loss) before
   income taxes and
   extraordinary
   charge          63,294       62,786       90,904       56,522      43,824
Interest expense,
   net             30,775       17,779       17,666       20,148      22,075
Income tax expense
   (benefit)       21,263       10,442       25,651        6,512       2,788
Income (loss)before
   extraordinary
   charge          42,031       52,344       65,253       50,010      41,036
Extraordinary charge--
   early repayment of
   debt, net
   of tax            (894)          --           --           --          --
Net income (loss)  41,137       52,344        65,253      50,010      41,036

PER COMMON SHARE DATA(C)
Income (loss)before
   extraordinary
   charge          $ 1.02       $ 1.27        $ 1.58      $ 1.21      $ 0.99
Extraordinary
   charge -
   early repayment
   of debt          (0.02)          --            --          --          --
Net income (loss)    1.00         1.27          1.58        1.21        0.99
Cash dividends       0.06         0.06         0.045        0.04        0.04
Book Value           9.27         8.33          7.11        5.58        4.41

BALANCE SHEET SUMMARY:
Working capital $ 203,450     $124,531      $154,242    $147,040    $133,542
Total assets    1,215,695      705,420       655,762     601,439     579,124
Notes payable and
   current maturities of
   long-term debt   5,099        4,657         4,353       5,889      11,596
Long-term debt, less
   current
   maturities     467,242      165,037       183,753     199,784     224,743
Total stockholders'
   equity         380,932      342,559       294,259     230,871     182,516

CASH FLOW SUMMARY:
Operating cash
   flow           $87,833     $130,803       $81,452     $85,016     $49,615
Depreciation &
   amortization(d) 55,390       36,027        34,536      32,591      29,796
Capital
   expenditures   112,632       92,128        69,649      53,518      50,231
Business
   acquisitions   239,539           --            --          --          --
Financing
  activities, net 254,382      (22,619)      (19,634)    (32,498)        348

CASHFLOW RATIOS:
EBITDA(e)         147,666      115,356       142,043     108,268       94,782
EBITDA/interest
   expense, net     4.80x        6.49x         8.04x       5.37x        4.29x
Senior secured
   debt/EBITDA      1.84x         .69x          .67x       1.02x        1.45x
Total debt/EBITDA   3.20x        1.47x         1.32x       1.90x        2.49x

KEY INDICATORS (AS A PERCENTAGE OF NET SALES):
Gross margin         9.7%        11.1%         13.7%       10.2%         9.0%
Selling,
   general and
   administrative
   expenses          5.4%         5.7%          5.6%        4.4%         4.0%
Operating
   income (loss)     4.3%         5.4%          8.1%        5.8%         5.0%
Interest
   expense, net      1.4%         1.2%          1.3%        1.5%         1.7%
Net income (loss)    1.9%         3.5%          4.8%        3.8%         3.2%
(See page 30 for footnotes.)

</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)    TEN YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001
                  1996         1995         1994        1993(b)     1992
<S>            <C>     <C>  <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>  <C>    <C>
Income Statement Data:
Net sales       $1,139,310    $931,806     $922,609    $887,843    $817,361
Gross margin        70,640      74,144      110,827     106,036      32,802
Operating income
   (loss)           21,504      24,930       59,698      56,345     (12,475)
Income (loss) before
   income taxes and
   extraordinary
   charge               47       2,091       42,448      32,838     (33,712)
Interest expense,
   net              21,539      17,483       19,175      25,719      22,502
Income tax expense
   (benefit)         4,551      10,058       11,390      10,543      (4,048)
Income (loss) before
   extraordinary
   charge           (4,504)     (7,967)      31,058      22,295     (29,664)
Extraordinary charge--
   early repayment
   of debt, net
   of tax           (2,780)         --           --      (1,286)         --
Net income (loss)   (7,284)     (7,967)      31,058      21,009     (29,664)

Per Common Share Data(c)
Income (loss) before
   extraordinary
   charge          $ (0.11)    $ (0.19)      $ 0.75      $ 0.54      $(0.83)
Extraordinary charge--
   early repayment
   of debt           (0.07)         --           --       (0.03)         --
 Net income (loss)   (0.18)      (0.19)        0.75        0.51       (0.83)
Cash dividends        0.04        0.04         0.04        0.02        0.04
Book value            3.46        3.67         3.91        3.20        2.71


Balance Sheet Summary:
Working capital     88,455      88,395       99,724      72,688      11,227
Total assets      $536,722    $497,604     $438,683    $422,846    $434,566
Notes payable and
   current maturities
   of long-term
   debt             35,850      18,187        4,493      25,643      86,424
Long-term debt, less
   current
   maturities      198,334     182,988      152,631     159,554     131,534
Total stockholders'
   equity          143,135     152,074      161,696     132,293     112,112

Cash Flow Summary:
Operating cash
   flow            $11,391     $32,712      $60,664     $44,970     $(1,573)
Depreciation &
   ammortization(d) 28,024      26,127       25,177      26,034      24,090
Capital
   expenditures     34,314      35,194       25,547      15,201      18,043
Business
   acquisitions         --      36,178           --          --          --
Financing
   activities, net  27,313      40,173      (30,291)    (40,339)     25,110

Cashflow Ratios:
EBITDA(e)           47,849      49,811       83,658      79,222      10,955
EBITDA/interest
   expense, net      2.22x       2.85x        4.36x       3.08x        .48x
Senior secured debt/
   EBITDA            2.26x       1.79x         .70x        .94x       9.40x
Total debt/EBITDA    4.89x       4.04x        1.88x       2.34x      20.17x

Key Indicators (as a percentage of net sales):
Gross margin          6.2%        8.0%        12.0%       11.9%        4.0%
Selling, general and
   administrative
   expenses           4.3%        5.3%         5.5%        5.6%        5.7%
Operating income
   (loss)             1.9%        2.7%         6.5%        6.3%       (1.6%)
Interest expense, net 1.9%        1.9%         2.1%        2.9%        2.8%
Net income (loss)    (0.6%)      (0.9%)        3.4%        2.4%       (3.6%)

(A)    THE COMPANY ACQUIRED WLR FOODS ON JANUARY 27, 2001 FOR $239.5 MILLION
       AND THE ASSUMPTION OF $45.5 MILLION OF INDEBTEDNESS.  THE ACQUISITION
       HAS BEEN ACCOUNTED FOR AS A PURCHASE, AND THE RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
       FOR THIS ACQUISITION HAVE BEEN INCLUDED IN OUR CONSOLIDATED RESULTS
       OF OPERATIONS SINCE THE ACQUISITION DATE.

(B)    FISCAL 1999 AND 1993 HAD 53 WEEKS

       HISTORICAL PER SHARE AMOUNTS REPRESENT BOTH BASIC AND DILUTED AND HAVE
(C)    BEEN RESTATED TO GIVE EFFECT TO A STOCK DIVIDEND ISSUED ON JULY 30,
       1999.  SEE NOTE F OF THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS OF THE
       COMPANY.

(D)    INCLUDES AMORTIZATION OF CAPITALIZED FINANCING COSTS OF APPROXIMATELY
       $0.9 MILLION, $1.2 MILLION, $1.1 MILLION, $1.0 MILLION, $0.9 MILLION,
       $1.8 MILLION, $1.1 MILLION,  $1.3 MILLION,  $1.6 MILLION AND  $0.5
       MILLION IN FISCAL YEARS 2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, 1997, 1996, 1995, 1994,
       1993 AND 1992,  RESPECTIVELY.

(E)    "EBITDA" IS DEFINED AS THE SUM OF NET INCOME (LOSS) BEFORE EXTRAORDINARY
       CHARGES, INTEREST, TAXES, DEPRECIATION AND AMORTIZATION.  EBITDA IS
       PRESENTED BECAUSE WE BELIEVE IT IS FREQUENTLY USED BY SECURITIES
       ANALYSTS, INVESTORS AND OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES IN THE EVALUATION OF
       COMPANIES.  EBITDA IS NOT A MEASUREMENT OF FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE UNDER
       GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS
       AN ALTERNATIVE TO CASH FLOW FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES OR AS A MEASURE OF
       LIQUIDITY OR AN ALTERNATIVE TO NET INCOME AS INDICATORS OF OUR OPERATING
       PERFORMANCE OR ANY OTHER MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE DERIVED IN ACCORDANCE
       WITH GENERALLY ACCEPTED ACCOUNTING PRINCIPLES.
</TABLE>





<PAGE>




ITEM 7.  MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS  OF RESULTS OF OPERATIONS AND
FINANCIAL CONDITION

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

     Statements of our intentions, beliefs, expectations or predictions for
the  future,  denoted  by  the  words "anticipate," "believe,"  "estimate,"
"expect," "project," "imply," "intend,"  "foresee" and similar expressions,
are forward-looking statements that reflect  our current views about future
events and are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions. Such risks,
uncertainties and assumptions include the following:

      -  Matters  affecting  the  poultry  industry   generally,  including
         fluctuations in the commodity prices of feed ingredients, chicken
         and turkey;

      -  Management  of our cash resources, particularly in  light  of  our
         substantial leverage;

      -  Restrictions imposed  by,  and  as  a  result  of, our substantial
         leverage;

      -  Currency  exchange  rate  fluctuations,  trade  barriers, exchange
         controls, expropriation and other risks associated with foreign
         operations;

      -  Changes in laws or regulations affecting our operations, as well as
         competitive factors and pricing pressures;

      -  Inability  to  effectively  integrate  WLR  Foods  or  realize the
         associated cost savings and operating synergies currently
         anticipated; and

      -  The impact of uncertainties of litigation as well as other  risks
         described in our filings with the Securities and Exchange
         Commission.

     Actual results  could  differ materially from those projected in these
forward-looking statements as a result of these factors, among others, many
of which are beyond our control.

GENERAL

     Profitability in the poultry  industry  is  materially affected by the
commodity  prices  of  feed  ingredients,  chicken and  turkey,  which  are
determined  by supply and demand factors. As  a  result,  the  chicken  and
turkey industries  are  subject to cyclical earnings fluctuations. Cyclical
earnings fluctuations can be mitigated somewhat by:

     - Business strategy;

     - Product mix;

     - Sales and marketing plans; and

     - Operating efficiencies.

   In an effort to reduce  price  volatility  and  to generate higher, more
consistent  profit  margins,  we  have concentrated on the  production  and
marketing of prepared foods products.  Prepared  foods  products  generally
have  higher  profit  margins than our other products. Also, the production
and sale in the U.S. of  prepared  foods  products reduce the impact of the
costs of feed ingredients on our profitability.  Feed  ingredient purchases
are  the  single largest component of our cost of goods sold,  representing
approximately  30.1% of our consolidated cost of goods sold in fiscal 2001.
The production of  feed  ingredients  is  positively or negatively affected
primarily by weather patterns throughout the  world,  the  global  level of
supply  inventories  and  demand for feed ingredients, and the agricultural
policies  of  the  United  States   and  foreign  governments.  As  further
processing  is  performed,  feed  ingredient   costs  become  a  decreasing
percentage  of a product's total production cost,  thereby  reducing  their
impact on our profitability. Products sold in this form enable us to charge
a premium, reduce  the impact of feed ingredient costs on our profitability
and improve and stabilize our profit margins.

BUSINESS SEGMENTS

     Since the acquisition  of WLR Foods on January 27, 2001, we operate in
two reportable business segments  as  (1)  a  producer of chicken and other
products and (2) a producer of turkey products.

      Our chicken and other products segment primarily  includes  sales  of
chicken  products  we  produce and purchase for resale in the United States
and Mexico, but also includes  the  sale  of  table  eggs,  and  feed.  Our
chicken  and  other  products  segment conducts separate operations in  the
United  States and Mexico and is  reported  as  two  separate  geographical
areas.  Our  turkey  segment  includes sales of turkey products produced in
our turkey operation recently acquired from WLR Foods, whose operations are
exclusively in the United States.

     Inter-area sales and inter-segment  sales, which are not material, are
accounted  for  at  prices  comparable  to  normal  trade  customer  sales.
Corporate expenses are included with chicken and other products.




<PAGE>




The following table presents certain information regarding our segments:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                             SEPTEMBER 29,    SEPTEMBER 30,     OCTOBER 2,
                                2001(A)           2000             1999
<S>                         <C>       <C>     <C>        <C>    <C>     <C>
                             (52 WEEKS)          (52 WEEKS)       (53 WEEKS)
                                             (IN THOUSANDS)
NET SALES TO CUSTOMERS:
Chicken  and Other Products:
   United States             $1,652,199         $1,192,077       $1,102,903
   Mexico                       323,678            307,362          254,500
      Sub-total               1,975,877          1,499,439        1,357,403
Turkey                          238,835                 --               --
      Total                  $2,214,712         $1,499,439       $1,357,403

OPERATING INCOME:
Chicken and Other Products:
   United States             $   78,096         $   45,928       $   88,177
   Mexico                        12,157             34,560           21,327
      Sub-total                  90,253             80,488          109,504
   Turkey                         4,289                 --               --
      Total                  $   94,542         $   80,488       $  109,504

Depreciation and Amortization(b)
Chicken and Other Products:
   United States             $   38,155         $   24,444       $   23,185
   Mexico                        11,962             11,583           11,351
      Sub-total                  50,117             36,027           34,536
 Turkey                           5,273                 --               --
      Total                  $   55,390         $   36,027       $   34,536

(a)    The  acquisition  of WLR Foods has been accounted for as a purchase,
and the results of operations  for  this acquisition have been  included in
our consolidated results of operating since  January  27, 2001, the
acquisition date.

(b)   INCLUDES AMORTIZATION OF CAPITALIZED FINANCING COSTS OF APPROXIMATELY
$0.9 MILLION,  $1.2  MILLION  AND  $1.1 MILLION IN FISCAL YEARS 2001, 2000
AND 1999,  RESPECTIVELY.
</TABLE>

The following table presents certain items as a percentage of net sales for
the periods indicated:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  2001 (a)   2000       1999
<S>                              <C>  <C>  <C> <C>    <C> <C>
Net sales                        100.0 %    100.0 %    100.0 %
Cost of sales                     90.3       88.9       86.3
Gross profit                       9.7       11.1       13.7
Selling, general and
   administrative expense          5.4        5.7        5.6
Operating income                   4.3        5.4        8.1
Interest expense, net              1.4        1.2        1.3
Income before income taxes         2.9        4.2        6.7
Net income                         1.9        3.5        4.8

</TABLE>

(a)  The acquisition of WLR Foods has been accounted for as a purchase,
and the  results  of  operations for this acquisition have been included
in our consolidated  results  of operating since January 27, 2001, the
acquisition date.

RESULTS OF OPERATIONS

FISCAL 2001 COMPARED TO FISCAL 2000

     On January 27, 2001, we completed the  acquisition  of  WLR  Foods,  a
vertically  integrated   producer of chicken and turkey products located in
the eastern United States.  Accordingly,  35  weeks  of  operations  of the
former WLR Foods are included in our results for fiscal 2001.

     CONSOLIDATED NET SALES.  Consolidated net sales were $2.2 billion  for
fiscal 2001, an increase of $715.3 million, or 47.7%, from fiscal 2000. The
increase  in consolidated net sales resulted from a $422.0 million increase
in U.S. chicken  sales to $1.5 billion, a $238.8 million increase in turkey
sales, a $38.2 million  increase  in sales of other U.S. products to $179.9
million and by a $16.3 million increase  in  Mexico chicken sales to $323.7
million. The increase in U.S. chicken sales was  primarily  due  to a 35.6%
increase  in  dressed  pounds  produced, which resulted primarily from  the
acquisition of WLR Foods, and to  a  3.4%  increase  in  total  revenue per
dressed  pound  produced.  The  increase  in  turkey  sales  was due to the
acquisition of WLR Foods. The $38.2 million increase in sales of other U.S.
products  to  $179.9  million was primarily due to the acquisition  of  WLR
Foods and higher prices in our commercial egg operations. The $16.3 million
increase in Mexico chicken  sales  was primarily due to a 13.4% increase in
dressed pounds produced offset partially  by  a  7.1%  decrease  in average
revenue per dressed pound produced, primarily due to lower prices caused by
an over supply of chicken.

      COST  OF  SALES.    Consolidated  cost of sales were $2.0 billion  in
fiscal 2001, an increase of $667.2 million,  or  50.0%,  compared to fiscal
2000. The U.S. operations accounted for $630.8 million of  the  increase in
the cost of sales and our Mexico operations accounted for $36.4 million  of
the increase.

      The  cost  of sales increase in our U.S. operations of $630.8 million
was due primarily  to the acquisition of WLR Foods, $222.6 million of which
related  to  the  turkey  operations,  but  also  resulted  from  increased
production of higher  cost prepared foods products, higher energy costs and
higher feed ingredient costs.

     The $36.4 million  cost of sales increase in our Mexico operations was
primarily due to a 13.4% increase in dressed pounds produced.

     GROSS PROFIT.  Gross  profit  was  $214.0  million for fiscal 2001, an
increase of $48.1 million, or 29.0%, over the same  period  last  year, due
primarily to the acquisition of WLR Foods. Gross profit as a percentage  of
sales decreased to 9.7% in fiscal 2001, primarily from 11.1% in fiscal 2000
due primarily to lower sale prices in Mexico.

      SELLING,  GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES.  Consolidated selling,
general and administrative  expenses were $119.4 million in fiscal 2001 and
$85.3 million in fiscal 2000.  The $34.1 million increase was due primarily
to  the acquisition of WLR Foods  and  certain  integration  costs  related
thereto.  Consolidated  selling,  general  and administrative expenses as a
percentage of sales decreased in fiscal 2001  to  5.4%, compared to 5.7% in
fiscal 2000, due primarily to synergies resulting from the WLR acquisition.

     OPERATING INCOME.  Consolidated operating income was $94.5 million for
fiscal  2001, an increase of $14.1 million when compared  to  fiscal  2000,
resulting  primarily  from higher volumes from the acquisition of WLR Foods
and higher sales prices in U.S.

     INTEREST EXPENSE.   Consolidated  net interest expense increased 73.1%
to $30.8 million in fiscal 2001, when compared  to $17.8 million for fiscal
2000, due to higher outstanding balances incurred  for  the  acquisition of
WLR Foods.

      INCOME  TAX EXPENSE.  Consolidated income tax expense in fiscal  2001
increased to $21.3  million  compared  to  an  expense  of $10.4 million in
fiscal  2000. This increase resulted from higher U.S. pre-tax  earnings  in
fiscal 2001 than in fiscal 2000.

FISCAL 2000 COMPARED TO FISCAL 1999:

     NET  SALES. Consolidated net sales were  $1.5 billion for fiscal 2000,
an increase  of $142.0 million, or 10.5%, from fiscal 1999. The increase in
consolidated net  sales  resulted  from  an  $86.9 million increase in U.S.
chicken sales to $1.1 billion, a $52.9 million  increase  in Mexico chicken
sales to $307.4 million and a $2.3 million increase of sales  of other U.S.
products  to  $141.7  million.  The  increase  in  U.S.  chicken sales  was
primarily  due  to  an  8.6%  increase  in dressed pounds produced  .   The
increase in Mexico chicken sales was primarily  due  to a 13.7% increase in
revenue  per  dressed  pound  and  to  a  6.2%  increase in dressed  pounds
produced.  The $2.3 million increase in sales of other  U.S.  products  was
primarily  due  to  higher  selling  prices  in  our   Poultry  By-Products
division.

   COST OF SALES.   Consolidated  cost  of sales was $1.3 billion in fiscal
2000, an increase of $161.9 million, or 13.8%, compared to fiscal 1999. The
increase resulted primarily from a $125.9  million  increase in the cost of
sales of our U.S. operations and from a $36.0 million  increase in the cost
of sales in our Mexico operations.

   The cost of sales increase in our U.S. operations of  $125.9 million was
due  primarily  to  an  8.6%  increase in dressed pounds produced,  a  4.0%
increase  in feed ingredient costs,  increased  production  of  higher-cost
prepared food  products,  losses  associated with the late January 2000 ice
storm and a $5.8 million write-off  of accounts receivable from AmeriServe,
which filed bankruptcy on January 31,  2000.  AmeriServe  was a significant
distributor  of products to fast food and casual dining restaurant  chains,
several of which  are  customers of the Company.  The $36.0 million cost of
sales  increase in our Mexico  operations  was  primarily  due  to  a  6.2%
increase in dressed pounds produced and a 9.8% increase in average costs of
sales per dressed pound produced caused primarily by the continued shift of
production to a higher-valued product mix.

     GROSS  PROFIT.  Gross  profit  was  $165.8  million for fiscal 2000, a
decrease of $19.9 million, or 10.7%, over the same  period last year. Gross
profit  as  a percentage of sales decreased to 11.1% in  fiscal  2000  from
13.7% in fiscal  1999.  The  lower  gross  profit  resulted  from lower net
margins  in  our  U.S.  operations  primarily  due to lower selling  prices
realized for fresh chicken products, higher feed  ingredient  costs, losses
associated  with the late January 2000 ice storm and the AmeriServe  write-
off, discussed  above,  offset in part by increased volume of prepared food
chicken sales.

   Beginning  in the fourth  quarter  of  fiscal  1999,  commodity  chicken
margins in the  U.S.  have  been  under pressure due, in part, to increased
levels of chicken production in the  U.S.   To the extent that these trends
continue, subsequent periods' gross margins could be negatively affected to
the extent not offset by other factors such as  those  discussed  under  "-
General" above.

   SELLING,  GENERAL  AND  ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES.  Consolidated selling,
general and administrative expenses were $85.3  million  in fiscal 2000 and
$76.2   million   in   fiscal  1999.  Consolidated  selling,  general   and
administrative expenses as a percentage of sales remained relatively stable
in fiscal 2000 at 5.7% compared  to  5.6% in fiscal 1999.  The $9.1 million
increase in consolidated selling, general  and  administrative expenses was
due to increased costs relating to our higher sales volumes.

   OPERATING  INCOME.  Consolidated operating income  was $80.5 million for
fiscal 2000, a decrease of $29.0 million, or 26.5%, when compared to fiscal
1999, resulting primarily from lower net U.S. margins due  to lower selling
prices  realized for fresh chicken products, higher feed ingredient  costs,
losses associated  with  the late January 2000 ice storm and the AmeriServe
write-off, discussed above,  offset in part by increased volume of prepared
food chicken sales.

   INTEREST EXPENSE. Consolidated  net  interest  expense increased 0.6% to
$17.8  million in fiscal 2000, when compared to $17.7  million  for  fiscal
1999, due  to  higher  interest  rates  experienced in fiscal 2000 on lower
outstanding debt levels.

   INCOME TAX EXPENSE.   Consolidated income  tax  expense  in  fiscal 2000
decreased  to  $10.4  million  compared  to an expense of $25.7 million  in
fiscal 1999. This decrease resulted from lower U.S. earnings in fiscal 2000
than in fiscal 1999.

LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES


   WE MAINTAIN $130.0 MILLION IN REVOLVING  CREDIT  FACILITIES  AND  $400.0
MILLION  IN A SECURED REVOLVING/TERM BORROWING FACILITY. THE $400.0 MILLION
REVOLVING/TERM  BORROWING  FACILITY  PROVIDES FOR $285.0 MILLION AND $115.0
MILLION OF 10-YEAR AND 7-YEAR COMMITMENTS,  RESPECTIVELY.  BORROWINGS UNDER
THESE  FACILITIES  ARE  SPLIT  PRO  RATA  BETWEEN  THE  10-YEAR AND  7-YEAR
MATURITIES  AS  THEY OCCUR. THE CREDIT FACILITIES PROVIDE FOR  INTEREST  AT
RATES RANGING FROM  LIBOR  PLUS  FIVE-EIGHTHS PERCENT TO LIBOR PLUS TWO AND
THREE-QUARTERS PERCENT, DEPENDING  UPON  OUR  TOTAL  DEBT TO CAPITALIZATION
RATIO.  INTEREST  RATES ON DEBT OUTSTANDING UNDER THESE  FACILITIES  AS  OF
SEPTEMBER 29, 2001  RANGED  FROM  LIBOR PLUS ONE AND ONE-QUARTER PERCENT TO
LIBOR PLUS TWO AND ONE-QUARTER PERCENT.  THESE  FACILITIES  ARE  SECURED BY
INVENTORY AND FIXED ASSETS OR ARE UNSECURED.

   AT SEPTEMBER 29, 2001, $86.0 MILLION WAS AVAILABLE UNDER THE REVOLVING
CREDIT FACILITIES AND $225.0 MILLION WAS AVAILABLE UNDER THE REVOLVING/TERM
BORROWING FACILITY.

   ON SEPTEMBER  7,  2001,  WE  AMENDED  AND  RESTATED OUR REVOLVING CREDIT
AGREEMENT FOR MEXICO, INCREASING THE COMMITMENT FROM $20.0 MILLION TO $30.0
MILLION.  OUTSTANDING BORROWINGS UNDER THIS FACILITY  ARE  PRESENTLY  $30.0
MILLION, THE PROCEEDS OF WHICH WERE USED TO REDUCE CERTAIN OTHER DEBT.

   ON JUNE 26, 1998, WE ENTERED INTO AN ASSET SALE AGREEMENT TO SELL  UP
TO $60  MILLION  OF  ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE. IN CONNECTION WITH THE ASSET SALE
AGREEMENT, WE SELL, ON  A REVOLVING BASIS, CERTAIN OF OUR TRADE RECEIVABLES
(THE "POOLED RECEIVABLES") TO A SPECIAL PURPOSE CORPORATION WHOLLY OWNED BY
US, WHICH IN TURN SELLS A  PERCENTAGE  OWNERSHIP INTEREST TO THIRD PARTIES.
AT SEPTEMBER 29, 2001 AND SEPTEMBER 30,  2000,  AN INTEREST IN THESE POOLED
RECEIVABLES OF $58.5 MILLION AND $35.4 MILLION, RESPECTIVELY, HAD BEEN SOLD
TO THIRD PARTIES AND IS REFLECTED AS A REDUCTION  IN  ACCOUNTS  RECEIVABLE.
THESE TRANSACTIONS HAVE BEEN RECORDED AS SALES IN ACCORDANCE WITH FINANCIAL
ACCOUNTING STANDARDS BOARD STATEMENT NO. 140, ACCOUNTING FOR TRANSFERS  AND
SERVICING OF FINANCIAL ASSETS AND EXTINGUISHMENTS OF LIABILITIES. THE GROSS
PROCEEDS  RESULTING FROM THE SALE ARE INCLUDED IN CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING
ACTIVITIES  IN  OUR  CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS. LOSSES ON THESE
SALES WERE IMMATERIAL.

   ON JUNE 29, 1999,  THE  CAMP COUNTY INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
ISSUED  $25.0  MILLION OF VARIABLE-RATE  ENVIRONMENTAL  FACILITIES  REVENUE
BONDS SUPPORTED  BY  LETTERS  OF CREDIT OBTAINED BY PILGRIM'S PRIDE. WE MAY
DRAW FROM THESE PROCEEDS OVER THE  CONSTRUCTION  PERIOD  FOR NEW SEWAGE AND
SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL FACILITIES AT A POULTRY BY-PRODUCTS PLANT  TO BE BUILT
IN CAMP COUNTY, TEXAS. WE ARE NOT REQUIRED TO BORROW THE FULL AMOUNT OF THE
PROCEEDS FROM THE BONDS. ALL AMOUNTS BORROWED FROM THESE FUNDS WILL  BE DUE
IN 2029. THE AMOUNTS THAT WE BORROW WILL BE REFLECTED AS DEBT WHEN RECEIVED
FROM THE CAMP COUNTY INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION. THE INTEREST RATES
ON  AMOUNTS  BORROWED  WILL  CLOSELY FOLLOW THE TAX-EXEMPT COMMERCIAL PAPER
RATES. PRESENTLY, THERE ARE NO BORROWINGS OUTSTANDING UNDER THE BONDS.

   ON AUGUST 9, 2001, PILGRIM'S  PRIDE  ISSUED  $200.0  MILLION  IN  SENIOR
UNSECURED  NOTES WITH AN INTEREST RATE OF 9 5/8% MATURING ON SEPTEMBER  15,
2011.  THE PROCEEDS  FROM  THE  NOTES  OFFERING  WERE  USED  TO  REDEEM THE
REMAINING  $90.8  MILLION  OUTSTANDING  OF  OUR 10 7/8% SENIOR SUBORDINATED
NOTES  DUE  2003.   THE  BALANCE  OF  THE  PROCEEDS   WAS  USED  TO  REDUCE
INDEBTEDNESS UNDER OUR $400.0 MILLION REVOLVING/TERM BORROWING FACILITY.

   AT SEPTEMBER 29, 2001, OUR WORKING CAPITAL INCREASED  TO  $203.5 MILLION
AND OUR CURRENT RATIO INCREASED TO 1.85 TO 1, COMPARED WITH WORKING CAPITAL
OF  $124.5 MILLION AND A CURRENT RATIO OF 1.86 TO 1 AT SEPTEMBER  30,  2000
AND WAS PRIMARILY DUE TO THE ACQUISITION OF WLR FOODS.

   TRADE ACCOUNTS AND OTHER RECEIVABLES WERE $95.0 MILLION AT SEPTEMBER 29,
2001,  COMPARED  TO $50.3 MILLION AT SEPTEMBER 30, 2000. THE 89.0% INCREASE
IN  TRADE  ACCOUNTS   AND  OTHER  RECEIVABLES  WAS  PRIMARILY  DUE  TO  THE
ACQUISITION OF WLR FOODS'  TRADE  RECEIVABLES  AND OTHER ACCOUNTS PARTIALLY
OFFSET BY THE SALE OF RECEIVABLES UNDER THE ASSET  SALE AGREEMENT DISCUSSED
ABOVE.    EXCLUDING  THE  SALE  OF  RECEIVABLES, TRADE ACCOUNTS  AND  OTHER
RECEIVABLES WOULD HAVE INCREASED TO $153.5  MILLION  IN  FISCAL  2001  FROM
$85.7 MILLION IN FISCAL 2000.

   INVENTORIES  WERE  $314.4  MILLION  AT  SEPTEMBER  29, 2001, COMPARED TO
$181.2  MILLION  AT  SEPTEMBER  30,  2000.  THE $133.2 MILLION,  OR  73.5%,
INCREASE IN INVENTORIES WAS PRIMARILY DUE TO THE ACQUISITION OF WLR FOODS.

   ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUED EXPENSES WERE  $229.9  MILLION AT SEPTEMBER
29,  2001,  COMPARED  TO  $139.8 MILLION AT SEPTEMBER 30, 2000.  THE  64.5%
INCREASE IN ACCOUNTS PAYABLE  AND ACCRUED EXPENSES WAS PRIMARILY DUE TO THE
ACQUISITION OF WLR FOODS.

   CAPITAL EXPENDITURES OF $112.6 MILLION, $92.1 MILLION AND $69.6 MILLION,
FOR FISCAL YEARS 2001, 2000 AND 1999, RESPECTIVELY, WERE PRIMARILY INCURRED
TO  ACQUIRE  AND EXPAND CERTAIN FACILITIES,  IMPROVE  EFFICIENCIES,  REDUCE
COSTS AND FOR  THE ROUTINE REPLACEMENT OF EQUIPMENT. WE ANTICIPATE SPENDING
APPROXIMATELY $65.0  MILLION IN FISCAL 2002 TO IMPROVE EFFICIENCIES AND FOR
THE  ROUTINE  REPLACEMENT   OF   EQUIPMENT.   WE  EXPECT  TO  FINANCE  SUCH
EXPENDITURES  WITH  AVAILABLE  OPERATING  CASH FLOWS  AND  EXISTING  CREDIT
FACILITIES.

   CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES  WERE  $87.8 MILLION, $130.8
MILLION  AND  $81.5  MILLION  FOR  THE  FISCAL YEARS 2001, 2000  AND  1999,
RESPECTIVELY. THE DECREASE IN CASH FLOWS  PROVIDED  BY OPERATING ACTIVITIES
IN FISCAL 2001 COMPARED TO FISCAL 2000, WAS PRIMARILY  DUE  TO  AN  OVERALL
INCREASE  OF  ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, DUE PRIMARILY TO A HIGHER LEVEL OF SALES
ACTIVITY; INCREASED  INVENTORIES,  DUE  PRIMARILY  TO HIGHER LEVELS OF LIVE
POULTRY  AND  FROZEN TURKEY INVENTORIES RESULTING PRIMARILY  FROM  SEASONAL
VARIATIONS IN THE  LIVE PRODUCTION CYCLE AND SALES OF TURKEY PRODUCTS, BOTH
OF WHICH WERE PRIMARILY A RESULT OF THE WLR FOODS ACQUISITION AND LOWER NET
INCOME FOR FISCAL 2001.   THE $24.0 MILLION DECREASE IN CASH FLOWS PROVIDED
BY  OPERATING  ACTIVITIES  THAT   RESULTED  FROM  ACCOUNTS  RECEIVABLE  WAS
PARTIALLY OFFSET BY A $23.1 INCREASE  IN  SALES OF ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE FROM
$35.4 MILLION AT FISCAL 2000 YEAR END TO $58.5  MILLION AT FISCAL 2001 YEAR
END.   THE  INCREASE  IN  CASH FLOWS PROVIDED BY OPERATING  ACTIVITIES  FOR
FISCAL 2000, COMPARED TO FISCAL  1999,  WAS  PRIMARILY  DUE  TO THE SALE OF
$35.4  MILLION  IN  ACCOUNTS  RECEIVABLE  UNDER  THE  ASSET  SALE AGREEMENT
MENTIONED  ABOVE  AND  INCREASES  IN ACCOUNTS PAYABLE AND ACCRUED  EXPENSES
OFFSET PARTIALLY BY AN INCREASE IN  INVENTORIES AND A DECREASE IN OPERATING
INCOME.

   CASH  FLOWS  PROVIDED  BY  (USED IN) FINANCING  ACTIVITIES  WERE  $254.2
MILLION, ($22.6) MILLION AND ($19.6)  MILLION  FOR  THE  FISCAL YEARS 2001,
2000  AND  1999,  RESPECTIVELY.  THE  INCREASE  IN  CASH FLOWS PROVIDED  BY
FINANCING  ACTIVITIES  FOR  FISCAL  2001,  WHEN  COMPARED TO  FISCAL  2000,
REFLECTS THE NET PROCEEDS FROM BORROWINGS TO FINANCE THE ACQUISITION OF WLR
FOODS. THE INCREASE IN CASH USED IN FINANCING ACTIVITIES  FOR  FISCAL 2000,
WHEN COMPARED TO FISCAL 1999 PRIMARILY REFLECTS THE NET PAYMENTS  ON  NOTES
PAYABLE AND LONG-TERM FINANCING AND DEBT RETIREMENTS.

ITEM 7A.  QUANITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

MARKET RISK SENSITIVE INSTRUMENTS AND POSITIONS

   The risk inherent in the Company's market risk sensitive instruments and
positions  is  the potential loss arising from adverse changes in the price
of feed ingredients,  foreign currency exchange rates and interest rates as
discussed below.  The sensitivity  analyses  presented  do not consider the
effects  that  such adverse changes may have on overall economic  activity,
nor do they consider additional actions our management may take to mitigate
our exposure to such changes. Actual results may differ.

  FEED INGREDIENTS

   We purchase certain  commodities,  primarily corn and soybean meal. As a
result, our earnings are affected by changes  in the price and availability
of such feed ingredients. As market conditions  dictate,  we will from time
to  time  lock-in  future  feed  ingredient  prices  using various  hedging
techniques,  including  forward  purchase  agreements  with  suppliers  and
futures  contracts.  We do not use such financial instruments  for  trading
purposes and are not a  party  to any leveraged derivatives. Market risk is
estimated as a hypothetical 10%  increase  in  the weighted-average cost of
our primary feed ingredients as of September 29,  2001.  Based  on our feed
consumption during fiscal 2001, such an increase would have resulted  in an
increase  to  cost  of  sales of approximately $60.2 million, excluding the
impact of any hedging in  that  period.  As  of  September 29, 2001, we had
hedged 9.1% of our 2002 feed requirements.

FOREIGN CURRENCY

   Our earnings are affected by foreign exchange rate  fluctuations related
to  the  Mexican  peso  net  monetary  position of our Mexico  subsidiaries
denominated  in  Mexican  pesos.  We  manage  this  exposure  primarily  by
attempting to minimize our Mexican peso  net  monetary  position,  but from
time to time we have also considered executing hedges to help minimize this
exposure.   Such   instruments,   however,   have   historically  not  been
economically  feasible.  We  are  also exposed to the effect  of  potential
exchange rate fluctuations to the extent  that amounts are repatriated from
Mexico to the United States. However, we currently anticipate that the cash
flows of our Mexico subsidiaries will continue  to  be  reinvested  in  our
Mexico operations. In addition, the Mexican peso exchange rate can directly
and  indirectly  impact our results of operations and financial position in
several manners, including potential economic recession in Mexico resulting
from a devalued peso.  The  impact on our financial position and results of
operations of a hypothetical  change  in the exchange rate between the U.S.
dollar  and  the  Mexican  peso  cannot  be reasonably  estimated.  Foreign
currency exchange gains and losses, representing  the  change  in  the U.S.
dollar  value  of  the  net  monetary  assets  of  our  Mexico subsidiaries
denominated in Mexican pesos, was a loss of $0.1 million in fiscal 2001 and
a  gain  of  $0.1  million  and  $0.2  million  in  fiscal  1999 and  2000,
respectively. On November 15, 2001, the Mexican peso closed at  9.20  to  1
U.S.  dollar,  strengthening  from 9.54 at September 29, 2001. No assurance
can be given as to how future movements in the peso could affect our future
earnings.

  INTEREST RATES

     Our earnings are also affected by changes in interest rates due to the
impact  those  changes  have on our  variable-rate  debt  instruments.  The
acquisition of WLR Foods  substantially  increased our outstanding balances
of variable rate debt.  We have variable-rate debt instruments representing
approximately 39.6% of our long-term debt  at  September 29, 2001.  Holding
other  variables  constant, including levels of indebtedness,  a  25  basis
points increase in interest rates would have increased our interest expense
by  $0.5  million  for   fiscal  2001.  These  amounts  are  determined  by
considering the impact of  the hypothetical interest rates on our variable-
rate long-term debt at September 29, 2001.

      Market  risk  for fixed-rate  long-term  debt  is  estimated  as  the
potential increase in  fair  value  resulting  from a hypothetical 25 basis
points decrease in interest rates and amounts to approximately $3.3 million
as of September 29, 2001, using discounted cash flow analysis.

  NEW ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

   In June 2001, the Financial Accounting Standards  Board issued Statement
of  Financial Accounting Standards No. 142 "GOODWILL AND  OTHER  INTANGIBLE
ASSETS"  ("SFAS  No.  142").   SFAS  No.  142 is effective for fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2001 and requires  that  goodwill  and certain
intangible assets will no longer be amortized upon adoption.  SFAS  No. 142
also  establishes  new standards for evaluating impairment of goodwill  and
certain intangible assets.   The adoption of this statement is not expected
to have a material effect on the Company.

     On October 1, 2000, we adopted  Financial  Accounting  Standards Board
Statement  ("SFAS")  No.  133,  Accounting  for Derivative Instruments  and
Hedging Activities, as amended. This statement requires us to recognize all
derivatives on the balance sheet at fair value.  Derivatives  that  are not
hedges   must be adjusted to fair value through earnings. If the derivative
is a hedge, depending on the nature of the hedge, changes in the fair value
of derivatives  will  either  be offset against the change in fair value of
the hedged assets, liabilities  or  firm  commitments  through earnings, or
recognized in other comprehensive income (loss) until the  hedged  item  is
recognized in earnings. The ineffective portion of a derivative's change in
fair  value is recognized in earnings.  The adoption of SFAS No. 133 had no
impact on the Company as of October 1, 2000.

  IMPACT OF INFLATION

   Due  to  moderate inflation in the U.S. and our rapid inventory turnover
rate, the results  of  operations  have  not been significantly affected by
inflation during the past three-year period.

ITEM 8.  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND SUPPLEMENTARY DATA

     The consolidated financial statements  together  with  the  report  of
independent  auditors,  and  financial  statement  schedule are included on
pages 49 through 68 of this document. Financial statement  schedules  other
than   those  included  herein  have  been  omitted  because  the  required
information is contained in the consolidated financial statement or related
notes, or such information is not applicable.

ITEM 9.   CHANGES  IN  AND DISAGREEMENTS WITH ACCOUNTANTS ON ACCOUNTING AND
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE

     Not Applicable

                                 PART III

ITEM 10.  DIRECTORS AND EXECUTIVE OFFICERS OF REGISTRANT

   Reference is made to "Election of Directors" on pages 3 through 5 of the
Company's Proxy Statement  for  its  2001  Annual  Meeting of Stockholders,
which section is incorporated herein by reference.

   Reference is made to "Compliance with Section 16(a) of the Exchange Act"
on page 9 of the Company's Proxy Statement for its 2001  Annual  Meeting of
Stockholders, which section is incorporated herein by reference.

ITEM 11. EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

ITEM 12. SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

ITEM 13. CERTAIN RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS

   Information  responsive  to  Items  11,  12  and  13  is incorporated by
reference  from  the sections entitled "Security Ownership",  "Election  of
Directors", "Executive  Compensation"  and  "Certain  Transactions"  of the
Company's Proxy Statement for its 2001 Annual Meeting of Stockholders.


                                  PART IV

ITEM 14. EXHIBITS, FINANCIAL STATEMENT SCHEDULES AND REPORTS ON FORM 8-K

   (a) Financial Statements

       (1)    The financial statements listed in the accompanying index to
       financial statements and schedules are filed as part of this report.

       (2)    All other schedules for which provision is made in the
       applicable accounting regulations of the SEC are not required under
       the related instructions or are not applicable and therefore have
       been omitted.

       (3)    The financial statements schedule entitled "Valuation and
       Qualifying Accounts and Reserves" is filed as part of this report on
       page 67.

       (4)    Exhibits

   (b) Reports on Form 8-K

       (1)  Pilgrim's Pride filed a Form 8-K on July 23, 2001, to report
       the proposed offering of $200,000,000 aggregate principal amount of
       its senior unsecured notes due in 2011 (the "Notes") under its
       registration statement on Form S-3 (No. 333-84861), (The
       "Registration Statement"), and for the purpose of filing as an
       exhibit the Form T-1 of The Chase Manhattan Bank in connection with
       the Registration Statement and the public offering of the Notes.

       (2)  Pilgrim's Pride filed a Form 8-K on August 9, 2001, to report
       the sale of $200,000,000 aggregate principal amount of its 9 5/8%
       Notes (the "9 5/8% Notes") due September 15, 2011 under the
       Registration Statement, and to file as exhibits the Underwriting
       Agreement, the Indenture, the First Supplemental Indenture, the form
       of Note and the opinion of Baker & McKenzie in connection with the
       Registration Statement and the public offering of the 9 5/8% Notes.

  (c)  Exhibits


EXHIBIT NUMBER
     2.1 Agreement and Plan of Reorganization dated September 15, 1986, by
         and among Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, a Texas corporation;
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, a Delaware corporation; and Doris
         Pilgrim Julian, Aubrey Hal Pilgrim, Paulette Pilgrim Rolston,
         Evanne Pilgrim, Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim, Lonnie Ken Pilgrim, Greta
         Pilgrim Owens and Patrick Wayne Pilgrim (incorporated by reference
         from Exhibit 2.1 to the Company's Registration Statement on Form
         S-1 (No. 33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

     2.2 Agreement and Plan of Merger dated September 27, 2000
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 2 of WLR Foods, Inc.'s
         Current Report on Form 8-K (No. 000-17060) dated September 28,
         2000).

     3.1 Certificate of Incorporation of the Company (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 3.1 of the Company's Registration Statement
         on Form S-1 (No. 33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

     3.2 Amended and Restated Corporate Bylaws of Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, effective May 14,1999
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 3.2 of the Company's
         Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended July 3,
         1999).

     3.3 Certificate of Amendment to Certificate of Incorporation of the
         Company (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1 of the Company's
         Form 8-A, filed with the SEC on July 20, 1999).

     4.1 Certificate of Incorporation of the Company (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 3.1 of the Company's Registration Statement
         on Form S-1 (No. 33-8805) effective November 14, 1986).

     4.2 Amended and Restated Corporate Bylaws of Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, effective May 14, 1999,
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 3.2 of the Company's
         Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended July 3,
         1999).

     4.3 Form of Indenture between the Company and Ameritrust Texas
         National Association relating to the Company's 10 7/8% Senior
         Subordinated Notes Due 2003 (incorporated by reference from
         Exhibit 4.6 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1
         (No. 33-59626) filed on March 16, 1993).

     4.4 Form of 10 7/8% Senior Subordinated Note Due 2003 (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 4.8 of the Company's Registration Statement
         on Form S-1 (No. 33-61160) filed on June 16, 1993).

     4.5 Certificated of Amendment to Certificate of Incorporation of the
         Company (incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1 of the Company's
         Form 8-A, filed with the SEC on July 20, 1999).

     4.6 Indenture dated as of August 9, 2001 by and between Pilgrim's
         Pride Corporation and The Chase Manhattan Bank relating to
         Pilgrim's Pride's 9 5/8% Senior Notes Due 2011 (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 4.1 to Pilgrim's Pride's Current Report on
         Form 8-K (No. 001-09273) dated August 9, 2001).

     4.7 First Supplemental Indenture dated as of August 9, 2001 by and
         between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and The Chase Manhattan Bank
         relating to Pilgrim's Pride's 9 5/8% Senior Notes Due 2011
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 4.2 to Pilgrim's Pride's
         Current Report on Form 8-K (No. 001-09273) dated August 9, 2001).

     4.8 Form of 9 5/8% Senior Note Due 2011 (incorporated by reference
         from Exhibit 4.3 to Pilgrim's Pride's Current Report on Form 8-K
         (No. 001-09273) dated August 9, 2001).

    10.1 Pilgrim's Industries, Inc. Profit Sharing Retirement Plan,
         restated as of July 1, 1987 (incorporated by reference from
         Exhibit 10.1 of the Company's Form 8 filed on July 1, 1992).

    10.2 Bonus Plan of the Company (incorporated by reference from Exhibit
         10.2 to the Company's Registration Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-
         8805) effective November 14, 1986).

    10.3 Employee Stock Investment Plan of the Company (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 10.28 of the Company's Registration
         Statement on Form S-1 (No. 33-21057) effective May 2, 1988).

    10.4 Second Amended and Restated Loan and Security Agreement dated July
         31, 1995, by and among the Company, the banks party thereto and
         Creditanstalt-Bankverein, as agent (incorporated by reference from
         Exhibit 10.38 of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
         fiscal year ended September 28, 1996).

    10.5 Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated March 27, 1995 by and among
         the Company and Agricultural Production Credit Association
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.39 of the Company's
         Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended September 28,
         1996).

    10.6 First Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated July 6,
         1995 by and among the Company and Agricultural Production Credit
         Association (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.40 of the
         Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended
         September 28, 1996).

    10.7 Second Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated June
         28, 1996 by and among the Company and Agricultural Production
         Credit Association (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.44
         of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
         ended September 28, 1996).

    10.8 Third Supplement to Revolving Credit Loan Agreement dated August
         22, 1996 by and among the Company and Agricultural Production
         Credit Association (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.45
         of the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year
         ended September 28, 1996).

    10.9 Note Purchase Agreement dated April 14, 1997 by and between John
         Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company and Signature 1A (Cayman),
         Ltd. And the Company (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.46
         of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three
         months ended March 29, 1997).

   10.10 Aircraft Lease Extension Agreement between B.P. Leasing Co., (L.A.
         Pilgrim, Individually) and Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (formerly
         Pilgrim's Industries, Inc.) effective November 15, 1992
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.48 of the Company's
         Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 29,
         1997).

   10.11 Broiler Grower Contract dated May 6, 1997 between Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation and Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (Farm 30) (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 10.49 of the Company's Quarterly Report on
         Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 29, 1997).

   10.12 Commercial Egg Grower Contract dated May 7, 1997 between Pilgrim's
         Pride Corporation and Pilgrim Poultry G.P. (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 10.50 of the Company's Quarterly Report on
         Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 29, 1997).

   10.13 Agreement dated October 15, 1996 between Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation and Pilgrim Poultry G.P. (incorporated by reference
         from Exhibit 10.23 of the Company's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q
         for the three months ended January 2, 1999).

   10.14 Heavy Breeder Contract dated May 7, 1997 between Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation and Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (Farms 44, 45 & 46)
         (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.51 of the Company's
         Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the three months ended March 29,
         1997).

   10.15 Broiler Grower Contract dated January 9, 1997 by and between
         Pilgrim's Pride and  O.B. Goolsby, Jr. (incorporated by reference
         from Exhibit 10.25 of the Company's Registration Statement on Form
         S-1 (No. 333-29163) effective June 27, 1997).

   10.16 Broiler Grower Contract dated January 15, 1997 by and between
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and B.J.M. Farms. (incorporated by
         reference from Exhibit 10.26 of the Company's Registration
         Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-29163) effective June 27, 1997).

   10.17 Broiler Grower Agreement dated January 29, 1997 by and between
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and Clifford E. Butler (incorporated
         by reference from Exhibit 10.27 of the Company's Registration
         Statement on Form S-1 (No. 333-29163) effective June 27, 1997).

   10.18 Second Amendment to Second Amended and Restated Loan and Security
         Agreement dated September 18, 1997 by and among the Company, the
         banks party thereto and Creditanstalt-Bankverein, as agent.

   10.19 Revolving Credit Agreement dated March 2, 1998 by and between
         Pilgrim's Pride de Mexico, S.A. de C.V., (the borrower); Avicola
         Pilgrim's Pride de Mexico, S.A. de C.V. (the Mexican Guarantor),
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation (the U.S. Guarantor), and COAMERICA
         Bank (the bank), (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.32 of
         the Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q for the three months
         ended March 28, 1998.

   10.20 Receivables Purchase Agreement between Pilgrim's Pride Funding
         Corporation, as Seller, Pilgrim's Pride Corporation, as Servicer,
         Pooled Accounts Receivable Capital Corporation, as Purchaser, and
         Nesbitt Burns Securities Inc., as Agent (incorporated by reference
         from Exhibit 10.33 of the Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q
         for the three months ended June 27, 1998).

   10.21 Purchase and Contribution Agreement Dated as of June 26, 1998
         between Pilgrim's Pride Funding Corporation and Pilgrim's Pride
         Corporation (incorporated by reference from Exhibit 10.34 of the
         Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q for the three months ended
         June 27, 1998).

   10.22 Second Amendment to Security Agreement Re:  Accounts Receivable,
         Farm Products and Inventory between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation
         and Harris Trust and Savings Bank (incorporated by reference from
         Exhibit 10.35 of the Company's Quarterly report on form 10-Q for
         the three months ended June 27, 1998).

   10.23 Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit Agreement between
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and Harris Trust and Savings Bank,
         individually and as agent and the lenders from time to time
         parties hereto as lenders, dated November 5, 1999.

   10.24 Guaranty Fee Agreement between Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and
         Pilgrim Interests, LTD., dated June 11, 1999.

   10.25 Heavy Breeder Contract dated October 27, 1999 between Pilgrim's
         Pride Corporation and David Van Hoose (Timberlake Farms).

   10.26 Credit Agreement dated December 14, 1999 by and between Pilgrim's
         Pride Corporation and Cobank, ACB, individually and as agent, and
         the lenders from time to time parties thereto as lenders.

   10.27 Revolving  Credit Agreement, made as of September 7, 2001 by and
         between Grupo Pilgrim's Pride Funding S. de R.L. de C.V., Comerica
         Bank, and Comerica Bank Mexico, S.A., Institucion de Banca
         Multiple.*

   10.28 Third Amendment to Second Amended and Restated Secured Credit
         Agreement dated as of November 5, 1999, as amended, between
         Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and Harris Trust and Savings Bank,
         individually and as agent and the lenders from time to time
         parties thereto as lenders, dated as of September 26, 2001.*

      12 Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges for the years ended September
         29, 2001, September 30, 2000, October 2, 1999, September 26, 1998
         and September 27, 1997.*

      21 Subsidiaries of Registrant.*

      23 Consent of Ernst & Young LLP.*

         *    Filed herewith





<PAGE>


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 on the
21th day of November 2001.

                                   PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

                                    /s/ Richard A. Cogdill
                                   By:
                                   Richard A. Cogdill
                                   Chief Financial Officer
                                   Secretary and Treasurer


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 and in the capacities and on the date indicated.

     SIGNATURE                     TITLE                 DATE


________________________      Chairman of the Board    11/21/2001
Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim


_______________________       Vice Chairman of the Board 11/21/2001
Clifford E. Butler


________________________      Chief Executive Officer  11/21/2001
David Van Hoose               President
                              Chief Operating Officer
                              Director
                              (Principal Executive Officer)


_______________________       Executive Vice President 11/21/2001
Richard A. Cogdill            Chief Financial Officer
                              Secretary and Treasurer
                              Director
                              (Principal    Financial   and   Accounting
                              Officer)




     SIGNATURE                     TITLE                 DATE



_______________________       Senior Vice President    11/21/2001
Lonnie Ken Pilgrim            Director of Transportation
                              Director


_______________________       Director                 11/21/2001
Charles L. Black


_______________________       Director                 11/21/2001
S. Key Coker


______________________        Director                 11/21/2001
Vance C. Miller


______________________        Director                 11/21/2001
James J. Vetter, Jr.


_______________________       Director                 11/21/2001
Donald L. Wass, Ph.D.





<PAGE>



REPORT OF ERNST & YOUNG LLP, INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

Stockholders, the Board of Directors and
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

   We  have  audited  the  accompanying  consolidated   balance  sheets  of
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation and subsidiaries as of September  29,  2001 and
September  30,  2000,  and  the  related consolidated statements of income,
stockholders' equity, and cash flows  for  each  of  the three years in the
period  ended September 29, 2001.  Our audits also included  the  financial
statement  schedule  listed  in  the  index at Item 14(a).  These financial
statements and schedule are the responsibility of the Company's management.
Our responsibility is to express an opinion  on  these financial statements
and schedule based on our audits.

   We conducted our audits in accordance with auditing  standards generally
accepted in the United States.  Those standards require that  we  plan  and
perform  the  audit  to  obtain  reasonable  assurance  about  whether  the
financial  statements are free of material misstatement.  An audit includes
examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures
in  the  financial  statements.   An  audit  also  includes  assessing  the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as
well  as evaluating  the  overall  financial  statement  presentation.   We
believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

   In our  opinion,  the  financial  statements  referred  to above present
fairly,  in all material respects, the consolidated financial  position  of
Pilgrim's  Pride  Corporation  as  of  September 29, 2001 and September 30,
2000, and the consolidated results of its operations and its cash flows for
each  of  the  three  years  in the period ended  September  29,  2001,  in
conformance with accounting principles  generally  accepted  in  the United
States.   Also,  in  our opinion, the related financial statement schedule,
when considered in relation  to  the basic financial statements, taken as a
whole, presents fairly in all material  respects  the information set forth
therein.

Dallas, Texas                                          Ernst & Young LLP
October 29, 2001










<PAGE>


{Consolidated Balance Sheets
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE AND PER       SEPTEMBER 29,     SEPTEMBER 30,
          SHARE DATA)                         2001               2000
<S>                                       <C>      <C>      <C>       <C>
Assets
Current Assets :
  Cash and cash equivalents                 $  20,916         $  28,060
  Trade accounts and other
    receivables, less allowance
    for doubtful accounts                      95,022            50,286
  Inventories                                 314,400           181,237
  Other current assets                         12,934             9,387
    Total Current Assets                      443,272           268,970

OTHER ASSETS                                   20,067            18,576

PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT:
  Land                                         36,350            26,137
  Buildings, machinery and equipment          929,922           565,034
  Autos and trucks                             53,264            48,187
  Construction-in-progress                     71,427            68,743
                                            1,090,963           708,101
  Less accumulated depreciation               338,607           290,227
                                              752,356           417,874
                                           $1,215,695          $705,420

LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
CURRENT LIABILITIES:
  Accounts payable                         $  151,265          $105,078
  Accrued expenses                             83,558            34,704
  Current maturities of long-term debt          5,099             4,657
    Total Current Liabilities                 239,922           144,439

LONG-TERM DEBT, LESS CURRENT MATURITIES       467,242           165,037
DEFERRED INCOME TAXES                         126,710            52,496
MINORITY INTEREST IN SUBSIDIARY                   889               889
COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES                      --                --

STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY:
  Preferred stock, $.01 par value,
    authorized 5,000,000 shares; none
    issued                                         --                --
  Common stock - Class A, $.01 par value,
    authorized 100,000,000 shares; and
    13,794,529 shares issued and outstanding
    in 2001 and 2000, respectively;               138               138
  Common stock - Class B, $.01 par value,
    authorized 60,000,000 shares; 27,589,250
    issued  and outstanding in 2001 and 2000      276               276
  Additional paid-in capital                   79,625            79,625
  Retained earnings                           302,758           264,088
  Accumulated other comprehensive
    income (loss)                                (297)               --
  Less treasury stock, 271,100 shares          (1,568)           (1,568)
    Total Stockholders' Equity                380,932           342,559
                                           $1,215,695          $705,420

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
</TABLE>


Consolidated Statements of Income
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA) THREE YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001

                                       2001         2000         1999
<S>                                  <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>   <C>    <C>
NET SALES                            $2,214,712   $1,499,439   $1,357,403
COST AND EXPENSES:
  Cost of sales                       2,000,762    1,333,611    1,171,695
  Selling, general and administrative   119,408       85,340       76,204
                                      2,120,170    1,418,951    1,247,899
   Operating Income                      94,542       80,488      109,504

OTHER EXPENSES (INCOME):
   Interest expense, net                 30,775       17,779       17,666
   Foreign exchange (gain) loss             122         (152)         (50)
   Miscellaneous, net                       351           75          984
                                         31,248       17,702       18,600

INCOME BEFORE INCOME TAXES AND
   EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE                  63,294       62,786       90,904
INCOME TAX EXPENSE                       21,263       10,442       25,651
INCOME BEFORE EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE       42,031       52,344       65,253
EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE, NET OF  TAX           894           --           --
NET INCOME                              $41,137      $52,344      $65,253

INCOME PER COMMON SHARE BEFORE EXTRAORDINARY
   CHARGE - BASIC AND DILUTED           $  1.02      $  1.27      $  1.58
EXTRAORDINARY CHARGE, NET OF  TAX          (.02)          --           --
NET INCOME PER COMMON SHARE-BASIC
   AND DILUTED                          $  1.00      $  1.27      $  1.58

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
</TABLE>







<PAGE>


{Consolidated Statements of Stockholders' Equity
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT SHARE DATA)
                                                     ACCUMULATED
               SHARES OF     TOTAL ADDITIONAL           OTHER
              COMMON STOCK   PAR     PAID-IN RETAINED COMPREHENSIVE TREASURY
             CLASS A CLASS B VALUE   CAPITAL  EARNINGS  LOSS          STOCK  TOTAL

<S>          <C> <C> <C>     <C><C><C> <C> <C> <C>  <C>  <C> <C> <C> <C>  <C>  <C>
Balance at September
   26, 1998      --  27,589,250  $276  $79,763 $150,832   $ --   $   --   $230,871
Dividend of Class A
Common Stock 13,794,529      --   138     (138)
Net income for year                              65,253                     65,253
Cash dividends declared
   ($.045 per share)                             (1,865)                    (1,865)

Balance at October 2,
   1999      13,794,529 27,589,250 414  79,625  214,220                    294,259
Treasury stock
   purchased   (271,100)                                           (1,568)  (1,568)
Net income for year                               52,344                    52,344
Cash dividends declared
   ($.06 per share)                               (2,476)                   (2,476)

Balance at September 30,
   2000     13,523,426  27,589,250 414  79,625   264,088           (1,568) 342,559
Net income for year                               41,137                    41,137
Other comprehensive income (loss):
   Losses on commodity hedging                              (994)             (994)
   Hedging losses reclassified as earnings                   697               697
   Total comprehensive income                                               40,840
Cash dividends declared
   ($.06 per share)                               (2,467)                   (2,467)

Balance at September 29,
   2001     13,523,429 27,589,250 $414 $79,625  $302,758   ($297) ($1,568)$380,932
See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

</TABLE>







<PAGE>


Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
Pilgrim's Pride Corporation

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)                               THREE YEARS ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001

                                             2001            2000          1999
<S>                                         <C>  <C>       <C>   <C>    <C>    <C>
Cash Flows From Operating Activities:
 Net income                                  $41,137        $52,344        $65,253
 Adjustments to reconcile net income to
   cash provided by operating activities:
   Depreciation and amortization              55,390         36,027         34,536
   Loss on property disposals                    301          1,093          2,668
   Deferred income taxes                      12,737            444         (5,595)
   Extraordinary charge                        1,434             --             --
 Changes in operating assets and
   liabilities:
   Accounts and other receivables             10,445         34,082         (2,555)
   Inventories                               (26,952)       (13,202)       (26,351)
   Other current assets                       (4,494)           245           (474)
   Accounts payable and accrued expenses      (1,030)        19,982         14,195
   Other                                      (1,135)          (212)          (225)
 Cash Provided by Operating Activities        87,833        130,803         81,452

INVESTING ACTIVITIES:
   Acquisitions of property, plant
      and equipment                         (112,632)       (92,128)       (69,649)
   Business acquisition                     (239,539)            --             --
   Proceeds from property disposals            2,472          2,319          1,178
   Other, net                                    571         (6,055)        (2,822)
 Cash Used in Investing Activities          (349,128)       (95,864)       (71,293)

FINANCING ACTIVITIES:
   Borrowing for acquisition                 285,070             --             --
   Repayment on WLR Foods debt               (45,531)            --             --
   Proceeds from notes payable to banks      136,000         71,000         24,500
   Repayments on notes payable to banks     (136,000)       (71,000)       (24,500)
   Proceeds from long-term debt              425,423         20,047         15,258
   Payments on long-term debt               (408,316)       (38,622)       (33,027)
   Purchase of treasury stock                     --         (1,568)            --
   Cash dividends paid                        (2,467)        (2,476)        (1,865)
Cash Provided By (Used In)Financing
   Activities                                254,179        (22,619)       (19,634)

Effect of exchange rate changes on
   cash and cash equivalents                     (28)            37             53

Increase (decrease)  in cash and cash
   equivalents                                (7,144)        12,357         (9,422)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning
   of year                                    28,060         15,703         25,125

Cash and cash equivalents at end of
   year                                      $20,916        $28,060        $15,703

SUPPLEMENTAL DISCLOSURE INFORMATION:
Cash paid during the year for:
   Interest (net of amount capitalized)      $26,948        $17,178        $18,130
   Income taxes                              $ 7,255        $13,258        $31,835

See Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements
</TABLE>





<PAGE>

PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2001


NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

NOTE A - BUSINESS AND SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES

PILGRIM'S  PRIDE CORPORATION (REFERRED TO HEREIN AS  "THE  COMPANY",  "WE",
"US", "OUR", OR SIMILAR TERMS) IS THE SECOND LARGEST PRODUCER OF POULTRY IN
BOTH THE UNITED  STATES  AND MEXICO.  IN THE UNITED STATES, WE PRODUCE BOTH
PREPARED  AND  FRESH CHICKEN  AND  TURKEY,  WHILE  IN  MEXICO,  WE  PRODUCE
EXCLUSIVELY FRESH  CHICKEN.   THROUGH  VERTICAL INTEGRATION, WE CONTROL THE
BREEDING, HATCHING AND GROWING OF CHICKENS  AND  TURKEYS AND THE PROCESSING
AND PREPARATION, PACKAGING AND SALE OF OUR PRODUCT LINES.

OUR  PREPARED CHICKEN PRODUCTS INCLUDE PORTION-CONTROLLED  BREAST  FILLETS,
TENDERLOINS AND STRIPS, DELICATESSEN PRODUCTS, FRANKFURTERS, SALADS, FORMED
NUGGETS  AND  PATTIES  AND  BONE-IN CHICKEN PARTS.  THESE PRODUCTS ARE SOLD
EITHER REFRIGERATED OR FROZEN  AND MAY BE FULLY COOKED, PARTIALLY COOKED OR
RAW.  IN ADDITION, THESE PRODUCTS  ARE  BREADED  OR  NON-BREADED AND EITHER
PRE-MARINATED OR NON-MARINATED.

THE COMPANY ALSO SELLS FRESH CHICKEN PRODUCTS TO THE FOODSERVICE AND RETAIL
MARKETS.   OUR FRESH CHICKEN PRODUCTS CONSIST OF REFRIGERATED  (NON-FROZEN)
WHOLE OR CUT-UP  CHICKEN,  EITHER  PRE-MARINATED OR NON-MARINATED, AND PRE-
PACKAGED   CHICKEN,  WHICH  INCLUDES  VARIOUS   COMBINATIONS   OF   FRESHLY
REFRIGERATED, WHOLE CHICKENS AND CHICKEN PARTS.

On January 27,  2001,  we  acquired WLR Foods, Inc. (formerly Nasdaq: WLRF)
for $239.5 million and the assumption of $45.5 million of indebtedness. The
purchase price and refinancing were provided by borrowings on the Company's
existing secured term borrowing facility (see Note C).  WLR operations have
been included since the acquisition  on  January 27, 2001.  The acquisition
is being accounted for under the purchase  method  of  accounting  and  the
purchase price, which is still preliminary, has been allocated based on the
estimated  fair value of assets and liabilities.  THE WLR FOODS ACQUISITION
PROVIDED US  WITH  CHICKEN  AND TURKEY PROCESSING FACILITIES IN THE EASTERN
UNITED STATES.





<PAGE>

PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2001


PRO FORMA FINANCIAL INFORMATION

The unaudited pro forma financial  information has been presented as if the
acquisition of WLR Foods, Inc. had occurred  as  of  the  beginning of each
period presented.  In addition, certain reclassifications have been made to
the WLR historical financial statements to conform to the presentation used
by the Company.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA                      YEAR ENDED

                                                 2001                 2000
<S>                                            <C>    <C>        <C>    <C>
Net Sales                                      $2,479,259        $2,311,666
Operating Income                                   99,128            86,017
Interest Expense, Net                              39,790            44,820
Income Before Taxes                                58,607            42,209
Income before Extraordinary Charge                 39,171            39,792
Net Income                                     $   38,277        $   39,792

Income per Common Share before
   Extraoridnary Charge - Basic and Diluted    $     0.95        $     0.97
Extraordinary Charge, Net of Tax                    (0.02)               --
Net Income per Common Share                    $     0.93        $     0.97

Other Information:
     Depreciation and Amortization             $   64,565        $   63,892
</TABLE>

PRINCIPLES OF CONSOLIDATION

The consolidated  financial  statements  include  the accounts of Pilgrim's
Pride   Corporation  and  its  wholly  and  majority  owned   subsidiaries.
Significant intercompany accounts and transactions have been eliminated.

The Company reports on the basis of a 52/53-week fiscal year, which ends on
the Saturday closest to September 30.  As a result, fiscal year 1999 had 53
weeks, while fiscal years 2001 and 2000 each had 52 weeks.

The  financial   statements   of  the  Company's  Mexico  subsidiaries  are
remeasured  as  if  the  U.S.  dollar   were   the   functional   currency.
Accordingly,   assets  and  liabilities  of  the  Mexico  subsidiaries  are
translated at end-of-period exchange rates, except for non-monetary assets,
which are translated  at  equivalent  dollar  costs at dates of acquisition
using  historical  rates.  Operations are translated  at  average  exchange
rates in effect during  the period.  Foreign exchange losses are separately
stated as a component of  "Other  Expenses  (Income)"  in  the Consolidated
Statement of Income.

REVENUE RECOGNITION

The Company generally recognizes revenue when the product is shipped to the
customer and shipping and handling expenses are included in  cost  of goods
sold.

CASH EQUIVALENTS

The  Company  considers  highly liquid investments with a maturity of three
months or less when purchased to be cash equivalents.

INVENTORIES

Live poultry inventories are  stated  at  the  lower  of cost or market and
breeder  hens  at  the  lower  of  cost, less accumulated amortization,  or
market.  The costs associated with breeder  hens  are accumulated up to the
production stage and amortized over the productive lives using the unit-of-
production  method.   Finished  poultry  products,  feed,  eggs  and  other
inventories are stated at the lower of cost (first-in, first-out method) or
market.   Occasionally, the Company hedges a portion of  its  purchases  of
major feed  ingredients  using  futures  contracts  to minimize the risk of
adverse price fluctuations.  The changes in market value of such agreements
have a high correlation to the price changes of the feed  ingredients being
hedged.   Gains  and  losses  on  the  hedge transactions are deferred  and
recognized as a component of cost of sales  when  products are sold.  Gains
and  losses on the futures contracts would be recognized  immediately  were
the changes  in  the  market  value  of the agreements cease to have a high
correlation to the price changes of the feed ingredients being hedged.

Statement  of  Accounting  Standards No.  133;  ACCOUNTING  FOR  DERIVATIVE
INSTRUMENTS AND HEDGING ACTIVITIES  ("SFAS 133"), was adopted on October 1,
2000.  No transitional impact resulted  from the adoption of SFAS 133.  The
Company recognizes all derivatives on the  balance  sheet  at  fair  value.
Derivatives  that are not hedges are adjusted to fair value through income.
If the derivative  is a hedge, changes in the fair value of derivatives are
offset against the change  in fair value of the hedged assets, liabilities,
or firm commitments through  earnings  or recognized in other comprehensive
income until the hedged item is recognized  in  earnings.   The ineffective
portion of a derivative's change in fair value is immediately recognized in
earnings.   No  significant  ineffectiveness  was recognized in 2001.   The
Company evaluates the effectiveness of the risk  reduction  and correlation
criteria based on forecasted future purchases (primarily corn  and soybean)
and  continues  to  evaluate  the  effectiveness  of  the  hedge  until the
transaction is closed.

PROPERTY, PLANT AND EQUIPMENT

Property,  plant and equipment is stated at cost.  Depreciation is computed
using the straight-line  method  over  the  estimated useful lives of these
assets.  Depreciation expense was $54.4 million,  $34.7  million  and $33.4
million in 2001, 2000 and 1999, respectively.

ACCUMULATED OTHER COMPREHENSIVE INCOME

As  of  September 29, 2001, accumulated other comprehensive income consists
of  mark-to-market   adjustments   on   open  commodity  future  contracts.
Comprehensive income for the year ended September  29,  2001 was net of the
related tax benefit of $179,000.

NET INCOME PER COMMON SHARE

Net income per share is based on the weighted average number  of  shares of
common  stock outstanding during the year.  The weighted average number  of
shares outstanding  (basic  and  diluted)   and  per-share amounts included
herein were 41,112,679 in 2001, 41,289,142 in 2000  and  41,383,779 in 1999
after adjustment for the common stock dividend referred to in Note F.

USE OF ESTIMATES

The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity with  generally
accepted accounting principles 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.  Actual results  could  differ  from  those
estimates.

RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS

In June 2001, the Financial  Accounting Standards Board issued Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards  142  "GOODWILL AND OTHER INTANGIBLE ASSETS"
(SFAS  142).   SFAS  142  is effective for  fiscal  years  beginning  after
December 15, 2001 and requires  that goodwill and certain intangible assets
will no longer be amortized upon  adoption.   SFAS 142 also establishes new
standards  for  evaluating impairment of goodwill  and  certain  intangible
assets.  The adoption  of this statement is not expected to have a material
effect on the Company.

NOTE B - INVENTORIES

Inventories consist of the following:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)                 2001        2000
<S>                          <C>  <C>     <C> <C>
Chicken:
   Live chicken and hens      $97,073     $72,438
   Feed, eggs and other        77,970      54,627
   Finished chicken products   70,493      54,172
                              245,536     181,237
Turkey:
   Live turkey and hens        30,694          --
   Feed, eggs and other         3,906          --
   Finished turkey products    34,264          --
                               68,864          --
     Total Inventory         $314,400    $181,237
</TABLE>

NOTE C - NOTES PAYABLE AND LONG-TERM DEBT

At September 29, 2001, the  Company  maintained $130.0 million in revolving
credit facilities and $400.0 million in  secured  revolving/term  borrowing
facilities.  The $400.0 million revolving/term borrowing facilities provide
for  $285.0  million  and $115.0 million of 10 year and 7 year commitments,
respectively.  Borrowings under these facilities are split pro rata between
the 10 year and 7 year  maturities  as  they  occur.  The credit facilities
provide for interest at rates ranging from LIBOR  plus five-eighths percent
to LIBOR plus two and three-quarters percent, depending  upon the Company's
total  debt  to  capitalization ratio.  Interest rates on debt  outstanding
under these facilities at September 29, 2001 ranged from LIBOR plus one and
one-quarter percent  to  LIBOR  plus  two  and  one-quarter percent.  These
facilities are secured by inventory and fixed assets  or are unsecured.  At
September 29, 2001, $86.0 million was available under the  revolving credit
facilities  and  $225.0  million  was  available  under  the term borrowing
facilities.   Annual  maturities  of  long-term  debt  for  the five  years
subsequent to September 29, 2001 are:  2002 -- $5.1 million;  2003  -- $7.1
million;  2004  --  $16.2 million; 2005 -- $15.6 million; and 2006 -- $55.0
million.

On June 29, 1999, the Camp County Industrial Development Corporation issued
$25.0  million  of variable-rate  environmental  facilities  revenue  bonds
supported by letters  of  credit  obtained by the Company.  The Company may
borrow from these proceeds over the  construction  period of its new sewage
and solid waste disposal facilities at a poultry by-products  plant  to  be
built  in  Camp  County,  Texas.  The Company is not required to borrow the
full amount of the proceeds  from  the  bonds.   All  amounts borrowed from
these funds will be due in 2029.  The amounts the Company  borrows  will be
reflected as debt when received from the Camp County Industrial Development
Corporation.   The  interest rates on amounts borrowed will closely  follow
the tax-exempt commercial  paper rates.  Presently, there are no borrowings
outstanding under these bonds.

On August 9, 2001, the Company  issued  $200.0  million in senior unsecured
notes with an interest rate of 9 5/8% maturing on  September 15, 2011.  The
proceeds from note offering were used to redeem the remaining $90.8 million
outstanding of our 10 7/8% senior subordinated notes due 2003.  The balance
of  the proceeds was used to reduce outstanding under  our  $400.0  million
revolving/term  borrowing  facility.  As a result of the Company's decision
to  retire all of the 10 7/8%  Senior  Subordinated  Notes  due  2003,  the
Company  has  recorded  an  extraordinary  loss  of  $894,000, net of a tax
benefit of $539,000.

On  September  7,  2001,  we  amended  and  restated  our revolving  credit
agreement for Mexico, increasing the commitment from $20.0 million to $30.0
million.  The entire amount matures in three years.  The  facility provides
for  interest  rates ranging from LIBOR plus one and one-quarter  to  LIBOR
plus one and one-half  percent.   At  September 29, 2001, $30.0 million was
outstanding, the proceeds of which were  used  to  reduce  existing  credit
facilities.

The  Company is required, by certain provisions of its debt agreements,  to
maintain  levels  of working capital and net worth, to limit dividends to a
maximum of $3.4 million  per  year,  and  to maintain various fixed charge,
leverage,  current and debt-to-equity ratios.   Substantially  all  of  the
Company's domestic  property,  plant and equipment is pledged as collateral
on its long-term debt and credit facilities.  The Mexico debt is secured by
accounts receivable, inventories and certain fixed assets.

Total interest was $38.9 million,  $21.7 million and $20.8 million in 2001,
2000  and  1999,  respectively.   Interest   related  to  new  construction
capitalized in 2001, 2000 and 1999 was $7.2 million,  $3.3 million and $2.0
million, respectively.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
LONG-TERM DEBT CONSISTS OF THE FOLLOWING:
(IN THOUSANDS)                               Maturity      2001       2000
<S>                                          <C>   <C>   <C>  <C>   <C>  <C>
Senior unsecured notes, interest at 9 5/8%     2011     $200,000    $      -
Revolving term/credit facility - 10 year
   tranche at LIBOR plus 2 .25%                2009      124,688       5,600
Notes payable to an insurance company
   at 7.07%  - 7.21%                           2006       65,474      70,121
Revolving term/credit facility - 7 year
   tranche at LIBOR plus 2.0%                  2006       50,313       2,400
Notes payable to a bank at                     2004       30,000          --
LIBOR plus 1.25 to 1.50
Other notes payable                         Various        1,866       1,078
Senior subordinated notes,
   interest at 10 7/8%                         2003           --      90,495
                                                         472,341     169,694
Less current maturities                                    5,099       4,657
                                                        $467,242    $165,037
</TABLE>

The fair value of long-term debt, at September 29, 2001  and  September 30,
2000  based upon quoted market prices for the same or similar issues  where
available  or  by  using  discounted  cash flow analysis, was approximately
$469.6 million and $166.2 million, respectively.

NOTE D - INCOME TAXES

Income before income taxes after allocation  of certain expenses to foreign
operations  for 2001, 2000 and 1999 was $57.8 million,  $32.7  million  and
$76.6 million,  respectively,  for  U.S. operations and $5.5 million, $30.0
million  and  $14.3 million, respectively,  for  foreign  operations.   The
provisions for  income  taxes  are  based  on  pre-tax  financial statement
income.

The components of income tax expense (benefit) are set forth below:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)           2001        2000       1999
<S>                   <C>  <C>    <C> <C>     <C> <C>
Current:
   Federal             $6,045     $ 9,239    $28,449
   Foreign              1,594         138        318
   State and other        348         621      2,480
                        7,987       9,998     31,247
Deferred               12,737         444     (5,596)
                      $20,724     $10,442    $25,651
</TABLE>





<PAGE>

PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2001


The following is a reconciliation between the statutory U.S. federal
income tax rate and the Company's effective income tax rate:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)                              2001     2000    1999
<S>                                       <C> <C>  <C> <C>  <C> <C>
Federal income tax rate                     35.0%    35.0%    35.0%
State tax rate, net                          2.4      1.4      1.3
Difference in U.S. statutory tax rate and
   Mexico's effective tax  rate             (3.9)   (19.8)    (8.1)
                                            33.5%    16.6%    28.2%
</TABLE>

Deferred  income  taxes  reflect  the net effects of temporary  differences
between  the  carrying  amounts of assets  and  liabilities  for  financial
reporting purposes and the amounts used for income tax purposes.

Significant components of the Company's deferred tax liabilities and assets
are as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)                                    2001             2000
<S>                                             <C> <C>           <C> <C>

Deferred tax liabilities:
   Tax over book depreciation                    $97,667          $24,390
   Inventory valuation                            27,926               --
   Prior use of cash accounting                   26,625           27,470
   Other                                           2,419            2,849
      Total deferred tax liabilities             154,637           54,709
Deferred tax assets:
   Expenses deductible in different years         23,027            8,469
      Total deferred tax asset                    23,027            8,469
         Net deferred tax liabilities           $131,610          $46,240
</TABLE>

The  Company  has not provided  any  U.S.  deferred  income  taxes  on  the
undistributed  earnings   of   its   Mexico  subsidiaries  based  upon  its
determination that such earnings will  be  indefinitely  reinvested.  As of
September  29,  2001,  the  cumulative  undistributed  earnings   of  these
subsidiaries were approximately $164.4 million.  If such earnings were  not
considered  indefinitely reinvested, deferred U.S. and foreign income taxes
would have been  provided,  after  consideration  of  estimated foreign tax
credits.   However,  determination  of the amount of deferred  federal  and
foreign income taxes is not practical.

NOTE E - ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE

The Company does not believe it has significant  concentrations  of  credit
risk  in  its  accounts  receivable, which are generally unsecured.  Credit
evaluations are performed  on  all  significant  customers  and  updated as
circumstances dictate.  Allowances for doubtful accounts were $3.9  million
and   $4.1   million   at  September  29,  2001  and  September  30,  2000,
respectively.

On June 26, 1998, the Company  entered into an Asset Sale Agreement to sell
up to $60.0 million of accounts  receivable.   In connection with the Asset
Sale Agreement, the Company sells, on a revolving  basis,  certain  of  its
trade   receivables   (the  "Pooled  Receivables")  to  a  special  purpose
corporation wholly owned  by  the Company, which in turn sells a percentage
ownership interest to third parties.  At September 29, 2001, an interest in
these Pooled Receivables of $58.5  million  had  been sold to third parties
and is reflected as a reduction to accounts receivable.  These transactions
have  been  recorded as sales in accordance with FASB  Statement  No.  140,
ACCOUNTING  FOR   TRANSFERS   AND   SERVICING   OF   FINANCIAL  ASSETS  AND
EXTINGUISHMENTS OF LIABILITIES.  The gross proceeds resulting from the sale
are  included in cash flows from operating activities in  the  Consolidated
Statements of Cash Flows.  Losses on these sales were immaterial.

NOTE F - COMMON STOCK

The Company has two series of authorized common stock, Class A common stock
and Class  B  common stock.  The shares have substantially the same rights,
powers and limitations,  except  that  each  share  of Class B common stock
entitles  the  holder  thereof to 20 votes per share, except  as  otherwise
provided by law, on any matter submitted for a stockholder vote, while each
share of Class A common  stock  entitles the holder thereof to one vote per
share on any such matter.

On July 2, 1999, the Company's Board of Directors declared a stock dividend
of the Company's Class A common stock.   Stockholders of record on July 20,
1999 received one share of the Company's Class A common stock for every two
shares of the Company's Class B common stock  held  as  of  that date.  The
additional  shares  were  issued on July 30, 1999.  Per share and  weighted
average shares outstanding  amounts for periods prior to July 30, 1999 have
been restated to give effect to the stock dividend.

During 2000, the Company repurchased 271,100 shares of Class A common stock
at a total cost of $1.6 million.

NOTE G - SAVINGS PLAN

The  Company  maintains  a Section  401(k)  Salary  Deferral  Plan  (the
"Plan").   Under  the  Plan,  eligible   U.S.   employees  may  voluntarily
contribute a percentage of their compensation.  The  Plan  provides  for  a
contribution  of  up  to four percent of compensation subject to an overall
Company contribution limit  of  five percent of the U.S. operation's income
before taxes.  Under this plan, the  Company's  expenses were $3.7 million,
$2.3 million and $4.6 million in 2001, 2000 and 1999, respectively.





<PAGE>

PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SEPTEMBER 29, 2001


NOTE H - RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

The  major  stockholder of the Company owns an egg  laying  and  a  chicken
growing operation.  Transactions  with  related  entities are summarized as
follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS)                  2001     2000    1999
<S>                           <C> <C>  <C> <C>  <C> <C>

Contract egg grower fees to
   major stockholder           $ 1,537  $ 5,100  $ 4,501
Lease payment to major
   stockholder                     564       --       --
Chick, feed and other
   sales to major stockholder   38,771   31,879   25,076
Live chicken purchases from
   major stockholder            39,784   31,979   26,899
</TABLE>

On  December  29,  2000 the Company entered into an agreement  to  lease  a
commercial egg property  and  assume  all  of  the  ongoing  costs  of  the
operation from the Company's major stockholder.  The Company had previously
purchased  the  eggs  produced  from  this operation pursuant to a contract
grower arrangement.  The lease term runs for ten years with a monthly lease
payment of $62,500.  The Company has an  option  to extend the lease for an
additional five years, with an option at the end of  the  lease to purchase
the  property  at  fair  market  value  as  determined  by  an  independent
appraisal.

The  Company  leases  an  airplane  from  its  major  stockholder  under an
operating  lease  agreement.   The  terms  of  the  lease agreement require
monthly  payments of $33,000 plus operating expenses.   Lease  expense  was
$396,000 for  each  of  the  years 2001, 2000 and 1999.  Operating expenses
were $234,066, $127,680, $135,786 in 2001,  2000 and 1999, respectively.

The  Company  had accounts receivable  of  approximately  $0.1  million  at
September 30, 2000,  from related parties, including its major stockholder.

On February 14, 2000, the Company purchased substantially all of the assets
of a chicken litter  disposal  and  fertilizer  business  operated  by  the
Company's major stockholder's son for approximately $8.5 million.

NOTE I - COMMITMENTS

The  Consolidated Statements of Income include rental expense for operating
leases  of  approximately $28.7 million, $22.4 million and $17.3 million in
2001, 2000 and  1999,  respectively.   The  Company's  future minimum lease
commitments under non-cancelable operating leases are as  follows:  2002 --
$22.1 million; 2003 -- $19.7 million; 2004 -- $16.8 million;  2005 -- $14.2
million; 2006 -- $11.1 million and thereafter $15.4 million.

At September 29, 2001, the Company had $14.0 million in letters  of  credit
outstanding relating to normal business transactions.

NOTE J - CONTINGENCIES

Since  March  23,  1999,  the Company has been a plaintiff in two antitrust
lawsuits in U.S. District Court  in  Washington, D.C. alleging a world-wide
conspiracy  to  control production capacity  and  raise  prices  of  common
vitamins such as A, B-4, C and E.  On November 3, 1999, a settlement, which
was entered into as part of a class action lawsuit to which the Company was
a member, was agreed  to  among  the  defendants and the class, which would
provide for a recovery of between 18-20%  of  vitamins  purchased  from the
defendants  from 1990 through 1998.  On March 28, 2000, the judge presiding
over the case  accepted  the  negotiated  settlement  between  the parties;
however,  appeals  from  various  sources are in process.  The Company  has
filed documentation showing that vitamin purchases made during the recovery
period  totaled  approximately $14.9  million.   During  fiscal  2001,  the
Company received $3.3 million in final settlement of its claim.

In January of 1998,  seventeen of our current and/or former employees filed
the case of "Octavius  Anderson,  et al. v. Pilgrim's Pride Corporation" in
the United States District Court for  the Eastern District of Texas, Lufkin
Division claiming Pilgrim's Pride violated  requirements  of the Fair Labor
Standards  Act.  The suit alleged Pilgrim's Pride failed to  pay  employees
for all hours worked.  The suit generally alleged that (1) employees should
be paid for time spent to put on, take off, and clean certain personal gear
at the beginning  and  end  of their shifts and breaks and (2) the use of a
master time card or production  "line"  time fails to pay employees for all
time  actually worked.  Plaintiffs sought  to  recover  unpaid  wages  plus
liquidated damages and legal fees.  Approximately 1,700 consents to join as
plaintiffs  were  filed  with the court by current and/or former employees.
During the week of March 5,  2001,  the case was tried in the Federal Court
of the Eastern District of Texas, Lufkin,  Texas.  The Company prevailed at
the  trial with a judgment issued by the judge,  which  found  no  evidence
presented  to  support  the  plaintiffs'  allegations.  The plaintiffs have
filed  an  appeal in the Fifth Circuit Court  of  Appeals  to  reverse  the
judge's decision.   The  plaintiff's  brief  was  submitted to the court on
November 5, 2001.  Pilgrim's Pride's response to the  plaintiff's  brief to
the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals is due on December 5, 2001.  Neither the
likelihood  of an unfavorable outcome nor the amount of ultimate liability,
if any, with  respect  to  this  case  can be determined at this time.  The
Company does not expect this matter, individually  or collectively, to have
a  material  impact  on  our financial position, operations  or  liquidity.
Substantially similar suits  have  been filed against four other integrated
poultry companies, including WLR Foods,  one of which resulted in a federal
judge dismissing most of the plaintiffs' claims  in  that action with facts
similar to our case.

In  August of 2000, four of our current and/or former employees  filed  the
case of "Betty Kennell, et al. v. Wampler Foods, Inc." in the United States
District  Court  for  the  Northern  District of West Virginia, claiming we
violated requirements of the Fair Labor  Standards Act.  The suit generally
makes the same allegations as Anderson v.  Pilgrim's Pride discussed above.
Plaintiffs seek to recover unpaid wages plus  liquidated  damages and legal
fees.  Approximately 150 consents to join as plaintiffs were filed with the
court by current and/or former employees.  No trial date has  been set.  To
date, only limited discovery has been performed.  Neither the likelihood of
an unfavorable outcome nor the amount of ultimate liability, if  any,  with
respect to this case can be determined at this time.  We do not expect this
matter,  individually  or  collectively,  to  have a material impact on our
financial position, operations or liquidity.

The Company is subject to various other legal proceedings and claims, which
arise  in  the  ordinary  course  of  its  business.   In  the  opinion  of
management, the amount of ultimate liability  with respect to these actions
will not materially affect the financial position  or results of operations
of the Company.

NOTE K - FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS

The  Company  is  a  purchaser of certain commodities, primarily  corn  and
soybeans.  The Company  periodically uses commodity futures and options for
hedging purposes to reduce the effect of changing commodity prices and as a
mechanism to procure the  grains.  The contracts that effectively meet risk
reductions and correlation  criteria  are  recorded using hedge accounting.
Gains and losses on closed hedge transactions  are  recorded as a component
of the underlying inventory purchase.

At  September 29, 2001, (there were no outstanding contracts  at  September
30, 2000), the Company held the following commodity contracts consisting of
delivery  contracts  settling  between  October  2001  and  July  2002. The
following   table   provides  information  about  the  Company's  financial
instruments that is sensitive to changes in commodity prices:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
Dollars in thousands, except per unit contract/strike prices

                           Notional     Weighted Average
                 Units     Amount   Contract/Strike Price   Fair Value
<S>              <C> <C>   <C>   <C>      <C>      <C>         <C> <C>
Hedging Position:
   Long positions
      in corn    Bushels    14,860            $2.22             ($476)
</TABLE>

NOTE L - BUSINESS SEGMENTS

Since  the  acquisition  of  WLR  Foods  on  January  27, 2001, the Company
operates in two reportable business segments as (1) a producer  of  chicken
and other products and (2) a producer of turkey products.

The  Company's  chicken and other products segment primarily includes sales
of chicken  products  the  Company produces and purchases for resale in the
United States and Mexico, and  also  includes  table  eggs  and  feed.  The
Company's  chicken  and other products segment conducts separate operations
in  the  United  States   and  Mexico  and  is  reported  as  two  separate
geographical areas.  The Company's  turkey segment includes sales of turkey
products produced in our turkey operation recently acquired from WLR Foods,
whose operations are exclusively in the United States.

Inter-area  sales and inter-segment sales,  which  are  not  material,  are
accounted for  at  prices comparable to normal trade customer sales.  Total
assets by segment and  geographic  area  are those assets which are used in
the Company's operations in each segment or  area.   Corporate  assets  and
expenses are included with chicken and other products.

The following table presents certain information regarding our segments:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                            FISCAL YEAR ENDED
                           SEPTEMBER 29,      SEPTEMBER 30,     OCTOBER 2,
                              2001(A)             2000             1999
<S>                       <C>       <C>       <C>        <C>    <C>     <C>
                           (52 WEEKS)            (52 WEEKS)       (53 WEEKS)
                                              (IN THOUSANDS)
NET SALES TO CUSTOMERS:
Chicken  and Other Products:
   United States           $1,652,199           $1,192,077       $1,102,903
   Mexico                     323,678              307,362          254,500
      Sub-total             1,975,877            1,499,439        1,357,403
Turkey                        238,835                   --               --
      Total                $2,214,712           $1,499,439       $1,357,403

OPERATING INCOME:
Chicken and Other Products:
   United States           $   78,096           $   45,928       $   88,177
   Mexico                      12,157               34,560           21,327
      Sub-total                90,253               80,488          109,504
   Turkey                       4,289                   --               --
      Total                $   94,542           $   80,488       $  109,504

Depreciation and Amortization(b)
Chicken and Other Products:
   United States           $   38,155           $   24,444       $   23,185
   Mexico                      11,962               11,583           11,351
      Sub-total                50,117               36,027           34,536
 Turkey                         5,273                   --               --
      Total                $   55,390           $   36,027       $   34,536

TOTAL ASSETS:
Chicken and Other Products:
  United States            $  764,073           $   496,173
  Mexico                      247,681               209,247
    Sub-total               1,011,754               705,420
Turkey                        203,941                    --
    Total                  $1,215,695           $   705,420

CAPITAL EXPENDITURES: (A)
Chicken and Other Products
  United States            $   80,173           $    69,712
  Mexico                       29,425                22,417
    Sub-total                 109,598                92,129
Turkey                          3,034                    --
    Total                  $  112,632           $    92,129
</TABLE>

(A)  EXCLUDES BUSINESS ACQUISITION COST OF $239,539, INCURRED IN CONNECTION
     WITH THE ACQUISITION OF WLR FOODS ON JANUARY 27, 2001.
(B)  INCLUDES  AMORTIZATION  OF CAPITALIZED FINANCING COSTS OF APPROXIMATELY
     $0.9 MILLION, $1.2 MILLION, AND $1.1 MILLION IN FISCAL YEAR 2001, 2000
     AND 1999, RESPECTIVELY.

AS OF SEPTEMBER 29, 2001, THE  COMPANY  HAD  NET ASSETS IN MEXICO OF $199.0
MILLION.  THERE WERE NO CUSTOMERS REPRESENTING  10%  OR  MORE OF REVENUE IN
FISCAL  2001.  DURING 2000 AND 1999, REVENUE FROM ONE CUSTOMER  REPRESENTED
13.5% AND 13.9%, RESPECTIVELY, OF CONSOLIDATED NET SALES.

NOTE M - QUARTERLY RESULTS

Quarterly Results (Unaudited)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PERSHARE DATA) YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001
                      First     Second    Third   Fourth Fiscal
                    Quarter Quarter(a)  Quarter  Quarter Year
<S>                <C>      <C>        <C>      <C>      <C>
Net sales          $386,032   $541,593 $645,836 $641,251 $2,214,712
Gross profit         47,166     29,216   75,625   61,943   213,950
Operating income
   (loss)            23,211     (5,272)  45,486   31,117    94,542
Income (loss)before
   extraordinary
   charge            12,737     (9,802)  25,267   13,829    42,031
Extraordinary charge,
   net of tax            --         --       --      894       894
Net income (loss)    12,737     (9,802)  25,267   12,934    41,137

Per Share:
   Net income (loss)    .31       (.24)     .61      .32      1.00
   Cash dividends      .015       .015     .015     .015       .06


</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(IN  THOUSANDS,EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)YEAR ENDED   SEPTEMBER 30, 2000
                      First     Second    Third   Fourth  Fiscal
                    Quarter Quarter(b)  Quarter  Quarter  Year
<S>                 <C>  <C>  <C>  <C> <C>   <C><C>   <C> <C>    <C>
Net sales          $354,825   $373,260 $391,979 $379,375  $1,499,439
Gross profit         45,477     34,029   46,665   39,657     165,828
Operating income     25,222     13,282   26,349   15,635      80,488
Net income           14,858      9,023   17,144   11,319      52,344

Per Share:
   Net income           .36        .22      .41      .28        1.27
   Cash dividends      .015       .015     .015     .015         .06

(a)  The  Company acquired WLR Foods on January 27, 2001 for $239.5 million
     and the assumption  of  $45.5 million of indebtedness.  The acquisition
     has been accounted for as a purchase,  and  the results of operations
     for this     acquisition     have     been     included     in     our
     consolidated results of operations since the acquisition date.

(b) The second  quarter  of  2000  includes  a  $5.8  million  write-off of
    accounts  receivable from        AmeriServe, which filed bankruptcy  on
    January 31, 2000.
</TABLE>





<PAGE>





<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES
SCHEDULE II-VALUATION AND QUALIFYING ACCOUNTS
   COL. A               COL. B             COL. C           COL. D        COL. E
                                         Additions          Deductions   Balance at
                      Balance at   Charged      Charged to     Describe     end of
                       Beginning   to Costs     Other Accounts-             Period
Description                       and Expenses    Describe

<S>                  <C>    <C>   <C>     <C>    <C>   <C>  <C>    <C>  <C>     <C>

YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 29, 2001:
  RESERVES AND ALLOWANCES DEDUCTED
     FROM ASSET ACCOUNTS:
      ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL
        ACCOUNTS      $4,086,000 $1,132,000          $--    $1,257,000(1)$3,961,000

YEAR ENDED SEPTEMBER 30, 2000:
  RESERVES AND ALLOWANCES DEDUCTED
     FROM ASSET ACCOUNTS:
      ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL
        ACCOUNTS      $4,703,000  $(611,000)         $--        $6,000(1)$4,086,000

 YEAR ENDED OCTOBER 2, 1999:
  RESERVES AND ALLOWANCES DEDUCTED
     FROM ASSET ACCOUNTS:
      ALLOWANCE FOR DOUBTFUL
        ACCOUNTS      $3,694,000 $1,122,000           $--     $113,000(1)$4,703,000

(1) UNCOLLECTABLE ACCOUNTS WRITTEN OFF, NET OF RECOVERIES.
</TABLE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                  EXHIBIT 12
                          PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION

               COMPUTATION OF RATIO OF EARNINGS TO FIXED CHARGES



                                          YEAR ENDED
                 SEPTEMBER 29, SEPTEMBER 30, OCTOBER 2, SEPTEMBER 26, SEPTEMBER 27,
                      2001         2000         1999          1998         1997
                                 (AMOUNTS IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT RATIO)

<S>               <C>   <C>     <C> <C>       <C> <C>     <C>  <C>     <C>  <C>
EARNINGS:

Income before income taxes
and extraordinary
   charge          $63,294      $62,786       $90,904     $56,522       $43,824

Add: Total fixed charges
   (see below)      48,406       29,168        26,706      27,987        27,647

Less: Interest
   Capitalized       7,153        3,313         2,032       1,675           502

   Total Earnings $104,547      $88,641      $115,578     $82,834       $70,969

FIXED CHARGES:

Interest (1)       $38,852      $21,712      $ 20,889     $23,239       $23,889
Portion of rental expense
   representative of the
   interest
   factor(2)         9,554        7,456         5,817       4,748         3,758

   Total fixed
      charges      $48,406      $29,168      $ 26,706     $27,987       $27,647

Ratio of earnings
   to fixed charges   2.16         3.04          4.33        2.96          2.57


(1)  Interest includes amortization of capitalized financing fees.
(2)  One-third of rental expenses is assumed to be representative of the
     interest factor.
</TABLE>


<PAGE>


                  EXHIBIT 22- SUBSIDIARIES OF REGISTRANT

1.        AVICOLA PILGRIM'S PRIDE DE MEXICO S.A. DE C.V.
2.        COMPANIA INCUBADORA HIDALGO S.A. DE C.V.
3.        INMOBILIARIA AVICOLA PILGRIM'S PRIDE, S. DE R.L.
4.        PILGRIM'S PRIDE S.A. DE C.V.
5.        GALLINA PESADA S.A. DE C.V.
6.        PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING CORPORATION
7.        PILGRIM'S PRIDE INTERNATIONAL INC.
8.        PPC OF DELAWARE BUSINESS TRUST
9.        PPC MARKETING, LTD.
10.       PILGRIM'S PRIDE AFFORDABLE HOUSING CORPORATION
11.       GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING HOLDINGS S. DE R.L. DE C.V.
12.       GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING S. DE R.L. DE C.V.
13.       ROCKINGHAM POULTRY, INC.
14.       ROCKINGHAM POULTRY, INC. (FOREIGN SALES CORP.)
15.       VALLEY RAIL SERVICE, INC.
16.       WAMPLER SUPPLY COMPANY, INC.
17.       PILGRIM'S PRIDE OF NEVADA, INC.
18.       PILGRIM'S PRIDE DUTCH FUNDING B.V.





<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT 23

                      CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the Registration Statements
(Form S-8 No. 3-12043 and Form S-3 No. 333-84861) of Pilgrim's Pride
Corporation, and in the related Prospectuses, of our report dated October
29, 2001,  with respect to the consolidated financial statements and
schedule of Pilgrim's Pride Corporation included in this Annual Report
(Form 10-K) for the year ended September 29, 2001.

Dallas, Texas                                     ERNST & YOUNG LLP
November 14, 2001


</TEXT>
</DOCUMENT>
<DOCUMENT>
<TYPE>EX-10
<SEQUENCE>3
<FILENAME>bankgroup.txt
<DESCRIPTION>BANKGROUP LARGE
<TEXT>
{\rtf1\ansi\ansicpg1252\deff0{\fonttbl{\f0\fnil\fcharset0 Courier New;}}
\viewkind4\uc1\pard\lang1033\f0\fs20\par
\par
                        PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION\par
\par
  THIRD AMENDMENT TO SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED SECURED CREDIT AGREEMENT\par
\par
\par
\par
Harris Trust and Savings Bank\par
Chicago, Illinois\par
\par
The Lenders From Time to Time Parties\par
to the Credit Agreement Described Below\par
\par
Ladies and Gentlemen:\par
\par
     Reference  is  hereby made to that certain Second Amended and Restated\par
Secured Credit Agreement  dated  as  of  November  5, 1999, as amended (the\par
"CREDIT AGREEMENT"), among the undersigned, Pilgrim's  Pride Corporation, a\par
Delaware corporation (the "COMPANY"), you (the "BANKS")  and  Harris  Trust\par
and  Savings Bank, as agent for the Banks (the "AGENT").  All defined terms\par
used herein  shall have the same meanings as in the Credit Agreement unless\par
otherwise defined herein.\par
\par
     The Company,  the  Agent  and  the  Banks now wish to amend the Credit\par
Agreement to permit optional prepayments of  Eurodollar  Loans and to amend\par
certain  other  covenants  to  the Credit Agreement, all on the  terms  and\par
conditions and in the manner set forth in this Amendment.\par
\par
1.   AMENDMENTS.\par
\par
     Upon satisfaction of all of  the  conditions  precedent  set  forth in\par
Section 2 hereof, the Credit Agreement shall be amended as follows:\par
\par
   1.1.  Section  3.3  of the Credit Agreement shall be amended to read  as\par
follows:\par
\par
          "SECTION 3.3.  OPTIONAL  PREPAYMENTS   (a)   DOMESTIC RATE LOANS.\par
     The Company shall have the privilege of prepaying without  premium  or\par
     penalty  and  in  whole  or in part (but if in part, then in a minimum\par
     principal amount of $2,500,000  or  such  greater  amount  which is an\par
     integral multiple of $100,000) any Domestic Rate Loan at any time upon\par
     prior telex or telephonic notice to the Agent on or before 12:00  Noon\par
     on the same Business Day.\par
\par
          (b)  FIXED  RATE  LOANS.  The Company may prepay any borrowing of\par
     Fixed Rate Loans without  premium  or  penalty, upon telephonic notice\par
     (which   shall   be  promptly  confirmed  in  writing   by   facsimile\par
     communication, telex  or  telegraph)  by  no  later  than  11:00  a.m.\par
     (Chicago  time)  on  the  third Business Day prior to the date of such\par
     prepayment from the Company  to  the Agent, such prepayment to be made\par
     by  the payment of the principal amount  to  be  prepaid  and  accrued\par
     interest  thereon and any compensation required by Section 9.4 hereof,\par
     if applicable; PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that any such prepayment shall be in\par
     a principal  amount  of no less than $3,000,000 or such greater amount\par
     which is an integral multiple  of  $1,000,000, and after giving effect\par
     to any such prepayment the outstanding  principal  amount  of any such\par
     borrowing  of Eurodollar Loans or CD Rate Loans prepaid in part  shall\par
     not be less  than  $3,000,000  or  such  greater  amount  which  is an\par
     integral multiple of $1,000,000.\par
\par
          (c) Any amount prepaid under the Revolving Credit may, subject to\par
     the  terms  and  conditions of this Agreement, be borrowed, repaid and\par
     borrowed again."\par
\par
   1.2.  Section 7.29 of  the  Credit Agreement shall be amended to read as\par
follows:\par
\par
          "SECTION 7.29. NEW SUBSIDIARIES.   The Company will not, directly\par
     or  indirectly, create or acquire in any Fiscal  Year  any  Subsidiary\par
     unless  (a)  after  giving effect to any such creation or acquisition,\par
     the total assets (determined  in  accordance  with  generally accepted\par
     accounting principles, consistently applied) of all such  Subsidiaries\par
     would  not  exceed  5%  of  the  Total  Assets of the Company and  its\par
     Subsidiaries, and (b) all Inventory of such  Subsidiaries  (other than\par
     any  such  Subsidiaries  that  are  organized  under  the  laws of any\par
     jurisdiction  other than the United States of America, any State,  the\par
     District of Columbia  or Puerto Rico) are pledged to the Agent for the\par
     benefit of the Banks pursuant  to  a  security agreement substantially\par
     identical to the Security Agreement."\par
\par
   1.3.  The  Required  Banks hereby agree that  the  Company  may  form  a\par
wholly-owned Subsidiary under  the  laws  of  the  State of Nevada ("NEVADA\par
CO.") without granting the Agent a security interest  in  its  inventory as\par
required  by Section 7.29(b) of the Credit Agreement, PROVIDED THAT  Nevada\par
Co. shall own no Inventory unless it first complies with Section 7.29(b).\par
\par
   1.4.  The  Required  Banks hereby waive the requirements of Section 3(b)\par
of the Security Agreement  with  respect  to  the Inventory acquired by the\par
Company as a result of the merger of WLR with and into the Company.\par
\par
2.   CONDITIONS PRECEDENT.\par
\par
     The effectiveness of the Amendment is subject  to  the satisfaction of\par
all of the following conditions precedent:\par
\par
   2.1.  The  Company  and  each  of  the  Banks  shall have executed  this\par
Amendment (such execution may be in several counterparts  and  the  several\par
parties hereto may execute on separate counterparts).\par
\par
   2.2.  Each of the representations and warranties set forth in Section  5\par
of the Credit Agreement shall be true and correct.\par
\par
   2.3.  The  Company shall be in full compliance with all of the terms and\par
conditions of the  Credit  Agreement  and  no Event of Default or Potential\par
Default shall have occurred and be continuing  thereunder  or  shall result\par
after giving effect to this Amendment.\par
\par
3.   REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES.\par
\par
   3.1.  The Company, by its execution of this Amendment, hereby represents\par
and warrants the following:\par
\par
          (a)  each  of  the  representations  and warranties set forth  in\par
     Section 5 of the Credit Agreement is true and  correct  as of the date\par
     hereof,  except  that  the  representations and warranties made  under\par
     Section 5.3 shall be deemed to  refer to the most recent annual report\par
     furnished to the Banks by the Company;\par
\par
          (b) the Company is in full compliance  with  all of the terms and\par
     conditions  of  the  Credit  Agreement  and  no  Event of  Default  or\par
     Potential Default has occurred and is continuing thereunder; and\par
\par
         (c) the Company's organizational number is 2101254.\par
\par
4.   MISCELLANEOUS.\par
\par
   4.1.  The  Company has heretofore executed and delivered  to  the  Agent\par
that certain Security Agreement Re:  Accounts Receivable, Farm Products and\par
Inventory dated  as  of May 27, 1993, as amended (the "SECURITY AGREEMENT")\par
and the Company hereby  agrees that the Security Agreement shall secure all\par
of the Company's indebtedness, obligations and liabilities to the Agent and\par
the Banks under the Credit  Agreement  as  amended  by this Amendment, that\par
notwithstanding the execution and delivery of this Amendment,  the Security\par
Agreement shall be and remain in full force and effect and that  any rights\par
and remedies of the Agent thereunder, obligations of the Company thereunder\par
and  any  liens  or  security  interests created or provided for thereunder\par
shall be and remain in full force  and  effect  and  shall not be affected,\par
impaired  or  discharged thereby.  Nothing herein contained  shall  in  any\par
manner affect or  impair  the  priority of the liens and security interests\par
created and provided for by the  Security  Agreement as to the indebtedness\par
which would be secured thereby prior to giving effect to this Amendment.\par
\par
   4.2.  Except as specifically amended herein the Credit Agreement and the\par
Notes  shall continue in full force and effect  in  accordance  with  their\par
original  terms.   Reference to this specific Amendment need not be made in\par
any note, document,  letter,  certificate, the Credit Agreement itself, the\par
Notes, or any communication issued  or  made pursuant to or with respect to\par
the  Credit  Agreement,  any  reference  to  the   Credit  Agreement  being\par
sufficient to refer to the Credit Agreement as amended hereby.\par
\par
   4.3.  The  Company agrees to pay all out-of-pocket  costs  and  expenses\par
incurred by the  Agent  and  Banks  in  connection  with  the  preparation,\par
execution and delivery of this Amendment and the documents and transactions\par
contemplated hereby, including the fees and expenses of Messrs. Chapman and\par
Cutler.\par
\par
   4.4.  This Amendment may be executed in any number of counterparts,  and\par
by  the  different  parties  on  different counterparts, all of which taken\par
together shall constitute one and  the  same Agreement.  Any of the parties\par
hereto may execute this Amendment by signing  any such counterpart and each\par
of such counterparts shall for all purposes be deemed to be an original.\par
\par
   4.5.  (A)  THIS  AMENDMENT  AND THE RIGHTS AND  DUTIES  OF  THE  PARTIES\par
HERETO, SHALL BE CONSTRUED AND DETERMINED  IN  ACCORDANCE WITH THE INTERNAL\par
LAWS  OF  THE  STATE  OF  ILLINOIS,  EXCEPT  TO  THE  EXTENT   PROVIDED  IN\par
SECTION 4.5(b) HEREOF AND TO THE EXTENT THAT THE FEDERAL LAWS OF THE UNITED\par
STATES OF AMERICA MAY OTHERWISE APPLY.\par
\par
    (b)  NOTWITHSTANDING ANYTHING IN SECTION 4.5(a) HEREOF TO THE CONTRARY,\par
NOTHING  IN  THIS AMENDMENT, THE CREDIT AGREEMENT, THE NOTES, OR THE  OTHER\par
LOAN DOCUMENTS  SHALL  BE DEEMED TO CONSTITUTE A WAIVER OF ANY RIGHTS WHICH\par
THE COMPANY, THE AGENT OR ANY OF THE BANKS MAY HAVE UNDER THE NATIONAL BANK\par
ACT OR OTHER APPLICABLE FEDERAL LAW.\par
\par
\par
\par
\par
                                   - 1 -\par
\par
\par
<PAGE>\par
\par
\par
Dated as of September ___, 2001.\par
\par
\par
                                 PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
     Accepted and Agreed to as of the day and year last above written.\par
\par
                                 HARRIS TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK individually\par
                                   and as Agent\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
                                 U.S. BANCORP AG CREDIT, INC.\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
                                 COBANK, ACB\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
                                 SUNTRUST BANK (formerly known as SunTrust\par
                                   Bank, Atlanta)\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
                                 CREDIT AGRICOLE INDOSUEZ\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
\par
                                 By\par
                                   Its\par
\par
\par

</TEXT>
</DOCUMENT>
<DOCUMENT>
<TYPE>EX-10
<SEQUENCE>4
<FILENAME>bkgrp-one.txt
<DESCRIPTION>BANKGROUP SMALL
<TEXT>






______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________



                        REVOLVING CREDIT AGREEMENT

                              BY AND BETWEEN

             GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING, S. DE R.L. DE C.V.

                       (THE "COMPANY" OR "BORROWER")

                               COMERICA BANK

                               ("COMERICA")

                                    AND

                       COMERICA BANK  MEXICO, S.A.,

                    INSTITUCI<O'>N DE BANCA M<U'>LTIPLE

                                 ( "CBM")

                             SEPTEMBER 7, 2001



______________________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________________







<PAGE>






                        REVOLVING CREDIT AGREEMENT


     THIS  REVOLVING  CREDIT  AGREEMENT,  is  made  as  of the 7{th} day of
September, 2001, by and between GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING S. de R.L. de
C.V.,  a  SOCIEDAD  DE  RESPONSABILIDAD  LIMITADA DE CAPITAL VARIABLE  duly
organized and validly existing under the laws  of the United Mexican States
("Mexico"), having its corporate domicile in Queretaro,  Mexico  ("Company"
or "Borrower"), and COMERICA BANK ("Comerica"), a banking corporation  duly
organized and validly existing under the laws of the State of Michigan,  of
Detroit,  Michigan and COMERICA BANK  MEXICO, S.A., INSTITUCI<O'>N DE BANCA
M<U'>LTIPLE  a banking institution organized and existing under the laws of
Mexico ("CBM;" collectively with Comerica, the "Bank").

WITNESSETH:

     WHEREAS,  Company  has  requested  Bank to provide it with a revolving
loan  in  the amount of Thirty Million Dollars  ($30,000,000)  which  shall
include a Seven  Million  Dollar ($7,000,000) sublimit in equivalent Pesos,
and  Bank  is willing to do so  upon  the  terms  and  conditions  of  this
Agreement.

     NOW, THEREFORE, Company and Bank agree to the following:

     1.        DEFINITIONS

     For the  purposes  of this Agreement the following terms will have the
following meanings:

     "Accounts"  means,  with   respect   to   any   Person,  all  accounts
receivables, monies and book debts at any time owed to such Person, and all
instruments, chattel paper and other documents evidencing  or  securing any
such accounts receivable, monies or book debts.

     "Advance"  shall  mean a borrowing requested by Borrower and  made  by
Comerica with respect to  Dollars  and  CBM with respect to Pesos, pursuant
hereto.

     "Affiliates"  shall  mean (i) any Subsidiary  of  Avicola;  (ii)  U.S.
Guarantor; and (iii) any Subsidiary of U.S. Guarantor.

     "Applicable Interest Rate"  shall  mean,  with respect to indebtedness
outstanding hereunder or under the Notes in Dollars the LIBOR-based Rate or
if required in accordance with the terms and conditions  set  forth in this
Agreement the Federal Funds-based Rate, as the alternative base  rate,  and
in  respect  to  indebtedness  outstanding  hereunder or under the Notes in
Pesos the TIIE-based rate, or if required in  accordance with the terms and
conditions set forth in this Agreement the CETES-based Rate.

     "Avicola" shall mean Avicola Pilgrim's Pride  de Mexico, S.A. de C.V.,
a SOCIEDAD AN<o'>NIMA DE CAPITAL VARIABLE duly organized  under the laws of
Mexico.

     "Business  Day" shall mean (i) with respect to any borrowing,  payment
or rate selection  of  LIBOR-based  Loans,  any  day,  other than Saturday,
Sunday or holiday on which commercial banks generally are  open in Detroit,
Michigan  for  the conduct of all or substantially all of their  commercial
lending activities  and on which dealings in U.S. Dollars are carried on in
the London interbank market, (ii) with respect to any borrowing, payment or
rate selection of TIIE-based Loans or CETES-based Loan, any day, other than
Saturday, Sunday or holiday on which commercial banks generally are open in
Mexico City, Mexico for  the  conduct  of all or substantially all of their
commercial lending activities and (ii) for all other purposes, a day (other
than a Saturday or Sunday) on which commercial  banks generally are open in
Detroit,  Michigan  and  Mexico  City, Mexico for the  conduct  of  all  or
substantially all of their commercial lending activities.

     "Capital Lease" shall mean, with  respect  to any Person, any lease of
any property (whether real, personal or mixed) by  such  Person  as  lessee
that,  in  accordance  with  GAAP,   would be required to be classified and
accounted for as a capital lease on a  balance  sheet  of  such  Person  or
otherwise would be disclosed as such in a note to such balance sheet.

     "Capital  Lease  Obligation"  shall  mean, with respect to any Capital
Lease,  the  amount of the obligation of the  lessee  thereunder  that,  in
accordance with  GAAP,  would  appear  on a balance sheet of such lessee in
respect of such Capital Lease or otherwise  be  disclosed in a note to such
balance sheet.

     "CETES-based  Loan" shall mean any portion of  the  Loan  which  bears
interest at the CETES-based Rate.

     "CETES-based Rate"  shall  mean,  with respect to any CETES-based Loan
outstanding under this Agreement bearing  interest  at the CETES-based Rate
for an applicable Interest Period, a per annum interest rate which is equal
to the quotient achieved by dividing (i) the sum of the  CETES  Margin plus
the  CETES  Rate,  by  (ii) the difference of 1.0 minus the rate of Mexican
income tax withholding rate  applicable  to  payment of interest receivable
hereunder, expressed as a decimal number applicable  to  interest  payments
hereunder.

     "CETES Margin" shall mean:

     (a)  to  the extent the outstanding principal balance of all Loans  is
          $15,000,000  (or  the Equivalent Amount in Pesos) or less, 1.25%;
          and

     (b)  to the extent the outstanding  principal  balance of all Loans is
          greater  than $15,000,000 (or the Equivalent  Amount  in  Pesos),
          1.5%.

     "CETES  Rate" shall  mean,  with  respect  to  any  CETES  based  loan
outstanding under this Agreement, the average weighted value of all primary
placement rates  of the Certificados de la Tesorer<i'>a de la Federaci<o'>n
having a maturity  of  28  days  or such term as may substitute such 28 day
term  in  case the maturity of such  instrument  is  not  a  Business  Day,
published in  the "Economic Indexes" Section of the Official Gazette on any
day that the CETES  Rate shall be the applicable interest rate with respect
to the indebtedness outstanding hereunder.

     "Collateral" means  all Accounts, Inventory, Equipment and Real Estate
of Operating Company, and any substitutions for, or replacements of, any of
the foregoing.

     "Consolidated" or "consolidated"  shall  mean when used with reference
to  any financial term in this Agreement, the aggregate  for  two  or  more
Persons  of  the  amounts  signified  by  such  term  for  all such Persons
determined  on  a  consolidated  basis  in  accordance  with GAAP.   Unless
otherwise   specified   herein,  references  to  "consolidated"   financial
statements  or data of Borrower,  Operating  Company  or  Avicola  includes
consolidation with the Subsidiaries of such Person in accordance with GAAP.

     "Credit Party" shall mean Borrower and Guarantors.

     "Current   Ratio"   shall   mean,   as   of  any  applicable  date  of
determination,  the  ratio of current assets to current  liabilities,  each
determined in accordance with GAAP.

     "Default" shall mean  any condition or event which, with the giving of
notice or the passage of time,  or  both,  would  constitute  an  Event  of
Default.

     "Dollars"  and  "$" shall mean lawful currency of the United States of
America.

     "EBITDA" shall mean  as  of any date, with respect to any Person for a
period of six consecutive fiscal  quarters  of  such  Person  ending at the
close  of the fiscal quarter most recently ended of such Person,  operating
income of  such  Person  for  such period PLUS, any amounts with respect to
depreciation or amortization, all determined in accordance with GAAP.

     "Effective Date" shall mean the date of this Agreement.

     "Eligible Accounts" shall  mean  an  Account  arising  in the ordinary
course  of  the  Operating  Company's  business  which  meets  each of  the
following requirements:

     (a)  to  the  extent it is not owing more than ninety (90) days  after
          the date of the original invoice or other writing evidencing such
          Account;

     (b)  it arises  from  the  sale  or lease of goods and such goods have
          been shipped or delivered to  the  account  debtor;  or it arises
          from services rendered and such services have been performed;

     (c)  it is evidenced by an invoice, dated not later than 5 days of the
          date of shipment or performance, rendered to the account  debtor,
          or some other evidence of billing acceptable to Bank;

     (d)  it is not evidenced by any note, trade acceptance, draft or other
          negotiable  instrument or by any chattel paper, unless such  note
          or other document  or instrument previously has been endorsed and
          delivered or otherwise legally conveyed to Bank;

     (e)  it is a valid, legally  enforceable  obligation  of  the  account
          debtor  thereunder,  and  to  the extent it is not subject to any
          offset, counterclaim or other defense on the part of such account
          debtor or to any claim on the part of such account debtor denying
          liability thereunder in whole or in part;

     (f)  it is not an Account billed in  advance, payable on delivery, for
          consigned goods, for guaranteed sales,  for  unbilled  sales, for
          progress  billings,  payable at a future date in accordance  with
          its terms, or to the extent  it  is not subject to a retainage or
          holdback by the account debtor or insured by a surety company;

     (g)  the Account is subject to a duly perfected  lien  in favor of the
          Bank  pursuant to the Security Documents ranking in  priority  to
          all other  liens,  which  lien has been duly registered, filed or
          recorded in all applicable  jurisdictions  and  all  other  steps
          necessary  have  been  taken to create, perfect and maintain such
          lien, to the extent such  actions  are  required under applicable
          law;

     (h)  the Account does not constitute an obligation  of  (i) any Person
          whose  principal place of business is, or who is organized  under
          the laws  of, any jurisdiction other than a jurisdiction included
          in the United  States  or  Mexico, (ii) an Affiliate of Operating
          Company, or (iii) any governmental entity;

     (i)  the Account has not arisen out  of  a  written  order or contract
          with  or  from  an  account debtor which by its nature  or  terms
          prevents, restricts,  forbids  or makes void or unenforceable the
          assignment to the Bank of such Account, or requires notice to, or
          the consent of, the account debtor(unless  such  consent has been
          secured or such notice has been given).

     An  Account  which  is  at  any  time  an Eligible Account, but  which
subsequently  fails  to  meet  any  of  the foregoing  requirements,  shall
forthwith cease to be an Eligible Account.

     "Eligible  Inventory"  shall  mean all  finished  animal  feed,  corn,
soybean, soybean meal and imported sorghum of Operating Company, excluding:

     (a)  Consigned goods;

     (b)  Inventory covered by or subject to a title retention agreement or
          a   seller's  right  to  repurchase,   or   any   consensual   or
          nonconsensual  lien  (including without limitation purchase money
          security interests) other than in favor of Bank; and

     (c)  any Inventory which is  not  subject  to a duly perfected lien in
          favor of the Bank ranking in priority to  all  other liens, which
          lien  has  been  duly  registered,  filed  or  recorded   in  all
          applicable jurisdictions and all other steps necessary have  been
          taken  to  create, perfect and maintain such liens, to the extent
          such actions are required under applicable law.

     Inventory shall be  valued  at  the  lower  of cost or market value as
determined in accordance with GAAP or appraisals as  determined  by Bank in
its reasonable credit judgment, and Inventory which is at any time Eligible
Inventory,  but  which  subsequently  fails  to  meet  any of the foregoing
requirements, shall forthwith cease to be Eligible Inventory.

     "Environmental Complaint" shall have the meaning set  forth in Section
5.15(c) hereof.

     "Environmental   Law(s)"  shall  mean  all  applicable  laws,   codes,
ordinances, rules, regulations,  orders,  decrees  and directives issued by
any  federal,  state,  local,  foreign  or  other  governmental  or  quasi-
governmental authority or body (or any agency, instrumentality or political
subdivision thereof) in which Borrower, Avicola, Operating  Company  or any
of  their respective Subsidiaries conducts business pertaining to Hazardous
Materials, including without limitation, any hazardous materials or wastes,
toxic  substances, flammable, explosive or radioactive materials, asbestos,
and/or other  similar  materials; or any portion thereof including, without
limitation,  those relating  to  soil,  surface,  subsurface  ground  water
conditions and  the  condition  of  the ambient air; and any other federal,
state, foreign or local statute, law,  ordinance,  code,  rule, regulation,
order or decree regulating, relating to, or imposing liability or standards
of  conduct  concerning,  any  hazardous, toxic, radioactive, flammable  or
dangerous waste, substance or material,  as now or at any time hereafter in
effect.

     "Equipment"  shall  mean  all machinery  and  equipment  of  Operating
Company located on the Real Estate.

     "Equivalent Amount" shall mean  (i)  with respect to each Advance made
or carried (or to be carried) in Dollars, the  principal amount thereof and
(ii)  with  respect  to each Advance made or carried  (or  to  be  made  or
carried) in Pesos, the amount of Dollars which is equivalent to such amount
of Pesos at the fixed  exchange  rate  established  by  the Central Bank of
Mexico and published in the Official Gazette for the sale  of  Dollars  for
such  Pesos  two  (2) Business Days before determination of such Equivalent
Amount is to be made.

     "Event of Default"  shall mean each of the Events of Default specified
in Section 8.1 of this Agreement.

     "Federal Funds-based  Loan"  shall  mean  an  Advance  which  bears an
interest at the Federal Funds-based Rate.

     "Federal Funds-based Rate" shall mean a per annum interest rate  which
is  equal  to  the quotient achieved by dividing (i) the sum of the Federal
Funds Margin plus  the  Federal  Funds  Rate, by (ii) the difference of 1.0
minus  the  rate  of  Mexican  income tax withholding  rate  applicable  to
payments of interest receivable  hereunder,  expressed  as a decimal number
applicable to interest payments hereunder.

     "Federal Funds Margin" shall mean:

     (a)  to the extent the outstanding principal balance  of  all Loans is
          $15,000,000  (or the Equivalent Amount in Pesos) or less,  1.25%;
          and

     (b)  to the extent  the  outstanding principal balance of all Loans is
          greater than $15,000,000  (or  the  Equivalent  Amount in Pesos),
          1.5%.

     "Federal  Funds  Rate"  shall  mean  a  per  annum  rate  of  interest
determined   on  the  basis  of  quotations  for  overnight  federal  funds
transactions appearing  on  Page  60  of the Knight-Ridder Moneycenter News
Services (Garvin GuyButler-Domestic Composite  Indicators  -  Term  Federal
Funds for Domestic Banks), on any day that the Federal Funds Rate shall  be
the  applicable  interest rate with respect to the indebtedness outstanding
hereunder. If, for  any reason, such rates do not appear on said Page 60 of
the Knight-Rider Moneycenter  News Services (or otherwise on such service),
the "Federal Funds Rate" shall  be  determined  by  reference to such other
publicly available service for displaying Federal Funds  Rates, as shall be
designated by the Bank from time to time.

     "Fixed Assets" shall mean the Equipment and Real Estate.

     "Formula  Amount"  shall  mean  as  of  the  date of any determination
thereof the sum of:

     (a)  70% of the Eligible Accounts; plus

     (b)  the  lesser  of  (i)  60%  of  the  Eligible  Inventory  or  (ii)
          $10,000,000; plus

     (c)  60%  of  the  "net market value" of the Fixed Assets,  determined
          pursuant  to  appraisals,   in   form  and  substance  reasonably
          satisfactory to Bank.

     "Funded Debt" shall mean with respect to  any Person, all Indebtedness
for  borrowed  money  evidenced  by  notes, bonds, debentures,  or  similar
evidences of Indebtedness and which by its terms matures more than one year
from, or is directly or indirectly renewable or extendible at such Person's
option under a revolving credit or similar  agreement obligating the lender
or lenders to extend credit over a period of  more  than  one year from the
date  of  creation  thereof,  and  specifically  including  Capital   Lease
Obligations,  current  maturities  of  long-term debt, revolving credit and
short-term debt extendible beyond one year at the option of the debtor.

     "GAAP" shall mean generally accepted  accounting principles in Mexico,
applied on a consistent basis.

     "Guarantor(s)"  shall  mean  Operating  Company,   Avicola,   Holding,
Inmobiliaria, US Guarantor and any Replacement Guarantor.

     "Guaranty" shall mean to guaranty agreement and the (FIANZA SOLIDARIA)
executed  and  delivered  to  Bank  by the Guarantors in form and substance
satisfactory to Bank pursuant to which:

     (a)  Operating Company, Avicola  and Holding guaranty all of Company's
          obligations and indebtedness  to  Bank hereunder, with respect to
          the Loans and under the other Loan Documents;

     (b)  US Guarantor guarantees $15,000,000  of  the principal balance of
          the   Loans,  plus  interest  accruing  thereon   and   cost   of
          collections.

     "Hazardous Material"  shall  mean  and include any hazardous, toxic or
dangerous waste, substance or material defined  as  such in, or for purpose
of, any Environmental Laws.

     "Holding" means Grupo Pilgrim's Pride Funding Holding,  S.  de  R.L.de
C.V.,  a  SOCIEDAD  DE  RESPONSABILIDAD  LIMITADA  DE CAPITAL VARIABLE duly
organized under the laws of Mexico.

     "Indebtedness" of any Person shall mean:  (i) all indebtedness of such
Person for borrowed money; (ii) all obligations evidenced  by notes, bonds,
debentures  or  similar  instruments;  (iii)  all  indebtedness created  or
arising under any conditional sale or other title retention agreements with
respect  to property acquired by such Person (even though  the  rights  and
remedies of  the  seller  or  lender  under  such agreement in the event of
default are limited to repossession or sale of  such  property);  (iv)  all
Capital  Lease  Obligations;  (v) all guaranteed indebtedness; and (vi) all
indebtedness referred to in clauses  (i),  (ii),  (iii),  (iv) or (v) above
secured  by (or for which the holder of such indebtedness has  an  existing
right, contingent  or  otherwise,  to  be  secured  by) any lien upon or in
property  (including accounts and contract rights) owned  by  such  Person,
even though such Person has not assumed or become liable for the payment of
such indebtedness.

     "Indebtedness  Ratio"  shall  mean,  as  of  any  applicable  date  of
determination,  the  ratio  of  Total  Liabilities  to  the  sum  of  Total
Liabilities and Net Worth.

     "Indenture"  shall  mean  that certain Indenture dated as of August 9,
2001 by US Guarantor, as Issuer  and  The  Chase Manhattan Bank, as Trustee
relating to $200,000,000, 9-5/8% Senior Notes due 2011 and additional notes
evidencing an additional aggregate principal  amount  of up to $200,000,000
and all amendments and supplements thereto.

     "Inmobiliaria" shall mean Immobiliaria Avicola Pilgrim's  Pride, S. de
R.L.  de  C.V., a SOCIEDAD DE RESPONSABILIDAD LIMITADA DE CAPITAL  VARIABLE
duly organized under the laws of Mexico.

     "Interest  Coverage  Ratio"  shall  mean, as of any applicable date of
determination,  the  ratio of EBITDA to Interest  Expense,  measured  on  a
rolling 6 fiscal quarters basis.

     "Interest Expense"  shall  mean,  the  interest  expense  of a Person,
determined in accordance with GAAP.

     "Interest Period" shall mean for:

     (A)  a  LIBOR-based  Loan, an interest period of one (1), two  (2)  or
     three (3) months as selected by Borrower;

     (B) a TIIE-based Loan, an interest period of one (1) month;

     provided however for (A) and (B) above that:

     (a)  any Interest Period  which  would otherwise end on a day which is
          not  a  Business Day shall be extended  to  the  next  succeeding
          Business  Day,  except  that  if the next succeeding Business Day
          falls in another calendar month, the Interest Period shall end on
          the next preceding Business Day,  and  when  an  Interest  Period
          begins on a day which has no numerically corresponding day in the
          calendar  month  during which such Interest Period is to end,  it
          shall end on the last Business Day of such calendar month; and

     (b)  no Interest Period shall extend beyond the Maturity Date.

     "Inventory"  shall mean  all  finished  animal  feed,  corn,  soybean,
soybean meal and imported sorghum of Operating Company.

     "LIBOR-based Loan"  shall  mean  any  portion  of the Loan which bears
interest at the LIBOR-based Rate.

     "LIBOR-based  Rate" shall mean, with respect to any  LIBOR-based  Loan
outstanding under this  Agreement  bearing interest at the LIBOR-based Rate
for an applicable Interest Period, a per annum interest rate which is equal
to the quotient achieved by dividing  (i)  the sum of the LIBOR Margin plus
the LIBOR Rate, by (ii) the difference of 1.0  minus  the  rate  of Mexican
income  tax  withholding rate applicable to payments of interest receivable
by the Bank hereunder, expressed as a decimal number applicable to interest
payments hereunder.

      "LIBOR Lending  Office" shall mean any Comerica office located in the
Cayman Islands, British West Indies, or such other branch of Bank, domestic
or foreign, as it may hereafter  designate  as  its LIBOR Lending Office by
notice to Borrower or any office of CBM located in Mexico.

     "LIBOR Margin" shall mean:

     (a)  to the extent the outstanding principal  balance  of all Loans is
          $15,000,000 (or the Equivalent Amount in Pesos) or  less,  1.25%;
          and

     (b)  to  the extent the outstanding principal balance of all Loans  is
          greater  than  $15,000,000  (or  the Equivalent Amount in Pesos),
          1.5%.

     "LIBOR  Rate"  shall  mean,  with  respect  to  any  LIBOR-based  Loan
outstanding under this Agreement, the per annum rate of interest determined
on the basis of the rate for deposits in United States Dollars for a period
equal to the relevant Interest Period for such Advance,  commencing  on the
first  day of such Interest Period, appearing on Page BBAM of the Bloomberg
Financial  Markets  Information Service as of 11:00 a.m. (Detroit, Michigan
time) (or soon thereafter as practical), two (2) Business Days prior to the
first day of such Interest Period.

     "Loan" or "Loans"  shall  mean the borrowings requested by Company and
to be made by Bank under this Agreement,  including  any  refunding of such
borrowing pursuant to Section 2.11 hereof.

     "Loan Documents" shall mean collectively, this Agreement,  the  Notes,
the  Guaranty  (FIANZA),  the  Security  Documents and any other documents,
instruments or agreements executed pursuant  to  or  in connection with the
Loans, this Agreement or the other Loan Documents, as such documents may be
amended from time to time.

     "Material  Adverse  Effect"  shall  mean with respect  to  the  Credit
Parties other than the US Guarantor, taken  as  a  whole or with respect to
the  US  Guarantor:  (i)  a  material adverse effect on (a)  the  business,
assets, operations or financial  or  other  condition  of  such  applicable
parties,  (b)  such  applicable  party's  ability  to  pay  or  perform the
obligations under the Loan Documents to which such Credit Party is  a party
in  accordance  with  the  terms thereof, or (c) Bank's rights and remedies
under the Agreement and the other Loan Documents.

     "Maturity Date" shall mean  September 7, 2004.

     "Mexican Guarantors" shall  mean  the  Guarantors  other  than  the US
Guarantor.

     "Mortgage"  shall  mean  the  first priority mortgage to be granted in
favor  of Comerica and CBM by: (i) Inmobiliaria  in  respect  to  the  real
estate in  which  the farm known as Granja la Pur<i'>sima, which is located
in Municipio de Col<o'>n,  Estado  de Queretaro, substantially in the terms
of Exhibit E; (ii) Operating Company in respect to the real estate in which
the  farm known as Granja el Coyote,  which  is  located  in  Municipio  de
Ezequiel Montes, Estado de Queretaro, substantially in the terms of Exhibit
E, (iii)  Operating Company in respect to the real estate in which the farm
known as Granja  Nogales, which is located in Municipio de Col<o'>n, Estado
de Queretaro, substantially  in  the  terms  of  Exhibit  E, (iv) Operating
Company  in  respect to the real estate in which the farm known  as  Granja
Buenos Aires,  which  is  located  in  Municipio  de  Col<o'>n,  Estado  de
Queretaro,  substantially  in the terms of Exhibit E, (v) Operating Company
in respect to the real estate  in  which the farm known as Granja Atongo I,
which  is  located  in  Municipio  del  Marquez,   Estado   de   Queretaro,
substantially  in the terms of Exhibit E, and (vi) by Operating Company  in
respect to the real  estate in which the farm known as Granja Cerro Prieto,
which  is  located  in  Municipio   del   Marquez,   Estado  de  Queretaro,
substantially in the terms of Exhibit E.

     "Net Worth" shall mean:

     (a)  With  respect to Operating Company on a consolidated  basis,  its
          Total Assets  (other  than  patents,  patent  rights, trademarks,
          trade  names,  copy  rights, franchises, licenses,  goodwill  and
          similar general intangible  assets)  less: (i) advances to and/or
          accounts receivables owing from Affiliates  (other than Operating
          Company and its Subsidiaries); and (ii) Total Liabilities; and

     (b)  With respect to Avicola on a consolidated basis, its Total Assets
          (other than patents, patent rights, trademarks, trade names, copy
          rights,  franchises,  licenses,  goodwill  and  similar   general
          intangible   assets)   less:  (i)  advances  to  and/or  accounts
          receivables owing from Affiliates  (other  than  Avicola  and its
          Subsidiaries);  (ii)  Total Liabilities; and (iii) loans made  to
          third parties other than to Affiliates.

     "Note(s)"  or  "Note" shall mean  the  Promissory  Notes  (PAGAR<e'>S)
evidencing the Loans  made  by  Bank  pursuant to Section 2.1 hereof in the
form of Exhibit "A" attached to this Agreement  executed  and  delivered by
the  Company  as  of date of and evidencing each requested Advance,  or  if
applicable, the Federal  Funds-based  Rate  Note  executed and delivered by
Company in accordance with Section 2.6 below (in the  form  attached hereto
as Exhibit "B"), or if applicable, the TIIE-based Rate Note or  the  CETES-
based  Rate  Note  (in  the  forms attached hereto as Exhibit C) and in all
events guaranteed (por aval) by the Guarantors.

     "Official Gazzete" shall  mean  the DIARIO OFICIAL DE LA FEDERACI<o'>N
of Mexico.

     "Operating  Company"  shall  mean Pilgrim's  Pride,  S.A.  de  C.V.  a
SOCIEDAD AN<o'>NIMA DE CAPITAL VARIABLE duly organized and validly existing
under the laws of Mexico.

     "Payment Date" shall mean the last day of the Interest Period selected
for each Note.

     "Permitted  Liens"  shall mean those  liens,  security  interests  and
encumbrances expressly permitted by Section 7.1.

     "Person" shall mean any  individual, corporation, partnership, limited
liability  company,  trust, incorporated  or  unincorporated  organization,
joint venture, joint stock  company,  or  a  government  (whether  foreign,
federal,  state,  country,  city,  municipal  or  otherwise,  including any
instrumentality,  division,  agency,  body  or department thereof)  or  any
agency or political subdivision thereof or other entity of any kind.

     "Pesos" shall mean Mexican pesos, the lawful currency of Mexico.

     "Pesos Subfacility" shall mean Advances requested to be made by CBM in
Pesos, in an aggregate amount not to exceed the  Pesos  Subfacility Maximum
as may be reduced pursuant to Section 2.19.

     "Pesos Subfacility Maximum" shall mean up to the Equivalent  Amount of
US $7,000,000, in Pesos as may be reduced pursuant to Section 2.19.

     "Premises" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 5.15 and  shall
include the Real Estate.

     "Process Agent" shall mean CT Corporation System or its successors  or
assigns,  or any other person or entity acting on behalf of the Company and
Mexican Guarantor  as  agent  for  the service of process in respect of any
lawsuits  or proceedings initiated in  the  United  States  of  America  in
connection with the Loan Documents.

     "Real Estate" shall mean the real estate described in the Mortgage.

     "Replacement Guarantor" shall mean any Subsidiary created by Operating
Company or  US  Guarantor  to be the primary importer and/or distributor in
Mexico of poultry product exported by US Guarantor to Mexico.

     "Request for Loan" shall  mean  a  Request  for Loan issued by Company
under this Agreement in the form annexed to this Agreement as Exhibit "D".

     "Reserve Requirements" shall mean the stated  maximum  rate (expressed
as  a decimal) of all reserve requirements (including, without  limitation,
any marginal,  emergency,  supplemental, special or other reserves) that is
specified at any time during such Interest Period by the Board of Governors
of  the  Federal Reserve System  (or  any  successor  agency  thereto)  for
determining  the  maximum  reserve  requirements with respect to eurodollar
funding (currently referred to as "eurocurrency liabilities") in Regulation
D  of  such  Board maintained by a member  bank  of  such  System;  all  as
conclusively determined by Bank, absent manifest error.

     "Revolving  Loan" or "Revolving Loans" shall mean the revolving credit
loans to be advanced and readvanced to the Borrower pursuant to Section 2.1
hereof.

     "Revolving  Loan   Commitment"   shall  mean  Thirty  Million  Dollars
($30,000,000), as may be reduced pursuant to Section 2.19.

     "Revolving Maximum" shall mean, as  of  any  date  the  lesser  of the
Revolving Loan Commitment or the Formula Amount, provided, however, that  a
portion  of  the Revolving Maximum may be designated by the Borrower in the
Equivalent Amount of Pesos, not to exceed the Pesos Subfacility Maximum.

     "Revolving  Maximum  -  Dollars" shall mean the Revolving Maximum less
the Equivalent Amount of the aggregate Advances outstanding under the Pesos
Subfacility.

     "Revolving Maximum - Pesos"  shall mean the Revolving Maximum less the
aggregate Advances under the Revolving  Maximum - Dollars facility, but not
to exceed the amount of the Pesos Subfacility Maximum.

     "Security Documents" shall mean the Mortgage and that certain Contrato
de Prenda ("Pledge Agreement") to be executed by Operating Company in favor
of the Bank in substantially the same form  as  set  forth  on the attached
Exhibit F.

     "Subsidiary"  of  any  Person shall mean any corporation, association,
joint stock company or business  trust  of  which  more  than fifty percent
(50%) of the voting stock or other voting interest is owned either directly
or indirectly by such Person and/or one or more of its Subsidiaries.

     "TIIE-based  Loan"  shall  mean  any portion of the Loan  which  bears
interest at the TIIE-based Rate.

     "TIIE-based Rate" shall mean, with  respect  to  any  TIIE-based  Loan
outstanding  under  this  Agreement bearing interest at the TIIE-based Rate
for an applicable Interest Period, a per annum interest rate which is equal
to the quotient achieved by  dividing  (i)  the sum of the TIIE Margin plus
the TIIE Rate, by (ii) the difference of 1.0  minus  the  rate  of  Mexican
income  tax  withholding rate applicable to payments of interest receivable
hereunder, expressed  as  a  decimal number applicable to interest payments
hereunder.

     "TIIE Lending Office" shall mean any CBM office located in Mexico

     "TIIE Margin" shall mean:

     (a)  to the extent the outstanding  principal  balance of all Loans is
          $15,000,000 (or the Equivalent Amount in Pesos)  or  less, 1.25%;
          and

     (b)  to the extent the outstanding principal balance of all  Loans  is
          greater  than  $15,000,000  (or  the Equivalent Amount in Pesos),
          1.5%.

     "TIIE Rate" shall mean, the average rate  equivalent  to  the "Tasa de
Inter<e'>s  Interbancaria de Equilibrio" for 28 (twenty eight) day  periods
as published  by Banco de Mexico in the Official Gazette. The Interest Rate
shall be modified or updated pursuant to the TIIE Rate variations published
by Banco de M<e'>xico.

     "Total Assets"  shall  mean,  as  of  the  date  of  any determination
thereof,  all  assets  of  Company, determined on a consolidated  basis  in
accordance with GAAP.

     "Total Liabilities" shall  mean,  as  of the date of any determination
thereof, all liabilities and other obligations  of Company, determined on a
consolidated basis in accordance with GAAP.

     "US Guarantor" means Pilgrim's Pride Corporation,  a  corporation duly
organized under the laws of the State of Delaware.

     2.        REVOLVING CREDIT

          2.1  COMMITMENT.  Subject  to  the terms and conditions  of  this
     Agreement: (a) Comerica agrees to lend  to  Borrower from time to time
     from  the  date of this Agreement until the Maturity  Date,  Revolving
     Loans, with  such  Advances  to  be  made  in Dollars in the aggregate
     principal amount outstanding at any time not  to  exceed the Revolving
     Maximum - Dollars; and (b) CBM agrees to lend to Borrower from time to
     time  from  the  date  of  this  Agreement  until  the Maturity  Date,
     Revolving  Loans,  with  such  Advances  to  be made in Pesos  in  the
     aggregate principal amount outstanding at any  time  not to exceed the
     Revolving  Maximum  -  Pesos. At no time shall the aggregate  Advances
     requested by Borrower and  outstanding  hereunder exceed the Revolving
     Maximum.

          2.2 NOTES (PAGAR<e'>S).  Each Advance  shall  be  evidenced  by a
     separate  Note (pAGAR<e'>), duly executed by Borrower in the principal
     amount of the  Advance  requested,  bearing interest at the Applicable
     Interest Rate, indicating the Interest  Period  and signed POR AVAL by
     the Guarantors..

          2.3   REPAYMENT.   Each  Note,  and  all  principal   outstanding
     thereunder, shall bear interest  at  its Applicable Interest Rate. The
     principal amount of and the interest accrued  under  each Note made by
     Borrower pursuant to Section 2.2 above shall be repaid,  converted  or
     rolled  over  by  the  Borrower  on  the Payment Date indicated in the
     applicable Request for Loan, but in no  event  later  than ninety (90)
     days  after  the date of advance for such Note. At the Maturity  Date,
     the entire balance  of all Notes then outstanding and all then accrued
     and unpaid interest thereon, shall be due and payable.  The amount and
     date of each Loan, the Applicable Interest Rates, the Interest Periods
     and the amount and date  of  any  repayment  shall  be noted on Bank's
     records,  which  records  will be conclusive evidence thereof,  absent
     manifest error; provided, however,  any  failure by Bank to record any
     such information shall not relieve Company of its obligations to repay
     the  outstanding  principal  amount  of  the Loans,  accrued  interest
     thereon,  and  any  other  amounts  payable by  Company  hereunder  in
     accordance with the terms of this Agreement.   All payments by Company
     to Bank under or pursuant to this Agreement or any  of  the other Loan
     Documents,  whether  principal, interest or otherwise, shall  be  made
     without setoff, deduction  or  counterclaim  on the date specified for
     such payment, in immediately available funds, (i) if payment is due in
     Dollars, to Comerica at Comerica Tower at Detroit Center, 500 Woodward
     Avenue, Detroit, Michigan, account no. 1851-355014 and (ii) if payment
     is due in Pesos, to CBM, at account no. 7336-0201.  Principal  amounts
     repaid  may  be subsequently reborrowed provided no Advance may mature
     after the Maturity  Date. Each payment by or on behalf of the Borrower
     hereunder shall, unless  a specific determination is made by Bank with
     respect thereto, be applied  (A)  first,  to any fees, costs, expenses
     and other amounts (other than principal and  interest)  due  Bank; (B)
     second,  to  accrued  and  unpaid interest and fees due Bank; and  (C)
     third, to principal due Bank.

          2.4 REQUESTS FOR LOANS.  Borrower  may request Advances under the
     Revolving  Loans  by  delivery  to Bank of a  Request  for  Loan  form
     executed by an authorized officer  of  Borrower  and  subject  to  the
     following:

     (A)  EACH  SUCH  REQUEST FOR LOAN SHALL INDICATE THE CURRENCY TO WHICH
          IT RELATES AND  SHALL SET FORTH ALL OTHER INFORMATION REQUIRED ON
          THE REQUEST FOR LOAN FORM;

     (B)  EACH SUCH REQUEST  FOR  LOAN  SHALL BE DELIVERED TO BANK BY 10:00
          A.M. (DETROIT TIME) THREE (3) BUSINESS DAYS PRIOR TO THE PROPOSED
          DATE OF LOAN, EXCEPT IN THE CASE  OF A TIIE-BASED LOAN, FOR WHICH
          THE REQUEST FOR LOAN MUST BE DELIVERED BY 10:00 A.M. (MEXICO CITY
          TIME) ON SUCH PROPOSED DATE;

     (C)  THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF SUCH ADVANCE,  SHALL BE AT LEAST $500,000
          (OR THE EQUIVALENT AMOUNT OF PESOS);

     (D)  A  REQUEST  FOR  LOAN,  ONCE  DELIVERED  TO BANK,  SHALL  NOT  BE
          REVOCABLE BY BORROWER;

     (E)  EACH  REQUEST  FOR LOAN SHALL CONSTITUTE A CERTIFICATION  BY  THE
          BORROWER AS OF THE  DATE  THEREOF  THAT ALL OF THE CONDITIONS SET
          FORTH IN SECTION 4.15 HEREOF ARE SATISFIED AS OF THE DATE OF SUCH
          REQUEST AND SHALL BE SATISFIED AS OF  THE  DATE  SUCH  ADVANCE IS
          REQUESTED; AND

     (F)  THE  PRINCIPAL  AMOUNT  REQUESTED,  TOGETHER  WITH  THE PRINCIPAL
          AMOUNT OF ALL OTHER OUTSTANDING ADVANCES UNDER THE REVOLVING LOAN
          SHALL  NOT  EXCEED  THE REVOLVING MAXIMUM AND IF THE REQUEST  FOR
          LOAN  IS FOR AN ADVANCE  IN  PESOS,  THEN  THE  PRINCIPAL  AMOUNT
          REQUESTED  TOGETHER  WITH  THE  PRINCIPAL  AMOUNT  OF  ALL  OTHER
          OUTSTANDING PESOS ADVANCES SHALL NOT EXCEED THE PESOS SUBFACILITY
          MAXIMUM.

          2.5  LIBOR-BASED  RATE.  Interest  on each LIBOR-based Loan shall
     accrue at the LIBOR-based Rate, and shall  be  payable on the last day
     of the Interest Period applicable thereto. Interest  accruing  at  the
     LIBOR-based  Rate shall be computed on the basis of a 360 day year and
     shall be assessed for the actual number of days elapsed from the first
     day of the Interest  Period  applicable  thereto to, but not including
     the last day thereof.

          2.6  FEDERAL  FUNDS-BASED RATE. In the  event  that  the  Federal
     Funds-based Rate is  required  to  be  the  Applicable  Interest  Rate
     pursuant to this Agreement, interest on the unpaid balance of the Loan
     from  time  to time outstanding shall accrue until paid at a per annum
     rate equal to  the  Federal  Funds-based  Rate,  and  shall be payable
     monthly  on the first Business Day closest to the first  day  of  each
     succeeding  month  and in such event Company shall execute and deliver
     to Bank a note (in the form attached hereto as Exhibit B; the "Federal
     Funds-based Rate Note") evidencing the Federal Funds-based Rate as the
     Applicable  Interest   Rate  on  or  before  48  hours  prior  to  the
     commencement of such period  in  which the Federal Funds-based Rate is
     the Applicable Interest Rate. Interest  accruing at the Federal Funds-
     based Rate shall be computed on the basis  of a 360 day year and shall
     be assessed for the actual number of days elapsed (including the first
     day,  but  not  the  last  day  that the Federal Funds-based  Rate  is
     applicable), and in such computation,  effect  shall  be  given to any
     change  in  the  Federal  Funds-based  Rate  on the date of each  such
     change.

          2.7  TIIE-BASED  RATE.  Interest  on each TIIE-based  Loan  shall
     accrue at the TIIE-based Rate, and shall be payable on the last day of
     the Interest Period applicable thereto. Interest accruing at the TIIE-
     based Rate shall be computed on the basis  of a 360 day year and shall
     be assessed for the actual number of days elapsed  from  the first day
     of  the  Interest Period applicable thereto to, but not including  the
     last day thereof.

          2.8 CETES-BASED  RATE.  Interest  on  the  unpaid balance of each
     CETES-based Loan from time to time outstanding shall accrue until paid
     at  a  per  annum  rate equal to the CETES-based Rate,  and  shall  be
     payable monthly on the  first Business Day closest to the first day of
     each succeeding month and  in  such  event  Company  shall execute and
     deliver to Bank a note (in the form attached hereto as  Exhibit C; the
     "CETES-based  Rate  Note")  evidencing  the  CETES-based Rate  as  the
     Applicable  Interest  Rate  on  or  before  48  hours   prior  to  the
     commencement  of  such  period  in which the CETES-based Rate  is  the
     Applicable Interest Rate. Interest  accruing  at  the CETES-based Rate
     shall be computed on the basis of a 360 day year and shall be assessed
     for the actual number of days elapsed (including the  first  day,  but
     not the last day that the CETES-based Rate is applicable), and in such
     computation,  effect  shall  be given to any change in the CETES-based
     Rate on the date of each such change.

          2.9 INTEREST PAYMENTS UPON  REFUNDINGS.  Notwithstanding anything
     to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, all  accrued  and  unpaid
     interest on any Loan which is refunded pursuant to Section 2.11 hereof
     shall  be  due  and payable in full on the date such Loan is refunded,
     together with any  amounts  payable  under  Section  3.1  hereof  if a
     refunding  of  a TIIE-based Loan occurs on any day other than the last
     day of the Interest Period applicable thereto.

          2.10 DEFAULT  INTEREST.  Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
     set forth herein, in the event  that  and  so long as there exists any
     default in payment hereunder (including, without  limitation,  failure
     to pay indebtedness under the Loan on any accelerated date for payment
     thereof), (a) interest shall be payable on the principal amount of all
     LIBOR-based  Loans  from  time to time outstanding at a per annum rate
     equal to the Applicable Interest  Rate  for  each  such  Loan plus two
     percent (2%) per annum, (b) at all other times when the Federal Funds-
     based Rate is in effect, interest shall be payable at a per annum rate
     equal  to the Federal Funds-based Rate plus two percent (2%),  (c)  at
     all other  times when the TIIE-based Rate is in effect, interest shall
     be payable at  a  per annum rate equal to the TIIE-based Rate plus two
     percent (2%), and (d)  at all other times when the CETES-based Rate is
     in effect, interest shall  be payable at a per annum rate equal to the
     CETES-based Rate plus two percent  (2%).  Any  interest accruing under
     this Section 2.10 shall be payable upon demand.

          2.11  REFUNDINGS.  Subject  to the payment of  any  break-funding
     reimbursements/prepayment premiums set forth in Section 3.1, as to any
     outstanding LIBOR-based Loan or TIIE-based  Loan, Borrower may convert
     any  LIBOR-based  Loan  to  a  TIIE-based  Loan  (provided   there  is
     availability  under Pesos Subfacility) or convert any TIIE-based  Loan
     to a LIBOR-based  Loan  or  continue  a LIBOR-based Loan or TIIE-based
     Loan, by making a written request therefore to the Comerica or CBM, as
     the case may be, by facsimile, specifying  (a)  the  principal  amount
     that  is  to  bear  interest  at the LIBOR Rate or TIIE-based Rate and
     (b) the Interest Period selected  by  Borrower  during which the LIBOR
     Rate  or TIIE-based Rate, as the case may be, is to  be  applied.  Any
     conversion  requested  by  Borrower must be in an amount not less than
     $500,000 or the Equivalent Amount  of  Pesos. Following the expiration
     of the Interest Period for any LIBOR-based Loan or TIIE-based Loan, as
     the case may be, interest shall automatically  accrue (x) if such Loan
     is  a  LIBOR-based  Loan,  at the Federal Funds Rate  unless  Borrower
     requests and receives another  LIBOR-based  Loan  as  provided in this
     Section 2.11 or (y) if such Loan is a TIIE-based Loan,  at  the  CETES
     Rate unless Borrower requests and receives another TIIE-based Loan  as
     provided in this Section 2.11.

          2.12  PREPAYMENTS. Company may prepay (without premium or penalty
     but subject  to  Article  3) all or part of the outstanding balance of
     the Loan at any time during  any  period when it bears interest at the
     Federal  Funds-based  Rate  or  the CETES-based  Rate.  Upon  two  (2)
     Business Days prior written notice  to Bank, Company may prepay all or
     part of any LIBOR-based Loan or any TIIE-based  Loan,  provided  that:
     (a)  the  amount  of  any  such  partial  prepayment shall be at least
     $500,000  (or  the  Equivalent  Amount of Pesos)  or  the  outstanding
     balance of such Loan, whichever is  less;  and  (b) if such prepayment
     occurs  on other than the last day of the Interest  Period  therefore,
     Company shall  pay  accrued  interest  on  the amount prepaid and such
     other amounts as are required pursuant to Section 3.1 hereof, together
     with such prepayment.

          2.13 PAYMENTS ON NON-BUSINESS DAY. Subject  to  the definition of
     "Interest Period" in this Agreement, in the event that  any payment of
     principal,  interest,  fees  or  any other amounts payable by  Company
     under this Agreement is due on any  day  which  is not a Business Day,
     such due date shall be extended to the next succeeding  Business  Day,
     and,  to  the extent applicable, interest shall continue to accrue and
     be payable for any such extension.

          2.14 REVIEW  DATE.  Without  commitment by either party, Bank and
     Borrower agree to review the Agreement  prior to the Maturity Date and
     consider  an  extension  of  the  Maturity  Date,  subject  to  Bank's
     satisfaction, with the financial performance and economic situation of
     Borrower.

          2.15 UPFRONT FEE. Borrower shall pay CBM  on  the Effective Date:
     (i)  an up-front fee equal to US $150,000.00, calculated  by  applying
     0.5% to  US  $30,000,000.00;  and (ii)  US $22,500.00 representing the
     VAT  on  such  fee. CBM agrees to  promptly  deliver  to  Borrower  an
     original official  invoice  with respect to such payment in accordance
     with applicable laws.

          2.16 COMMITMENT FEE. Unless  this  Agreement is sooner terminated
     (in which case the Commitment Fee shall be  prorated  and payable upon
     such termination), following the first anniversary of this  Agreement,
     Borrower  shall  pay  Bank  a commitment fee calculated by multiplying
     0.250% by the average monthly  unutilized  amount of US $30,000,000.00
     measured from the first anniversary date from  the  execution  of this
     Agreement  to  the  second anniversary date from the execution of this
     Agreement and each anniversary date thereof until the Maturity Date.

          2.17 RECEIPT OF PAYMENTS. Any payments hereunder received by Bank
     after: (i) 2:00 p.m.  Detroit  time  for payments in Dollars, and (ii)
     2:00 p.m. Mexico City time for payments  in  Pesos,  shall  be  deemed
     received by Bank on the next Business Day.

          2.18  USE  OF  LOAN  PROCEEDS.  Borrower  shall use the principal
     amount of the Loan for its and its Subsidiaries' working capital needs
     and the general corporate needs of the Affiliates.

          2.19 REDUCTIONS OF REVOLVING LOAN COMMITMENT.  Upon at least five
     (5)  days'  prior  written  notice  (or  telephonic  notice   promptly
     confirmed  in  writing)  from  the  Borrower to the Bank, the Borrower
     shall  have  the right, without premium  or  penalty,  to  reduce  the
     Revolving Loan  Commitment  in part or to terminate the Revolving Loan
     Commitment  in  whole,  provided  that  (i)  any  partial  termination
     pursuant to this Section  2.19  shall  be  in  an  amount  of at least
     $1,000,000 (or the Equivalent Amount of Pesos) and integral  multiples
     of  $500,000  (or  the  Equivalent  Amount of Pesos), and (ii) no such
     reduction shall be permitted which would  reduce  the  Revolving  Loan
     Commitment  to an amount less than the aggregate outstanding principal
     amount of the  Revolving  Loans.  If  the Revolving Loan Commitment is
     reduced to amount less than the Pesos Subfacility  Maximum,  the Pesos
     Subfacility Maximum shall automatically be deemed reduced to an amount
     equal to the Revolving Loan Commitment.

     3.   SPECIAL PROVISIONS, CHANGES IN CIRCUMSTANCES AND YIELD PROTECTION

          3.1 BREAK-FUNDING REIMBURSEMENTS/PREPAYMENT PREMIUMS. If  Company
     makes any payment of principal with respect to any LIBOR-based Loan or
     any TIIE-based Loan on any day other than the last day of the Interest
     Period  applicable  thereto (whether voluntarily, by acceleration,  or
     otherwise), or if Company  fails  to  borrow  any  LIBOR-based Loan or
     TIIE-based  Loan  after notice has been given by Company  to  Bank  in
     accordance with the  terms  of  this  Agreement  requesting such Loan,
     Company  shall  reimburse  Bank,  within  thirty (30) days  of  Bank's
     demand, for any resulting loss, cost or expense  incurred by Bank as a
     result thereof, including, without limitation, any  such loss, cost or
     expense incurred in obtaining, liquidating, employing  or  redeploying
     deposits  from  third  parties  (but excluding any loss of anticipated
     margin over Bank's cost of funds).  Such  amount payable by Company to
     Bank may include, without limitation, an amount  equal  to the excess,
     if any, of (a) the amount of interest which would have accrued  on the
     amount so prepaid, or not so borrowed or refunded, for the period from
     the  date  of  such prepayment or of such failure to borrow or refund,
     through  the  last  day  of  the  relevant  Interest  Period,  at  the
     Applicable Interest  Rate for said Loan provided under this Agreement,
     over (b) the amount of  interest  (as  reasonably  determined by Bank)
     which would have accrued to Bank on such amount by placing such amount
     on deposit for a comparable period with leading banks  in the relevant
     interbank  market.  Calculation of any amounts payable to  Bank  under
     this Section 3.1 shall  be  made  as  though  Bank shall have actually
     funded  or committed to fund the relevant LIBOR-based  Loan  or  TIIE-
     based Loan  through the purchase of an underlying deposit in an amount
     equal to the  amount  of such Loan and having a maturity comparable to
     the relevant Interest Period;  provided,  however,  that Bank may fund
     any LIBOR-based Loan or TIIE-based Loan in any manner it deems fit and
     the foregoing assumptions shall be utilized only for  the  purpose  of
     the  calculation  of  amounts  payable  under  this  Section. Upon the
     written   request  of  Company,  Bank  shall  deliver  to  Company   a
     certificate   setting   forth  the  basis  in  reasonable  detail  for
     determining such losses,  costs  and expenses, which certificate shall
     be conclusively presumed correct, absent manifest error.

          3.2 ILLEGALITY. If, after the  date  hereof, the introduction of,
     or any change in, any applicable law, rule  or  regulation  or  in the
     interpretation or administration thereof by any governmental authority
     charged   with   the  interpretation  or  administration  thereof,  or
     compliance by Bank  (or  its  LIBOR  Lending  Office  or  TIIE Lending
     Office) with any request or directive (whether or not having the force
     of  law)  of  any such authority, shall make it unlawful or impossible
     for Bank (or its LIBOR Lending Office or TIIE Lending Office) to honor
     its obligations  hereunder to make or maintain any LIBOR-based Loan or
     TIIE-based Loan under this Agreement, Bank shall forthwith give notice
     thereof to Company.  Thereafter,  until Bank notifies Company that the
     circumstance giving rise to such suspension  no  longer exists (a) the
     obligation of Bank to make LIBOR-based Loans or TIIE-based  Loans  and
     the  right of Company to request LIBOR-based Loans or TIIE-based Loans
     and to  convert a Loan or refund a Loan as a LIBOR-based Loan or TIIE-
     based Loan shall be suspended, and thereafter, the Federal Funds-based
     Rate shall  be  the  Applicable Interest Rate, and (b) if Bank may not
     lawfully continue to maintain  a LIBOR-based Loan or a TIIE-based Loan
     to the end of the then current Interest Period applicable thereto, the
     Federal Funds-based Rate shall be the Applicable Interest Rate for the
     remainder of such Interest Period  for  such  LIBOR-based Loan and the
     CETES-based Rate for such TIIE-based Loan as applicable. To the extent
     that doing so will not be, in Bank's sole judgment, disadvantageous to
     Bank, if doing so will eliminate the need to suspend  LIBOR-based Loan
     CETES-based Loan availability pursuant to this Section  3.2  Bank will
     designate a different LIBOR Lending Office or TIIE Lending Office  for
     the Loans hereunder.

          3.3  INCREASED  COSTS.  If the adoption after the date hereof, or
     any change after the date hereof  in,  any  applicable  law,  rule  or
     regulation  of  any governmental authority, central bank or comparable
     agency charged with  the  interpretation or administration thereof, or
     compliance  by Bank (or its  LIBOR  Lending  Office  or  TIIE  Lending
     Office) with any request or directive (whether or not having the force
     of law) made  by any such authority, central bank or comparable agency
     after the date hereof:

     (A)  SHALL SUBJECT  BANK  (OR ITS LIBOR LENDING OFFICE OR TIIE LENDING
          OFFICE) TO ANY TAX, DUTY  OR  OTHER  CHARGE  WITH  RESPECT TO ANY
          LOAN, THE NOTES, OR ANY OF THE INDEBTEDNESS UNDER THIS AGREEMENT,
          OR SHALL CHANGE THE BASIS OF TAXATION OF PAYMENTS TO BANK (OR ITS
          LIBOR LENDING OFFICE OR TIIE LENDING OFFICE) OF THE  PRINCIPAL OF
          OR  INTEREST  ON  ANY LOAN, THE NOTES, OR ANY OF THE INDEBTEDNESS
          UNDER  THIS AGREEMENT,  OR  ANY  OTHER  AMOUNTS  DUE  UNDER  THIS
          AGREEMENT  IN  RESPECT THEREOF (EXCEPT FOR CHANGES IN THE RATE OF
          TAX ON THE OVERALL NET INCOME OF BANK OR ITS LIBOR LENDING OFFICE
          OR TIIE LENDING  OFFICE  IMPOSED  BY  THE  JURISDICTION  IN WHICH
          BANK'S PRINCIPAL EXECUTIVE OFFICE OR LIBOR LENDING OFFICE OR TIIE
          LENDING OFFICE IS LOCATED); OR

     (B)  SHALL  IMPOSE,  MODIFY OR DEEM APPLICABLE ANY RESERVE (INCLUDING,
          (TO THE EXTENT NOT  PROVIDED ELSEWHERE IN THIS AGREEMENT) WITHOUT
          LIMITATION, ANY IMPOSED  BY THE BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL
          RESERVE SYSTEM), SPECIAL DEPOSIT  OR  SIMILAR REQUIREMENT AGAINST
          ASSETS  OF,  DEPOSITS  WITH  OR  FOR THE ACCOUNT  OF,  OR  CREDIT
          EXTENDED BY BANK (OR ITS LIBOR LENDING OFFICE) OR SHALL IMPOSE ON
          BANK (OR ITS LIBOR LENDING OFFICE)  OR  THE  FOREIGN EXCHANGE AND
          INTERBANK  MARKETS ANY OTHER CONDITION AFFECTING  ANY  LOAN,  THE
          NOTES, OR ANY INDEBTEDNESS UNDER THIS AGREEMENT;

and the result of any  of  the foregoing is to increase the cost to Bank of
maintaining any part of the  indebtedness hereunder or to reduce the amount
of any sum received or receivable  by Bank under this Agreement, the Notes,
or any of the indebtedness hereunder,  by  an  amount  reasonably deemed by
Bank  to  be material, then Company shall pay to Bank, within  thirty  (30)
days of Company's  receipt  of  written  notice  from  Bank  demanding such
compensation,   such  additional  amount  or  amounts  as  will  reasonably
compensate Bank for  such  increased  cost or reduction. Bank will promptly
notify Company of any event of which it  has  knowledge  which will entitle
Bank  to compensation pursuant to this Section 3.3. A certificate  of  Bank
setting   forth  the  basis  in  reasonable  detail  for  determining  such
additional  amount  or  amounts  necessary  to  compensate  Bank  shall  be
conclusively presumed to be correct, absent manifest error.

          3.4 CAPITAL ADEQUACY. In the event that after the Effective Date,
     any  applicable  law,  treaty, rule or regulation (whether domestic or
     foreign) now or hereafter  in  effect  and  whether  or  not presently
     applicable to Bank, or any interpretation or administration thereof by
     any   governmental  authority  charged  with  the  interpretation   or
     administration  thereof,  or  compliance  by  Bank with any guideline,
     request or directive of any such authority (whether  or not having the
     force of law), including any risk-based capital guidelines, affects or
     would  affect  the  amount  of  capital  required  or expected  to  be
     maintained by the Bank (or any corporation controlling  the Bank), and
     the Bank determines that the amount of such capital is increased by or
     based  upon the existence of any obligations of the Bank hereunder  or
     the making  or maintaining any Loans, and such increase has the effect
     of  reducing the  rate  of  return  on  Bank's  (or  such  controlling
     corporation's)  capital  as  a  consequence of such obligations or the
     making or maintaining such Loans  to a level below that which the Bank
     (or such controlling corporation) could  have  achieved  but  for such
     circumstances (taking into consideration its policies with respect  to
     capital  adequacy), then Company shall pay to Bank, within thirty (30)
     days of Company's  receipt  of written notice from Bank demanding such
     compensation, additional amounts sufficient to compensate the Bank (or
     such controlling corporation)  for  any  increase  in  the  amount  of
     capital and reduced rate of return which Bank reasonably determines to
     be  allocable to the existence of any obligations of Bank hereunder or
     to the  making  or  maintaining  any  Loans  hereunder or otherwise in
     respect of any of the indebtedness hereunder.  A  certificate  of Bank
     setting  forth  the  basis  in  reasonable detail for determining such
     additional amounts necessary to compensate  Bank shall be conclusively
     presumed   correct,   absent   manifest  error.  Notwithstanding   the
     foregoing, Company shall not be  required  to compensate Bank pursuant
     to  this  Section  for any period prior to the  ninetieth  (90th)  day
     preceding the date of Bank's demand for such compensation.

          3.5 TAXES. Notwithstanding  anything  to  the  contrary contained
     herein,  all payments to be made by Company under this  Agreement  and
     the Notes shall be made without set-off or counterclaim, as aforesaid,
     and without  deduction  for  or  on  account  of any present or future
     withholding or other taxes of any nature imposed  by  any governmental
     authority  of  Mexico or of any political subdivision thereof  or  any
     federation or organization of which such governmental authority may at
     the time of payment be a member, unless Company is compelled by law to
     make payment subject to such tax. In such event, Company shall:

     (A)  PAY TO THE  BANK  SUCH  ADDITIONAL AMOUNTS AS MAY BE NECESSARY TO
          ENSURE THAT THE BANK RECEIVES  A  NET AMOUNT IN DOLLARS OR PESOS,
          AS THE CASE MAY BE, EQUAL TO THE FULL  AMOUNT  WHICH  WOULD  HAVE
          BEEN  RECEIVABLE  HAD  PAYMENT NOT BEEN MADE SUBJECT TO SUCH TAX;
          AND

     (B)  REMIT SUCH TAX TO THE RELEVANT  TAXING  AUTHORITIES  ACCORDING TO
          APPLICABLE  LAW,  AND  SEND  TO BANK WITHIN FORTY FIVE (45)  DAYS
          FOLLOWING THE DATE IN WHICH SUCH  TAX  IS  DUE  AND  PAYABLE SUCH
          CERTIFICATES  OR  CERTIFIED  RECEIPTS  AS  BANK  SHALL REASONABLE
          REQUIRE AS PROOF OF THE PAYMENT BY THE COMPANY OF ANY SUCH TAXES;
          PROVIDED,  THAT  BANK  SHALL  PROMPTLY  REIMBURSE TO BORROWER  AN
          AMOUNT IN DOLLARS EQUAL TO THE AMOUNT, IF  ANY,  OF  ANY SUCH TAX
          CREDITS  ACTUALLY  USED BY BANK TO OFFSET ITS TAX LIABILITIES  IN
          THE UNITED STATES OF  AMERICA  ON  ITS  FOREIGN SOURCE INCOME, IN
          ACCORDANCE  WITH  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA  TAX  REGULATIONS.  IN
          CONNECTION THEREWITH,  BANK SHALL ENDEAVOR TO OBTAIN FROM THE TAX
          AUTHORITIES OF THE UNITED  STATES  OF AMERICA A TAX CREDIT ON ANY
          MEXICAN INCOME TAX WITHHELD FROM INTEREST  PAYMENTS  RECEIVED  BY
          BANK HEREUNDER AND THE NOTES.

      THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION SHALL SURVIVE TERMINATION HEREOF.

As  used  herein,  the  terms  "tax",  "taxes"  and  "taxation" include all
existing  taxes,  levies,  imposts, duties, charges, fees,  deductions  and
withholdings and any restrictions  or  conditions  resulting  in  a  charge
together with interest thereon and fines and penalties with respect thereto
which  may  be  imposed  by  any governmental authority of Mexico or of any
political subdivision thereof  or  any  federation or organization of which
such governmental authority may at the time  of  payment  be  a  member  by
reason  of  any violation or default with respect to the law regarding such
tax, assessed  as  a  result  of  or in connection with the transactions in
Dollars or Pesos, as the case may be, the payment or delivery of funds into
or out of any jurisdiction other than  the  United  States of America or to
non-Mexican   residents  (whether  assessed  against  Company   or   Bank).
Notwithstanding  the foregoing or anything contained herein or in any other
Loan Document to the  contrary, it is understood and agreed that the CETES-
based Rate, the Federal  Funds-based  Rate,  the  LIBOR-based  Rate and the
TIIE-based   Rate  expressly  provides  for  the  payment  by  Borrower  of
withholding for  Mexican  Income  taxes  applicable to interest payments to
Bank hereunder and the Notes.

          3.6 CURRENCY INDEMNITY.  The Bank  will  make  all  advances  and
     disbursements  in Dollars or Pesos, as the case may be, and Company is
     bound to repay the  Loan  in Dollars, if such advance was disbursed by
     the Company in Dollars and  in  Pesos if such advance was disbursed by
     the Company in Pesos, accordingly, the parties agree that:

     (A)  IN THE EVENT OF A JUDGMENT OR  ORDER  BEING RENDERED BY ANY COURT
          OR TRIBUNAL HAVING JURISDICTION THEREOF,  FOR  THE PAYMENT OF ANY
          AMOUNTS  OWED TO THE BANK UNDER A LIBOR-BASED LOAN,  OR  FOR  THE
          PAYMENT OF  DAMAGES  RESULTING FROM ANY BREACH OF THIS LOAN OR OF
          THE  LOAN DOCUMENTS AND  IF  SUCH  JUDGMENT  OR  ORDER  IS  BEING
          EXPRESSED IN A CURRENCY OTHER THAN DOLLARS ("JUDGMENT CURRENCY"),
          THE COMPANY HEREBY AGREES TO INDEMNIFY AND HOLD HARMLESS THE BANK
          AGAINST ANY DEFICIENCY IN TERMS OF DOLLARS IN THE AMOUNT RECEIVED
          BY THE  BANK  ARISING  OUT OR RESULTING FROM ANY VARIATION IN (I)
          THE RATE OF EXCHANGE AT  WHICH  DOLLARS  ARE  CONVERTED  INTO THE
          JUDGMENT  CURRENCY  AND,  (II) THE RATE OF EXCHANGE AT WHICH  THE
          BANK IS ABLE TO PURCHASE DOLLARS  WITH THE AMOUNT OF THE JUDGMENT
          CURRENCY  ACTUALLY  RECEIVED  BY THE BANK  ON  THE  BUSINESS  DAY
          FOLLOWING SUCH RECEIPT.

     (B)  THE ABOVE INDEMNITY SHALL CONSTITUTE  A  SEPARATE AND INDEPENDENT
          OBLIGATION  OF  THE  COMPANY  FROM ITS OTHER OBLIGATIONS  ASSUMED
          HEREUNDER   OR  UNDER  THE  LOAN  DOCUMENTS   AND   SHALL   APPLY
          IRRESPECTIVE  OF  ANY INDULGENCE GRANTED BY THE BANK AND NO PROOF
          OR EVIDENCE OF ANY  ACTUAL LOSS SHALL BE REQUIRED BY THE COMPANY.
          THE ABOVE INDEMNITY SHALL  ALSO APPLY IN THE EVENT FOR ANY REASON
          THE COMPANY MAKES PAYMENT TO  THE  BANK  IN A CURRENCY OTHER THAN
          DOLLARS, EXCEPT FOR PAYMENTS IN PESOS  MADE  UNDER  A  TIIE-BASED
          LOAN OR CETES-BASED LOAN.

     (C)  THE TERM RATE OF EXCHANGE SHALL INCLUDE ANY PREMIUMS, COMMISSIONS
          AND COSTS OF EXCHANGE PAYABLE IN CONNECTION WITH THE PURCHASE OF,
          OR CONVERSION INTO DOLLARS.

          3.7  ALTERNATIVE INTEREST RATE. Notwithstanding anything  to  the
     contrary contained herein:

     (a)  If Bank  determines that by virtue of circumstances affecting the
          LIBOR market  or  in  the event that such rate does not appear on
          Page BBAM of the Bloomberg  Financial Markets Information Service
          (or otherwise on such Service) or if the Reserve Requirements are
          applicable to Bank or for any  other  reason  set  forth  in this
          Section  3,  adequate  and  reasonable  means  do  not  exist  to
          determine  or  maintain  the LIBOR Rate applicable to the Loan or
          such event has the effect  of reducing the Bank's rate of return,
          Bank shall notify Borrower that  the  LIBOR-based  Rate  shall no
          longer  be  the  Applicable Interest Rate and Federal Funds-based
          Rate shall be the Applicable Interest Rate.  In such event, on or
          before 48 hours prior to the commencement of such period in which
          the Federal Funds-based  Rate  is  the  Applicable Interest Rate,
          Borrower  shall execute and deliver to Bank  the  Federal  Funds-
          based Rate  Note.   Thereafter, until it is reasonably determined
          by Bank and notified  to  Borrower  that  such  circumstances  no
          longer  exist, the right of Borrower to request the applicability
          of a LIBOR-based Rate on the Loan shall be suspended and Borrower
          shall only be permitted to request the applicability of a Federal
          Funds-based Rate on the Loan.

     (b)  Borrower hereby agrees that in the event Borrower does not accept
          the Federal  Funds-based Rate or fails to execute and deliver the
          Federal Funds-based  Rate  Note  in accordance with this Section,
          then Bank shall be released from its  obligation  to maintain the
          Loan.  In such an event Borrower shall pay without  any  penalty,
          precisely  on  the  next succeeding date in which the payment  of
          interest is due, the  principal  amount  of  Loan,  together with
          interest accrued to the date of such payment, in accordance  with
          the Notes.  Borrower hereby also agrees that in the event of such
          payment  all  of  Bank's  obligations  hereunder  shall terminate
          immediately  without  any  liability for Bank.  Bank hereby  also
          agrees that in the event of  payment  in  full  of all Borrower's
          obligations  hereunder,  Borrower's  obligations shall  terminate
          immediately without any liability for Borrower.

     (c)  If Bank determines that by virtue of circumstances  affecting the
          TIIE  market  or in the event that such rate is not published  in
          the  Official  Gazette   or   if  the  Reserve  Requirements  are
          applicable to Bank or for any other  reason  set  forth  in  this
          Section  3,  adequate  and  reasonable  means  do  not  exist  to
          determine  or  maintain  the  TIIE Rate applicable to the Loan or
          such event has the effect of reducing  the Bank's rate of return,
          Bank  shall  notify Borrower that the TIIE-based  Rate  shall  no
          longer be the Applicable Interest Rate and CETES-based Rate shall
          be the Applicable  Interest Rate.  In such event, on or before 48
          hours prior to the commencement  of  such  period  in  which  the
          CETES-based  Rate is the Applicable Interest Rate, Borrower shall
          execute  and  deliver   to   Bank   the  CETES-based  Rate  Note.
          Thereafter,  until  it  is  reasonably  determined  by  Bank  and
          notified to Borrower that such circumstances no longer exist, the
          right of Borrower to request the applicability  of  a  TIIE-based
          Rate  on  the Loan shall be suspended and Borrower shall only  be
          permitted to  request  the applicability of a CETES-based Rate on
          the Loan.

(a)Borrower hereby agrees that in  the  event  Borrower does not accept the
CETES-based Rate or fails to execute and deliver  the CETES-based Rate Note
in  accordance  with  this Section, then Bank shall be  released  from  its
obligation to maintain  the  Loan.   In  such  an  event Borrower shall pay
without any penalty, precisely on the next succeeding  date  in  which  the
payment  of  interest  is  due, the principal amount of Loan, together with
interest accrued to the date of such payment, in accordance with the Notes.
Borrower hereby also agrees that in the event of such payment all of Bank's
obligations hereunder shall terminate immediately without any liability for
Bank.  Bank hereby also agrees  that in the event of payment in full of all
Borrower's obligations hereunder,  Borrower's  obligations  shall terminate
immediately without any liability for Borrower.

     1.        CONDITIONS

     A.   The obligation of Bank to enter into this Agreement is subject to
the following conditions precedent:

          1.1 EXECUTION OF THIS AGREEMENT. Company and the Credit  Parties,
     as applicable, shall have executed and delivered to Bank, or caused to
     have  been  executed  and  delivered  to the Bank, this Agreement, the
     Guaranty (FIANZA SOLIDARIA), and all other  applicable  Loan Documents
     (except  the Security Documents), (including all schedules,  exhibits,
     certificates, opinions, financial statements and other documents to be
     delivered pursuant hereto), and such Loan Documents (when executed and
     delivered  to  Bank) shall be in full force and effect and binding and
     enforceable obligations  of  Company  and any other Credit Parties who
     may  be parties thereto, except to the extent  limited  by  applicable
     bankruptcy, insolvency or other insolvency laws.

          1.2  COMPANY  AUTHORITY  DOCUMENTS.   Bank  shall  have  received
     certified  copies  of  Company's  charter  and  estatutos sociales and
     powers of attorney in form acceptable to Bank.

          1.3  GUARANTOR'S  AUTHORITY DOCUMENTS. Bank shall  have  received
     certified copies of each  Mexican  Guarantor's  estatutos sociales and
     powers of attorney in form acceptable to Bank. With  respect to the US
     Guarantor,  Bank  shall  have received a certificate of good  standing
     from the Secretary of State  for  the State of Delaware and such other
     documentation  as Bank may reasonably  request  to  confirm  that  the
     Guaranty executed  by  the  US  Guarantor  has  been  duly authorized,
     executed and delivered.

          1.4  CERTIFICATES.  Bank  shall  have  received a Certificate  of
     Secretary and an Officer's Certificate from each  of  the  Company and
     Guarantors  (other  than  the  US Guarantor) in the form set forth  in
     Schedule 4.4(A), attached hereto.

          1.5  REPRESENTATIONS  AND  WARRANTIES.  The  representations  and
     warranties made by Company, and any other Person who is a party to any
     of  the  Loan Documents, under this  Agreement  or  any  of  the  Loan
     Documents,  and  the  representations  and  warranties  of  any of the
     foregoing  made  to  Bank  which  are  contained  in  any certificate,
     document  or  financial  or  other  statement  furnished  at any  time
     hereunder or thereunder or in connection herewith or therewith,  shall
     have been true and correct in all material respects when made.

          1.6 COMPLIANCE WITH CERTAIN DOCUMENTS AND AGREEMENTS. Company and
     any  other  Person  who  is a party to any of the Loan Documents shall
     have each performed and complied  in  all  material  respects with all
     agreements  and conditions contained in the Loan Documents  applicable
     to it which have  been  (or  will  be) delivered pursuant to the terms
     hereunder and are then in effect.

          1.7  OPINION  OF  COUNSEL.  Company  shall  have  furnished  Bank
     opinions of counsel to Company and  the  Guarantors,  dated  the  date
     hereof, and covering such matters as required by Bank in substantially
     the  form attached hereto as Schedule 4.7, provided, however, that all
     opinions  with  respect  to  the Notes and Security Documents shall be
     condition to the funding of the initial Loan under Article 4 B below.

          1.8 NO MATERIAL ADVERSE EFFECT;  NO  DEFAULT. No Default or Event
     of Default shall have occurred and be continuing  and there shall have
     been  no  Material  Adverse  Effect  with  respect  to  the  condition
     (financial or otherwise), properties, business, results or  operations
     of  the  Credit Parties since the date of the financial statements  of
     Company and/or Guarantors mentioned in Section 5.17 hereof.

          1.9 PROCESS  AGENT  APPOINTMENT. The Company has furnished to the
     Bank evidence that the Process Agent has been duly appointed, and that
     the Process Agent has accepted such designation.

          1.10 SPECIAL POWER OF  ATTORNEY.  The  Company  and  the  Mexican
     Guarantors have granted an irrevocable special power of attorney under
     Mexican law in favor of the Process Agent.

          1.11  LIEN  SEARCHES.  Bank  shall  have  received  such evidence
     satisfactory to Bank indicating that upon the filing and/or  recording
     of  the  Security  Documents,  Bank's  shall  have  a  first priority,
     perfected lien and/or security interest in the Collateral.

          1.12  COMPLIANCE  WITH  INDENTURE.  Bank  shall have received  an
     opinion  of  counsel  to  the US Guarantor and a certificate  from  an
     officer of the US Guarantor,  in  form  and  substance satisfactory to
     Bank, indicating that this Agreement does not violate the terms of the
     Indenture.

          1.13 OTHER DOCUMENTS AND INSTRUMENTS. Bank  shall  have  received
     such other instruments and documents (not inconsistent with the  terms
     hereof)  as  Bank may reasonably request in connection with the making
     of the Loans hereunder,  and  all such instruments and documents shall
     be reasonably satisfactory in form and substance to the Bank.

          1.14 POWER OF ATTORNEY. The  Board  of Directors of Company shall
     have granted a special power of attorney authorizing  and  identifying
     those individuals of Company authorized to sign the Loan Documents.

          B.  THE  OBLIGATIONS OF BANK TO MAKE THE INITIAL LOAN UNDER  THIS
     AGREEMENT SHALL BE SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING CONDITIONS PRECEDENT:

          1.15 EXECUTION  OF  NOTES AND SECURITY DOCUMENTS. Company and the
     Credit Parties, as applicable,  shall  have  executed and delivered to
     Bank, or caused to have been executed and delivered  to  the  Bank the
     Note  or Notes (PAGAR<e'>S) as may be necessary to evidence the  Loans
     and the  Security  Documents  and all other applicable Loan Documents,
     (including all schedules, exhibits,  certificates, opinions, financial
     statements and other documents to be delivered  pursuant  hereto), not
     executed and delivered under Article 4 A. above, the receipt  by  Bank
     of  evidence  that  the  Security  Documents shall have been filed for
     registration with the applicable governmental  authorities,  and  such
     Loan  Documents (when executed and delivered to Bank) shall be in full
     force and  effect  and  binding and enforceable obligations of Company
     and any other Credit Parties who may be parties thereto, except to the
     extent  limited  by  applicable   bankruptcy,   insolvency   or  other
     insolvency laws. Additionally, the Mortgages (i) shall have been  duly
     granted  by  the applicable Guarantors; (ii) shall have been filed for
     registration with  the relevant Public Registry of Property; (iii) all
     registration and notary public fees have been paid; and (iv) and shall
     constitute a first priority line in favor of the Bank.

          1.16  CERTIFICATES.   Bank   shall  have  received  an  Officer's
     Certificate from each of the Company and Guarantors (other than the US
     Guarantor) in the forms set forth in Schedule 4.4(B) attached hereto.

          1.17 COMPLIANCE WITH CERTAIN DOCUMENTS  AND  AGREEMENTS.  Company
     and any other Person who is a party to any of the Loan Documents shall
     have  each  performed  and  complied in all material respects with all
     agreements and conditions contained  in  the Loan Documents applicable
     to it which have been delivered pursuant to  the  terms  hereunder and
     are then in effect.

          1.18  OPINION  OF  COUNSEL.  Company  shall  have furnished  Bank
     opinions  of  counsel to Company and the Guarantors,  dated  the  date
     hereof, with respect  to the execution, delivery and enforceability of
     the Notes and Security  Documents  in  substantially the form attached
     hereto as Schedule 4.7.

          C. THE OBLIGATIONS OF BANK TO MAKE  A  LOAN  UNDER THIS AGREEMENT
     (INCLUDING  THE  INITIAL  LOAN)  SHALL  BE  SUBJECT  TO THE  FOLLOWING
     CONDITIONS PRECEDENT:

          1.19 NO EVENT OF DEFAULT. As of the date of such Loan, no default
     or  Event of Default shall have occurred and be continuing  and  there
     shall  have  been  no  Material  Adverse  Effect  with  respect to the
     condition (financial or otherwise), properties, business,  results  or
     operations  of  the  Credit  Parties, taken as a whole, since the last
     date  of  the  financial  statements   of  Company  and/or  Guarantors
     delivered to Bank in accordance with Section 6.1 hereof.

          1.20 REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES. As of the date of such Loan,
     the representations and warranties made  by  Company,  and  any  other
     Credit  Party  under  this Agreement or any of the Loan Documents, and
     the representations and  warranties  of  any  of the foregoing made to
     Bank which are contained in any certificate, document  or financial or
     other  statement furnished at any time hereunder or thereunder  or  in
     connection  herewith or therewith, shall have been true and correct in
     all material respects when made.



     2.        REPRESENTATIONS AND WARRANTIES

     Company, and  to the extent applicable, each Guarantor, represents and
warrants, and such  representations  and  warranties  shall be deemed to be
continuing representations and warranties during the entire  life  of  this
Agreement, as follows:

          2.1  DUE  INCORPORATION.  The Borrower and the Mexican Guarantor,
     are corporations duly incorporated and validly existing under the laws
     of  Mexico,  the  US  Guarantor is a  corporation  duly  incorporated,
     validly existing and in  good  standing  under  the laws of the United
     States, and such corporations are duly qualified to do business.

          2.2  CORPORATE  AUTHORITY. Both the Borrower and  the  Guarantors
     have all requisite power  and  authority,  corporate  or otherwise, to
     conduct  their  business, to own their properties and to  execute  and
     deliver, and to perform  all of their obligations under this Agreement
     and the Note(s).

          2.3 DUE EXECUTION. The  execution,  delivery  and  performance of
     this  Agreement  and  the  Note(s)  have been duly authorized  by  all
     necessary corporate and/or shareholder action of both the Borrower and
     the  Guarantors  in  the case of this Agreement,  and  the  respective
     Guarantors in the case of the Guaranty(s), and do not and will not (i)
     violate any provision  of  any  law,  rule,  regulation,  order, writ,
     judgment,  injunction,  decree,  determination  or award presently  in
     effect having applicability to the Borrower or the  Guarantors  or the
     estatutos  sociales,  charter  or  by-laws  of  the  Borrower  or  the
     Guarantors,  (ii) result in a breach or constitute a default under any
     indenture or loan or credit agreement or any other agreement, lease or
     instrument to  which  the Borrower or the Guarantors are a party or by
     which their properties may be bound or affected or (iii) result in, or
     require the creation or  imposition  of  any  mortgage, deed of trust,
     pledge, lien, security interest or other charge  or encumbrance of any
     nature  upon  or with respect to any of the properties  now  owned  or
     hereafter acquired by the Borrower or the Guarantors, and the Borrower
     and the Guarantors  are  not  in  default  under  any  such law, rule,
     regulation,  order, writ, judgment, injunction, decree, determination,
     indenture or agreement, lease or instrument; the result of which would
     render such Loan  Document void or ineffective or result in a Material
     Adverse Effect.

          2.4 ENFORCEABILITY.  This  Agreement constitutes, and the Note(s)
     when  executed  and  delivered  by the  Borrower  and  the  respective
     Guarantors,  as  applicable, will constitute,  the  legal,  valid  and
     binding obligations of the Borrower and of the Guarantors, enforceable
     against the Borrower  and  against  the  Guarantors in accordance with
     their terms.

          2.5  PARI  PASSU. The obligations of the  Borrower,  Avicola  and
     Holding under this  Agreement  and the Note(s) will rank at least pari
     passu with all other present and  future indebtedness of the Borrower,
     Avicola and Holding other than the  obligations  secured  by Permitted
     Liens.

          2.6 LITIGATION. Except as disclosed on Schedule 5.6, there  is no
     action,  suit  or  proceeding pending against, or, to the knowledge of
     the Borrower and/or  the  Guarantors,  threatened against or affecting
     the Borrower or the Guarantors before any  court  or arbitrator or any
     governmental body, agency or official in which there  is  a reasonable
     possibility  of  an adverse decision which could result in a  Material
     Adverse Effect.

          2.7 TAXES. The Borrower and the Mexican Guarantors have filed all
     federal (or State  of  organization)  income tax returns and all other
     material tax returns which are required  to be filed and have paid all
     such taxes due pursuant to such returns or  pursuant to any assessment
     received by the Borrower and by the Mexican Guarantors.  The  charges,
     accruals  and reserves on the books of the Borrower and of the Mexican
     Guarantors  in  respect of taxes or other governmental charges are, in
     the opinion of the Borrower and of the Mexican Guarantors, adequate.

          2.8 COMPLIANCE WITH LAWS. The Borrower and the Mexican Guarantors
     have  complied  with   all   applicable   laws,   ordinances,   rules,
     regulations,  and requirements of governmental authorities (including,
     without limitation,  environmental laws, social security laws, housing
     and pension provisions)  and  have  made  payment  of  all  quotas  or
     contributions   required   to   be   made   thereunder,  except  where
     non-compliance thereof would not reasonably be expected to result in a
     Material Adverse Effect.

          2.9  TITLE TO PROPERTY. Each Credit Party  has,  good  and  valid
     title to all  property  and  assets  purported  to  be  owned  by  it,
     including  those  assets  identified  on the financial statements most
     recently delivered to and accepted by Bank.

          2.10  ENCUMBRANCES. There are no security  interests  in,  liens,
     mortgages, or  other  encumbrances  on  and no financing statements on
     file with respect to, any of the Collateral  other  than the Permitted
     Liens.

          2.11 NON-CONTRAVENTION. The execution, delivery  and  performance
     of  this Agreement and the Loan Documents and any other documents  and
     instruments  required  under  or  in connection with this Agreement by
     Company or the Guarantors are not in contravention of the terms of any
     indenture,  agreement  or  undertaking   to   which   Company  or  the
     Guarantors, as the case may be, is a party or by which  it  is  bound,
     the   result  of  which  would  render  such  Loan  Document  void  or
     ineffective or result in a Material Adverse Effect.

          2.12  CONSENTS,  APPROVALS  AND  FILINGS ETC. Except as have been
     previously  obtained, no authorization,  consent,  approval,  license,
     qualification or formal exemption from, nor any filing, declaration or
     registration  with,  any  court,  environmental  agency  or regulatory
     authority or other governmental body or any securities exchange and no
     material authorization, consent or approval from any other  person  is
     required in connection with the execution, delivery and performance of
     any  Loan  Documents  by  Company  or  the  Guarantors, except for the
     registration of the Security Documents which  must be recorded therein
     in accordance with applicable laws. All such authorizations, consents,
     approvals, licenses, qualifications, exemptions, filings, declarations
     and registrations which have previously been obtained  or made, as the
     case may be, are in full force and effect and are not the  subject  of
     any  attack, or to the knowledge of Company, any threatened attack (in
     any material respect), by appeal or direct proceeding or otherwise.

          2.13 CONTRACTS, AGREEMENTS AND LEASES. Neither Company nor any of
     its Subsidiaries  (if  any)  is  in  default  in  complying  with  any
     provision  of  any  material  contract, agreement, indenture, lease or
     instrument to which it is a party  or  by  which it is or those of its
     properties  or  assets  the  default of which would  have  a  Material
     Adverse Effect, and, to the best  of  Company's  knowledge,  each such
     contract, commitment, undertaking, agreement, indenture and instrument
     is in full force and effect and is valid and legally binding.

          2.14 NO MARGIN STOCK. No Credit Party is engaged principally,  or
     as  one  of  its  important activities, directly or indirectly, in the
     business of extending credit for the purpose of purchasing or carrying
     margin stock, and none  of  the  proceeds of any of the Loans or other
     indebtedness  hereunder  will  be used,  directly  or  indirectly,  to
     purchase or carry any margin stock or made available by a Credit Party
     in any manner to any other Person  to  enable or assist such Person in
     purchasing  or  carrying  margin  stock, or  otherwise  used  or  made
     available for any other purpose which  might violate the provisions of
     Regulations G, T, U, or X of the Board of  Governors  of  the  Federal
     Reserve System.

          2.15 HAZARDOUS MATERIALS.

     (A)  NO CREDIT PARTY HAS USED HAZARDOUS MATERIALS ON OR AFFECTING  ANY
          REAL  PROPERTY  OWNED  OR  OPERATED  BY  BORROWER  OR ANY MEXICAN
          GUARANTOR  (COLLECTIVELY  AND SINGULARLY THE "PREMISES")  IN  ANY
          MANNER WHICH VIOLATES ANY ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS, AND, TO THE BEST OF
          EACH CREDIT PARTY'S KNOWLEDGE,  NO PRIOR OWNER OF THE PREMISES OR
          ANY CURRENT OR PRIOR OCCUPANT HAS  USED HAZARDOUS MATERIALS ON OR
          AFFECTING  THE  PREMISES  IN  ANY  MANNER   WHICH   VIOLATES  ANY
          ENVIRONMENTAL  LAWS,  EXCEPT  WHERE  SUCH  VIOLATION  WOULD   NOT
          REASONABLY  BE  EXPECTED  TO RESULT IN A MATERIAL ADVERSE EFFECT.
          EACH CREDIT PARTY COVENANTS  AND  AGREES THAT NEITHER IT, NOR ANY
          OCCUPANT OF ANY OF THE PREMISES SHALL  USE, INTRODUCE OR MAINTAIN
          HAZARDOUS MATERIALS ON THE PREMISES IN ANY MANNER, UNLESS, IN ALL
          MATERIAL   RESPECTS,   DONE   IN  STRICT  COMPLIANCE   WITH   ALL
          ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS.

     (B)  EACH CREDIT PARTY SHALL DEFEND, INDEMNIFY AND HOLD HARMLESS BANK,
          ITS EMPLOYEES, AGENTS, OFFICERS  AND  DIRECTORS, FROM AND AGAINST
          ANY  AND  ALL  CLAIMS,  DEMANDS, PENALTIES,  FINES,  LIABILITIES,
          SETTLEMENTS, DAMAGES, COSTS  AND  EXPENSES  OF  WHATEVER  KIND OR
          NATURE  ARISING  OUT OF OR RELATED TO (I) THE PRESENCE, DISPOSAL,
          RELEASE OR THREATENED RELEASE OF ANY HAZARDOUS MATERIALS ON, FROM
          OR  AFFECTING  THE  PREMISES  OR  THE  SOIL,  WATER,  VEGETATION,
          BUILDINGS, PERSONAL PROPERTY,  PERSONS  OR  ANIMALS THEREON, (II)
          ANY PERSONAL INJURY (INCLUDING WRONGFUL DEATH) OR PROPERTY DAMAGE
          (REAL OR PERSONAL) ARISING OUT OF OR RELATED  TO  SUCH  HAZARDOUS
          MATERIALS,  (III)  ANY  LAWSUIT BROUGHT OR THREATENED, SETTLEMENT
          REACHED  OR  GOVERNMENTAL  ORDER   RELATING   TO  SUCH  HAZARDOUS
          MATERIALS,  (IV)  THE  COST  OF  REMOVAL  OF  ALL SUCH  HAZARDOUS
          MATERIALS  FROM ALL OR ANY PORTIONS OF THE PREMISES,  (V)  TAKING
          NECESSARY PRECAUTIONS TO PROTECT AGAINST THE RELEASE OF HAZARDOUS
          MATERIALS ON  OR  AFFECTING THE PREMISES, (VI) COMPLYING WITH ALL
          ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS,  AND/OR  (VII) ANY VIOLATION OF ENVIRONMENTAL
          LAWS OR REQUIREMENTS OF BANK,  WHICH ARE BASED UPON OR IN ANY WAY
          RELATED   TO   SUCH  HAZARDOUS  MATERIALS,   INCLUDING,   WITHOUT
          LIMITATION, REASONABLE  ATTORNEYS'  AND  CONSULTANTS'  FEES (SAID
          ATTORNEYS  AND CONSULTANTS TO BE SELECTED BY BANK), INVESTIGATION
          AND LABORATORY  FEES,  ENVIRONMENTAL  STUDIES  REQUIRED  BY  BANK
          (WHETHER  PRIOR TO FORECLOSURE OR OTHERWISE), AND COURT COSTS AND
          LITIGATION  EXPENSES.  UPON REQUEST OF BANK, A CREDIT PARTY SHALL
          EXECUTE, A SEPARATE INDEMNITY COVERING THE SAME MATTERS SET FORTH
          HEREIN.

     (C)  AS OF THE EFFECTIVE DATE, NO CREDIT PARTY HAS RECEIVED ANY NOTICE
          ("ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLAINT")  OF  ANY  VIOLATIONS OF ENVIRONMENTAL
          LAWS (AND, WITHIN FIVE (5) DAYS OF RECEIPT  OF  ANY ENVIRONMENTAL
          COMPLAINT ARISING HEREAFTER, SUCH PARTY SHALL GIVE  BANK  A  COPY
          THEREOF),  AND  TO  THE  BEST OF EACH CREDITOR PARTY'S KNOWLEDGE,
          THERE HAVE BEEN NO ACTIONS  COMMENCED  OR THREATENED BY ANY PARTY
          FOR NONCOMPLIANCE BY A CREDIT PARTY WITH ANY ENVIRONMENTAL LAWS.

     (D)  THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 5.15 (B) SHALL  BE  IN  ADDITION TO ANY
          AND ALL OTHER OBLIGATIONS AND LIABILITIES A CREDIT PARTY MAY HAVE
          TO  BANK  AT  COMMON LAW OR PURSUANT TO ANY OTHER AGREEMENT  AND,
          NOTWITHSTANDING  ANYTHING CONTAINED HEREIN TO THE CONTRARY, SHALL
          SURVIVE (I) THE REPAYMENT  OF ALL SUMS DUE UNDER THE NOTE AND THE
          OTHER LOAN DOCUMENTS AND THE  REPAYMENT OF ALL OTHER INDEBTEDNESS
          HEREUNDER,  AND  (II)  THE  SATISFACTION  OF  ALL  OF  THE  OTHER
          OBLIGATIONS OF SUCH CREDIT PARTY  HEREUNDER  AND  UNDER THE OTHER
          LOAN DOCUMENTS.

          2.16  LABOR  DISPUTES AND CASUALTIES. LABOR MATTERS.  As  of  the
     Effective Date, there  are  no strikes or other labor disputes against
     Borrower or any Mexican Guarantor  that  are pending or, to any Credit
     Party's knowledge, threatened. All payments  due  from Borrower or any
     Mexican Guarantor on account of employee health and  welfare insurance
     have  been and will continue to be paid or accrued as a  liability  on
     the books  of such Credit Party. Except as set forth on Schedule 5.16,
     as of the Effective Date (a) there is no organizing activity involving
     Borrower or  any  Mexican  Guarantor pending or, to any Credit Party's
     knowledge, threatened by any  labor  union  or group of employees; (b)
     there  are no representation proceedings pending  or,  to  any  Credit
     Party's  knowledge, threatened with the National Labor Relations Board
     or any analogous  organization  in Mexico such as the JUNTA FEDERAL DE
     CONCILIACI<o'>N Y ARBITRAJE or the  JUNTA  LOCAL  DE CONCILIACI<o'>N Y
     ARBITRAJE;  and  (c)  no labor organization or group of  employees  of
     Borrower  or  any  Mexican   Guarantor  has  pending  any  demand  for
     recognition, and each Credit Party  shall  give to Bank prompt written
     notice of any of the foregoing occurring after the Effective Date.

          2.17  ACCURACY  OF  INFORMATION. As of the  Effective  Date,  the
     financial  statements of the  Credit  Parties  dated  June  30,  2001,
     previously furnished  to Bank by such Credit Parties, are complete and
     correct in all material  respects  and  fairly  present  the financial
     condition of such Credit Party, and the results of its operations  for
     the  periods  covered  thereby;  and  since the date of said financial
     statements, there has been no Material Adverse Effect.

          2.18 SOLVENCY. Company and Guarantors  are  solvent,  able to pay
     its  debts  as  they  mature,  has capital sufficient to carry on  its
     business and has assets the fair  market  value  of  which  exceed its
     liabilities,  and  neither  Company  nor  Guarantors  will be rendered
     insolvent, under-capitalized or unable to pay debts generally  as they
     become  due by the execution or performance of this Agreement, or  any
     of the other Loan Documents to which it is party.

     3.        AFFIRMATIVE COVENANTS

     Company,  and  to the extent applicable, each Guarantor, covenants and
agrees that it will, and it will cause each of its Subsidiaries of Borrower
and Mexican Guarantors  (if  any)  to, so long as Bank is committed to make
any  Loans pursuant to this Agreement,  and  thereafter,  so  long  as  any
indebtedness remains outstanding under or pursuant to this Agreement or the
Notes:

          3.1 REPORTING. Furnish to the Bank:

     (A)  AS  SOON  AS POSSIBLE AND IN ANY EVENT WITHIN 10 (TEN) DAYS AFTER
          OBTAINING KNOWLEDGE  OF  THE OCCURRENCE OF EACH EVENT OF DEFAULT,
          OR EACH EVENT WHICH WITH THE GIVING OF NOTICE OR LAPSE OF TIME OR
          BOTH WOULD REASONABLY EXPECTED TO CONSTITUTE AN EVENT OF DEFAULT,
          WHICH IS CONTINUING ON THE  DATE OF SUCH STATEMENT, THE STATEMENT
          OF  AN  AUTHORIZED  OFFICER OF THE  BORROWER  OR  THE  GUARANTORS
          SETTING FORTH DETAILS  OF  SUCH  EVENT  OF DEFAULT OR EVENT WHICH
          WOULD CONSTITUTE AN EVENT OF DEFAULT, AND  THE  ACTION  WHICH THE
          BORROWER OR THE GUARANTORS PROPOSE TO TAKE WITH RESPECT THERETO;

     (B)  AS  SOON  AS  AVAILABLE  AND  IN ANY EVENT WITHIN 60 (SIXTY) DAYS
          AFTER THE END OF EACH OF THE QUARTERS  OF EACH FISCAL YEAR OF THE
          BORROWER AND OF THE GUARANTORS (EXCLUDING THE LAST FISCAL QUARTER
          OF  BORROWER'S  AND  GUARANTOR'S  FISCAL  YEAR),  A  CONSOLIDATED
          BALANCE SHEET OF THE BORROWER AND THE GUARANTORS AS OF THE END OF
          SUCH  QUARTER AND STATEMENTS OF INCOME AND RETAINED  EARNINGS  OF
          THE BORROWER  AND  OF THE GUARANTORS FOR THE PERIOD COMMENCING AT
          THE END OF THE PREVIOUS  FISCAL  YEAR  AND ENDING WITH THE END OF
          SUCH QUARTER, (I) IN DOLLARS AND IN PESOS  FOR  THE  BORROWER AND
          THE MEXICAN GUARANTORS, AND (II) IN DOLLARS FOR THE US GUARANTOR,
          ALL IN REASONABLE DETAIL AND DULY CERTIFIED (SUBJECT TO  YEAR END
          AUDIT  ADJUSTMENTS)  BY  AN  OFFICER  OF  THE  BORROWER OR OF THE
          GUARANTORS,  AS  THE  CASE  MAY  BE,  AS HAVING BEEN PREPARED  IN
          ACCORDANCE  WITH  ACCOUNTING  PRINCIPLES  GENERALLY  ACCEPTED  IN
          MEXICO OR IN THE UNITED STATES, AS THE CASE  MAY BE, CONSISTENTLY
          APPLIED,  AND  TOGETHER  WITH (X) A CERTIFICATE OF  SAID  OFFICER
          STATING THAT THE COVENANTS  SET  FORTH  IN SECTIONS 6.7, 6.8, 6.9
          AND 6.10 ARE BEING COMPLIED WITH, TOGETHER  WITH  A SHEET SETTING
          FORTH  THE  CALCULATIONS TO DETERMINE THE FOREGOING,  AND  (Y)  A
          CERTIFICATE OF SAID OFFICER STATING THAT HE HAS NO KNOWLEDGE THAT
          AN EVENT OF DEFAULT,  OR AN EVENT WHICH WITH THE GIVING OF NOTICE
          OR LAPSE OF TIME OR BOTH  WOULD  CONSTITUTE  AN EVENT OF DEFAULT,
          HAS OCCURRED AND IS CONTINUING OR, IF AN EVENT OF DEFAULT OR SUCH
          EVENT  HAS  OCCURRED  AND IS CONTINUING, A STATEMENT  AS  TO  THE
          NATURE  THEREOF  AND  THE   ACTION  WHICH  THE  BORROWER  OR  THE
          GUARANTORS PROPOSE TO TAKE WITH  RESPECT THERETO. NOTWITHSTANDING
          ANYTHING TO THE CONTRARY CONTAINED  HEREIN,  AS  LONG  AS  THE US
          GUARANTOR  FILES  ITS  "10-K"  AND  "10-Q"  STATEMENTS  WITH  THE
          SECURITIES  AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION, IT WILL NOT BE REQUIRED TO
          SUBMIT TO BANK THE STATEMENTS  SET  FORTH  IN  THIS SECTION OTHER
          THAN THE CERTIFICATES SET FORTH IN (X) AND (Y);

     (C)  AS  SOON  AS AVAILABLE AND IN ANY EVENT WITHIN 135  (ONE  HUNDRED
          THIRTY FIVE)  DAYS  AFTER  THE  END  OF  EACH  FISCAL YEAR OF THE
          BORROWER   AND   OF   THE  GUARANTORS,  A  COPY  OF  THE  AUDITED
          CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS AND STATEMENTS OF INCOME AND RETAINED
          EARNINGS  FOR THE BORROWER  AND  FOR  THE  GUARANTORS  (PROVIDED,
          HOWEVER,  THAT  BORROWER  AND  GUARANTORS  SHALL  USE  REASONABLE
          EFFORTS TO  DELIVER  PRELIMINARY STATEMENTS WITHIN 120 DAYS AFTER
          THE END OF EACH SUCH FISCAL  YEAR),  (I)  IN DOLLARS AND IN PESOS
          FOR THE BORROWER AND THE MEXICAN GUARANTOR,  AND  (II) IN DOLLARS
          FOR  THE  U.S.  GUARANTOR  IN  EACH CASE CERTIFIED BY INDEPENDENT
          PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS OF RECOGNIZED STANDING ACCEPTABLE TO THE BANK,
          TOGETHER WITH (X) A CERTIFICATE OF AN OFFICER OF THE BORROWER AND
          OF  THE  GUARANTORS, STATING THAT  THE  COVENANTS  SET  FORTH  IN
          SECTIONS 6.7, 6.8, 6.9 AND 6.10 ARE BEING COMPLIED WITH, TOGETHER
          WITH A SHEET  SETTING  FORTH  THE  CALCULATIONS  TO DETERMINE THE
          FOREGOING,  AND (Y) A CERTIFICATE OF AN OFFICER OF  THE  BORROWER
          AND OF THE GUARANTORS  STATING  THAT  HE HAS NO KNOWLEDGE THAT AN
          EVENT OF DEFAULT, OR AN EVENT WHICH WITH  NOTICE OR LAPSE OF TIME
          OR BOTH WOULD CONSTITUTE AN EVENT OF DEFAULT, HAS OCCURRED AND IS
          CONTINUING, OR IF, IN THE OPINION OF SUCH OFFICER,  AN  EVENT  OF
          DEFAULT OR SUCH AN EVENT HAS AND IS CONTINUING, A STATEMENT AS TO
          THE  NATURE  THEREOF  AND  THE  ACTION  WHICH THE BORROWER OR THE
          GUARANTORS PROPOSE TO TAKE WITH RESPECT THERETO.  NOTWITHSTANDING
          ANYTHING  TO  THE CONTRARY CONTAINED HEREIN, AS LONG  AS  THE  US
          GUARANTOR  FILES  ITS  "10-K"  AND  "10-Q"  STATEMENTS  WITH  THE
          SECURITIES AND  EXCHANGE  COMMISSION,  IT WILL NOT BE REQUIRED TO
          SUBMIT TO BANK THE STATEMENTS SET FORTH  IN  THIS  SECTION  OTHER
          THAN THE CERTIFICATES SET FORTH IN (X) AND (Y);

     (D)  IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE COMMENCEMENT THEREOF, NOTICE IN WRITING  OF
          ALL ACTIONS, SUITS AND PROCEEDINGS ADVERSELY PENDING IN ANY COURT
          OF COMPETENT JURISDICTION AGAINST BORROWER OR A MEXICAN GUARANTOR
          IN EXCESS OF US $5,000,000.00 (FIVE MILLION DOLLARS OF THE UNITED
          STATES OF AMERICA);

     (E)  IN  THE  CASE OF THE OPERATING COMPANY, ON A MONTHLY BASIS WITHIN
          THE FIRST  15 (FIFTEEN) BUSINESS DAYS, A REPORT LISTING THE THIRD
          PARTY ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE, ANY RESERVES FOR DOUBTFUL ACCOUNTS AND
          INVENTORY;

     (F)  INTENTIONALLY OMITTED;

     (G)  IN THE CASE  OF  THE BORROWER AND AVICOLA, UPON SUBMISSION OF THE
          DOCUMENTATION MENTIONED  IN  PARAGRAPHS (B) AND (C) ABOVE, AND TO
          THE EXTENT APPLICABLE, SUBMIT  TO  THE  BANK A CALCULATION OF THE
          FINANCIAL COVENANTS, AS WELL AS A COMPLIANCE  CERTIFICATE STATING
          THE  FULFILLMENT  OF  THE BORROWER TO ALL THE OBLIGATIONS  STATED
          HEREIN; AND

     (H)  SUCH OTHER INFORMATION RESPECTING THE BUSINESS, PROPERTIES OR THE
          CONDITIONS OF OPERATIONS,  FINANCIAL OR OTHERWISE OF THE BORROWER
          AND THE GUARANTORS AS THE BANK  MAY  FROM TIME TO TIME REASONABLY
          REQUEST.

          3.2  TAXES.  Duly pay and discharge all  taxes,  assessments  and
     governmental charges  or  levies  imposed  upon  the  Borrower and the
     Guarantors  or  upon  their income or profits, or upon any  properties
     belonging to the them,  by  Mexico, the United States, or by any other
     jurisdiction, or any political  subdivision thereof, prior to the date
     on which penalties are attached thereto,  and all lawful claims which,
     if not paid, may become a lien or charge upon  any  properties  of the
     Borrower  or  of  the Guarantors, PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that the Borrower
     and the Guarantors  shall  not  be  required  to  pay  any  such  tax,
     assessment,  charge,  levy  or  claim which is being contested in good
     faith and by proper legal proceedings.

          3.3 INSURANCE. Obtain prior  to  the initial Loan and thereafter,
     maintain insurance with responsible and  reputable insurance companies
     or associations in such amounts and covering  such risks as is usually
     carried by companies engaged in similar businesses  and owning similar
     properties  in  the same general areas in which the Borrower  and  the
     Mexican Guarantors operate and such other insurance as may be required
     by law, all of which  Insurance  shall  be in such amounts, containing
     such terms, in such form, for such purposes,  prepaid  for  such  time
     period,   and  written  by  such  companies  as  shall  be  reasonably
     satisfactory  to  the  Bank. All such policies covering the Collateral
     shall contain a provision  whereby  they  may  not be canceled for non
     payment of premiums (unless substitute insurance  in  compliance  with
     this  Section 6.3 is obtain and provided on or before the date of such
     cancellation)  except  upon  thirty (30) days' prior written notice to
     the Bank. The Operating Company  will promptly deliver to the Bank, at
     the  Bank's  request, evidence satisfactory  to  the  Bank  that  such
     insurance  has   been  so  procured  and,  with  respect  to  casualty
     insurance, endorsed  with  a loss payable clause in favor of the Bank.
     If  the Operating Company fails  to  maintain  satisfactory  insurance
     covering  the  Collateral  as herein provided, the Bank shall have the
     option  to do so, and the Borrower  agrees  to  repay  the  Bank  upon
     demand, with  interest  at the Federal Funds-based Rate then in effect
     for the Revolving Loan, all  amounts  so expended by the Bank. Upon an
     Event  of  Default  or  with  respect to any  loss  in  excess  of  US
     $2,500,000, the Operating Company appoints the Bank or any employee or
     agent of the Bank as the Operating  Company's  attorney-in-fact, which
     appointment   is  coupled  with  an  interest  and  irrevocable,   and
     authorizes the Bank or any employee or agent of the Bank, on behalf of
     the Operating Company,  to  adjust  and compromise any loss under said
     insurance  covering  the Collateral (which  adjustment  or  compromise
     shall only be made with the Operating Company's consent if an Event of
     Default  has not occurred  and  is  not  continuing  hereunder)and  to
     endorse any  check  or  draft  payable  to  the  Operating  Company in
     connection with returned or unearned premiums on said insurance or the
     proceeds  of  said  insurance,  and  any amount so collected shall  be
     applied toward repair and/or replacement  of  the  Collateral to which
     such  casualty occurred or satisfaction of the indebtedness  hereunder
     in  accordance  in  accordance  with  the  provisions  governing  such
     application  in  the Security Documents pursuant to which Bank's liens
     on such Collateral were granted.

          3.4 CORPORATE  EXISTENCE.  Preserve  and maintain their corporate
     existence, rights, franchises and privileges  in  Mexico or the United
     States,  as  the case may be; except (i) when said rights,  franchises
     and privileges  shall  be  terminated  by operation of law or order of
     authority;  (ii)  or the termination of such  rights,  franchises  and
     privileges would not  reasonably  be  expected to result in a Material
     Adverse Effect .

          3.5 MAINTENANCE OF PROPERTIES. Maintain and preserve all of their
     properties necessary or useful in the proper conduct of their business
     in good working order and condition, ordinary  wear and tear excepted,
     provided,  however,  that no Credit Party will be  prevented  by  this
     covenant  from discontinuing  those  operations  or  disposing  of  or
     suspending   the   maintenance  of  those  properties  which,  in  the
     reasonable judgment  of  such  Credit Party, is no longer necessary or
     useful in the conduct of such Credit  Party's  business  or  would not
     result in a Material Adverse Effect.

          3.6  COMPLIANCE  WITH  LAWS. Comply with all applicable laws  and
     regulations of any governmental entity and the terms of any indenture,
     contract or other instrument  to  which the Borrower or the Guarantors
     may be a party or under which their respective properties may be bound
     or affected, if non-compliance would  reasonably be expected to have a
     Material Adverse Effect, except where contested  in  good faith and by
     proper proceedings.

          3.7  CURRENT  RATIO.  In  the  case  of  the  Operating  Company,
     maintain, in accordance with its consolidated balance sheet, a minimum
     Current  Ratio  of  1.25  to  1.0 for the interim quarterly and annual
     audited financial statements, during  the  term hereof. In the case of
     Avicola, maintain, in accordance with its consolidated  balance sheet,
     a  minimum Current Ratio of 1.25 to 1.0 for the interim quarterly  and
     annual audited financial statements, during the term hereof.

          3.8  INDEBTEDNESS  RATIO.  In  the case of the Operating Company,
     maintain, in accordance with its consolidated balance sheet, a maximum
     Indebtedness  Ratio  of 0.50 to 1.0 for  interim  quarterly  financial
     statements and annual  audited  financial  statements  during the term
     hereof.   In  the  case of Avicola, maintain, in accordance  with  its
     consolidated balance sheet, a maximum Indebtedness Ratio ratio of 0.50
     to 1.0 for interim quarterly  financial  statements and annual audited
     financial statements during the term hereof.

          3.9  INTEREST  COVERAGE  RATIO.  In  the case  of  the  Operating
     Company, maintain, in accordance with its consolidated  quarterly  and
     annual financial statements, a minimum Interest Coverage Ratio of 2.25
     to  1.0.  In  the  case  of  Avicola, maintain, in accordance with its
     consolidated  quarterly  and annual  quarterly  and  annual  financial
     statements, a minimum Interest Coverage Ratio of 2.25 to 1.0.

          3.10 MINIMUM NET WORTH.  In  the  case  of the Operating Company,
     maintain, in accordance with its consolidated  financial statements on
     an interim quarterly and annual basis, a minimum  Net Worth of the sum
     of US $100,000,000.00 (One Hundred Million Dollars)  plus  that amount
     of  Funded  Debt  of  Operating  Company in excess of the indebtedness
     hereunder. In the case of Avicola,  maintain,  in  accordance with its
     consolidated financial statements on an interim quarterly  and  annual
     basis,  a  minimum  Net  Worth  of  the sum of US $125,000,000.00 (One
     Hundred Twenty Five Million Dollars)  plus  that amount of Funded Debt
     of Operating Company in excess of the indebtedness hereunder.

          3.11 SUBORDINATED CLAIMS. To the extent  not  prohibited  by  the
     Indenture,  if there is an Event of Default by Borrower or the Mexican
     Guarantor that exists hereunder, then any claims that the US Guarantor
     may have against them will be subordinated to the Loan.

          3.12 INDENTURE. Subject to Section 7.11, notwithstanding anything
     in this Agreement  to  the contrary, provided there is not an Event of
     Default, or event which with the giving of notice or the lapse of time
     or both, would constitute  an  Event  of  Default  hereunder,  nothing
     contained  herein  shall be deemed to prohibit, encumber, restrict  or
     prevent Borrower or  Mexican  Guarantors  or  any  of their respective
     Subsidiaries  from  making  any payments, loans, advances,  dividends,
     distributions or transfers to  US  Guarantor  or  any Subsidiary of US
     Guarantor (each, a "Restricted Payment").

          3.13 Intentionally omitted.

          3.14 KEEPING OF BOOKS. Keep proper books of record and account in
     which full and correct entries shall be made of all  of  its financial
     transactions  and  its  assets  and  businesses  so  as to permit  the
     presentation of financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP;
     and  permit  Bank,  or  its representatives, at reasonable  times  and
     intervals, to visit all of  its offices, discuss its financial matters
     with  its officers, employees,  directors  and  independent  certified
     public  accountants,  and  by  this provision, Company authorizes such
     officers, employees, directors and accountants to discuss the finances
     and  affairs  of  Company and examine  any  of  its  books  and  other
     corporate  records,   subject   only   to   reasonable   security  and
     confidentiality  procedures  and  provided  that  such  requests   and
     visitations  shall  be  related  to and limited to matters relevant to
     this Agreement and the transactions  contemplated  hereunder and shall
     be  during normal business hours and shall not unreasonably  interfere
     with or interrupt operations of the Company or the Guarantors.

          3.15  INDEMNIFICATION.  Indemnify and save Bank harmless from all
     losses, costs, damages, liabilities  and  expenses, including, without
     limitation, reasonable attorneys' fees, incurred  by Bank by reason of
     any  Default  or  Event  of  Default  hereunder, or its enforcing  the
     obligations of Company or any other Credit  Party under this Agreement
     or the Loan Documents; provided that no Credit  Party  shall  have  an
     obligation  to  indemnify  Bank  hereunder to the extent the foregoing
     results from the Bank's gross negligence or willful misconduct.

          3.16 GOVERNMENTAL AND OTHER APPROVALS.  Apply  for, obtain and/or
     maintain  in  effect,  as  applicable,  all authorizations,  consents,
     approvals, licenses, qualifications, exemptions, filings, declarations
     and  registrations  (whether  with  any  court,  governmental  agency,
     regulatory  authority, securities exchange  or  otherwise)  which  are
     necessary in  connection  with the execution, delivery and performance
     by each Credit Party, of this  Agreement,  the  Loan Documents, or any
     other documents or instruments to be executed and/or delivered by such
     Credit  Party  in  connection therewith or herewith  and  all  of  the
     obligations performed  or  contemplated  to be performed, and material
     transactions consummated or to be consummated thereunder.

          3.17 PAYMENT OF OBLIGATIONS. Borrower  will  pay and discharge or
     cause  to be paid and discharged all obligations to  Bank  under  this
     Agreement or any of the Loan Documents in a timely manner.

          3.18 Intentionally omitted.

          3.19  YEARLY  AUDIT/APPRAISAL.  Operating Company shall cooperate
     with Bank in a yearly audit of the Inventory  (the average annual cost
     of which shall not exceed $3,000) and appraisal  of  the Fixed Assets,
     the cost of which shall be borne by Borrower.

     4.        NEGATIVE COVENANTS

     Borrower and Guarantors covenant and agree that, so long  as  Bank  is
committed  to  make  any Loans, and thereafter, so long as any indebtedness
remains outstanding under  or  pursuant  to this Agreement or the Notes, it
will  not and it will not permit any of its  Subsidiaries  of  Borrower  or
Mexican Guarantors (if any) to, without Bank's prior consent:

          4.1  ENCUMBRANCES.  In the case of the Operating Company, create,
     incur, assume or suffer to  exist any mortgage, deed of trust, pledge,
     lien, security interest or other  charge  or encumbrance of any nature
     to any third party, upon or with respect to the Collateral other than:

     (A)  LIENS IN FAVOR OF THE BANK;

          (B)  LIENS EXISTING ON THE DATE OF THIS  AGREEMENT  AND DISCLOSED
               ON SCHEDULE 7.1;

          (C)  ANY  LIEN  ON  ANY  PROPERTY  (BUT EXCLUDING THE COLLATERAL)
               SECURING INDEBTEDNESS INCURRED OR ASSUMED FOR THE PURPOSE OF
               FINANCING ALL OR ANY PART OF THE  ACQUISITION  COST  OF SUCH
               PROPERTY OR SECURING ANY CAPITAL LEASE OBLIGATIONS, PROVIDED
               THAT  such  lien  does  not extend to any other property and
               secures Indebtedness and Capital Lease Obligations;

          (d)  (i) liens for taxes not yet  due,  or  (ii) liens for taxes,
               which  are  being  contested  in good faith  by  appropriate
               proceedings;

          (e)  statutory  liens  of  landlords  and   liens   of  carriers,
               warehousemen, mechanics, materialmen, worker's, repairman's,
               miner's,  agister's,  attorney's and other liens imposed  by
               law created in the ordinary  course  of business for amounts
               not yet due or which are being contested  in  good  faith by
               appropriate proceedings;

          (f)  liens  under  workers' compensation, unemployment insurance,
               social  security   or  similar  legislation,  or  to  secure
               payments of premiums for insurance purchased in the ordinary
               course of business, or to secure the performance of tenders,
               statutory obligations, surety and appearance bonds and bids,
               bonds for release of  an  attachment,  stay  of execution or
               injunction,  leases,  government contracts, performance  and
               return-of-money bonds and  other similar obligations, all of
               which are incurred in the ordinary  course  of  business and
               not in connection with the borrowing of money);

          (g)  any  attachment  or  judgment  lien, the time for appeal  or
               petition for rehearing of which shall not have expired or in
               respect of which a Credit Party  or  any of its Subsidiaries
               is protected in all material respects by insurance, provided
               that the execution or other enforcement  of  such  liens  is
               effectively  stayed and the claims secured thereby are being
               contested in good  faith by appropriate proceedings and with
               respect to which adequate  reserves  are being maintained in
               accordance with GAAP consistently applied; and

          (h)  easements,   rights-of-way,   restrictions,   encroachments,
               covenants,  servitudes,  zoning  and   similar  encumbrances
               which,  in the aggregate, do not materially  interfere  with
               the occupation,  use  and enjoyment by a Credit Party or any
               Subsidiary of the property  or  assets encumbered thereby in
               the normal course of its business  or  materially impair the
               value of the property subject thereto.

          4.2 ADDITIONAL INDEBTEDNESS. In the case of the  Borrower  or the
     Mexican Guarantor, incur additional indebtedness made available on the
     basis of the Collateral (other than to Bank or Indebtedness secured by
     Permitted Liens).

          4.3  MERGER  &  CONSOLIDATION.  In  the  case  of Borrower or the
     Mexican Guarantors, (i) merge or consolidate with another corporation,
     unless Borrower or the Mexican Guarantors, as the case  may be, is the
     surviving   entity  and  PROVIDED,  HOWEVER,  that  the  Borrower   or
     Guarantors are not in default of any of their obligations hereunder or
     under the Note(s); or (ii) assign or transfer its assets into trust.

          4.4 SALE OF ASSETS. Sell, assign, lease, transfer or in any other
     manner dispose  of  (whether  in  one  transaction  or  in a series of
     transactions)  all  or substantially all of their assets (whether  now
     owned or hereafter acquired).

          4.5 CHANGE OF BUSINESS.  (i)  Engage  in any material respects in
     any  business  activity  or  operations  other  than   operations   or
     activities  (a)  in  the  poultry industry, (b) processing, packaging,
     distribution and wholesales  of poultry products, or (c) which are not
     substantially different from or  are  related  to its present business
     activities or operations; or (ii) Operating Company  fails  to  be the
     primary  importer or distributor in Mexico of poultry product exported
     by  US Guarantor  to  Mexico;  provided  that  US  Guarantor,  Mexican
     Guarantors  or  Operating  Company  may  create  a  Subsidiary for the
     purpose of the distribution and sale of such product  to third parties
     without  the  consent of the Bank so long as such Subsidiary  executes
     and delivers to  Bank  (i)  a  guaranty  of the obligations under this
     Agreement in substantially the same form as  the  Guaranty  and (ii) a
     security  agreement  granting  a security interest in the Accounts  of
     such Subsidiary, which security  interest shall secure the obligations
     under this Agreement.

          4.6 CHANGE IN OWNERSHIP. Change  the participation of the current
     shareholders of the Borrower or the Mexican  Guarantors  in  a  manner
     that  the  Guarantors  (other  than  the  Operating  Company) cease to
     maintain, directly or indirectly, a majority interest  in  the capital
     stock  of  the  Borrower,  unless the Bank has given the Borrower  and
     Guarantors, prior written approval  of  such changes which will not be
     unreasonably withheld.

          4.7  LIENS.  In  the  case  of  the  Borrower   and  the  Mexican
     Guarantors,  carry  out  any  arrangements  to finance the  Collateral
     (other  than  Indebtedness  securing Permitted Liens),  and  will  not
     create any security interest  granted  herein to any party (other than
     Permitted Liens).

          4.8  GUARANTY.  In  the  case  of the Borrower  and  the  Mexican
     Guarantors, to the extent not prohibited by the Indenture, that it and
     its  Affiliates  will  not guarantee, endorse  or  become  secondarily
     liable for  the debt of the US Guarantor, other than guarantees of the
     Indebtedness of US Guarantor under the Indenture.

          4.9 CAPITAL STRUCTURE,  BUSINESS  OBJECTS OR PURPOSE. In the case
     of  the  Borrower  and the Mexican Guarantors,  purchase,  acquire  or
     redeem any of its capital  stock,  or enter into any reorganization or
     recapitalization or reclassify its capital  stock,  or  (and also with
     respect to the US Guarantor) make any material change in  its  general
     business objects or purpose unless (i) required due to changes in GAAP
     procedures;  or  (ii)  such  changes  do  not cause a Material Adverse
     Effect.

          4.10 ENCUMBRANCES - CONTRACTS, NOTES.  With  respect to Borrower,
     create,  incur,  assume  or  suffer  to  exist  any mortgage,  pledge,
     encumbrance,  security  interest,  lien  or  charge upon  any  of  its
     contracts,  notes  or  other  evidence of indebtedness  owing  to  it,
     whether now owned or hereafter  acquired,  or create, suffer or permit
     to exist any lien, security interest in, or  encumbrance thereon other
     than the Permitted Liens.

          4.11 RESTRICTED PAYMENTS. So long as Bank  is committed to make a
     Loan, and thereafter, so long as any indebtedness  remains outstanding
     under or pursuant to this Agreement or the Notes, Borrower and Mexican
     Guarantors  will  not  and  will  not  permit any of their  respective
     Subsidiaries (if any) to, without Bank's  prior consent declare or pay
     or make any Restricted Payments (other than  to  Borrower or a Mexican
     Guarantor) while any Event of Default, or event which  with the giving
     of notice or the passage of time, or both, would constitute  an  Event
     of  Default  under  this  Agreement  has occurred and is continuing or
     would occur as a result of the making  of   such  Restricted  Payment;
     provided  that nothing contained in this Agreement shall be deemed  to
     restrict, prohibit  or prevent the payment or reimbursement (at prices
     reflecting  arms-length   transactions)   by  Borrower  or  a  Mexican
     Guarantor to US Guarantor or its Subsidiaries  in  respect of: (x) the
     sale  of inventory, including without limitation, grain  and  hatching
     eggs, sold  in  the  ordinary  course of business, (y) trade payables,
     overhead, operating expenses and  similar  expenses incurred on behalf
     of   Borrower  or  a  Mexican  Guarantor  by  US  Guarantor   or   its
     Subsidiaries,  and (z) sale of goods and equipment upon terms that are
     no less favorable  to  Borrower  or such Mexican Subsidiary than those
     that could be obtained in a comparable  transaction  with an unrelated
     Person.

     5.        EVENTS OF DEFAULT

          5.1 If any of the following events shall occur and  be continuing
     (each  an  "Event  of  Default"),  the  Bank  may  declare all of  its
     obligations  hereunder to be terminated, whereupon the  commitment  of
     the Bank hereunder  shall forthwith terminate and the Bank may declare
     the entire unpaid principal  amount  of  the  Loan,  together with all
     interest  and  fees  accrued and unpaid thereon and all other  amounts
     payable hereunder to be forthwith due and payable, whereupon the Loan,
     all such accrued interest,  fees and all such amounts shall become and
     be forthwith due and payable  without  presentment, demand, protest or
     further notice of any kind, all of which  are  hereby expressly waived
     by the Borrower and the Guarantors:

     (A)  THE BORROWER SHALL FAIL TO PAY THE ADVANCES  WITHIN  5  DAYS FROM
          WHEN  DUE,  OR  SHALL  FAIL  TO  PAY ANY INTEREST ON THE ADVANCES
          WITHIN 5 DAYS FROM WHEN DUE; OR

     (B)  ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY MADE  BY  THE  BORROWER  OR BY THE
          GUARANTORS  IN  THIS  AGREEMENT OR IN ANY CERTIFICATE, AGREEMENT,
          INSTRUMENT OR STATEMENT  CONTEMPLATED  HEREBY  OR  THEREBY  SHALL
          PROVE  TO  HAVE BEEN INCORRECT WHEN MADE IN ANY MATERIAL RESPECT;
          OR

     (C)  THE BORROWER  OR  THE GUARANTORS SHALL FAIL TO PERFORM OR OBSERVE
          ANY OTHER TERM, COVENANT OR AGREEMENT CONTAINED IN THIS AGREEMENT
          AND SUCH FAILURE CONTINUES  FOR  A  PERIOD  OF  15 DAYS AFTER THE
          BORROWER'S OR GUARANTOR'S LEARNING OF SUCH FAILURE TO COMPLY; OR

     (D)  THE FAILURE OF BORROWER OR GUARANTOR TO PAY WHEN  DUE, OR FAILURE
          TO  PERFORM  OR  OBSERVE  ANY OTHER OBLIGATION OR CONDITION  WITH
          RESPECT TO ANY OF THE FOLLOWING OBLIGATIONS TO ANY PERSON, BEYOND
          ANY  PERIOD  OF  GRACE  UNDER  THE   INSTRUMENT   CREATING   SUCH
          OBLIGATION:   (I)  ANY INDEBTEDNESS FOR BORROWED MONEY OR FOR THE
          DEFERRED  PURCHASE  PRICE  OF  PROPERTY  OR  SERVICES,  (II)  ANY
          OBLIGATIONS  UNDER  LEASES   WHICH   HAVE  OR  SHOULD  HAVE  BEEN
          CHARACTERIZED  AS  CAPITAL  LEASES,  OR  (III)   ANY   CONTINGENT
          LIABILITIES,  SUCH  AS GUARANTIES AND LETTERS OF CREDIT, FOR  THE
          OBLIGATIONS OF OTHERS RELATING TO INDEBTEDNESS FOR BORROWED MONEY
          OR FOR THE DEFERRED PURCHASE  PRICE  OF  PROPERTY  OR SERVICES OR
          RELATING  TO  OBLIGATIONS UNDER LEASES WHICH HAVE OR SHOULD  HAVE
          BEEN CHARACTERIZED  AS  CAPITAL  LEASES;  PROVIDED  THAT  NO SUCH
          FAILURE WILL BE DEEMED TO BE AN EVENT OF DEFAULT HEREUNDER UNLESS
          THE AMOUNT OWING UNDER THE OBLIGATION WITH RESPECT TO WHICH  SUCH
          FAILURES  HAVE  OCCURRED  AND  ARE  CONTINUING  IS  AT  LEAST (X)
          $5,000,000.00 WITH RESPECT TO BORROWER AND MEXICAN GUARANTORS, OR
          (Y) $10,000,000 WITH RESPECT TO US GUARANTOR; OR

     (E)  THE  OPERATING  COMPANY OR AVICOLA, AS THE CASE MAY BE, FAILS  TO
          MAINTAIN ANY OF THE  RATIOS  AND/OR FINANCIAL COVENANTS SET FORTH
          IN SECTION 6.7, 6.8, 6.9 OR 6.10 AND SUCH FAILURE CONTINUES FOR A
          PERIOD OF 7 DAYS AFTER SUCH PARTIES'  LEARNING OF SUCH FAILURE TO
          COMPLY; OR

     (F)  THE PARTICIPATION OF THE CURRENT SHAREHOLDERS  OF THE BORROWER OR
          THE  MEXICAN  GUARANTORS,  ARE  MODIFIED  IN  ANY WAY  WHATSOEVER
          RESULTING,  IN THE GUARANTORS (OTHER THAN THE OPERATING  COMPANY)
          CEASING TO MAINTAIN,  DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, A MAJORITY INTEREST
          IN THE CAPITAL STOCK OF  THE  BORROWER, WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN
          CONSENT  OF  THE  BANK  GIVEN TO THE  BORROWER  AND  THE  MEXICAN
          GUARANTOR WHICH WILL NOT BE UNREASONABLY WITHHELD; OR

     (G)  THIS AGREEMENT OR THE NOTE(S)  SHALL  AT  ANY TIME FOR ANY REASON
          CEASE TO BE IN FULL FORCE AND EFFECT OR SHALL  BE  DECLARED TO BE
          NULL AND VOID OR THE VALIDITY OR ENFORCEABILITY THEREOF  SHALL BE
          CONTESTED BY THE BORROWER OR THE GUARANTORS OR THE GOVERNMENT  OF
          MEXICO,  OR  ANY  POLITICAL SUBDIVISION OR AGENCY THEREOF, OR THE
          BORROWER OR THE GUARANTORS  SHALL  DENY  THAT  IT  IS ANY FURTHER
          LIABILITY OR OBLIGATION HEREUNDER; OR

     (H)  AFTER  THE FILING AND RECORDING THEREOF, IF THE MORTGAGE  OR  THE
          SECURITY  DOCUMENTS  CEASE  TO  CONSTITUTE A VALID FIRST PRIORITY
          LIEN IN FAVOR OF THE BANK; OR

     (I)  IF A CREDITORS' COMMITTEE, INTERVENTOR, VISITADOR, CONCILIADOR OR
          A  S<i'>NDICO  SHALL  HAVE BEEN APPOINTED  FOR  THE  BUSINESS  OF
          COMPANY OR A GUARANTOR;  OR  IF COMPANY OR A GUARANTOR SHALL HAVE
          MADE A GENERAL ASSIGNMENT FOR  THE  BENEFIT OF CREDITORS OR SHALL
          HAVE BEEN ADJUDICATED BANKRUPT, OR SHALL  HAVE  FILED A VOLUNTARY
          PETITION   IN   CONCURSO   MERCANTIL   OR   BANKRUPTCY   OR   FOR
          REORGANIZATION  OR TO EFFECT A PLAN OR ARRANGEMENT WITH CREDITORS
          OR SHALL FAIL TO PAY ITS DEBTS GENERALLY AS SUCH DEBTS BECOME DUE
          IN THE ORDINARY COURSE  OF  BUSINESS (EXCEPT AS CONTESTED IN GOOD
          FAITH AND FOR WHICH ADEQUATE  RESERVES  ARE  MADE IN SUCH PARTY'S
          FINANCIAL STATEMENTS); OR SHALL FILE AN ANSWER  TO  A  CREDITOR'S
          PETITION  OR  OTHER  PETITION  FILED  AGAINST  IT,  ADMITTING THE
          MATERIAL  ALLEGATIONS  THEREOF FOR AN ADJUDICATION IN BANKRUPTCY,
          CONCURSO MERCANTIL OR FOR  REORGANIZATION;  OR SHALL HAVE APPLIED
          FOR  OR  PERMITTED  THE  APPOINTMENT  OF A RECEIVER,  INTEVENTOR,
          VISITADOR, CONCILIADOR, S<i'>NDICO, TRUSTEE  OR CUSTODIAN FOR ANY
          OF ITS PROPERTY OR ASSETS; OR SUCH CREDITORS COMMITTEE, RECEIVER,
          S<i'>NDICO,  TRUSTEE OR CUSTODIAN SHALL HAVE BEEN  APPOINTED  FOR
          ANY OF ITS PROPERTY OR ASSETS (OTHERWISE THAN UPON APPLICATION OR
          CONSENT  OF  COMPANY   OR   A   GUARANTOR),  AND  SUCH  RECEIVER,
          INTERVENTOR,  VISITADOR,  CONCILIADOR,   TRUSTEE,  S<i'>NDICO  OR
          CUSTODIAN  SO  APPOINTED  SHALL NOT HAVE BEEN  DISCHARGED  WITHIN
          SIXTY (60) DAYS AFTER THE DATE  OF  SUCH  APPOINTMENT,  OR  IF AN
          ORDER   FOR  RELIEF  OR  OTHERWISE  APPROVING  ANY  PETITION  FOR
          REORGANIZATION  OF  COMPANY  OR  THE RELEVANT GUARANTOR, SHALL BE
          ENTERED AND SHALL NOT BE DISMISSED  OR  STAYED  WITHIN SIXTY (60)
          DAYS FROM THE DATE OF ENTRY; OR

     (J)  THE  RENDERING  OF  ONE  OR MORE JUDGMENTS OR DECREES  AGAINST  A
          CREDIT PARTY FOR THE PAYMENT OF MONEY OR THE ATTACHMENT OR FILING
          OF ANY LIEN OR CHARGE AGAINST  A  CREDIT  PARTY  OR  ANY  OF  ITS
          PROPERTY  IN  EXCESS  OF  $5,000,000  WITH RESPECT TO BORROWER OR
          MEXICAN GUARANTORS OR $10,000,000 WITH  RESPECT  TO US GUARANTOR,
          THAT IS NOT COVERED BY INSURANCE AND SUCH JUDGMENT(S), DECREE(S),
          LIEN(S) OR CHARGE(S) SHALL REMAIN UNPAID, UNVACATED,  UNBONDED OR
          UNSTAYED BY APPEAL OR OTHERWISE OR NOT DISCHARGED OR RELEASED FOR
          A  PERIOD  OF  SIXTY (60) CONSECUTIVE DAYS, AFTER DATE OF  ENTRY,
          FILING OR ATTACHMENT; OR

     (K)  A BREACH BY A GUARANTOR UNDER ITS RESPECTIVE GUARANTY; OR

     (L)  SHOULD THE OPERATING  COMPANY  FAIL TO BE THE PRIMARY IMPORTER OR
          DISTRIBUTOR IN MEXICO OF POULTRY PRODUCT EXPORTED BY US GUARANTOR
          TO MEXICO WITHOUT THE US GUARANTOR  OR OPERATING COMPANY CREATING
          A SUBSIDIARY FOR THE PURPOSE OF THE DISTRIBUTION AND SALE OF SUCH
          PRODUCT  TO  THIRD  PARTIES  AND  SUCH  SUBSIDIARY  EXECUTES  AND
          DELIVERS  TO  BANK (I) A GUARANTY OF THE OBLIGATIONS  UNDER  THIS
          AGREEMENT IN SUBSTANTIALLY THE SAME FORM AS THE GUARANTY AND (II)
          A SECURITY AGREEMENT GRANTING A SECURITY INTEREST IN THE ACCOUNTS
          OF SUCH SUBSIDIARY,  WHICH  SECURITY  INTEREST  SHALL  SECURE THE
          OBLIGATIONS UNDER THIS AGREEMENT; OR

     (M)  SHOULD BORROWER FAIL TO EXECUTE AND DELIVER A FEDERAL FUNDS-BASED
          RATE  NOTE  OR  A  CETES-BASED  NOTE,  AS  THE  CASE  MAY  BE, IN
          ACCORDANCE  WITH  ARTICLE  3.7  WITHIN 5 DAYS AFTER THE DATE SUCH
          NOTE IS DELIVERED TO BORROWER IN EXECUTABLE FORM; OR

     (N)  SHOULD  THE  LOANS  OR  GUARANTEES  PROVIDED  FOR  HEREIN  BE  IN
          VIOLATION OF THE INDENTURE.

          5.2 REMEDIES. Upon the occurrence and  during the continuation of
     any  Event  of Default, unless such Event of Default,  Bank  may  give
     notice to Company  declaring all outstanding indebtedness hereunder to
     be due and payable in full, whereupon all indebtedness hereunder shall
     immediately become due  and  payable without further notice or demand,
     as the case may be, and Bank's  commitment to make further Loans or to
     extend additional credit to Company  under this Agreement or otherwise
     and Bank may exercise any remedies it has under the Security Documents
     as provided for therein and/or under applicable  law.  Notwithstanding
     the foregoing, in the case of an Event of Default under Section 8.1(i)
     hereof,  and  notwithstanding  the  lack  of  any  notice,  demand  or
     declaration  by  Bank, the entire unpaid indebtedness hereunder  shall
     become automatically  due  and  payable  in full and any commitment by
     Bank to make Loans shall be automatically  and immediately terminated,
     without any requirement of notice or demand by Bank upon Company, each
     of which are hereby expressly waived by Company.  The right of Bank to
     terminate   its   commitment  to  make  Loans  and  or  to  accelerate
     indebtedness shall  expire  with  respect  to  any particular Event of
     Default of which Bank has been given actual notice,  if  such Event of
     Default  is cured prior to Bank's exercise of such right to  terminate
     and/or accelerate.

          5.3 SETOFF.  During  the  continuance  of  any  Event  of Default
     hereunder, Bank may, in accordance with any applicable requirements of
     law,  during  any period when an uncured Event of Default is existing,
     setoff and apply  against  the indebtedness (whether or not then due),
     any and all deposits (general  or special, time or demand, provisional
     or final) at any time held and other indebtedness at any time owing by
     Bank to or for the credit or for the account of a Credit Party and any
     property at the time in possession or control of Bank, irrespective of
     whether or not Bank shall have made  any demand hereunder and although
     such obligations may be contingent and  unmatured.  In  the  event any
     Bank  exercises  any  such  right of setoff, Bank shall use reasonable
     efforts to notify the corresponding  Credit  Party  affected  by  such
     setoff  in  sufficient  detail within five (5) Business Days as of the
     date such setoff has occurred.

          5.4 WAIVER OF DEFAULTS.  No  Default or Event of Default shall be
     waived by Bank except in a written instrument specifying the scope and
     terms of such waiver and signed by  an  authorized officer of Bank and
     shall be effective only for the specific  time  and  purpose given. No
     single or partial exercise of any right, power or privilege hereunder,
     nor any delay in the exercise thereof, shall preclude other or further
     exercise  of  Bank's  rights.  No  waiver of any Default or  Event  of
     Default  shall extend to any other or  further  Default  or  Event  of
     Default. No forbearance on the part of Bank in enforcing any of Bank's
     rights or  remedies hereunder or any of the other Loan Documents shall
     constitute a  waiver  of  any  of  its  rights  or  remedies.  Company
     expressly  agrees  that this Section 8.4 may not be waived or modified
     by Bank by course of performance, estoppel or otherwise.

     6.        MISCELLANEOUS

          6.1 ACCOUNTING  PRINCIPLES.  Where the character or amount of any
     asset or liability or item of income  or  expense  is  required  to be
     determined  or  any  consolidation  or other accounting computation is
     required to be made for the purposes  of  this  Agreement, it shall be
     done  in accordance with GAAP. Furthermore, all accounting  terms  not
     specifically   defined   in  this  Agreement  shall  be  construed  in
     accordance with GAAP.

          6.2 EXECUTIVE TITLE.  This  Agreement,  jointly with the  account
     statement  certified  by  the  duly  authorized  accountant   of  CBM,
     constitutes  an  execution  title pursuant to article 68 of the Credit
     Institutions Law.

          6.3 RESTRICTIONS. Pursuant  to  article 294 of the General Law of
     Negotiable  Instruments  and  Credit  Transactions,   the  Bank  shall
     maintain the right to restrict the disbursements term or the amount of
     the  Loan or the disbursements and the amount of the Loan,  by  simple
     written  communication  to  the  Borrower, limiting or terminating the
     right to use non disbursed amounts.

          6.4  INTEREST. In the event the  obligation  of  Company  to  pay
     interest on  the principal balance of any Note is or becomes in excess
     of the maximum  interest  rate  which  Company  is permitted by law to
     contract or agree to pay, giving due consideration  to  the  execution
     date  of  this  Agreement,  then,  in that event, the rate of interest
     applicable hereunder shall be deemed to be immediately reduced to such
     maximum rate and all previous payments  in  excess of the maximum rate
     shall be deemed to have been payments in reduction  of  principal  and
     not of interest.

          6.5  BINDING  EFFECT;  ASSIGNMENT.  This  Agreement  shall become
     effective  when  it  shall  have been executed by the Company and  the
     Bank, and thereafter shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of
     the Company and the Bank and  their respective successors and assigns,
     except that the Company shall not  have the right to assign its rights
     hereunder or any interest herein without  the prior written consent of
     the Bank, and that Bank shall not have the  right  to transfer, assign
     or convey, whether by participation or otherwise, its rights hereunder
     or any interest herein without the prior written consent  of  Company,
     unless  (a) Bank complies with the provisions of Section 9.10 and  (b)
     such transfer,  assignment  or  conveyance  is in favor of a financial
     institution which is subject to a Mexican Income  tax withholding rate
     payable under the Loans equal to no more than the Mexican  Income  tax
     withholding  rate  payable  by  Bank  as  of  the  date  of  any  such
     conveyance.

          6.6 GOVERNING LAW.

     (A)  THIS  AGREEMENT AND THE NOTE SHALL BE GOVERNED BY THE LAWS OF THE
          STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNITES STATES OF AMERICA, AND FOR ALL PURPOSES
          SHALL BE  CONSTRUED  IN  ACCORDANCE  WITH THE LAWS OF SAID STATE;
          PROVIDED, HOWEVER that if any action or  proceeding in connection
          with the Note is brought in the courts of Mexico, such Note shall
          be governed by the laws of Mexico;

     (b)  Any suit, action or proceeding with respect  to this Agreement or
          the Note or any judgement entered by any court in respect thereof
          may  be  brought  in the courts of the State of Michigan  in  the
          United States and,  in  the case of suits, actions or proceedings
          with respect to the Note,  in  the Courts of Mexico City, Mexico.
          Each party hereby submits to the  jurisdiction of such courts for
          the  purpose of any such suit, action,  proceeding  or  judgement
          (and waives  for such purpose any other preferential jurisdiction
          by reason of its  present  of future domicile or otherwise). Each
          party hereby irrevocably waive  any  objection which they may now
          or hereafter have to the laying of the  venue of any suit, action
          or proceeding arising out of or relating to this Agreement or the
          Note  brought  in  any  such  court  as  being  brought   in   an
          inconvenient  forum.  To the extent that a party has or hereafter
          may acquire any immunity  from  jurisdiction of any court or from
          any  legal process (whether from service  or  notice,  attachment
          prior  to judgement, attachment in aid of execution, execution or
          otherwise)  with  respect  to  itself or its property, such party
          hereby  irrevocably  waives  such  immunity  in  respect  of  its
          obligations under this Agreement or the Notes.

          6.7 COSTS AND EXPENSES. Subject to Section  6.19,  Company  shall
     pay  Bank,  promptly, all reasonable and documented costs and expenses
     incurred by Bank in connection with this Agreement, the Loan Documents
     and the indebtedness,  hereunder  and the consummation and the closing
     of the loans and transactions contemplated  hereby,  including, by way
     of  description  and  not limitation, reasonable attorneys'  fees  and
     advances, appraisal and  accounting  fees, title and lien search fees.
     All costs, including, without limitation,  reasonable  attorneys' fees
     and  costs and expenses to any environmental consultants  retained  by
     Bank hereunder, incurred by Bank hereunder or in perfecting, revising,
     protecting or enforcing any of its rights against Company, or incurred
     by Bank  in  connection  with  any  Default or Event of Default or the
     enforcement  of  the  indebtedness  hereunder,  including  by  way  of
     description  and not limitation, (a) such  charges  in  any  court  or
     bankruptcy proceedings  or  (b)  arising out of any claim or action by
     any person against Bank which would not have been asserted were it not
     for Bank's lending relationship with  Company  hereunder or otherwise,
     shall also be promptly paid by Company to Bank.  If not promptly paid,
     all of such costs, expenses and other sums payable  by Company to Bank
     under  this Section 9.7 shall bear interest at the highest  per  annum
     interest rate applicable to any of the Loans at such time.

          6.8  NOTICES.  All  notices and other communications provided for
     herein or in any document  contemplated  hereby,  given  hereunder  or
     required  by  law  to  be given, shall be in writing (unless expressly
     provided to the contrary).  Subject  to  Section  9.22,  if personally
     delivered  or delivered by facsimile transmission, such notices  shall
     be effective  when  delivered  or  transmitted,  and  in  the  case of
     courier, such notices shall be effective four (4) Business Days  after
     sending  by  international  courier service, in each case addressed to
     the parties as set forth on the  signature  page of this Agreement, or
     to such other address as a party shall have designated to the other in
     writing in accordance with this Section. The  giving  of at least five
     (5)  days' notice before Bank shall take any action described  in  any
     notice  shall  conclusively  be  deemed  reasonable  for all purposes;
     provided, that this shall not be deemed to require Bank  to  give five
     (5)  days'  notice or any notice if not specifically required in  this
     Agreement. IF  ANY LEGAL PROCEEDING ARISES OR IS INITIATED BY THE BANK
     IN THE UNITED STATES  IN  CONNECTION WITH THIS AGREEMENT, THE NOTES OR
     THE GUARANTY (FIANZA), then all notices and other communications shall
     be delivered to the Process Agent.

          6.9 FURTHER ACTION. Each  Credit  Party,  from time to time, upon
     written request of Bank, will promptly make, execute,  acknowledge and
     deliver,  or  cause to be made, executed, acknowledged and  delivered,
     all such further  and  additional  instruments,  and promptly take all
     such further action as may be reasonably required  to  carry  out  the
     intent and purpose of this Agreement.

          6.10 SUCCESSORS AND ASSIGNS; PARTICIPATIONS. This Agreement shall
     be binding upon and shall inure to the benefit of Company and Bank and
     their  respective  successors  and  assigns.  The  foregoing shall not
     authorize  any  assignment  or  transfer by Company of its  rights  or
     duties hereunder, and such assignments  or  transfers  being expressly
     prohibited. Subject to the limitations set forth in Section  9.5, Bank
     may  assign,  whether  by assignment, participation or otherwise,  its
     rights and obligations hereunder, and is hereby authorized to disclose
     (subject to reasonable security and confidentiality procedures) to any
     such assignee or participant any financial or other information in its
     knowledge  or  possession   regarding  Company,  or  the  indebtedness
     hereunder. Notwithstanding the  foregoing  (i)  in connection with any
     participation granted by Bank, Bank shall remain  primarily  obligated
     to  Company  hereunder  and Company shall be entitled to deal directly
     with Bank with respect to  all  matters  related hereto, and (ii) with
     respect to any assignment by Bank, so long  as no Event of Default has
     occurred and is existing at the time of such  assignment Bank shall be
     required to obtain the prior written consent of Company and Guarantors
     to such assignment (which consent shall not be  unreasonably  withheld
     or  delayed).  In  the  event  of any assignment made or participation
     granted by Bank under this Agreement,  neither  the  Company  nor  the
     Guarantors  shall  be required to indemnify, or pay additional amounts
     to, any such assignee  or  participant  in  excess  of the amount that
     would  have  been payable under this Agreement had no such  assignment
     occurred or participation granted.

          6.11 INDULGENCE.  No  delay  or failure of Bank in exercising any
     right, power or privilege hereunder or under any of the Loan Documents
     shall affect such right, power or privilege  nor  shall  any single or
     partial  exercise  thereof preclude any further exercise thereof,  nor
     the exercise of any  other  right,  power  or privilege. The rights of
     Bank hereunder are cumulative and are not exclusive  of  any rights or
     remedies of Bank.

          6.12  COUNTERPARTS.  This  Agreement  may be executed in  several
     counterparts, and each copy shall constitute  an  original instrument,
     but such counterparts shall together constitute but  one  and the same
     instrument.

          6.13  AMENDMENT  AND  WAIVER.  No  amendment  or  waiver  of  any
     provision  of  this Agreement or any Loan Document, nor consent to any
     departure by Company therefrom, shall in any event be effective unless
     the same shall be  in writing and signed by Bank, and then such waiver
     or consent shall be  effective  only  in the specific instance and for
     the specific purpose for which given.

          6.14 SEVERABILITY. In case any one  or more of the obligations of
     Company or any party to this Agreement, the  Note  or any of the other
     Loan  Document  shall  be  invalid,  illegal or unenforceable  in  any
     jurisdiction,  the  validity,  legality  and   enforceability  of  the
     remaining obligations of Company or such other party  shall not in any
     way  be affected or impaired thereby, and such invalidity,  illegality
     or unenforceability in one jurisdiction shall not affect the validity,
     legality or enforceability of the obligations of Company or such other
     party  under  this  Agreement,  the  Notes  or  any  of the other Loan
     Documents in any other jurisdiction.

          6.15  HEADINGS  AND  CONSTRUCTION OF TERMS. The headings  of  the
     various subdivisions hereof  are for convenience of reference only and
     shall  in no way modify or affect  any  of  the  terms  or  provisions
     hereof.  Where  the context herein requires, the singular number shall
     include the plural, and any gender shall include any other gender.

          6.16 CONSTRUCTION OF CERTAIN PROVISIONS. If any provision of this
     Agreement or any  of  the  Loan  Documents  refers to any action to be
     taken by any Person, or which such Person is  prohibited  from taking,
     such  provision  shall  be  applicable  whether  such  action is taken
     directly  or  indirectly  by  such  Person,  whether  or not expressly
     specified in such provision.

          6.17 INDEPENDENCE OF COVENANTS. Each covenant hereunder  shall be
     given  independent  effect so that if a particular action or condition
     is not permitted by any  such  covenant,  the  fact  that  it would be
     permitted  by  an  exception  to,  or  would  be  otherwise within the
     limitations of, another covenant shall not avoid the occurrence of any
     Default or Event of Default.

          6.18 RELIANCE ON AND SURVIVAL OF VARIOUS PROVISIONS.  All  terms,
     covenants,  agreements,  representations and warranties of Company  or
     any other Person who is a  party  to  any  of  the Loan Documents made
     herein or in any of the Loan Documents or in any  certificate, report,
     financial statement or other document furnished by  or  on  behalf  of
     Company in connection with this Agreement or any of the Loan Documents
     shall  be deemed to have been relied upon by the Bank, notwithstanding
     any investigation  heretofore  or  hereafter made by Bank or on Bank's
     behalf.

          6.19 WAIVER OF JURY TRIAL. BANK,  COMPANY  AND EACH CREDIT PARTY,
     AFTER  CONSULTING  OR  HAVING  HAD  THE  OPPORTUNITY TO  CONSULT  WITH
     COUNSEL, KNOWINGLY, VOLUNTARILY AND INTENTIONALLY WAIVE ANY RIGHT TO A
     TRIAL BY JURY IN ANY LITIGATION BASED UPON  OR  ARISING  OUT  OF  THIS
     AGREEMENT  OR  ANY  RELATED  INSTRUMENT  OR  AGREEMENT  OR  ANY OF THE
     TRANSACTIONS CONTEMPLATED BY THIS AGREEMENT OR ANY COURSE OF  CONDUCT,
     DEALING,  STATEMENTS  (WHETHER  ORAL  OR WRITTEN) OR ACTION OF ANY  OF
     THEM. THESE PROVISIONS SHALL NOT BE DEEMED  TO  HAVE  BEEN MODIFIED IN
     ANY RESPECT OR RELINQUISHED BY THE BANK OR COMPANY EXCEPT BY A WRITTEN
     INSTRUMENT EXECUTED BY ALL OF THEM.

          6.20  COMPLETE  AGREEMENT; CONFLICTS. This Agreement,  the  other
     Loan Documents, any agreements  certificates, or other documents given
     in  connection with the Loans and  any  commitment  letter  previously
     issued  by  Bank  with respect thereto contain the entire agreement of
     the parties thereto,  and  none  of  the  parties  shall  be  bound by
     anything not expressly in writing. In the event that and to the extent
     that  any  of  the terms, conditions or provisions of any of the other
     Loan Documents are  inconsistent  with  or in conflict with any of the
     terms,  conditions  or  provisions of this Agreement,  the  applicable
     terms, conditions and provisions  of  this  Agreement shall govern and
     control.

          6.21 CONFIDENTIALITY. Bank agrees that all non-public information
     made available by Credit Parties to it pursuant  to this Agreement and
     the  Loan  Documents  shall (except to the extent required  by  legal,
     regulatory authority or  government  process) be held in confidence by
     Bank  except  to  the  extent use and or disclosure  is  necessary  in
     connection with the enforcement of the indebtedness hereunder.

          6.22  SERVICE  OF  PROCESS.   The   Borrower  hereby  irrevocably
     designates the Process Agent, having its registered  domicile at 30600
     Telegraph  Road, Bingham Farms, Michigan 48025, as agent  to  receive,
     for and on behalf  of the Borrower, service of process in the State of
     Michigan  and absolutely  and  in  connection  therewith,  irrevocably
     appoints the  Process  Agent  as its true and lawful attorney-in-fact,
     coupled  with an interest, in its  name  and  stead  to  receive  such
     process, as  such  appointment  shall be evidenced by a duly notarized
     power-of-attorney, granted pursuant  to Mexican law.  Service upon the
     Borrower shall, for purposes of preserving  the  Bank's right to bring
     an action or proceeding or enforcing a judgment in connection with the
     Loan  Documents  in any court within Mexico, be deemed  complete  upon
     personal delivery  of  service to the Process Agent, otherwise and for
     all other purposes, service  upon the Borrower will be deemed complete
     upon delivery of the summons and  complaint in accordance with Section
     9.6., provided such notices, if delivered  in  connection with a court
     procedure   comply  with  Mexican  procedural due process  and  public
     policy laws. The Borrower shall continue  said  appointment of Process
     Agent in full force and effect or appoint another  agent  so  that the
     Borrower  will  at all times have an agent for service of process  for
     the  above  purposes   in  Detroit,  Michigan.  The  Borrower  further
     irrevocably consents to  the  service  of  process  out  of any of the
     aforementioned courts in any such action or proceeding by  any  method
     described in Section 9.6, such service of process to be effective upon
     receipt  of  such  registered  mail  (or  as  otherwise required under
     Mexican  procedural  due  process  and public policy  laws).   Nothing
     herein shall affect the right of the  Borrower  or  the  Bank to serve
     process in any other manner permitted by applicable law or to commence
     legal proceedings or otherwise proceed against Borrower in  the  State
     of  Michigan of the United States of America, the Federal District  of
     Mexico,  or any other jurisdiction in which Borrower may be subject to
     suit.  The  Borrower  shall  pay to Process Agent such compensation as
     shall  be  required  to be paid to  Process  Agent  for  its  services
     hereunder.  In the event  of  the transfer of all or substantially all
     of the assets and business of Process  Agent to any other corporation,
     by  consolidation, merger, sale of assets  or  otherwise,  such  other
     corporation  shall be substituted hereunder for Process Agent with the
     same effect as  if  named herein in place of CT Corporation System, in
     which case such replacement in the appointment shall be evidenced by a
     duly notarized power-of-attorney,  granted  pursuant  to  Mexican law.
     Company shall be liable for the compliance of such obligation  only as
     of  the  date  CT  Corporation  System notifies the occurrence of such
     transfer to Company.

          6.23 INDEMNIFICATION - INTEREST  RATE.  If  the interest rate set
     forth in any of the Notes is inconsistent with the  interest  rate  as
     determined  pursuant to the terms of this Agreement, then the terms of
     this Agreement  with  respect  to  the  rate  of  interest  payable by
     Borrower  shall  control.   If,  as  a  result  of  any  assignment or
     participation by Bank, any Credit Party would be obligated to pay such
     participant, assignee or other acquiror of any Note a rate of interest
     higher than what any Credit Party would be obligated to pay  under the
     terms of this Agreement, then Bank shall indemnify the Credit  Parties
     against  the  costs  and expenses incurred by the Credit Parties as  a
     result of such higher interest rate.





<PAGE>






     WITNESS THE DUE EXECUTION  HEREOF  AS  OF  THE DAY AND YEAR FIRST
     ABOVE WRITTEN.

COMERICA BANK                     GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING, S.
                                  de RL, de C.V.


By:                               By:

Its:________________________________ Its: Attorney-In-Fact


                                  By:

International Dept. - Latin Group Its: Attorney-In-Fact
500 Woodward Ave.                 Avenida 5 de Febrero No. 1408
Detroit, Michigan 48226-3330      Queretaro, Queretaro, Mexico
Facsimile:  __________________    Facsimile:  011 42 17 97 80
                                  Attn: Fernando Urresta

Comerica Bank  Mexico, S.A.


By:_______________________________

Its:_______________________________


_____________________________
_____________________________
_____________________________






<PAGE>








                              ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

The  undersigned  are  signatories to this Agreement in their  capacity  as
Credit Parties and not as a Borrower.  Each of the undersigned who also are
Guarantors hereby:  (i)  acknowledge and consent to the execution, delivery
and performance of this Agreement;  (ii)  confirm the truth and validity of
the representations and warranties set forth  herein,  to  the  extent such
representations an warranties pertain to the undersigned, respectively, and
(iii) ratify and agree to perform the covenants and agreements set forth in
this  Agreement,  to  the extent such covenants and agreements specifically
pertain to the undersigned, respectively.

GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING                                     AVICOLA
PILGRIM'S PRIDE DE
HOLDING, S. de RL  de C.V.        MEXICO, S.A. de C.V.


By:                               By:

Its: Attorney-In-Fact             Its: Attorney-In-Fact


By:                               By:

Its: Attorney-In-Fact             Its: Attorney-In-Fact

Address: Same as Borrower         Address: Same as Borrower


PILGRIM'S PRIDE, S.A. de C.V.     PILGRIM'S PRIDE CORPORATION


By:                               By:

Its: Attorney-In-Fact             Its:

                                  Address:
By:                               110 South Texas Street
                                  Pittsburg, Texas 75686
Its: Attorney-In-Fact             Facsimile: 001 903 856 7505
                                  Attn: Rick Cogdill
Address: Same as Borrower







<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT "A"

                            FORM OF LIBOR NOTE

                             [To be attached]




                                 Exhibit B




<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT "B"

                        FORM OF FEDERAL FUNDS NOTE

                             [To be attached]




                                   - 1 -




<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT "C"

                            FORM OF CETES NOTE

                             [To be attached]





                                   - 2 -




<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT "D"

                             REQUEST FOR LOAN

     Pursuant  to  the  Revolving Credit Agreement dated as of ___________,
2001 (herein called "Agreement"),  the undersigned hereby requests COMERICA
BANK and/or COMERICA BANK MEXICO, S.A. to make a ________-Based Loan to the
undersigned  on  ____________________,   ________,   in   the   amount   of
__________________   (____________)   and   the   currency   requested   is
_____________.  The  LIBOR  Interest  Period  for  the  requested  Loan, if
applicable, shall be ________ months.

     The  undersigned  certifies  that there exists no Default or Event  of
Default under the Agreement and none will exist upon the making of the Loan
requested hereunder. The undersigned  further certifies that upon advancing
the sum requested hereunder, the aggregate  amount  of  indebtedness (under
the  Agreement) will not exceed the Revolving Maximum (as  defined  in  the
Agreement) and with respect to a request for a Pesos Advance, the aggregate
amount of Pesos Advances shall not exceed the Pesos Subfacility Maximum. If
the aggregate  amount  of the indebtedness under the Agreement shall at any
time exceed the Revolving Maximum and/or the Pesos Subfacility Maximum, the
undersigned will pay such excess amount on demand.

     The undersigned hereby  authorizes  said Bank to disburse the proceeds
of this Request for Loan by crediting the  account  of the undersigned with
Bank  separately  designated by the undersigned or as the  undersigned  may
otherwise direct.

      Dated this day of _______________, 2001.

                              GRUPO  PILGRIM'S  PRIDE  FUNDING, S. de RL de
                              C.V.



                              By:

                              Its:




                                   - 3 -




<PAGE>



                                EXHIBIT "E"

                             FORM OF MORTGAGE

                             [To be attached]




                                   - 4 -




<PAGE>


                                EXHIBIT "F"

                        FORM OF CONTRATO DE PRENDA

                             [To be attached]




                              Schedule 4.4(A)




<PAGE>


                              SCHEDULE 4.4(A)


FORM OF CERTIFICATE OF SECRETARY

I,  _____________________________,  Secretary  of       [APPLICABLE  CREDIT
PARTY]   , a SOCIEDAD DE RESPONSABILIDAD LIMITADA DE CAPITAL VARIABLE  duly
organized and validly existing under the laws of  the United Mexican States
(the "Company"), hereby certify that:

     1.   Attached hereto as Exhibit A is a true, correct and complete copy
of the estatutos sociales of the Company certified by a notary public;

     2.   Attached hereto as Exhibit B is a true, correct and complete copy
of the powers of attorney of the Company certified  by a notary public, and
granted to persons acting on behalf of the Company in  connection  with the
execution and delivery of the Loan Documents to which it is a party;

     3.   The persons named below are duly qualified and acting officers of
the Company; that such Persons, acting together,  have sufficient authority
to  sign,  execute  and  deliver  on behalf of the Company each of the Loan
Documents; that each such Person has  been  duly  elected  to the indicated
office; that set forth opposite each such Person's name is his  or her true
and genuine signature.

Name                     Office                Signature

____________________________ _______________________ _____________________

____________________________ _______________________ _____________________

capitalized  terms  used, but not defined herein have the meanings ascribed
to   them   in   the   Revolving    Credit    Agreement,    dated   as   of
____________________, 2001, among GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING,  S.  de RL
de C.V. and Comerica Bank.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto signed by name.

                              ____________________________________________

                              By:
                              Name:
Dated:_________________       Title: Secretary

I,   ______________________,   the   duly  elected,  qualified  and  acting
_______________     of     the     Company,     hereby     certify     that
_________________________ is the duly, qualified  and  acting  Secretary of
the Company and that the signature appearing above is his true and  genuine
signature.

                              __________________________________________________

                              By:
                              Name:
                              Its:

Dated:              , 2001







<PAGE>


                              SCHEDULE 4.4(B)

FORM OF OFFICER'S CERTIFICATE

     I,  __________________________,  hereby  certify  that  I  am the duly
elected  and  authorized  ___________________  of       [APPLICABLE  CREDIT
PARTY]    , a SOCIEDAD DE RESPONSABILIDAD LIMITADA DE CAPITAL VARIABLE duly
organized  and validly existing under the laws of the United Mexican States
(the "Company"),  and  pursuant  to  Section  4  of  the  Revolving  Credit
Agreement, dated as of ____________, 2001 (the "Credit Agreement"), between
GRUPO PILGRIM'S PRIDE FUNDING, S. de RL de C.V.  and Comerica Bank, further
certify as follows:

     1.   All  representations  and warranties of the Company contained  in
the Agreement are true and correct as of the date hereof.

     2.   No event has occurred and is continuing that constitutes an Event
of Default (as defined in the Credit Agreement).

     3.   The Company has complied  with  all  agreements and satisfied all
conditions  on  its  part  to be performed or satisfied  under  the  Credit
Agreement at or prior to the Closing Date.

     IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have  executed  this certificate in the name and
on behalf of the Company this ______ day of _______________, 2001.

                              _________________________________________



                              By:
                              Name:
                              Title:








<PAGE>


                               SCHEDULE 4.7

                          Form of Opinion Letter



                             ___________, 2001






Comerica Bank
Comerica Bank Mexico, S.A.,
Institucion de Banca Multiple
One Detroit Center
500 Woodward Avenue
Detroit, Michigan 48226

Re:  Credit Agreement dated as of ____________, 2001 between ______________
(the  "Borrower")  and  Comerica  Bank  and  Comerica  Bank  Mexico,  S.A.,
Institucion de Banca Multiple ("Lender")

Ladies and Gentlemen:

     We  have  acted  as  counsel  to (i) the Borrower,  (ii)  ___________,
______________  (collectively, the "Guarantors")  in  connection  with  the
preparation, execution  and  delivery  of (A) the Credit Agreement, (B) the
promissory note dated ____________, 2001  (the "Note") made by the Borrower
in  favor of Lender, (C) the  Guarantee dated  _______________,  2001  (the
"Guarantee") made by each of the Guarantors in favor of the Lender, and (D)
the form  of  notes  (collectively with the Note, the "Notes") which may be
delivered after the date  hereof.   The  Credit  Agreement,  the Notes, the
Guarantee  and  such  other documents executed in connection therewith  are
sometimes collectively  referred  to  herein  as  the  "Credit  Documents".
Unless otherwise defined herein, terms defined in the Credit Agreement  are
used herein as therein defined.

     This  opinion  is  furnished  to  you  pursuant to Section ____ of the
Credit Agreement.

     In connection with the opinion expressed below, I have reviewed:

     (1)  the Credit Documents;
     (2)  forms of the Notes to be delivered after the date hereof; and
     (3)  such other documents as I have deemed  relevant or appropriate in
          connection with the giving of this opinion.

     I have assumed, without any independent investigation  or verification
of  any  kind,  (i)  the due authorization, execution and delivery  by  the
Lender of the Credit Agreement;  (ii)  the  validity,  binding  effect  and
enforceability  of  the  Credit  Documents  under  the laws of the State of
Michigan, United States of America; (iii) the genuineness  and authenticity
of  all  opinions,  documents  and  papers submitted to me as well  as  the
signature  contained  therein;  and  (iv)  that  copies  of  all  opinions,
documents  and  papers submitted to me are  complete  and  conform  to  the
originals thereof.

     I express no  opinion as to any laws other than the laws of the United
Mexican States ("Mexico")  and  I have assumed that there is nothing in any
other law that affects my opinion which is delivered based upon Mexican law
applicable to the date hereof.  In  particular,  I have made no independent
investigation of the laws of the United States of  America  or any state or
other political subdivision thereof or therein as a  basis for the opinions
stated herein and do not express or imply any opinion on or based  on  such
laws.

     Based  upon  the  foregoing and subject to the further qualifications,
exceptions, assumptions  and  limitations  stated  herein,  and  upon  such
investigations as I have deemed necessary, I am of the opinion that:

(a)The  Borrower  and  each  of  the  Guarantors is a corporation (sociedad
anonima de capital variable) duly organized  and validly existing under the
laws of Mexico and has the corporate power and  authority  to  enter  into,
perform and comply with its obligations under the Credit Documents.

(b)The execution, delivery and performance by the Borrower and each of  the
Guarantors of the Credit Documents to which such Borrower or Guarantor is a
party  have  been  duly authorized by all necessary corporate action and do
not violate any material  contractual  obligation,  the  Estatutos Sociales
requirement of law or judgment, license or order, binding upon the Borrower
or the Guarantors or result in the creation or imposition  of  any  lien on
any  asset  of the Borrower or the Guarantors other than the liens intended
to be created by such Credit Documents.

(c)No authorization or approval, notice to or filing with, any Governmental
Authority in Mexico is required for the execution, delivery and performance
by the Borrower  and  each of the Guarantors of the Credit Documents except
for  such  consents,  approvals,   authorizations,   notices,   filings  or
qualifications which have been obtained prior to the date hereof,  for  the
validity  or  enforceability of the Credit Documents for the performance of
their obligations thereunder.

(d)The Credit Documents  have  been  duly  executed  and  delivered  by the
Borrower  and the Guarantors, as the case may be, and constitute valid  and
binding obligations of the Borrower and the Guarantors, as the case may be,
enforceable against them in accordance with their respective terms, subject
to  the  suspension   of  payments,  bankruptcy,  insolvency,  liquidation,
moratorium and other similar  laws  of  general  application relating to or
affecting the rights generally.

(e)Neither  the  Borrower,  the  Guarantors,  nor any of  their  respective
property, has any immunity from the jurisdiction  of  any court or from any
legal  process  (whether  through  service or notice, attachment  prior  to
judgment, attachment in aid of execution, execution or otherwise) under any
applicable law in Mexico in respect  of  their obligations under the Credit
Documents, as the case may be.

(f)There are no legal or governmental proceedings  pending  or, to the best
of my knowledge, threatened to which the Borrower, the Guarantors or any of
their respective subsidiaries are a party or of which any property  of  the
Borrower,  the  Guarantors  or any of their respective subsidiaries are the
subject which, if determined  adversely  to the Borrower, the Guarantors or
any  of  their  respective  subsidiaries,  would  individually  or  in  the
aggregate, have a Material Adverse Effect.

(g)It is not necessary under the laws of Mexico  (i) in order to enable the
Lender to enforce its rights under the Credit Documents  or  (ii) solely by
reason  of the execution, delivery or performance of the Credit  Documents,
that the  Lender be licensed, qualified or entitled to carry on business in
Mexico.

(h)Under currently existing Mexican law and regulations the Lender will not
be deemed resident,  domiciled, carrying on business or subject to taxation
in Mexico, by reason solely  of  the  execution,  delivery,  performance or
enforcement of the Credit Documents, provided that the Lender does not have
a permanent establishment in Mexico, for tax purposes, it being  understood
that  the  mere  performing  of its obligations under such Credit Documents
would not result in the existence of such permanent establishment.

(i)Each Guarantor's obligations  under  the  Guaranty  rank  and will under
current  law,  rank at least pari passu in priority of payment and  in  all
other  respects  with  all  its  other  present  or  future  unsecured  and
unsubordinated Indebtedness,  except for obligations preferred by mandatory
provisions of law including, among  others,  labor  claims,  claims  of tax
authorities  for  unpaid  taxes, duties, social security quotas, retirement
funds quotas, and workers'  housing funds quotas which have preference over
claims arising from the Notes and other Credit Documents.

(j)There is no tax, impost, deduction  or  withholding imposed by Mexico or
any  political  subdivision  thereof  on  or by virtue  of  the  execution,
delivery, enforcement or performance of the  Credit  Documents,  except for
withholding  taxes imposed on payments of interest and fees made under  the
Credit Agreement  and the Notes by the Borrower to the Lender that is not a
resident of Mexico  for  tax purposes, imposed under the Mexican Income Tax
Law (Ley del Impuesto sobre la Renta).

(k)To endure the legality,  validity,  enforceability  or  admissibility in
evidence  of the Credit Documents in Mexico, it is not necessary  that  the
Credit Documents  or any other document be filed or recorded with any court
or other Governmental Authority in Mexico.

(l)The choice of Michigan  law  as  the governing law of the Agreement is a
valid choice of law.  The submission by the Borrower to the jurisdiction of
the competent United States Federal District Court in the State of Michigan
and to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State of Michigan is valid and
binding on the Borrower and not subject to revocation.

(m)The Notes qualify as "Pagares" for  the  purposes of the Mexican General
Law  of  Credit Instruments and Transactions ("ley  General  de  Titulos  y
Operaciones de Credito") and may be enforced through executory proceedings.

(n)Any final  judgment  obtained  against the Borrower or the Guarantors in
any of the courts specified in the  Credit Documents, in respect of any sum
payable by the Borrower or the Guarantors  under the Credit Documents would
be recognized and enforced by the courts of Mexico without reexamination of
the issues, pursuant to Articles 569 and 571 of the Mexican Federal Code of
Civil Procedure ("Codigo Federal de Procedimientos  Civiles")  and  Article
1347A  of  the Mexican Commerce Code ("Codigo de Comerico"), which provide,
inter alia,  that  any  judgment rendered outside Mexico may be enforced by
Mexican courts, provided that:

(i)such judgment is obtained  in  compliance with legal requirements of the
jurisdiction of the court rendering  such  judgment  and in compliance with
all legal requirements of the Agreement;

(ii)such judgment is strictly for the payment of a certain sum of money and
has  been  rendered in a "in personam" action as opposed  to  an  "in  rem"
action:

(iii)service  of  process  was  made  personally  on the Borrower or on the
appropriate process agent (a court of Mexico would  consider the service of
process upon the duly appointed agent, by means of a  notarial  instrument,
to  be  personal  service  of  process  meeting procedural requirements  of
Mexico),  provided such service of process  is  personally  made  upon  the
process agent:

(iv)such judgment does not contravene Mexican law, public policy of Mexico,
international  treaties  or  agreements  binding  upon  Mexico or generally
accepted principles of international law;

(v)the  applicable  procedural  requirements under the law of  Mexico  with
respect to the enforcement of foreign  judgments (including the issuance of
letters rogatory by the competent authority  of  such  jurisdiction and the
certification   of   such   judgment  as  authentic  by  the  corresponding
authorities of such jurisdiction  in accordance with the laws thereof), are
complied with;

(vi)such judgment is final in the jurisdiction where obtained;

(vii)the action in respect of which  such  judgment  is rendered is not the
subject  matter  of  a  lawsuit  among the same parties, pending  before  a
Mexican court; and

(viii)any such foreign courts would  enforce  final judgments issued by the
federal or state courts of Mexico as a matter of reciprocity;

     The opinion is subject to the following qualifications:

(a)Enforcement  may  be  limited  or  affected by suspension  of  payments,
bankruptcy, insolvency, liquidation, reorganization,  moratorium  and other
similar laws of general application relating to or affecting the rights  of
creditors  generally;  also  pursuant  to the laws of Mexico, labor claims,
claims  of  tax  authorities  for  unpaid taxes,  Social  Security  quotas,
Workers' Housing Fund quotas and Retirement  Fund quotas will have priority
over claims of the Lender;

(b)I note that the payment of interest on interest is prohibited by Mexican
law;

(c)In the event that proceedings are brought in  Mexico seeking performance
of  the Borrower's obligations in Mexico, pursuant  to  Article  8  of  the
Mexican Monetary Law ("Ley Monetaria de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos"), the
Borrower  may  discharge  its  obligations  by  paying  any sums due in the
currency other than Mexican currency, in Mexican currency  at  the  rate of
exchange  fixed  by Banco de Mexico in Mexico for the date when payment  is
made;

(d)In the event that  any  legal  proceedings  are brought in the courts of
Mexico, a Spanish translation of the documents required in such proceedings
prepared by a court-approved translator would have  to  be  approved by the
court  after the defendant had been given an opportunity to be  heard  with
respect   to  the  accuracy  of  the  translation,  and  proceedings  would
thereafter be based upon the translated documents.

     This opinion is addressed to you solely for your benefit and it is not
to be transmitted to anyone else nor is it to be relied upon by anyone else
or for any  other purpose or quoted circulated, filed or referred to in any
public document or filed with anyone without my express written consent.

Very truly yours,

</TEXT>
</DOCUMENT>
</SEC-DOCUMENT>
-----END PRIVACY-ENHANCED MESSAGE-----