Cyber assault impacts United Natural Foods' quarterly profits, company admits
United Natural Foods Inc. (UNFI) Overcomes Cyberattack Disruption
The fourth quarter of 2025 saw a significant challenge for United Natural Foods Inc. (UNFI) as a cyberattack disrupted its supply chain operations, affecting grocery stores across the U.S., including Whole Foods locations[1][3]. The attack occurred on June 5 and caused critical system outages, leading to delivery delays, canceled shifts, and empty shelves in over 30,000 stores[1][2][3].
The cyberattack resulted in lost sales volume and increased recovery costs, substantially impacting UNFI’s quarterly profits[3][4]. The company took immediate action to contain the breach, launched investigations, and gradually restored IT and distribution functions while manually processing orders as a temporary measure[1][3].
UNFI emphasized that long-term operations remain on track, and it is likely implementing enhanced cybersecurity measures, employee training, and business continuity planning to prevent similar incidents[1]. The company also revealed that the cyberattack will materially affect its quarterly earnings, as disclosed in an SEC filing on June 21[6].
Despite the short-term disruption, UNFI does not expect the cyberattack to have a material impact on its financial condition or its ability to achieve its long-term strategic and financial objectives[7]. The company is regularly receiving and shipping products to retailers across its distribution network[8].
The cyberattack has highlighted the supply chain risks facing the food and agriculture sector, underscoring the importance of robust cybersecurity measures[9]. UNFI is optimistic about its financial future, with a strong operating performance in the third and fourth quarters of the fiscal year, including the estimated impact of the cyberattack[7]. The company will provide a financial update in July, detailing its performance and the estimated impact of the cyberattack.
UNFI is also confident that its cybersecurity insurance policy will cover the costs associated with the incident[10]. Core systems for electronic ordering and invoicing have been restored, enabling business operations to normalize[2]. The recovery process is expected to extend into UNFI's 2026 fiscal year[4].
References:
- Supermarket News
- The Wall Street Journal
- CNBC
- Reuters
- Natural Grocers
- SEC Filing
- Yahoo Finance
- BusinessWire
- Forbes
- Insurance Journal
Read also:
- Social Security Administration Abandons Plan for Electronic Payments: Important Information for Recipients of Benefits
- AI-Powered Transportation Stock's Possible Challenge to Tesla's Autonomous Dreams?
- Giant Luxury Yacht from Lürssen Company Capable of Navigating 1,000 Nautical Miles on Electric Power Solely
- Investment Firm, MPower Ventures, Obtains $2.7 Million in Capital to Broadens Solar Power Offerings Throughout Africa