Beyond Meat's home in the meat aisle sparks food fight
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[June 06, 2019]
By Tina Bellon
NEW YORK (Reuters) - In a bid to directly
compete with ground beef and pork sausage, Beyond Meat Inc bills itself
the world's first plant-based burger sold in the meat case of U.S.
grocery stores.
But interviews with nine U.S. grocery chains show that retailers are
still figuring out Beyond Meat's best fit in their shopping aisles - and
it may be closer to the vegan section than the refrigerated meat
department so desired by Beyond Meat.
The stakes are high in the battle over supermarket real estate, as
upstart Beyond Meat seeks to quickly carve out its place in the meat
section in the face of pushback from meat producers before more
plant-based rivals from Impossible Foods and Nestle SA hit the market.
Natural Grocers by Vitamin Cottage Inc, which owns some 150 stores in 19
states, told Reuters it places Beyond Meat in a refrigerated section
with other alternative proteins like tofu, and not the meat case, to
avoid confusion among shoppers, its co-president, Kemper Isely, said.
At the 35 Kings Food Markets and Balducci's Food Lover's Markets across
New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and the Washington D.C. area, Beyond
Meat products are sold both in the dairy and meat section.
"Sales in both spaces have been great and customers generally view this
as a new food category," said Stephen Corradini, chief merchandising
officer at KB US Holdings Inc, the investment firm owning the stores.
Other retail chains across the United States, including Town & Country
Markets Inc in the Pacific Northwest, New York-based Morton Williams
Supermarkets and Fresh Thyme Farmers Market in the Midwest, echoed
Corradini, saying they see high demand among customers regardless of
where Beyond Meat products are placed.
Beyond Meat and its new meatless burger rivals are counting on going
head to head with meat inside stores. They avoid terms such as vegan or
vegetarian, and request stores do not place their products in the
supermarket vegan aisle where non-meat eaters traditionally buy tofu,
tempeh and other plant-based alternatives.
Marketing its burger as one designed to look, cook and taste like
traditional ground beef, Beyond Meat targets mainstream consumers who
want to reduce their meat consumption amid growing concerns over health
risks, animal welfare and environmental hazards of industrial animal
farming.
"Find it in the meat aisle," the company's website says of its sausages
and burger patties, which are made of yellow pea protein, coconut and
canola oil.
Beyond Meat declined to comment ahead of its first earnings report
scheduled for Thursday afternoon.
The company has warned in regulatory filings that changes to retail
placement could hamper growth by failing to attract new customers and
effectively compete with animal-based protein. Analysts consider Beyond
Meat's strategic placement a "strong advantage" over competitors and a
differentiating factor in reaching the broadest possible U.S. market
which they estimate to be $100 billion by 2035.
Investors are bullish on the business model, boosting Beyond Meat's
valuation to more than $6 billion from $1.5 billion when it went public
on May 2, even though the California-based company said it may never
turn a profit.
But while Beyond Meat requests stores sell its products next to real
meat, there are no contractual obligations on product placement,
according to interviews with nine retail chains. Some grocers, such as
The Fresh Market Inc, which operates some 160 stores across 22 states,
place Beyond Meat in the freezer with other veggie burgers or even the
dairy section as they evaluate sales and decide on a long-term placement
strategy.
"The freezer section is our initial go-to destination as our guests
otherwise wouldn't intuitively know where to find the product," said
Dwight Richmond, Fresh Market's director of grocery.
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Vegetarian sausages from Beyond Meat Inc, the vegan burger maker,
are shown for sale at a market in Encinitas, California, U.S., June
5, 2019. REUTERS/
Kroger Co, Target Corp, Amazon.com Inc's Whole Foods, Walmart Inc, Ahold
Delhaize, Shop Rite, Stater Brothers and Wegmans, which all sell Beyond Meat,
did not respond or declined to comment on their placement strategy.
Sean Saenz, senior director of meat and seafood operations at Gelson's, which
owns 28 stores across Southern California, said the retailer did not see strong
sales when it initially placed Beyond Meat in the freezer.
Since moving the burger out of the freezer, Beyond Meat sales are up 60 percent,
Saenz said, while sales in the overall vegan section grew 20 percent.
"We're still heavily weighted on probably 60 to 70 percent of the Beyond Meat
being sold from the vegan location," Saenz said, calling purchases out of the
fresh meat case "more of an impulse buy."
"I don't think it will ever be as big as meat, but it's definitely adding
growing sales which is something every retailer is looking for," he said.
CONSUMER CONFUSION?
The fresh meat case is one of the most restricted areas in a supermarket because
space is limited and perishable items need to be chilled, according to Rick
Stein, vice president of fresh foods at the Food Marketing Institute, the retail
trade association.
He sees retailers carving out space for plant-based meat alternatives in the
packaged meat section, next to bacon, sausages and ham, a placement aimed at
adding sales.
The move has drawn the ire of the U.S. Cattlemen's Association, which wants the
meat case reserved exclusively for real meat and says the new products create
confusion and erode the trust consumers place in the meat case.
"These plant-based companies are riding on the coattails of the beef industry,
which has spent decades building up a healthy brand consumers trust," said Lia
Biondo, USCA's director of policy and outreach.
COMPETITION COMING
The debate is about to get more noisy as Beyond Meat, which began selling its
burger patties to retailers about three years ago, begins to face more
plant-based competitors in stores.
"Competition over placement is clearly heating up as everyone vies for a spot in
the meat case," said Phil Lempert, an expert on retail food trends who advises
companies on food branding and consumer behavior.
Canadian packaged meat producer Maple Leaf Foods Inc, which sells plant-based
meat alternatives such as vegan ground beef under its LightLife brand, expects
its products in the meat case of U.S. retailers by this summer.
Impossible Foods, which has so far focused on supplying restaurants, plans to
sell its Impossible Burger in supermarkets' meat cases by the end of the year.
Nestle, the world's biggest packaged foods group, seeks to sell a pea-based
veggie patty called Awesome Burger under its U.S. plant-based Sweet Earth brand
in the fall.
Tyson Foods Inc, the largest U.S. meat processor, is also working on its own
line of alternative protein products after it sold its stake in Beyond Meat in
April.
John Beretta, group vice president for meat and seafood merchandising at
Albertsons Companies Inc, which owns Safeway Inc, Lucky and Randalls stores,
said the meat case will change based on consumer demand, with plant-based items
potentially replacing some meat products.
"We're at a point where plant-based meats have become a segment of their own,
and by the end of the year we'll have a section solely dedicated to these
products inside the meat department," said Beretta.
(Reporting by Tina Bellon; Editing by Anna Driver and Edward Tobin)
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