Lockdown 2.0: Food companies overhauled production to put more toilet
paper, pasta sauce in stores
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[November 14, 2020] By
Richa Naidu, Victoria Waldersee and Siddharth Cavale
CHICAGO/LISBON (Reuters) - When rumors
first began to circulate that the UK would go back into lockdown, Leanne
Barnes despaired as bread and toilet roll flew off the shelves again at
her local supermarket. But to her surprise, shelves were back to being
fully stocked within a few days.
Barnes stocked her pantry last time around with a few additional comfort
foods - macaroni cheese, ravioli, soup and spaghetti. But as of last
week, she said she felt no urge to stockpile goods.
So far, consumers haven't returned to the sort of panic buying frenzy
that sent packaged-food manufacturers scrambling earlier this year.
At the same time, major food companies – including Campbell Soup <CPB.N>,
Kraft Heinz <KHC.O> and McCormick & Co <MKC.N> – told Reuters or have
said publicly that they have taken measures like changing their
production, packaging or pricing so retailers can keep shelves stocked.
Their steps include expanding manufacturing, hiring more workers,
re-routing products from restaurants to grocery stores, and turning to
bigger pack sizes. Many of their moves came at a high financial cost.
Economists say shoppers realize they can’t afford to overspend, and
therefore, aren’t likely to make binge purchases.
Consumers are more likely to hold back from stockpiling goods - even
with significant price-promotions on offer – because the economy is weak
and they want to conserve financial resources, according to Benny Mantin,
director of the Luxembourg Centre of Logistics and Supply Chain
Management.
A Reuters analysis of a basket of goods shows shoppers are buying far
less in the United States and Europe than they did earlier this year at
the start of the first round of lockdowns.
(Click here for graphics on consumer spending patterns in the United
States https://tmsnrt.rs/2IvYJkk, Germany https://tmsnrt.rs/3lDqtCl and
the United Kingdom https://tmsnrt.rs/36yzbew.)
Yet for consumer companies, the financial consequences of quickly
ramping up production have been severe.
Beyond Meat’s <BYND.O> third-quarter sales growth slowed and the company
on Monday posted a $19.3 million net loss, partly due to higher expenses
from retooling its supply chain to meet grocery demand earlier this
year, and what it described as less “retail stockpiling” during the
quarter.
Spice maker McCormick's costs have shot up in the last two quarters and
are expected by Refinitiv to rise even more in the current one.
“I'd say that today, our supply chain is so much more resilient than it
was at the beginning of the year,” McCormick's Chief Executive Lawrence
Kurzius told Reuters in October.
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A worker with a face shield checks products on the shelf of a
grocery store in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York,
U.S., August 7, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
Kurzius said the company has had to de-prioritize products like some gluten-free
spices in favor of popular comfort ingredients like pumpkin-pie spice and taco
seasoning. “I'm not trying to tempt fate by saying that, but I think McCormick,
as well as our industry as a whole, is in a much better place.”
Next month, Prego pasta sauce owner Campbell Soup is expected to report an
increase in operating expenses, its first in five quarters, according to
Refinitiv. Campbell - which has sacrificed some products to focus on more
popular ones, such as chicken or tomato soup - spent more on sanitation and
labor in its most recent quarter and invested $40 million in a new Goldfish
cracker plant in September.
Campbell CEO Mark Clouse told Reuters the company has upped outsourcing of
production of soup and some snacks to third-party manufacturers – or
“co-packers” - to meet any unexpected demand quickly.
“There will be enough soup for the winter,” he said. “You’ll see a shelf that
feels fuller than what you might have seen back in March as we’ve worked closely
with retailers to make sure we get assortments right.”
Other companies grappling with higher manufacturing costs include Procter &
Gamble <PG.N>, which has been making Charmin products at record levels this year
and has hired more workers to keep lines running 24/7.
Rival Kimberly-Clark <KMB.N>, the world’s biggest toilet paper maker, is also
seeing higher manufacturing and distribution costs, while Clorox <CLX.N> said
this month that it is “investing significantly” in third-party suppliers and
getting products to retailers faster.
Companies including Kraft Heinz are also running factories 24/7 and making
bigger, more affordable pack sizes of products.
“Affordability is a rising concern, which should be a benefit to those companies
that are fast to adapt,” said Miguel Patricio, CEO of Kraft Heinz which is
seeing more demand for 12-pack Mac & Cheese and bigger bottles of ketchup.
Patricio told Reuters Kraft Heinz has increased U.S. third-party manufacturing
by 20%, and its own production by 20-25%. Kellogg said the company has plans to
invest in “significant capacity” as it enters 2021.
McCormick’s Kurzius said it, too, struck more deals with co-packers, changed
factory shifts to run 24/7 and hired 400 U.S. manufacturing workers to increase
capacity. “We've added the equivalent of a whole new manufacturing center to
meet this year’s surge in demand,” Kurzius said.
(Reporting by Richa Naidu in Chicago, Victoria Waldersee in Lisbon, Siddharth
Cavale in Bengaluru; Editing by Vanessa O'Connell and Nick Zieminski)
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