$10 toothpaste? U.S. household goods makers face blowback on price hikes
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[March 01, 2022]
By Jessica DiNapoli
(Reuters) - Get ready for the $10 tube of toothpaste.
Colgate-Palmolive Co CEO Noel Wallace said
last week at an industry conference that the household goods maker sees
its new Optic White Pro Series toothpaste as the type of premium product
"vital" to its ability to raise prices, which will help drive profit
growth this year.
His remarks come when many consumer products companies are hiking prices
as much as they can to offset their own rising costs, a trend that could
continue due to the conflict between Russia and Ukraine, whose economic
risks include driving up gasoline prices.
So far retailers and consumers seem largely unfazed by higher prices.
But some lawmakers and consumer advocates argue that companies are
excessively raising prices in order to fuel profits and return money to
shareholders.
"We're seeing significant price hikes on virtually every item consumers
purchase," said U.S. Representative David Cicilline, who is working on
proposed antitrust legislation aimed at bringing down prices. "They're
imposing real hardships. People are taking things out of their grocery
carts because it’s too expensive."
In the past, major retailers such as Walmart Inc pushed back on price
hikes. But now, retailers like Walmart and Target Corp, which is to
report quarterly results Tuesday, are mostly going along with them.
The U.S. Federal Trade Commission over the last three months has probed
sky-high prices and supply chain disruptions, requiring companies
including Procter & Gamble, Kraft Heinz Co, Kroger Co and Walmart to
turn over internal documents on profit margins, pricing and promotions.
Comments on the inquiry are due March 14 and so far show small grocers
angry with having to pay more and receive less of crucial products.
Consumers wrote in about being unable to find oatmeal, cereal and cat
food.
In an interview with Reuters, Cicilline cited Colgate as an example of a
company touting price hikes, making basic items too costly, and paying
out more to investors.
Colgate expects its margins to widen this year, due in part to higher
prices. It also bought back almost 50% more shares last year, a boon for
investors.
Raising prices is a "key capability" for Colgate that will help drive
profit growth, Wallace said last week.
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A display of Colgate toothpaste is seen on a store shelf in
Westminster, Colorado April 26, 2009. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/Files
A Colgate spokesperson said in a
statement that the company has a wide portfolio of products at
different price points, and touted its new $10 toothpaste as the
first with 5% hydrogen peroxide, with "demonstrated efficacy to
whiten teeth.”
Consumer goods companies last year started hiking prices in response
to rising raw material costs and labor shortages due to the
pandemic.
"There is incredible appetite for our products," said Katie Denis, a
spokeswoman for the Consumer Brands Association, a trade group for
consumer packaged goods companies including Colgate. "We make
essentials. And there is no option of not delivering."
Prices also rose on competing private label items, analysts said.
The White House is targeting corporate profits as it grapples with
inflation. Bharat Ramamurti, deputy director of the White House's
National Economic Council, said there are examples of companies
outside of the meatpacking industry -- which has particularly been
in the White House's crosshairs -- increasing prices beyond their
own climbing costs.
Lindsay Owens, executive director of the progressive non-profit
Groundwork Collaborative, named diapers as a category with little
competition, paving the way for aggressive price hikes.
Kimberly-Clark Corp's margins took a hit in 2021 due to rising
costs. The maker of Huggies diapers is betting that consumers will
buy pricier options made with plant-based material, helping its
profits recover, executives said at last week's conference.
P&G executives said last week that they expect margins to continue
to improve as higher prices hit stores. The company also plans to
buy back more stock than originally planned.
"Many companies are taking advantage of high consumer demand to
continue to raise prices when they don’t need to," said Jack Gillis,
executive director of the Consumer Federation of America, a
non-profit consumer interest group. "As long as consumers are
willing to pay those prices, there’s no incentive to lower them."
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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