Major food companies offering deals, new sizes as low-income Americans
spend less
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[April 08, 2024] By
Jessica DiNapoli
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Americans relying on government benefits to buy
food and other essentials are slashing spending, prompting food makers
like Kraft-Heinz and Conagra Brands to overhaul their products and
strategies following years of price hikes.
Many of the biggest makers of packaged foods and drinks are seeing their
sales volumes fall, due partly to low-income consumers -- typically
making roughly less than $35,000 per year -- cooking from scratch, using
up leftovers or just buying less.
Roughly one-third of Black American households and 21% of white American
households fell into this category in 2022, according to the latest
available U.S. census data.
"We expect reduced SNAP [food stamp] benefits will be a headwind,"
Dollar Tree CEO Richard Dreiling said during a March 13 earnings call.
Dreiling was referring to the U.S. government's supplemental nutrition
assistance program (SNAP), which provides benefits to low-income
families to help them afford groceries.
At Circle K convenience stores, sales from people using food stamps were
down 40% from last year.
"We can look geographically and see that where we've got lower-income
consumers, our results are worse," Brian Hannasch, CEO of Alimentation
Couche-Tard, which operates Circle K, said during a March 21 earnings
call.
To appeal to Americans who can no longer afford fast food, Conagra in
late May will introduce new Banquet chicken patties, priced at $6.99 for
six, a company spokesman said. Chicken sandwiches are top picks at
fast-food chains.
Sherry Frey, NielsenIQ vice president of wellness, said that low-income
consumers eat less produce and fresh meat than wealthier shoppers.
"For sure SNAP and WIC shoppers are looking for value," Frey said,
referring to government food benefits for women, infants and children
(WIC). "Unfortunately so many SNAP and WIC shoppers are food insecure
and they’re subsidizing at food banks as well."
People struggling to make ends meet are buying “whatever is on the shelf
that you can stretch longer and further to feed the many mouths that
might be sitting around the table," said Carlos Rodriguez, chief policy
and operations officer at City Harvest, which distributes fresh food in
New York City.
They are "forgoing items you normally want, which is fresh nutritious
food,” Rodriguez said.
Consumer companies' new emphasis on value and discounts is a reversal
from their strategy during the pandemic and immediately after, when they
focused on premium products, touting new flavors and options in an
effort to justify climbing prices.
Now food companies must “make sure they are attracting the value buyer
back into the fold,” said Duleep Rodrigo, U.S. consumer and retail
sector leader at KPMG. “They can’t get volume without this key segment.”
Some shoppers are ditching low-calorie snacks like popcorn for more
filling ones, executives have said. Hershey rolled out bigger bags of
Skinny Pop, which are cheaper per ounce than smaller sizes. PepsiCo has
new campaigns in the works to promote its competing Smartfood brand, a
spokesperson said.
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A Stouffer's frozen meal is displayed for sale at Target in
Manhattan, New York City, U.S., March 6, 2024. REUTERS/Jessica
DiNapoli
A spokesperson for Coca-Cola said the soft drinks maker has been
increasing the number of weeks that retailers are promoting 1.25
liter sodas as part of a value bundle targeted to appeal to
price-conscious and lower-income consumers.
Nissin Foods, whose products like Cup Noodles sell for under $1, saw
unit sales decline last year in its category, Brian Huff, CEO of the
U.S. division of the Japanese company, said in a March 18 interview.
The company is investing in buy-one-get-one-free deals at
Florida-based Publix, for example, and other promotions to encourage
so-called pantry loading, Huff said.
Kraft macaroni and cheese maker Kraft Heinz, cereal company WK
Kellogg and Kellanova, which sells Pringles chips, are among the
food companies ratcheting up discounts after a years-long hiatus
during the pandemic, investment bank Jefferies said in an April 3
research note.
Conagra's approach to discounts is to make them more frequent
instead of deep, CEO Sean Connolly said in an interview April 4.
"We might invest to get below a key price threshold," Connolly said,
such as discounting an item regularly priced at $3.25 to $2.99. It's
"a shallow discount but something to make it provocative and make it
therefore more effective."
Charsetta Reed, 61, of Chicago, is seeking more bargains and
increasingly shopping at Dollar Tree for groceries like Hershey's
candies, Pampa canned mackerel and sardines and jars of relish,
jalapeno peppers and pickles.
"These are items that I use often, so they need to be replaced,"
Reed said. "I can’t afford to go keep buying $3-$4 jars of food."
PROTEINS AND PEANUT BUTTER
Executives said the financial stress low-income consumers are facing
is showing up in what they are buying: proteins and more filling
corn-based snacks.
"We have a large canned-meat portfolio," said Bob Nolan, Conagra
senior vice president of demand science. "It's on fire." Conagra
manufactures Armour Star Vienna sausages, which are sold for $1 for
a 4.6 oz tin in Walgreens stores, for example.
Nolan said sales of Conagra's corn-based snack Andy Capp's have
"been up 20-30%." And sunflower seed snacks like David Seeds, which
"last you a whole baseball game," are "doing spectacular," he said.
J.M. Smucker is continuing to see an uptick in sales of its Jif
peanut butter, according to CFO Tucker Marshall, which he said
"provides a very cost-effective form of a protein," Marshall said.
(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Mark Porter)
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