Showing posts with label food. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

RETAILWIRE: What consumer trends will shape food retailing in 2014?

What consumer trends will shape food retailing in 2014?    



Millennials, health-conscious shoppers and a shift in consumer palates set the stage for what's to come in the food world this year, according to 2014 predictions from Phil Lempert, the well-known Supermarket Guru.

Mr. Lempert sees the following 10 trends in the grocery space gaining attention from consumers in 2014:

1. The Emergence of the IndieWoman: Almost 31 million strong, these women are 27 and older, live alone and have no children. Time is of the essence for the IndieWoman, so look for more brands to cater to this powerful consumer who wants to cook, but might not have the time for a homemade meal every night.

2. Better-for-You Snacking: Look for supermarkets to replace traditional higher-sugar, higher-fat snacks at the checkout with better-for-you on-the-go offerings.
3. Brands Reach Consumers Locally Through Cause Initiatives: A survey recently conducted by ConAgra Foods found that 62 percent of consumers appreciate and want to support companies that donate to important social causes. Look for food brands to increasingly focus on community outreach.

4. Click to Cook: For the sake of convenience and saving time, people will begin to rely more on their mobile phones when grocery shopping. In a recent online ConAgra Foods survey, one third of consumers reported using their mobile phone while at the grocery store, most often to refer to shopping lists and recipes.

5. Supermarkets — The New Culinary Schools: Grocery stores are beginning to offer services such as "community cooking centers" where shoppers collaborate and learn from each other. These social environments are the perfect place for the aging Millennial population as they are a group that likes to cook, but doesn't necessarily have the skills to make elaborate meals at home.

6. The Retailer Becomes the Brand: Consumers have become increasingly loyal to their preferred retailer and its products. No longer will private brands just emulate national brand products, but consumers will see more private brands creating new products of their own.

7. Rise and Shine — The New Way to Start Your Day: To live a healthy lifestyle without compromising taste and indulgence, consumers are looking more at foods like eggs, meats, and Greek yogurt, as well as whole grain products, for their breakfast, Mintel reports.

8. Packaging Evolves to Share More with Consumers: Beyond learning more about an ingredient or health claim, using an app on a mobile device might be used to tell where the ingredients come from, who prepared the food, the company's history and even offer other customer reviews and ratings.

9. Millennials Make the Supermarket Social: The next evolution will be "click to buy" for consumers looking to purchase ingredients for a recipe on Pinterest or other social media platforms.

10. International Restaurant Flavors at Home: The surge of Latino and Asian populations, along with growing consumer interest in adding more flavor and variety to mealtime, will fuel this trend.

Through a special arrangement, presented here for discussion is a summary of a current article from the monthly e-zine, CPGmatters. Article from RetailLink and can be found here:
 

Thursday, October 3, 2013

5 Ugly Food and Bev Boycotts That Could Have Been Avoided

In the mid-1960s we knew a nun who was a believer in the Catholic Worker movement. She was an activist, a protester, a voice screaming against wrongs. She was also our fourth-grade teacher.

One day, walking through a neighborhood supermarket with Mom, we ran in to the good sister. She had chained herself to a display of grapes. Our teacher had become a supporter of the grape boycott and the Delano grape strike.

We followed suit, refusing to eat grapes and learning to love Cesar Chavez. 

Years later we'Il still have a soft spot for boycotts. Our first instinct when a company does wrong is to stop buying from them, and to urge others to do the same. Our second instinct is to chain ourselves to a grape display.

Here are five food and beverage boycotts that caught our attention this year.

1. BARILLA PASTA

Right about the time that Cesar Chavez won his years-long battle to organize migrant farm workers, the gay rights movement was just getting started. But by 2013, the LGBT movement had become the global rights cause. Yet it appears no one told Guido Barilla, president of the world's largest pasta company.

Barilla pasta boycott
(Image credit: Flickr user Dave Kleinschmidt)

His comments last month that he would never use a same-sex couple in an advertisement were viewed as insensitive at best, and downright homophobic at worst. Barilla quickly tried to back pedal, but it was too late. Calls for boycotts popped up across the globe.

2. STOLICHNAYA VODKA

Gay rights are also at the center of the call to boycott Russia's best-known vodka brand. Concern for the legal rights and safety of gay people in Russia has captured the attention of the world as athletes prepare for the Olympic Games next year in Sochi, Russia.

Stolichnaya boycott
(Image credit: Flickr user Michael Dorausch)

A gay bar in Chicago issued the first call to boycott Stoli vodka. The company has since tried to distance itself from Russia's abysmal human-rights record, but the boycott continues.

3. VINI LUNARDELLI

Speaking of nations run by madmen who trample on the dignity of human beings, Vini Lunardelli found itself facing a boycott after putting pictures of Adolph Hitler on bottles of its wine.

Hitler wine boycott
(Image credit: vinilunardelli.com)

Turns out the Italian wine maker has been using the Fuhrer's photo in marketing material since 1995. But it was this year that the Simon Wiesenthal Center called for a boycott.

4. KROGER

Earlier this year, the Texas legislature approved a bill to strengthen wage-discrimination laws. Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican, vetoed the bill, despite bipartisan support for the new law. Several days later the Houston Chronicle newspaper published a story outlining how two giant retailersKroger supermarkets and Macy's department stores—​had lobbied the governor to squash the bill.

Kroger boycott
(Image credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Activists decided to try to squash the companies instead, and called for a boycott.

5. MONSANTO

Secret lobbying campaigns are also behind the call to boycott products made with ingredients grown with Monsanto seeds. At issue was a rider attached to an emergency spending bill passed by Congress in March. That rider gave farmers the right to harvest crops from genetically modified seeds even if courts said they could not. For weeks it was unclear who was responsible for the rider, which activists called "the Monsanto Protection Act."

Monsanto boycott
(Image credit: Flickr user waywuwei)

Eventually Roy Blunt, a Republican congressman from Missouri, took responsibility. The press was outraged. But there was little that could be done. Nor was there much that needed to be done. The rider was set to expire when the emergency spending bill did. And the Monsanto Protection Act became null and void this week.

But when Blunt's rider showed anti-GMO forces that they could not rely on the courts or Congress, a long-standing call to boycott Monsanto-based products took on new life.

The problem, however, is that the list of products that can be traced to Monsanto is quite long, making a boycott difficult.

Fortunately for activists, there's an app for that.

Article originally written for Fooddive.com by By  and can be located here:
http://www.fooddive.com/news/5-ugly-food-and-bev-boycotts-that-could-have-been-avoided/177502/


Would you like to see more food and beverage industry news and information like this in your inbox on a daily basis? Subscribe to our Food Dive email newsletter! You may also want to check out our Food Dive's look at America's top 15 nutrition bars.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Kroger to Buy Harris Teeter for $2.4 Billion


A Kroger-operated market in Del Mar, Calif. Kroger will acquire 212 Harris Teeter stores.
The Kroger Company, seeking to expand in the Southeast and mid-Atlantic regions, said on Tuesday that it would acquire Harris Teeter Supermarkets for $2.4 billion.
Kroger agreed to pay $49.38 a share in cash, about 2 percent above Harris Teeter’s closing price on Monday and 34 percent above the price on Jan. 18, when media reports emerged that Harris Teeter was exploring strategic alternatives.
Harris Teeter has 212 stores in North Carolina, Virginia, South Carolina, Maryland, Tennessee, Delaware, Florida, Georgia and the District of Columbia. The company also operates distribution centers for grocery, frozen and perishable foods in North Carolina. Harris Teeter posted $4.5 billion in revenue for the 2012 fiscal year.   Kroger said it would finance the transaction with debt and assume Harris Teeter’s outstanding debt of about $100 million. Harris Teeter will continue to operate its stores as a subsidiary of Kroger and will continue to be led by Harris Teeter’s senior management team. There are no plans to close stores.
Kroger expects the deal to result in savings of $40 million to $50 million over the next three to four years.
“This is a financially and strategically compelling transaction and a unique opportunity for our shareholders and associates,” David B. Dillon, Kroger’s chairman and chief executive, said in a statement. “Harris Teeter is an exceptional company with a great brand, friendly and talented associates, and attractive store formats in vibrant markets run by a first-class management team.”

Thomas W. Dickson, the chairman and chief executive of Harris Teeter, said, “Harris Teeter has a long track record of creating shareholder value, and this merger is the culmination of those efforts over many years.”

Bank of America Merrill Lynch advised Kroger and Arnold & Porter served as legal adviser. J.P. Morgan Securities advised Harris Teeter, and McGuireWoods was its legal adviser.

Original Article authored by Dealbook for the NYTIMES and can be located here)http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/07/09/kroger-to-buy-harris-teeter-for-2-4-billion/?ref=business

Monday, June 3, 2013

New hires: Who’s on the move in June 2013? PepsiCo, ConAgra, Hershey, Hillshire Brands, Pinnacle Foods, Coca-Cola, GOED

Checkout who is moving on up and onward in the US Food Industry in June 2013!


The people over at Food Navigator - USA have put together a little Food CPG Movers and Shakers Slideshow to showcase the new hires for the companies who are making moves this month; Check it out here at FoodNavigator.com

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Where Did Food and Grocery Companies Land on this Year's Fortune 500?

Where Did Food and Grocery Companies Land on this Year's Fortune 500?
(Written on May 6, 2013 by Davide Savenije for Fooddive.com)



The Fortune 500 for 2013, the annual list of U.S. companies with the most revenue, has been announced by Fortune magazine and a whole slew of food companies were on it. Check out who made the list:

1. KROGER
Rank: 23
Revenue: $96.8 billion
Profits: $1.5 billion

2. ARCHER DANIELS MIDLAND
Rank: 27
Revenue: $89 billion
Profits: $1.22 billion

3. WALGREEN
Rank: 37
Revenue: $71.6 billion
Profits: $2.13 billion

4. PEPSICO
Rank: 43
Revenue: $65.5 billion
Profits: $6.18 billion

5. COCA-COLA
Rank: 57
Revenue: $48 billion
Profits: $9.02 billion

6. SAFEWAY
Rank: 62
Revenue: $44.2 billion
Profits: $597 million

7. SUPERVALU
Rank: 86
Revenue: $36.1 billion
Profits: -1.04 billion

8. MONDELEZ INTERNATIONAL
Rank: 88
Revenue: $35 billion
Profits: $3.03 billion

9. TYSON FOODS
Rank: 93
Revenue: $33.3 billion
Profits: $583 million

10. PUBLIX SUPER MARKETS
Rank: 108
Revenue: $27.7 billion
Profits: $1.55 billion

11. KRAFT FOODS GROUP
Rank: 151
Revenue: $18.3 billion
Profits: $1.64 billion

12. GENERAL MILLS
Rank: 169
Revenue: $16.7 billion
Profits: $1.57 billion

13. KELLOGG
Rank: 192
Revenue: $14.2 billion
Profits: $961 million

14. LAND O'LAKES
Rank: 194
Revenue: $14.1 billion
Profits: $240 million

15. CONAGRA FOODS
Rank: 209
Revenue: $13.3 billion
Profits: $468 million

16. SMITHFIELD FOODS
Rank: 213
Revenue: $13.1 billion
Profit: $361 million

17. DEAN FOODS
Rank: 217
Revenue: $12.9 billion
Profits: $159 million

18. WHOLE FOODS MARKET
Rank: 232
Revenue: $11.7 billion
Profits: $467 million

19. H.J. HEINZ
Rank: 234
Revenue: $11.6 billion
Profits: $923 million

20. HILLSHIRE BRANDS
Rank: 288
Revenue: $9.3 billion
Profits: $845 million

21. LEUCADIA NATIONAL
Rank: 299
Revenue: $9.3 billion
Profits: $855 million

22. HORMEL FOODS
Rank: 319
Revenue: $8.2 billion
Profits: $500 million

23. CAMPBELL SOUP
Rank: 338
Revenue: $7.7 billion
Profits: $774 million

24. COCA-COLA ENTERPRISES
Rank: 339
Revenue: $7.6 billion
Profits: $677 million

25. DOLE FOOD
Rank: 372
Revenue: $6.8 billion
Profits: -$146 million

26. HERSHEY
Rank: 384
Revenue: $6.6 billion
Profits: $661 million

27. INGREDION
Rank: 386
Revenue: $6.5 billion
Profits: $428 million

28. SEABOARD
Rank: 411
Revenue: $6.2 billion
Profits: $282 million

29. DR PEPPER SNAPPLE GROUP
Rank: 427
Revenue: $6 billion
Profits: $629 million

30. J.M. SMUCKER
Rank: 452
Revenue: $5.5 billion
Profits: $460 million