The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Luxury food industry turns sour amid virus outbreak

Some high-grade foods lose value as restaurant­s close

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SINGAPORE: Global demand for premium foods like wagyu beef, bluefin tuna and caviar has plunged with thousands of restaurant­s shuttered and many economies sliding into recession amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

As strict lockdown measures to contain the outbreak ravage global economic activity, the luxury food industry could be among the worst-hit since it heavily relies on restaurant­s and top hotels for demand for deluxe items from caviar to champagne.

While some gourmet food producers are tapping consumers directly to stay afloat, others have been forced to cut output, as some products have lost nearly half their value since the start of the year.

Jean-marie Barillere, co-chairman of champagne producers’ lobby CIVC in France, said he hoped people would celebrate the easing of lockdowns with a bottle of champagne, but expects a difficult end to the year.

“This is really a period that looks like war time,” he said.

Bookings data compiled by Opentable, an online restaurant reservatio­n service, showed a near 80% year-on-year decline in seated diners in restaurant­s in the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Canada, Australia, Ireland and Mexico this year.

People are also less likely to consume luxury foods when stuck at home in the middle of a health crisis and worried about their financial situation, or under clinical social distancing measures as eateries reopen.

“People will not want to taste a Chateau Petrus wine, a lobster or caviar under a bell jar,” said Michel Berthommie­r, managing director of Caviar Perlita in south-western France.

“If you force people to eat in these conditions they will prefer going to fast foods.”

Premium foods was “one of the worst-hit sectors worldwide”, said Ole Houe, director of advisory services at agricultur­e brokerage IKON Commoditie­s in Sydney.

He said he did not expect a prompt recovery, given many countries were in recession.

Falling demand has already taken a toll on the prices of luxury items.

In Tokyo, the price of top-quality wagyu beef cuts has fallen about 30% from a year earlier, bluefin tuna – considered the best in Japan – has dropped more than 40% over that period, while prices of the famed ‘Earl’s melons’ from Shizuoka have slumped 30%.

Russia’s top sturgeon breeding company - Russian Caviar House – meanwhile was offering a 30% discount for Beluga hybrid caviar.

“Spring and summer are always low seasons for the caviar market, but if we compare this period with previous years, the sales in Russia are down 50%,” said the firm’s owner Alexander Novikov.

In France, caviar prices languished near historic lows, champagne sales tumbled, while foie gras producers have had to cut output to prop up prices.

Cifog, a foie gras producers’ group, said restaurant­s account for 40% of total foie gras sales.

“Mid-march it felt like the sky had fallen on us,” said Florian Boucherie, who produces two tonnes of foie gras per year in France.

Oyster and razor clam fishermen from Cape Cod and other top fishing grounds have also had to curb catches as lockdowns upended global eating habits.

To plug the yawning gap left by eateries, many high-end food producers are attempting to reach consumers directly via e-commerce platforms.

Others are steering more produce onto supermarke­t shelves.

“We are accelerati­ng our supply of products into some of the world’s largest supermarke­ts, gourmet butchers and direct to consumers online,” said Hugh Killen, chief executive of Australia’s largest listed beef producer, Australian Agricultur­al Company.

But some vendors say selling to supermarke­ts is far less profitable than selling to highend restaurant­s.

 ??  ?? Low demand: The Yonezawa beef wagyu. Global buying of premium foods like wagyu beef and bluefin tuna has plunged due to restaurant­s shutting down because of the pandemic.
Low demand: The Yonezawa beef wagyu. Global buying of premium foods like wagyu beef and bluefin tuna has plunged due to restaurant­s shutting down because of the pandemic.

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