San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FAST-FOOD BOOM DRIVES REBOUND IN MEAT SALES FOR U.S. PACKERS

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

American meatpacker­s are benefiting from one bright spot in the restaurant industry during the pandemic: fast-food sales.

With most restaurant­s closed or operating at reduced capacity, customers have flocked to places including Mcdonald’s and Burger King, where they can simply drive through to grab food. That’s helped Cargill Inc.’s protein sales to foodservic­es business to return to near normal, while Sanderson Farms Inc. is encouraged by the chicken-sandwich rivalry among quickservi­ce restaurant­s, or QSR.

Americans used to spend more than half of their food budget eating out before the virus struck, locking down cities from New York to Los Angeles and shuttering restaurant­s. Consumer behavior shifted, and businesses adapted to more online sales and increased delivery options.

“Our food-services business is pretty close to being back to where it was,” said Jon Nash, head of North America protein for Cargill, the third-largest U.S. beef producer. “The only places where we continue to see things being impacted is more fine dining, but the QSR space has been very strong.”

The turnaround boosted the meat industry, which was initially roiled by lower sales to restaurant­s. Companies have also come under fire this year for the way they handled the coronaviru­s crisis after processing plants became hot spots. Meatpacker­s faced scrutiny amid investigat­ions and lawsuits involving price-fixing allegation­s, especially in the chicken industry.

Same-store sales at fastfood restaurant­s in November rose 1.1 percent from a year earlier after plunging more than 20 percent in April, according to a Millerpuls­e index. Figures may improve more in 2021, with Mcdonald’s planning fauxmeat burgers and a new crispy chicken sandwich early next year, competing with Chick-fil-a and Popeyes Louisiana Kitchen.

“We are encouraged by reports of a chicken sandwich war in 2021,” Joe Sanderson, chief executive officer of Sanderson Farms, the third-largest U.S. chicken producer, said Dec. 17 on an investor call, alluding to a major fast-food restaurant building inventory ahead of a sandwich rollout.

Chicken-breast prices in November climbed to $3.41 a pound, the highest in more than five years, according to U.S. Department of Agricultur­e data.

The rebound in fast-food demand has focused on lunch and dinner. Breakfast sales are still suffering because people aren’t traveling to work or taking children to school in the same way as they did before the pandemic, Cargill’s Nash said. Even with a second wave of the coronaviru­s, Nash said he was upbeat.

“I’m pretty optimistic,” he said. “We are going to continue to see pretty robust demand.”

While U.S. drive-through shops performed strongly in the virus economy, a bigger recovery in the food-services sector will be tied to a vaccine and the economy returning to normal, Nash and Sanderson said.

“I don’t think any of that’s going to happen until the vaccine is widely distribute­d, and people start going out to eat again,” Sanderson said.

“The vaccine is an important determinan­t,” Nash said. “As that goes, we will see people willing to travel more, eat out more and let lose more and have some fun. It’s been a tough time for many many people around the world.”

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS BLOOMBERG ?? Same-store sales at fast-food restaurant­s in November rose 1.1 percent from a year earlier after plunging more than 20 percent in April.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS BLOOMBERG Same-store sales at fast-food restaurant­s in November rose 1.1 percent from a year earlier after plunging more than 20 percent in April.

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