The Oakland Press

Mondelez is making fewer cookies, crackers amid strike, CEO says

- — Compiled by Bloomberg

Mondelez Internatio­nal Inc. is making fewer Nabisco cookies and snacks during a worker strike at three U.S. plants, further limiting supply in an already tight market for packaged food.

Production of Nabisco products continues, but “not to the same level” as before the strike, Chief Executive Officer Dirk Van de Put said at a Barclays consumer conference on Thursday. Another meeting with the union will take place next week, he said.

In preparatio­n for potentiall­y contentiou­s talks and a strike, Mondelez created a business continuity plan that it has now enacted, Van de Put said. Actions have ranged from increasing inventorie­s before the strike to simplifyin­g sales operations to ease production and distributi­on.

Nabisco, a subsidiary of Mondelez, produces Oreo cookies, Ritz crackers and other snacks.

The company’s fulfillmen­t rates have worsened recently, according to market analysis from DecaData, which tracks retailer transactio­ns with shoppers and manufactur­ers. The rate of undelivere­d orders climbed to 7.1% from 5.3% prior to the strike, the data show, with the vast majority of those caused by Mondelez canceling shipments.

Van de Put said the company remains committed to U.S. manufactur­ing and would like to invest more in its plants, but “we need to remain competitiv­e” to do that.

U.S. food producers are struggling with a lack of workers and higher commodity and shipping costs, sparking a broad round of price increases. This has made it more difficult to meet demand.

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