The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Global retailers seek price ‘shields’

Consumer goods makers wrestle with inflation

- RICHA NAIDU JESSICA DINAPOLI

— As shoppers pay more for anything from coffee to ketchup, some retailers have started to cut or cap the price of hundreds of products as they compete for customers and set themselves up to do battle in negotiatio­ns with major packaged food makers.

Eurostat said on Friday that euro zone inflation for food, alcohol and tobacco rose by 6.4 per cent in April versus last year, compared with a five per cent increase in March, as the rising cost of living in Europe extends beyond expensive energy.

The head of Leclerc, France’s biggest retailer by market share, on Tuesday said it would identify the 120 items consumers buy most, including toilet paper, soap, rice and pasta, and create a “shield” whereby Leclerc will guarantee the price of those items from May 4 until July.

Price increases have been anywhere between six and 20 per cent. Pasta, for instance, has increased by 20 per cent, as have some brands of coffee and chocolate, Micheledou­ard Leclerc said in an interview with French radio broadcaste­r franceinfo.

In March, European government­s, some facing elections this year, spent tens of billions of euros to shelter households from energy costs.

There is little sign they will offer similar help with food bills, which are a smaller part of domestic expenditur­e, but politician­s are nervous as household incomes are squeezed and consumer groups have warned the poorest are having to choose between heating their homes and eating properly.

As almost everyone becomes more careful about how much they spend, supermarke­ts, which have experience­d flat margins, are anxious to avoid losing customers to the competitio­n.

The CEO of British supermarke­t group Sainsbury’s told reporters last week shoppers were “watching every penny.”

An analysis of a varied basket of goods created for Reuters by data firm Nielsen shows that prices for products including beer, bottled water and ketchup are rising sharply, in many cases extending big increases from last year.

On average, Europe’s shoppers are paying about two euros more for six essential food products, eight per cent higher than last year. Retailers charged 8.6 per cent more for instant coffee in the four weeks to March 26, on average, while the price of baby milk rose by more than 21 per cent.

PRICE PROTECTION

While Leclerc has promised to freeze some prices, across Europe, retailers are widely seeking to limit the inflation impact on the most essential items.

A spokespers­on for European retail and wholesale trade associatio­n Eurocommer­ce, which has more than 95 members, including Carrefour, Lidl and Marks & Spencer, said all were looking at price caps and cuts in some form, although it would depend on input costs on suppliers’ margins.

“Because of the very competitiv­e nature of the grocery market, you will see other supermarke­t chains trying to keep prices down as much as they can,” the spokespers­on said.

In Britain, surging prices have caused the biggest squeeze on household incomes since at least the 1950s as grocery price inflation hit 5.2 per cent in the four weeks to March 20, the highest level since April 2012, industry data last month showed.

In response, supermarke­ts there, including Asda and Morrisons, have cut the prices of essential items.

Although they have a cushion after lockdowns because people ate at home and spent more on buying ingredient­s, analysts expect full-year margins to be flat or decline slightly at European retailers, including Carrefour SA, Sainsbury’s, Colruyt and Ahold Delhaize.

They will look to recover some of the impact of price cuts in tough negotiatio­ns with the food production companies, which typically would have finished late last year in parts of Europe, but have dragged on as supply chain problems and inflation exacerbate­d by Russia’s war in Ukraine has complicate­d agreement.

The packaged food makers such as Mondelez and Unilever are eager to raise prices as their margins have also shrunk while input prices have surged because of record commodity costs.

Unilever, which makes Knorr chicken stock and Hellmann’s mayonnaise, said last Thursday it raised prices in Europe by 5.4 per cent, growing quarterly underlying sales for the region by 0.7 per cent. Still, it forecast that its first-half margin would be between 16-17 per cent, down from 18.8 per cent last year.

“If you compare that with what’s happening to people’s energy bills, we feel that is quite responsibl­e,” chief executive Alan Jope told reporters.

The company warned of further price hikes and said that unless it charged more, the “full impact” of higher input costs would be a 900-basis-point hit to its full-year margins.

Dirk van de Put, CEO of Oreo-maker Mondelez, said last week that the company was approachin­g retailers in Europe about another price hike, after increasing prices earlier this year.

Mondelez’s first-quarter margin declined to 38.4 from 41 per cent, the company said.

Nestle, the world’s biggest food maker, said last month it expected to grow sales around five per cent this year after higher pet food, dairy and coffee prices.

While sales revenues rise, some packaged food companies’ branded products are losing market share to retailers with cheaper privatelab­el products such as Aldi. Customers are stocking up, as the war in Ukraine raises the risk of shortages that will also drive prices further.

“We observe higher sales across all our own brands and over all categories,” Rolf Buyle, managing director internatio­nal buying at ALDI Nord, told Reuters.

“At the moment we especially have stockpilin­g effects in our pantry category such as oil, pasta, rice, canned food and flour.”

Unilever and Nestle declined to comment for this story. Mondelez did not respond to a request for comment and Leclerc could not be reached.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Shelves are restocked at a Rewe grocery store in Potsdam, Germany.
REUTERS Shelves are restocked at a Rewe grocery store in Potsdam, Germany.

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