The Citizen (Gauteng)

Shoppers face price hikes

INFLATION: RETAILERS, CONSUMER GOODS PRODUCERS IN TOUGH TALKS Input costs are being exacerbate­d by Ukraine war.

- Reuters

Shoppers around the world will pay even more for groceries this year than they did in 2022, according to retailers, consumer goods firms and investors, unless commodity costs decline or the shift to cheaper store-brand products accelerate­s.

Retailers and consumer goods producers have been stuck in tough price negotiatio­ns for more than a year now, with friction beginning in 2021 over Covid-related supply chain logjams.

This has since ballooned into fights over the high cost of raw materials and energy in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with rising prices of basic foodstuffs from bread to milk and meat exacerbati­ng a cost-of-living crisis in Europe.

Britons paid a record 16.7% more for food in the four weeks to January 22 compared to the same period last year, according to research firm Kantar. The US food index, including meals eaten at home and in cafes and restaurant­s, increased 10.4% for the year ended in December.

Mark Schneider, CEO of Nestle, last week told a German newspaper it would have to raise prices of its food products further this year to offset higher production costs that it has yet to fully pass on to consumers.

“Investors will pay a premium for companies that exhibit pricing power in their portfolio without adversely impacting volumes and market share,” Jack Martin, a fund manager at Oberon Investment­s, said.

Big, packaged-goods companies’ margins have been squeezed by higher input costs for over a year as the price of ingredient­s like wheat and sunflower oil have skyrockete­d since the Ukraine war began last February.

Unilever said in October that its underlying price growth – an indicator of pricing – rose to a record 12.5% in the third quarter. Nestle and dairy giant Danone are due to report results later this month.

Tineke Frikkee, a portfolio manager at Waverton Investment Management, expects Unilever to hike prices in 2023, though selectivel­y.

“The last time we heard from Unilever, it was made clear that they prefer to sell fewer products at higher prices, to keep prices below peers and gain market share,” Frikkee said.

Consumer goods manufactur­ers will continue to raise prices until they recover their profitabil­ity, said Bernstein analyst Bruno Monteyne.

“The only thing that can stop this is... consumers starting to trade down to private-label products at a more rapid pace ... (and) if commoditie­s keep declining, then there may be no need for more price increases.”

In December, the CEO of Walmart warned that some “packaged goods suppliers are still pointing us towards more inflation next year on top of the mid-double digits this year”.

“Dry grocery and consumable­s have double-digit to mid-double-digit inflation that feels stubborn to us,” Doug McMillon said, adding that suppliers were being encouraged to focus on “the longer term with us”.

 ?? Picture: Bloomberg ?? COST OF LIVING. If consumers start trading down to private-label products at a more rapid pace and commoditie­s keep declining, then there may be no need for more price increases, an analyst says.
Picture: Bloomberg COST OF LIVING. If consumers start trading down to private-label products at a more rapid pace and commoditie­s keep declining, then there may be no need for more price increases, an analyst says.

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