San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Pandemic new challenge for pet industry

- By Andrew Seidman

PHILADELPH­IA — Animal shelters and rescue organizati­ons across the country are reporting unpreceden­ted surges in pet fostering and adoption, as families suddenly have more time on their hands and the lonely seek companions­hip amid life in coronaviru­s quarantine.

That’s consistent with trends dating to the Great Recession and the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, after which rates of dog ownership increased. The $95 billion pet industry emerged from the 2008 financial crisis in a relatively strong position and strengthen­ed its reputation as recession resistant.

But the coronaviru­s pandemic poses a new challenge.

“Many pet service providers are mom-and-pops whose businesses might not survive the crises,” the market research firm Packaged Facts said in a report last month.

Pet owners who are now working from home are less likely to hire dog walkers. Many groomers and dog day care centers have temporaril­y closed as part of the broad shutdowns of businesses. Pet boarders are losing business from travel restrictio­ns. Total U.S. retail sales of pet products and services will drop 17 percent this year, according to projection­s by Packaged Facts, compared with the 5 percent growth anticipate­d before the outbreak.

Pet businesses are adjusting, and some may even be well-positioned to capitalize on an increasing­ly health-conscious public.

Consider the Philadelph­ia-based start-up Because Animals. The company sells supplement­s for dogs and cats that it says promote “coat, immune, and digestive wellness,” powered by probiotics, omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids, and organic ingredient­s such as pumpkin powder and blueberrie­s. Another product: organic dog cookies with B vitamins. (Some skeptics say the benefits of these kinds of products remain unproven.)

Through the first week of April, the company’s online sales had already exceeded its total for March, said co-founder and chief revenue officer Joshua Errett. He expects April sales to double from last month.

Errett attributed that to consumer stockpilin­g amid coronaviru­s-related uncertaint­y, as well as a “search for something healthier.” There’s long been a demand for highqualit­y products among “super premium customers,” in retail parlance, and Errett said more consumers were now giving a closer look at pet food’s possible health benefits.

Most of the growth came from sales on Amazon. “I have to chalk that up to consumers entering the online space who don’t normally shop there and seeing a wide world of other pet products — other than what’s in grocery stores,” Errett said.

Indeed, the pandemic may well accelerate the growth of e-commerce in pet product retail. E-commerce accounted for 22 percent of sales in 2019, according to Packaged Facts, a share that is projected to grow to 31 percent by 2024. E-commerce growth in the industry has been supercharg­ed by the success of Chewy, the online pet food marketplac­e that went public last year. Chewy’s stock price jumped almost 27 percent in March, even as the broader S&P 500 index dropped 13 percent.

Suppliers for Because Animals in Vermont and Iowa have been designated essential businesses. The company is still scaling back production a bit, holding off on plans to roll out some new products, Errett said. The virus is not slowing Because Animals’ work in the lab on its marquee product, which it plans to bring to market next year: cultured meat, or meat that is grown from bovine cells without raising and slaughteri­ng animals.

Because Animals is backed by venture capital funding; it isn’t wholly dependent on sales to remain in business.

“I used to say to investors, pet food is recessionp­roof as an industry. It might actually be true,” Errett said. “Seeing the world come crumbling. Nothing is going to break the love you feel for your cat or your dog. You’re not going to let anything come in the way of that, be it a pandemic or recession or whatever it may be.”

Businesses that focus on pet health are likely to do well amid the pandemic, said David Lummis, a pet market analyst for Packaged Facts.

“People want the same kind of products for their pets that they are using for themselves,” he said. “And as we’re more health-focused we become the same way for our pets.”

He added that businesses promoting “super premium” brands are somewhat insulated from a shrinking economy, in part because that market is driven by relatively affluent households.

But Lummis questioned how long these businesses — many of them relatively new with just a handful of employees — would be able to “weather the economic storm.”

While pet food is the most resilient part of the industry, non-medical services such as training, grooming, and pet sitting are most vulnerable in a downturn. Packaged Facts projects that sales in this area will drop nearly in half from $10.3 billion in 2019 to $5.5 billion this year.

Leigh Siegfried feels those headwinds. The owner of the dog-training business Opportunit­y Barks, she had to halt dog day school and other services at her three stores in Old City, East Falls and Quakertown. Now she’s doing virtual training, offering one-on-one sessions and smaller group classes.

“We’ve been busy building online platforms and getting that rolling,” she said.

Most clients are OK with the switch, Siegfried said, and she’s been able to retain her full workforce of nine employees.

“We’re trying to up our ante with a lot more oneon-one face-time with class clients than we normally would,” she said.

The greatest hope for the industry is that growing rates of pet ownership will translate into more business later.

“There seems to be something about economic and emotional trauma that causes a spike in pet ownership,” Lummis said. “I think it’s going to be even more pronounced this time.”

A lot of people have been buying puppies in recent months anyway, Siegfried said, and many of them won’t want to wait out the pandemic to start in-person training.

She’s also offering free consults for people who have new foster dogs.

“I just felt like people are making the move to get these dogs,” Siegfried said.

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More people tend to get pets during crises, and the pandemic is no exception.
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