News has been added to the top of the lists.
Climb up to see them.
Subscribe to the newsletter
Major food companies offering deals, new sizes as low-income Americans spend less
Jessica DiNapoli - Reuters -
08/04
Americans relying on government benefits to buy food and other essentials are slashing spending, prompting food makers like Kraft-Heinz and Conagra Brands to overhaul their products and strategies following years of price hikes.
NEW YORK, April 8 (Reuters) - Americans relying on government benefits to buy food and other essentials are slashing spending, prompting food makers like Kraft-Heinz (KHC.O), opens new tab and Conagra Brands (CAG.N), opens new tab to overhaul their products and strategies following years of price hikes.
Many of the biggest makers of packaged foods and drinks are seeing their sales volumes fall, due partly to low-income consumers -- typically making roughly less than $35,000 per year -- cooking from scratch, using up leftovers or just buying less.
Roughly one-third of Black American households and 21% of white American households fell into this category in 2022, according to the latest available U.S. census data.
"We expect reduced SNAP [food stamp] benefits will be a headwind," Dollar Tree (DLTR.O), opens new tab CEO Richard Dreiling said during a March 13 earnings call. Dreiling was referring to the U.S. government's supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP), which provides benefits to low-income families to help them afford groceries.
At Circle K convenience stores, sales from people using food stamps were down 40% from last year.
"We can look geographically and see that where we've got lower-income consumers, our results are worse," Brian Hannasch, CEO of Alimentation Couche-Tard (ATD.TO), opens new tab, which operates Circle K, said during a March 21 earnings call.
To appeal to Americans who can no longer afford fast food, Conagra in late May will introduce new Banquet chicken patties, priced at $6.99 for six, a company spokesman said. Chicken sandwiches are top picks at fast-food chains.
Sherry Frey, NielsenIQ vice president of wellness, said that low-income consumers eat less produce and fresh meat than wealthier shoppers.
"For sure SNAP and WIC shoppers are looking for value," Frey said, referring t... [Short citation of 8% of the original article]
Loading...
🍪
The economic model of our website relies on displaying personalized advertisements based on the use of advertising cookies. By continuing your visit to our website, you consent to the use of these cookies.
Privacy Policy