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When asked what they would cut first to reduce monthly spending, only 3% of pet supplement shoppers said they would cut pet-related expenses, according to a recent survey.
The rate was lower than any other category surveyed.
The survey was completed by MarketPlace, a St. Louis-based brand strategy firm, and it showed that while pet supplement shoppers are most likely to cut nonessential categories like entertainment (64%) and apparel (38%), 19% said they would cut their own food expenses, 8% would reduce transportation costs, and 5% would spend less on healthcare.
“Many pet parents consider their pets family, and these relationships influence their purchase behaviors and priorities,” said Nicole Hill, executive director of strategy at MarketPlace, in a statement.
The findings come as Nestlé, Colgate-Palmolive, and General Mills are lately finding their fastest growth in premium pet categories amid inflationary pressures.
Hunter Williams, partner at consulting firm Oliver Wyman, told FreightWaves, “Part of the recession resilience of [the pet industry] is that people don’t like to sacrifice the quality that they’re providing to their children — furry or not.”
Nearly half (46%) of pet owners spend the same or even more per month on their pets as on their children, according to a recent survey from Ally Financial.
Last fall, Morgan Stanley Morgan Stanley predicted 8% annual growth in the pet industry through 2030 as the pandemic pet craze added 5 million pets to U.S. households since 2019. About a third of the most-recent pet adoptees were found to be 18- to 34-year-olds, and they tend to spend more than other age groups on food, treats, and care for their pets.
“As Millennials become homeowners, delay having children and increasingly have smaller families, they tend to spend more on their pets than older pet owners do, especially on premium food and services,” said Simeon Gutman, a Morgan Stanley analyst. “The increase in ownership during the pandemic was driven primarily by this cohort, and they are likely to accelerate the trends toward treating pets like humans and providing premium care. As a result, the COVID benefit to the pet industry likely has a long tail.”
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