Source: iStock | Kwangmoozaa
Price increases, not sales volume, are driving recent increased profit growth in grocery, according to CNN Business. In fact, the amount of groceries customers are buying in some categories has dropped.
The unit volume of staples dropped year-over-year in late May, with sales of eggs down 4.7 percent, milk down 3.9 percent, packaged bread down 3.8 percent and fresh root vegetables down 3.5 percent.
Dollar sales in these categories increased with eggs rising 41.2 percent, milk 0.9 percent, bread 8.5 percent and root vegetables 10.7 percent.
Categories showing higher dollar sales were all subject to price inflation, with egg prices up 48.2 percent, milk five percent, bread 12.7 percent and root vegetables 14.7 percent.
Grocery volume sales are still up from where they were in 2019, but Alastair Steel, executive, client engagement for market research firm Circana, attributes that to customers eating more food at home.
The outsize increase in gross egg profits may not be surprising given the highly publicized problem of skyrocketing egg prices that hit the U.S. earlier this year. Prices of a dozen grade A eggs reached an average of $4.82 per dozen in January, more than double the previous year-over-year price of $1.93.
The reduction in purchase volume comes after customers have already been trading down to lower-priced items to cope with inflation. Research released in March found that purchases made in the most expensive tier of groceries dropped from 24.5 percent in 2019 to nine percent. Purchases of the lowest tier increased 13 percent.
Customers spending more while purchasing less does not paint a rosy economic picture.
Some economists, however, anticipate a “soft landing” in which inflation and other economic indicators normalize without high-interest rates pushing the economy fully into a recession.
Jack Kleinheiz, chief economist at the National Retail Federation (NRF), said in a June economic review that the economy has been holding up better than many projected. He argues that a strong job market and rising wages have countered the effect of increased prices and higher borrowing costs. Consumer sentiment, however, is still “weak and stuck in recessionary territory.”
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