Greedflation in the grocery aisle is over. That’s the message from the consumer giants on both sides of the Atlantic. It’s great for consumers — not so good for manufacturers.

After three years of rampant escalation in food prices, many consumers in the US and Europe have had enough. They are voting with their wallets and trading down to cheaper off-brand and private labels, as well as companies that offer better value meals.

As a result, supermarkets, manufacturers and fast-food chains are all stepping up promotions to entice customers to buy more. But this is happening unevenly across the industry. With many consumers still under pressure, profit margins are at risk.

It’s increasingly clear that, aside from the super-wealthy, US consumers are straining under stubborn inflation and high borrowing costs. European customers appear to be holding up better, but their confidence is at risk from similar factors. This makes them all much more picky.

A key buzz word from second-quarter earnings has been “value-seeking” shoppers. In other words, your coffee creamers, candy and cleaners are too expensive.

Consequently, companies have not been able to push through price increases the way they did in 2022 and 2023. Most are still showing positive pricing — but this is from earlier raises. In most categories, inflation has started to ease back to its historic low-single-digit range, according to Circana data analyzed by Bloomberg Intelligence. Refrigerated, frozen and general foods have had a more precipitous decline. No wonder the world’s biggest food group, Nestle SA, pared its outlook for the full year.

When food inflation is accelerating, the value of sales expands, especially if it compares with a period a year earlier, when inflation was lower. This is now reversing. With less help from price hikes, companies must sell more, but not all are managing to achieve this. North American packaged foods — the sort of products you find in the middle of the grocery store — look the most precarious.

Consequently, many companies are having to adjust prices by unleashing a barrage of bargains in the form of promotions, particularly in the US. Depending on the depth of special offers, shoppers should finally feel as if their grocery bills are coming under control.

Some companies, such as PepsiCo Inc., have talked explicitly about giving value back to customers. Procter & Gamble Co. makes the sort of products that consumers buy every day, owns household name brands, such as Pampers diapers and Ariel washing powder, and constantly brings out new versions. Yet even it had to resort to offering deals to encourage consumers to put its products in their carts, while baby care was also weak in its fiscal fourth quarter. That doesn’t bode well for manufacturers with weaker brands or in less frequently bought categories.

Retailers, whose same-store sales growth also moderates with lower food price inflation, are getting in on the act too.

Walmart Inc. said in May that its grocery deals were up 45% year on year, while Target Corp. is cutting prices on 5,000 everyday items. And fast food chains, including McDonald’s Corp., are offering value meals to entice back diners.

We’re also starting to see a reversal of perhaps the most pernicious form of price rise: shrinkflation, whereby companies charge consumers the same amount for fewer potato chips or smaller chocolate bars. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. said recently that it would spend $50 million to ensure all of its restaurants served generous portions. We could see more manufacturers advertising pack sizes with 20% more for the same price, for example.

Yet it’s not clear that any of this activity will lift sales.

Once consumers have begun to shop at discount supermarkets or buy private-label goods, they don’t unlearn these behaviors. Even with slower food price inflation, own brands continued to gain share in the US in the second quarter, according to Circana.

Consumers are also taking to TikTok to show off their money-saving skills, such buying hand wash in containers without pumps, which are cheaper, and making their own baby wipes. Others on social media are prioritizing spending on what they can show off in their feeds or in their homes, from fancy candles to branded mayonnaise, over products that are largely invisible, such as household cleaners.

Less-expensive commodities and companies’ own cost-cutting efforts mean there is some room for maneuvering on price. But some items, such as cocoa and robusta coffee, remain stubbornly high, while demand for certain types of pulp — used in packaging —  is outstripping supply. Wages are also a headwind, and freight rates are worth watching. Advertising spending is stepping up too, with P&G’s marketing reinvestments as a proportion of sales rising 3 percentage points in the final quarter.

All this means a potential squeeze on profits unless shoppers buy more.
Unilever Plc may regret committing to a margin target relatively early in the year. It also explains why Mars Inc.is weighing a bid for Kellanova, maker of Cheez-It, Pringles and Pop-Tarts.

Remember that run on Lunchables a few years ago? Demand surged in 2021 as schools returned to in-person learning. Now maker Kraft Heinz Co is trying to boost sales of the almost-charcuterie-board-like snacks, including making making them better value.

Some of the reversal is the unwinding of the reopening trend, as well as concerns about how healthy the snacks are. But I’d bet some of the slump is from moms inspired by TikTok to make their own versions to save money. When Lunchables become an economic indicator, it’s time for consumers to rejoice, and manufacturers to worry.

Credit: Bloomberg