The recession may be pulling consumers away from common brand-name food products and toward generic store offerings, according to
Kellogg Co. CEO David Mackay.
Mackay commented on current consumer spending habits in a conference call with analysts after discussing the company's second-quarter results, according to a July 30
Associated Press report.
"I think one of the issues that investors have had is a concern about the growth in private label," Mackay said in the Associated Press report. "The one thing that we started to see is the growth in many categories, not only in the U.S. but around the world. We would call it a sequentially flat whether looking at cereal, crackers waffles. (In) Australia (and) Canada private label is down."
Mackay said he believes the growth spurt is beginning level off but that "consumers still have a mindset of looking for value and trying to extract as much value as they can out of every dollar they spend."
For Kellogg, one silver lining in the economic downturn could be a consumer shift of people trying to save money by eating at home more often, which has helped the packaged-food business, Mackay told
Reuters news service.
Kellogg Corp. At A Glance
Kellogg Corp. Battle Creek, Mich. Primary Industry: Food Number of Employees: 32,400 2008 In Review Revenue: $12.82 billion Profit Margin: 8.95% Sales Turnover: 1.17 Inventory Turnover: 8.19 Revenue Growth: 8.88% Return On Assets: 10.07% Return On Equity: 45.45%
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The Battle Creek, Mich., company's profit rose 13% to $353 million, or 92 cents a share, up from $312 million, or 82 cents per share, during the year-earlier period. The results were "better-than-expected, despite ongoing cost pressures and the challenging economic environment," the company said in its quarterly report.
Earlier in the year, the maker of iconic cereal and snack brands, including Keebler and Rice Krispies, was part of a massive peanut products recall after Peanut Corp. of America was linked to a salmonella outbreak.
The recall led to Mackay's call for tighter food inspection standards and the formation of the International Food Protection Training Institute funded by a grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation. Mackay told the
Kalamazoo Gazette that Battle Creek could be the site for a food safety hub if the federal government selects the city as the site for the training institute and the National Center for Food Protection. The project proposal includes training opportunities at Kellogg plants, according to the Gazette.
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