Kellogg's CEO Sells Cereal for Breakfast as Americans Struggle to Pay Food Bills
The Trends Journal has said there is a clear disconnect between Main Street and Wall Street
With The Wall Street Journal reporting that Americans are spending more than 10 percent of their earnings on food—the most they have in 30 years and USA TODAY noting that the average family is spending more than $1,000 on groceries each month… market shills are selling “not to worry” alternatives.
Plantation workers of Slavelandia can’t afford to eat well, don’t worry about it… swallow Kellogg’s crap and buy into its advertising campaign to eat “cereal for dinner.”
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Bragging about the success of the advertising campaign in an interview with CNBC, Kellogg’s CEO, Gary Pilnick said it is “landing really well” with American consumers and that “If you think about the cost of cereal for a family versus what they’d otherwise do, that’s going to be much more affordable.”
In January, the cost of groceries in the U.S. was 1.2 percent higher than a year earlier and menu prices at restaurants jumped 1.2 percent, according to data from the U.S. Labor Department.
“Historically, after periods of inflation, there’s no period you could point to where food prices go back down,” Steve Cahillane, CEO of snack maker Kellanova, told The Wall Street Journal.
In 1991, U.S. households spent 11.4 percent of their disposable income on food, U.S. Agriculture Department data shows. In 2022, the proportion was 11.3 percent, indicating that food prices have grown apace with incomes.
While commodity prices have risen, companies have also indulged in “greedflation.” In 2022 and 2023, several companies were found to have jacked their prices beyond their rise in costs to protect their profits at the literal expense of consumers.
We reported this pattern of behavior in “‘Greedflation’ Fuels Inflation” (30 May 2023).
Denny’s and Wendy’s are among the restaurant chains reporting fewer guests in 2023 than in 2022 as more and more consumers are pinching pennies.
Heinz and Hershey have said their sales volumes declined as their prices rose with inflation.
More is to come: Mondelez, which makes Oreo cookies and other snacks, has warned it will continue to raise prices; the cost of cocoa has broken a 46-year price record.
Also, last month 22 states hiked their minimum wage. California’s is set to jump 25 percent starting in April.
“It’s a really fast move and a high percentage increase,” Brian Niccol, CEO of Chipotle Mexican Grill, said to the WSJ. “Pricing [the increase into menus] is going to be part of the puzzle.”
As a result of slipping sales, investors seem to have soured on food company stocks. The Standard & Poor’s restaurant subindex has risen about 10 percent during the 12 months ending 21 February, while the S&P as a whole has grown by about 25 percent.
Another S&P subindex monitoring packaged foods and meat share prices have sunk about 8 percent over the same period.
TREND FORECAST: The cost of individual food items such as bread or eggs will continue to tick up and down, but grocery prices overall will remain high.