FOOD Serious Food Supply Chain Difficulties Accelerating (From an Inside Source)

SageRock

Veteran Member
Posted for fair use and discussion.

From "aminutetomidnite" website

July 10th 2020

Yesterday I received an email from a man who is a supply chain analyst for a large grocery chain in the USA. After securing a promise of anonymity from me, he agreed to allowing me to share this very important information. It should serve as a wake up call for those who are not already “preppers,” to begin to take some steps to prepare for what lays ahead. For those who have already been preparing, it should provide confirmation to continue doing so. Please take this information seriously and act accordingly

Tony K

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Here goes the simple 40K’ foot level executive summary from a very anonymous source!

Overview – in summary, there are less goods coming into the grocery retail system from vendors (manufacturers and distributors), therefore less to go to the shelves for consumers to purchase. With that statement, you may be thinking…”tell me something I don’t already know”, but my main purpose for getting this out is to confirm some things that will result in the Remnant to ramp-up their preparations in this area.

By the way, I know that the most important prep is spiritual, in case anyone wonders about that; but I feel that others will benefit from what I’m doing TODAY….they may be the ones eating the food, living one more day to be able to call on the name of the Lord and be saved — this is my main reason for prepping. I am even preparing a physical place to go AGAINST the will of my wife and my children. But, I feel that if I need to drag them there when the goons are looting our neighborhood, then it will be worth it, and if it never happens like they think, then hey, we’ll deal with that at that point….I digress….

There are many questions from folks around the country about the REAL state of the supply chain in food. Some report there are pockets of relative surplus on an item in one area but yet a drought of the same item in another part of the country. They wonder: “is there really a shortage in supply of _____”? However, as you should know, this is largely due to factors such as previously negotiated contracts and purchase orders, with pipelines that are running their course. BUT the persistent decline in the fulfillment of purchase orders by vendors is steady and continuous, and that is the larger current and should be considered OVER the pockets of ebb and flow in certain markets. It’s the forest; the ebb and flow in certain markets is the trees. Large, national manufacturers are not only continuously extending their delivery dates on products, but they are out-right cancelling orders. They too — the manufacturers — are all scrambling down through their own supply chains to mitigate sourcing of raw materials as well as absenteeism, etc.

Another player in the “supply chain” are the distributors who bundle products that come from many manufacturers; these distributors are also facing issues such as the one very large national distributor who has just cut delivery routes in our area from 13 down to 3 with many caveats and shortages projected added.

I feel like what I’m reporting here (and seeing with my daily and weekly work) is a good proxy for the rest of the country in-that our chain is a very highly-rated chain, carrying lots of weight in this industry…this means we’re getting a lot of focus and attention from vendors; what are the other smaller and less prominent chains facing? I am NOT with Walmart or Kroger to be sure; those companies may have even longer trails of purchase orders from pre-COVID that are still running their course.

Again, I am not sharing anything that folks may not already know; just confirming things for them with the admonition and encouragement to ramp-up their prepping and planning. I am personally doing this EACH and EVERY day….I am also mindful that if I am not around to personally use these preps for whatever reason, that others in my family know why I’m doing this and that they know about the gospel. I am going out on a limb here as I’d be summarily fired if folks were to put the puzzle pieces together on who I am and who my company is, but I feel there is a great benefit to alerting the remnant on what is happening – while maintaining my anonymity. Summary: ignore the ebbs and flows in your market on meat, etc. — realize the general trend is going to less and less fulfilment of orders from vendors and if you are blessed with a surplus of things, then by all means purchase them NOW while you can so that maybe you can share this along with the gospel at some point in the future.

Now, the information I’ve already stated above was about goods coming from manufacturers or distributors into company-owned warehouses….

Next are comments on GOODS GOING FROM COMPANY-OWNED WAREHOUSES TO THE ACTUAL RETAIL STORE OUTLETS IN THE CHAIN, which – again – I feel would be the norm for any grocery chain in the US:

— the meeting of store demand — which is a proxy for actual consumer demand — from company-owned central warehouses has steadily declined over the last 4 months; from a 98% pre-COVID fulfillment rate to 58% as of yesterday. Key point: STEADY decline; yes some blips upward from time to time, but overall steady decline to be sure

— what this impacts is the presentation on the shelves; for example: do we have some or no toilet paper, tomato paste, rice and noodles, etc., etc.; you will also see new and unknown brands coming in to substitute for a product, but that is only going to be a temporary stop-gap as these are from 2nd and 3rd tier vendors who may not carry as much clout in getting their own raw-material supply chains filled…these too will dry up and go away over the next 3-6 months (not to mention the effect of absenteeism in their own ranks, leading to an inability to produce said 2nd/3rd tier products)…

— there is also a trend to see less variations on products; for example, we only have 3 variations on tomato paste to put on shelves as-opposed to the 15 we had pre-COVID

— to the folks in the industry, this is known as the presentation and the service level at the shelf in the store; service levels on some harder-hit commodities are near 10% at-best, averaging in the 70% level on an aggregate across all stores/commodities when you carve-out bath tissue, paper towels, baby wipes, disinfectant wipes; comparatively during pre-COVID service levels were in the very high 90’s for all products (sans SEASONAL)…

— Additional contributing factors: in addition to waning vendor fulfilment, we are also seeing more-and-more absenteeism in our warehouses due to COVID cases, fear, exhaustion.

There is much more on the technical side I could share but the picture is there is a continuous and steady decline in what is coming into the network and being made available to the consumers to purchase. It is also an accepted premise from which we’re fomulating weekly plans to address, that these trends will continue, that we are living off of last year’s harvest and that this next year will be a big question mark.

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nomifyle

TB Fanatic
Thanks to the OP. My DH use to be a big truck driver and he has said all along that there are warehouses full of anything we need. I keep telling him that's not the case any more. Today he surprised me and said "it use to be that way" and I told him it isn't that way any more. I think he's starting to see the light.

If only I could convience my sons of this, but they just won't listen, they think they know better. In a way I want to tell them not to come this way if they run out of food, but I won't. We have plenty for us but to add several more people we simply do not have enough and we do not have the room to store much more than our current level. I put them in God's hand a long time ago.

I just want to get in the truck and drive down there and shake both of them and give their wives a piece of my mind, but that would just make them dislike me even more. Their loss, God save them from themselves.

Judy
 

blackjeep

The end times are here.
At the grocery store where I shop, there has been a lack of bulk nuts, ie cashews, pecans, peanuts, walnuts and almonds. Also MIA, sunflower seeds.
They've been either totally missing or available in tiny quantities that disappear immediately.
It seems that almost everything else has gotten back to near normal. TP and other paper products are back in stock in good amounts. Meat has gone WAY up, as well as cleaning products including laundry detergent.
I hope the fake surge in China virus cases collapses, or this supply thing might get much worse.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Thanks for posting, sagerock. This mirrors my own experience lately.

Famine is coming...

ETA - took a while for this to surface, the gray matter gears are getting rusty. If you have not done so, you owe it to yourself and any who depend on you to read John Ringo's The Last Centurion - srsly.

The Last Centurion

by
John Ringo
3.96 · Rating details · 2,239 ratings · 182 reviews

In the second decade of the twenty-first century the world is struck by two catastrophes, a new mini-ice age and, nearly simultaneously, a plague to dwarf all previous experiences. Rising out of the disaster is the character known to history as “Bandit Six” an American Army officer caught up in the struggle to rebuild the world and prevent the fall of his homeland—despite the best efforts of politicians both elected and military.
The Last Centurion is a memoir of one possible future, a world that is a darkling mirror of our own. Written “blog-style,” it pulls no punches in its descriptions of junk science, bad strategy and organic farming not to mention all three at once.
 
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parsonswife

Veteran Member
I service 4 different store chains and this is right on the money. Local chain called Thunderbird/Food for Less/Sherms sold rib eyes for the 4th of July sourced from Australia. They are all scrambling to find food sources to fill shelves. Once we go through all the Inventory of the off brands that they have filled shelves with America will be REALLY hurting.
 

rob0126

Veteran Member
Being in the current situation we are in, their$ not much room for prep of any kind except to pray.

If the situation changes for the better, then we will have a gameplan.

But right now, I watch and learn what to do, when the time comes.

Hopefully, Lord willing, soon.
 

et2

Has No Life - Lives on TB
We just made some changes in our home to add lots more room for preps. Will be working hard the next month and further to add more stocks.

Just added some more Down range protection this weekend. Too old to be moving and running. We keep to ourselves. Neighbors don’t know of our prepping. Never will. Until we are overrun we’re staying put.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I am even saving pickle juice at this point. The BBQ joint I first got to know in AL used pickle juice instead of buying vinegar to make their BBQ sauce :D

TWIX® 'N TWEEN BARBECUE SAUCE​
1/2 c. ketchup
1/4 c. mustard
1/4 c. dill pickle juice
1 tsp. hot sauce
3 tbsp. sugar, or to taste

Mix together.

-- TWIX® 'n Tween Barbecue Sauce - Recipe | Cooks.com

You can use pickle juice for a lot of stuff, and I love pickled eggs!
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I have been noticing a shortage of herbs on some of the websites like Vitacost. Try Penzeys spices.

Ameriherb is in my backyard, as is Tones... no shortage of herbs and spices here locally. The only thing I need is white pepper, pink peppercorns, and saffron at this point. Oh and it never hurts to buy more salt. I have thirteen types of vinegar, not including white industrial vinegar and apple cider vinegar, about eight types of oil, three or four fat sources, two types of soy sauce, fish sauce, oyster sauce, mole sauce, about eight types of hot sauce, and three types of chili paste either in the fridge or the pantry. Seven or so different types of mustard as well. Oh and pickles... got pickles?
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Grow, buy and preserve what you can now. Get seeds now for next year or this fall/ winter. Get supplies for making a greenhouse. If you have animals don't forget the feed.

I need to buy some tubing and plastic for a grow tunnel, sigh. Good idea on the seeds especially for greens they do well in containers.
 

AlfaMan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Agree on grocery stores starting to use alternative sources to fill shelves. Was in a northern VA Food Lion yesterday-meat was expensive and the area where the markdown meats were was where the action was at. People hanging like buzzards for the butcher to bring out more cut price meat. The rest of it was pretty expensive. We snapped up a bunch of packs of breakfast steak sized pork chops. 6 of them in a pack for a buck 50-10 of them now sit in our freezer. The high end meats they had were from everywhere but here it seemed.

Agree on the grow your own too. We have a very small veggie/flower garden behind our apartment. People saw me picking tomatoes yesterday for our cucumber/tomato salad for last night's dinner, now the neighbors like to come up and see what we're growing. I have one watermelon plant in the ground-it's now 4 seperate branches each about 12 ft. long. People come up and actually know what it is now. With the number of people out of work around here garden security may come to be a concern.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I have been noticing a shortage of herbs on some of the websites like Vitacost. Try Penzeys spices.

Even if you're in an apartment, if you have a south-facing window or add a plant light, you can grow little pots of the common kitchen herbs (rosemary and such). I have a salad garden and some herbs in contrainers with wheels along my driveway. I can wheel them into the garage if it gets too wet or hail is in the forecast.
 

Troke

On TB every waking moment
Warehouses? And it is taking 4-6 months to deplete them? What happened to Just In Time? I thought the problem with that was no warehouses. I miss something here?
 
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nomifyle

TB Fanatic
I have been noticing a shortage of herbs on some of the websites like Vitacost. Try Penzeys spices.
I noticed that on Vitacost myself, however since Penzeys supports BLM, I will never by from them again, I'm pretty well stocked on spices, been stocking up on them for a good while, but then again I'm not a new prepper. I have pink salt, sea salt and if all that runs out I have a large supply of regular table salt (yuck).

Judy
 

Terrwyn

Veteran Member
I noticed that on Vitacost myself, however since Penzeys supports BLM, I will never by from them again, I'm pretty well stocked on spices, been stocking up on them for a good while, but then again I'm not a new prepper. I have pink salt, sea salt and if all that runs out I have a large supply of regular table salt (yuck).

Judy
I didn't know that. I wonder why they do?
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
This is just me, but I don't let politics get in the way when I'm stocking imports, and spices are an import. My goal is to acquire what is needed ASAP. I will worry about politics later.

The only store I'm boycotting is Whole Foods -- I can get anything they have elsewhere, usually at a much cheaper price.
 

Coco82919

Veteran Member
I recommend lard in the large tubs at Walmart and extra virgin coconut oil in largest container at Costco. Both are shelf stable and last longer then expiration date. I have thought if I had to leave my house I would grab these items. You can live a good while on the fat alone but can add to it to make it last longer.
 

TKO

Veteran Member
Agree on grocery stores starting to use alternative sources to fill shelves. Was in a northern VA Food Lion yesterday-meat was expensive and the area where the markdown meats were was where the action was at. People hanging like buzzards for the butcher to bring out more cut price meat. The rest of it was pretty expensive.
Get ready for worse. With socialism comes hyperinflation. Just ask South America.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
This is just me, but I don't let politics get in the way when I'm stocking imports, and spices are an import. My goal is to acquire what is needed ASAP. I will worry about politics later.

The only store I'm boycotting is Whole Foods -- I can get anything they have elsewhere, usually at a much cheaper price.


This^^^ and possibly Costco only because they are a good hour away from me, but we have four Sam's Clubs in the area.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
This^^^ and possibly Costco only because they are a good hour away from me, but we have four Sam's Clubs in the area.

I know where the new Costco is, but I've never been inside. It's too far from me to be practical. I let my Sam's Club membership go for now. I may get another one next year. There's the new Aldi in N. Ankeny and over in Grimes (in front of the new Menard's, across from the Walmart, along Rt. 46). Between the two and Fareway, with some loss leaders from HyVee, I've been doing OK.
 
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