FARM US Shoppers Buying Less Bread in Troubling Trend for Farmers

WalknTrot

Veteran Member

US Shoppers Buying Less Bread in Troubling Trend for Farmers​



By Michael Hirtzer / Bloomberg News
April 23, 2024 at 3:09 PM
Link:
http://www.duluthnewstribune.com/business/us-shoppers-buying-less-bread-in-troubling-trend-for-farmers

America’s wheat crop is making a comeback. Too bad U.S. grocery shoppers want to buy less food made with it.

Although crop conditions for the staple grain are the best in four years, purchases of many flour-based foods have been slipping. The U.S. Department of Agriculture expects the amount of wheat used in food this year to hit the lowest level in five years. In the fourth quarter, millers churned out the least flour for that time of year in data going back a decade, signaling demand for the baking staple isn’t quite holding up.

The pullback has been especially acute in sweets and processed foods. Cookie and cracker unit sales were down 3.4% from the previous year as of late February, data from consumer intelligence company NIQ show. Grocery-aisle bread sales fell 2%.

Several overlapping factors are behind the slumping demand, including the increased adoption of GLP-1 medications like diabetes-drug Ozempic. Grocery spending in households that use the class of drugs can drop as much as 9%, Morgan Stanley said in a report earlier this year. Inflation is also partly to blame, with high prices still slamming shoppers. Cash-strapped households are also trying to waste less food as prices continue to climb.

“Indulgences that people were spending money on during the pandemic — that’s been scaled back,” said Brian Walker, a milling industry consultant.

As domestic demand slips, American wheat farmers will increasingly need to look abroad to find buyers. It’s not going to be easy: U.S. farmers were already losing ground in global export markets amid an influx of cheaper supplies offered by top shipper Russia. That means U.S. prices will need to come down in order to compete — a blow to wheat farmers who’ve just come out of a challenging growing period.

Last spring, fields were so plagued by drought that farmers abandoned crops at the highest rate in more than a century. Some U.S. flour mills hunting for supplies during that time were forced to turn to rare imports, including from Poland and France, to help make up for the domestic shortfall. This year, though, 56% of the winter wheat crop is deemed by the USDA to be good or excellent, double the rate a year

Wheat demand got a bump during the pandemic, when restaurant closures resulted in a surge in baking at home and prompted rapid flour production in the U.S. Food makers also held onto higher flour inventories to beat COVID-era supply chain snarls and to try to avoid surging costs after wheat futures jumped to a record when Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022. Now, companies have largely returned to just-in-time deliveries instead of sitting on extra ingredients.

There are some pockets of flour-based food demand that have held strong. Consumers have been trending away from super-processed foods with a long shelf life and toward smaller batch items. Bakery bread sales, for instance, were up 3.5% in the past year, NIQ data show. Dave’s Killer Bread, a packaged organic product, saw unit volumes soar 10% even as overall bread sales were down, owner Flower Foods Inc. said on its fourth-quarter call in February.

Meanwhile, some bakeries are selling more individual slices of pie instead of whole pies as demand wanes.

“If I’m a baker, I’d rather sell less than not sell at all,” said JP Frossard, consumer foods analyst at agriculture lender Rabobank.
 

WalknTrot

Veteran Member
I'll buy into the possibility that people are wasting/throwing out less food, plus eating a lot less junk food. Gads - it's hard to find a loaf of grocery store brand bread anymore less than $3.00 a loaf, and snack crackers, chips and bakery are absolutely through the roof $$$.

If you are feeding kids, making lunches for school and work, eating toast for breakfast - people are going to need bread. Still, it isn't like when I was a kid, when a pile of bread was on the table for every meal, including "coffee" mid-morning. Given, that might change when people really start to scrape bottom financially, because bread, biscuits, pancakes, plus rice and potatoes will fill up a hungry belly cheaper than meat, fruit and vegetables.

Must admit though, this is the first mention of trends like Ozempic and the diabetes drugs having an impact on the food industry. Going to be interesting to watch.
 
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Mercury3

Veteran Member
I love good fresh bread but have to limit it because of blood sugar issues due to type II. Also (memory could be off a little) they put bromide in it which inhibits iodine uptake impacting thyroid function.

Adding: My wife makes the best french toast with sour dough bread. I'm craving for some and may have to give in. Once in a while we have to enjoy.
 

Milkweed Host

Veteran Member
Glyphosate (roundup) is sprayed on 33% or more of the US wheat to kill the plant for harvest.

Most US bread products use high fructose corn syrup instead of sugar.

Potassium bromate, a human carcinogen, is used in the leavening process, but not listed on the ingredients.
Last I read, bromate is a type of plastic?
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
If they were making REAL bread with REAL NON-TREATED, NON-ADULTERATED, NON-GMO, chemical and additive free wheat......you know, like real food, then maybe they could sell it. Most people in this country have no idea what kind of chemical adulterated garbage they are putting in their body. And when they do wake up and find out what REAL FOOD tastes like there is no way they are going back to the chemical concoction that's being sold in stores.
 
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packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
It’s the fad diets like KETO and other low carb variants and the fact that commercial bread is crap, full of processes and chemicals.

I got a grinder and been making my own from wheat berries, wow talk about fiber in your diet lol!

This^^^ Recently a lot of my friends have started making sourdough bread and growing their own starters, which lead to making pasta, and the like. Most have said they won't go back to store bought bread, homemade tastes better and you know what's in the bread.
 

Toosh

Veteran Member
It's not the wheat - it's how they strip nutrients during processing and how they add junk to commercially made bread.

I make sourdough bread. Find a community supported, regenerative, farmer. Buy locally grown wheatberries. Sourdough does not affect blood sugar. Lots of fiber. Nutritious. Cost about $1.50 per loaf.
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Eat sourdough bread. No chemicals or gimmicks just toast it lightly and dunk it in olive oil. We also make our own flap jacks by grinding half wheat and half groats (oats) together. When mixing by hand we add 1/2 teaspoon of aluminum free baking powder and 3/4 cup milk for something real in the belly.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
Eat sourdough bread. No chemicals or gimmicks just toast it lightly and dunk it in olive oil. We also make our own flap jacks by grinding half wheat and half groats (oats) together. When mixing by hand we add 1/2 teaspoon of aluminum free baking powder and 3/4 cup milk for something real in the belly.

where are you getting your groats?
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
From what I'm seeing in the article, wouldn't make any difference if you make your own bread or buy it, OR what kind, it's the purchase of wheat flour for any use that's dropping. The title as written by the source is a little misleading.
you can get them from amazon
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
where are you getting your groats?
Azure. 25# bag for $29.89 or $1.19/# organic. Liked to pick up 25# of Black Eyed Peas. They show they have it but it never comes up in the cart. Got plenty at the moment but like to stay ahead of things.

I have 56 liters of olive oil stashed. Been slowly buying it over the last few years. Figured when the Middle East blows olive oil becomes tight. Thought I would be referred to psychiatric counseling. Try to buy a couple liters today and you will go into counseling for sticker shock. It is secure and buried in a well hidden location.
 

energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Anyone ever take a pesticide applicator course? Pesticides build up in your body in very small amounts and over time, you get sick. That way you go to the hospital run under big pharma where you get treated for the symptoms, but not the disease.

I don't eat any bread now. Week 6 or 7 on the carnivore diet. A little bit of cheating with ice cream, otherwise, I feel way better. I need a new belt though.
 

Bubble Head

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There is about 3 cents worth of wheat in your average $3 loaf of bread. However there are almost 4 inches of ingredients in such fine print you need a magnifying glass to read it. The rest of the cost of bread goes into transportation, baking, presentation and store operations. The farmer is the bottom of the list supplying the product. The average loaf of bread sold has no nutritional value nor health value.
 
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energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I grew up on this crap. All we could afford. Sugary cereals too, which promotes tooth decay, so my parents could support the dental industry. Had to have that fancy toothpaste with fluorides to help prevent tooth decay.

wonderbread.jpg
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Why is plain cornbread or cornbread muffins SO expensive to buy in the bakery section of the grocery?
 
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ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Okay, that sucks.

When store bought bread will sit on your counter for weeks, but your homemade biscuits mold in three days, that should be a clue.

Home baked bread, about the .I have an ulta violet sterilizing wand.
I have a large ultra violet sterilizing wand.
It might be a good idea to pass it over stuff that molds quickly to extend the time before moldy.
Strawberries, biscuits, bread, etc. It also can stop or slow germs growing on pillow cases or
Mold on walls, dish scrubbies, and elsewhere.
Germs on toys, phones,anything people touch,
Especially things that shouldn't be washed.
 
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