The Good Fight
by Julie Cook Ramirez
Facing high raw costs and competition from
“healthier” alternatives, butter producers refuse to give up.
Butter producers have long
been plagued by a host of challenges. Chief among them is the ongoing
struggle to shed butter’s commodity image and chuck its
less-than-positive reputation as an inconvenient, unhealthy product.
After decades of scratching their heads, butter
producers finally appear to be making some progress. At long last,
consumers seem to have abandoned the mindset that “butter is
butter” and are developing brand loyalty, primarily due to the
ambitious marketing efforts of national brands — most notably Land
O’Lakes — and regional players.
What’s more, bad news about trans-fatty acids
hit the margarine and spreads industry hard. Consumers who had fled the
butter category over a fear of fat began rethinking their decision and gave
butter a second chance. As those consumers began rediscovering the great
taste of butter, they found a whole new subcategory of products to choose
from — “spreadable” butters with added canola oil to make
them easier to use.
Just when things seemed to be looking up, butterfat
prices surged, surpassing $2 per pound in 2004. This, in turn, resulted in
retail butter prices of $3 and higher. At first blush, the category seems
not to have been negatively affected by the volatility in raw-material
costs. Dollar sales of butter in supermarkets, drug stores and mass
merchandisers, excluding Wal-Mart, rose 21.7 percent during the 52-week
period ending March 20, 2005, according to Chicago-based Information
Resources Inc. A closer look tells the tale, however, as unit sales fell
8.3 percent.
“When butter increases in price rapidly and past
the comfort level for the consumer — which seems to be about $3
— sales fall off in volume,” says Greg Hansen, vice president
of marketing, Cass-Clay Cooperative Creamery Association, Fargo, N.D.
If there’s a silver lining in this dark cloud,
it’s that consumers don’t seem to be flocking to margarine as a
result of butter’s woes. “Despite
the fact that we saw some slippage in butter volume, we didn’t see a
mass exodus from butter to other table spreads,” says Jed Davis,
director of marketing, Cabot Creamery Cooperative, Cabot, Vt. “People
may have cut back a little bit, but they haven’t abandoned
butter.”
TOP 10 BUTTER BRANDS* | ||||
$ Sales (In Millions) | % Change vs. Year Ago | Unit Sales (In Millions) | % Change vs. Year Ago | |
Total Category | $1,324.4 | 21.7% | 441.9 | -8.3% |
Private Label | 610.1 | 26.5 | 222.9 | -8.3 |
Land O’Lakes | 387.6 | 16.3 | 113.6 | -9.3 |
Challenge | 64.2 | 16.4 | 18.2 | -3.0 |
Breakstone | 34.0 | 28.0 | 13.5 | 1.1 |
Tillamook | 30.2 | 29.6 | 9.0 | -0.7 |
Crystal Farms | 25.2 | 29.4 | 9.3 | -5.6 |
Keller’s | 20.6 | 13.0 | 6.9 | -19.7 |
Hotel Bar | 16.9 | 7.1 | 5.9 | -21.3 |
Cabot | 15.7 | 17.0 | 4.6 | -11.6 |
Darigold | 10.4 | 15.0 | 3.6 | -12.5 |
* Total sales in supermarkets, drug stores and mass merchandisers, excluding Wal-Mart, for the52-week period ending March 20, 2005. SOURCE: Information Resources Inc. |
TOP 10 MARGARINE/SPREADS/BUTTER BLENDS BRANDS* | ||||
$ Sales (In Millions) | % Change vs. Year Ago | Unit Sales (In Millions) | % Change vs. Year Ago | |
Total Category | $1,243.6 | 5.2% | 867.5 | 0.9% |
I Can’t Believe It’s Not Butter | 248.9 | 28.7 | 134.4 | 22.9 |
Shedd’s Country Crock | 186.2 | 3.3 | 97.6 | -2.4 |
Land O’Lakes | 98.2 | 34.8 | 58.4 | 23.7 |
Private Label | 97.2 | -4.0 | 100.8 | -12.6 |
Parkay | 92.5 | -5.1 | 69.3 | -5.6 |
Blue Bonnet | 88.4 | 15.2 | 110.2 | 17.5 |
Imperial | 59.3 | 2.0 | 76.3 | 4.5 |
Fleischmann’s | 51.3 | -0.2 | 35.7 | 3.8 |
Smart Balance | 44.8 | 25.0 | 21.4 | 15.1 |
Brummel & Brown | 38.2 | -0.2 | 21.0 | -6.0 |
* Total sales in supermarkets, drug stores and mass merchandisers, excluding Wal-Mart, for the52-week period ending March 20, 2005. SOURCE: Information Resources Inc. |
During previous price spikes, Davis says, foodservice
operators frequently reformulated their recipes, substituting butter blends
or other fats to keep raw-ingredient prices in check. This time he
hasn’t seen a widespread move toward such surrogates.
According to Davis, this is evidence the foodservice
channel is confident butter prices will make their way back from the
stratosphere before too long. Already, wholesale butter prices have come
down to just below $1.50, the first time prices have been that low since
early 2004.
“The past few weeks, it’s been very
stable,” agrees Kevin Nagle, director of marketing, Crystal Cream
& Butter Co., Sacramento, Calif. “We really can’t heave a
sigh of relief yet because the ice cream season is right around the corner,
and when you get the butterfat going in two different directions, who knows
what will happen with the market.”
When prices do settle down, Hansen says, that’s
the time for producers to promote their product more aggressively. By doing
so, Cass-Clay has successfully taken a bite out of competitive
spreads’ sales, particularly when it comes to hard stick margarine.
Soft tub-style products are harder to impact, Hansen says. “People want the soft, spreadable product, and butter
has an issue trying to get there,” he explains.
Covering the Spread
In an attempt to steal some of margarine’s
convenience thunder, St. Paul, Minn.-based Land O’Lakes rolled out
two products last year — Land O’Lakes® Soft Baking
Butter with Canola Oil and Land O’Lakes Spreadable Butter with Canola
Oil. This spring, the company expanded the line with the introduction of
Land O’Lakes Light Butter with Canola Oil. Containing 60 percent less
cholesterol and 50 percent less fat and calories per serving than butter,
this new spread also offers “immediate spreadability” right out
of the refrigerator.
While Land O’Lakes’ latest offerings
resolve butter consumers’ biggest complaint, they have created quite
a stir among the competition, many of whom charge that such hybrid products
threaten to jeopardize the integrity of butter. Some producers have gone so
far as to suggest that the butter industry needs to develop a set of
standards, establishing exactly what constitutes a product that can be
labeled as butter.
“There’s certainly room for those type of
products in the category, but there needs to be a more deliberate decision
to examine the standards of butter,” says Joe Fallon, vice president
of marketing, Keller’s Creamery LLC, Harleysville, Pa. “There
may be short-term gains in terms of sales and expanding the category, but
long-term, you have to consider what the impact will be.”
Because Land O’Lakes Light Butter with Canola Oil
contains 0 grams trans fat, it’s in the same subcategory as several
other butter alternatives on the market for several years, but have just
recently begun building up steam.
Smart Balance, made by GFA Brands Inc., Cresskill,
N.J., experienced a banner year, with a 25 percent rise in dollar sales.
In years past, industry experts have shrugged off these
kinds of products, claiming they don’t consider them to be
competition. So has the sudden surge in sales changed their mindset?
“I still think it’s a niche
product,” says Jerry Kozak, executive director, American Butter
Institute (ABI), Arlington, Va. “They are bringing people to the
category, who are unique, meaning it’s not taking sales away from
butter or margarine.”
Of greater concern to producers is the increasing
number of butter imports reaching U.S. grocery stores. Producers have been
pressuring the USDA to increase tariffs on imports, claiming that import
levels more than doubled between 2003 and 2004. While Davis does express
concern that the United States may someday become “a dumping ground
for foreign butter,” he remains confident, at least for the time
being, that a preference for homegrown dairy products will mitigate any
surge in import sales.
“At the end of the day, people like to feel that
their dairy products are coming from somewhere near home,” he says.
ABI has developed Cooperatives Working Together (CWT),
a program that assists members exporting hard
cheese and butter. Whenever the domestic butter price drops below $1.30,
CWT provides an incentive bonus for the exportation of butter products.
According to Nagle, Crystal Cream has successfully
exported its butter to Russia, but in recent years, butter prices have
risen so high that exporting hasn’t been an option. m
Julie Cook Ramirez is a freelance
journalist based in the Chicago area.
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