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US
Frozen Food Consumption Grows,
But the Numbers Don't All Crunch
By
Author

Production and consumption data bases more elusive or incomplete.
But it's safe to say that poultry, seafood, entrees, meat and snacks
are up, whereas juices are down.
Retail and foodservice consumption of frozen food last year was
in the area of 36.6 billion pounds, and value in the area of $55.2
billion. But production, much of which was exported, was considerably
greater than that - in the area of 44.7 billion pounds and $69.4
billion.
But what were always iffy figures are now iffier than ever. Until
a few years ago, sales reported by market research firms like ACNielsen
and Information Resources, Inc. (IRI), covered only supermarkets.
Then they added discount stores. But now they are no longer able
to do that in any meaningful way, because Wal-Mart, the largest
retailer in the United States, refuses to participate.
Except for a brief attempt ages ago by Selling Areas Marketing,
Inc. (which later went out of business entirely), nobody has adequately
tracked category sales for restaurants and institutions on a regular
basis. Frozen food volume there is pretty much a guesstimate, based
on production less retail sales and exports. But production data,
too, is elusive.
Quick Frozen Foods International has always based its almanac on
a mix of production and consumption data from various sources, but
we are trying to make a greater distinction this year, especially
since some of the traditional sources of production data, like the
American Frozen Food Institute's pack book, are no longer available,
whereas others may be unreliable or misleading.
Frozen poultry exports reported by the Bureau of the Census, for
example, are greater than total poundage of frozen poultry in the
Department of Agriculture's year-end Poultry Slaughter bulletin.
Two thirds of the citrus juice produced in Florida goes into chilled
juice, and a lot of shrimp and fish imported in frozen form show
up in supermarket seafood sections as "previously frozen."
Much US production of frozen consumer products, from chicken parts
to vegetables, is exported - especially "Bush legs" to
Russia and french fries to Japan. There may also be a good deal
of duplication in statistics, as when frozen meat, seafood, poultry
and vegetables are used as ingredients in frozen dinners. Exact
numbers are thus hard to pin down, now more than ever.
Retail (10.1 billion pounds, $23 billion) and foodservice (26.5
billion pounds, $32.2 billion) volume for this year's almanac, for
example, are based on IRI market research data and projections from
the US Economic census of 1997 - but fudge factors have had to be
added in both cases. On the retail side, estimated frozen food volume
for Wal-Mart - which operates more than 1,000 supercenters selling
frozen food - has to be factored in. On the foodservice side...
well those 1997 numbers are pretty old by now.
Supermarket sales of frozen food last year were actually down 1.6%
in volume but up 4.7% in value, according to IRI, but with Wal-Mart
underselling conventional supermarkets and siphoning off their sales,
the reverse may be true for retail sales as a whole. Without hard
data, all QFFI could do was add a 10% fudge factor to IRI supermarket
data (15% in poultry and entrees, which Wal-Mart really pushes).
Still, some category trends were clear from IRI data - frozen poultry
sales were up, and seafood sales way up. Also gaining were entrees,
meat and snacks and appetizers. Juices were down as usual, and other
categories little changed.
As for foodservice, which had been growing at a rapid pace in recent
years but had suffered from the economic slowdown last year even
before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, QFFI has factored in a one
percent increase for sales (based on restaurant visit statistics)
and a two percent gain in dollar volume (based on reports of higher
checks). But with fast food outlets now featuring bargain menus,
chances are that if volume grows this year, dollar sales may lag
behind or even decline.
On the production side, QFFI counts items that are manufactured,
imported or exported in pretty much the same form they are consumed
- i.e., chicken parts and fries as opposed to beef carcasses or
seafood blocks - although the end-user form may not be frozen. Shrimp
from Thailand and other distant sources is imported frozen, for
example, but can often be found thawed and repackaged in products
like cocktail shrimp rings (Shrimp is so huge a category, moreover,
that lower prices there help make for a lower overall frozen food
dollar volume). Crabs, which along with lobsters are the highest
of high-ticket items, are frozen to begin with but are often sold
otherwise. Surimi is generally produced in frozen form, but usually
ends up as refrigerated imitation crabmeat. Both poundage and dollar
value for imports, raw production and exports are counted this year
in overall totals, but not in retail and institutional columns.
Although IRI doesn't specifically report them, it's hardly a secret
that a few new brands are energizing the frozen entree market these
days. Uncle Ben's rice bowls have made a lot of money and inspired
numerous imitations by both rival brands and private label. Uncle
Ben's itself has now created a children's bowl meal line. Boston
Market entrees, a line spun off from the restaurant chain, have
been another hit. Also going after the upscale market are brands
like Marie Callender's and Wolfgang Puck - and premium private label.
Skillet stir-fry meals like Birds Eye's Voila are on the upsurge,
too, and these days they often include beef or even shrimp. Shoppers
are also seeing more organic products under brands like Amy's Kitchen
and Cascadian Farms. Once marginal, the category has grown enough
to attract even private label attention.
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