The makers of many products you may have at home, like Quaker oatmeal, Nespresso coffee or Pampers diapers, reported earnings this week that reflected concerns about new tariffs. Businessweek’s Deena Shanker writes today about how shoppers might react. Plus: A different kind of cola war is brewing, and an investigation shows how the FDA failed to rein in the opioid public-health crisis. If this email was forwarded to you, click here to sign up. Pour one out for the brands. I’m personally loyal to just a few: Hellman’s mayonnaise, Café Bustelo coffee, Safe Catch tuna and Tide Free & Gentle laundry detergent. Beyond that? Pretty flexible. I buy what’s cheap, what’s healthy-ish or even just what’s weird and new. All of this makes me Big Brands’ worst kind of shopper: a “brand switcher.” Sixty percent of my fellow millennials fall into this category, and that number climbs even higher, to 64%, for members of Generation Z, according to a recent global survey by consulting firm EY. There are a lot of reasons we switch brands, and unsurprisingly price a big one. With grocery bills at the top of mind for just about everyone, I’ve got bad news for many supermarket brands: They’re the most vulnerable to being abandoned for cheaper alternatives, according to EY. While 30% of respondents said that, regardless of price increases, they’d stick with their brand for tobacco, and 24% for personal care products, the numbers dropped to their lowest levels for snacks and confectionery (17%), processed food (19%) and home and household-care products (19%). A grocery store in Chicago. Photographer: Scott Olson/Getty Images And boy, are the brands feeling the pain. Over the past five years, companies have been hit with the Covid-19 pandemic, supply chain shocks, runaway inflation and shifting consumer preferences—all of which drove shoppers to new products, whether it was lower price private label or even, sometimes, higher price premium versions. “People are less and less brand loyal,” says Rob Holston, EY global and Americas consumer products sector leader, who notes that the explosion of products bombarding shoppers in the past 20 years “has just diluted brand loyalty.” Right when things were starting to settle down in the consumer economy, President Donald Trump started a trade war, which has raised prices and cooled consumer demand. Costs for commodities such as cocoa and coffee are also high. Unsurprisingly, in earnings this week, Nestlé and Unilever said they’re already raising prices and could go further if tariffs force it. Procter & Gamble said tariff-related price hikes were coming for its products, too. PepsiCo, which has been losing sales volume quarter after quarter, seems to be resisting that step, leaning instead into changing package sizes but not offering big discounts and promotions. These are companies to watch in case even more once-loyal consumers drift away to cheaper pastures. Holston says he’s still optimistic for the big guys. He wants to see them use digital channels to send “more tailored and personalized” messages to consumers versus the “big, splashy ads” of mass promotion. Plus, he wants them to lean into innovation to keep customers coming back for more. But that’s another challenge. “It's like 18, 24 months just to do a flavor variant,” for a product that’s already on shelves, he says, “which is too long.” As for me, I’ll stick with my mayo and my coffee and my super-low-mercury tuna, however expensive they get. But my dishwashing soap? I’ll take the cheapest option on the shelf. Related: US Consumer Sentiment Slides While Inflation Expectations Jump More from Deena Shanker: In her latest Extra Salt column, Deena writes about an emerging soft-drink category—known variously as “modern soda” at Walmart, “next gen beverage” at Albertsons and “enhanced soda” at Target—that might pose another threat to well-known brands. Keep reading: Healthy Sodas Like Poppi, Olipop Are Drawing PepsiCo’s and Coca-Cola’s Attention Photographer: Patricia Lopez Ramos for Bloomberg Businessweek; Prop stylist: Kelly Silva |