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question everything

(48,985 posts)
Sat Jun 11, 2022, 08:53 PM Jun 2022

The Pandemic Pet Boom Has Legs

Many pandemic winners are seeing their sales go to the dogs. Not the pet category. Americans are swiftly reversing newly acquired buying habits. Not all consumers who purchased a Peloton are still paying their $44-a-month fee, if they are keeping the bike at all. Others are canceling one or two of the streaming services they signed up for when they were living room-bound. Many are tapped out on cooking all their meals at home.

But some pandemic acquisitions have a way of hanging around. About 14% of people surveyed by the American Pet Products Association in February said the pandemic led them to get a new pet. And while human spending is shifting in big ways—from sweatpants to dresses, from supermarkets to restaurants—the things people buy for their four-legged friends hasn’t changed all that much.

As of April 2022, inflation-adjusted spending on pets and related products was 28% higher than in January 2019, compared with 9.6% growth for groceries over the same period. In an earnings call on Tuesday, J.M. Smucker, which owns brands such as Meow Mix and Kibbles ‘n Bits, said comparable sales for pet foods grew 10% in the quarter ended April 30 from a year earlier. Its consumer food sales grew by a more moderate 3%.

But don’t expect this pup to keep growing forever. Pet adoptions have slowed since 2020 and 2021... In all, the pandemic likely added millions to America’s pet population. There were 6.9 million more dogs in the U.S. in 2020 compared with 2016, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association... Not only have U.S. households added more pets during the pandemic, but a parallel trend has been the so-called humanization of our furry friends: More pet owners are opting for premium and fresh foods for their puppies and kittens.

And the trend could be inflation-proof: Early indications show that people might be more inclined to trade down on their own food than their pets’ kibble. Retailers such as Walmart have said they are seeing signs of consumers shifting to cheaper, private-label brands in products like deli meat. But both Chewy and Petco Health and Wellness indicated in their latest earnings calls that they aren’t seeing signs of a trade-down in pet food.

More..

https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-pandemic-pet-boom-has-legs-11654853400 (subscription)


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The Pandemic Pet Boom Has Legs (Original Post) question everything Jun 2022 OP
I get it Skittles Jun 2022 #1
The pet shelters are overflowing, according to what I'm reading on NextDoor, etc. No Vested Interest Jun 2022 #2
Yeah, this article is stupid ReluctanceTango Jun 2022 #3

Skittles

(160,016 posts)
1. I get it
Sat Jun 11, 2022, 10:19 PM
Jun 2022

I'm still buying the same treats for my pets, they have gotten......used to a certain lifestyle

No Vested Interest

(5,202 posts)
2. The pet shelters are overflowing, according to what I'm reading on NextDoor, etc.
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 01:54 AM
Jun 2022

Seems like not enough of these new pet owners are getting their pets neutered in a timely manner.

Shelters are begging for foster owners to take in pets and socialize them when young, and to take others for a weekend or even a noontime walk, just to get them out of cages even temporarily.

Sad situation..

 

ReluctanceTango

(219 posts)
3. Yeah, this article is stupid
Sun Jun 12, 2022, 04:58 AM
Jun 2022

Our local no-kill shelter is suspending adoption fees to get pets adopted this weekend because they're full. And we're at the max for pets we can afford to keep.

Breaks my heart to think of what will happen at the regular shelters while the no-kill place can't take in anymore animals.

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