Produce sees sales spike in US amid coronavirus, led by frozen fruits, vegetables
The numbers are starting to come in and at least on the grocery side of the business and the produce industry has been able to respond to consumer needs during this period of economic and medical uncertainty caused by COVID-19.
While some news reports and social media discussion forums indicated consumers could be reducing produce purchases in favor of non-perishable, center store foods, supermarket sales data indicates strong demand for produce.
As a result of the health crisis, consumers are buying more produce but may be modifying how they buy. Category Partners’ analysis powered by Nielsen U.S. scan data for the Total U.S. for the single-week ending March 7 revealed produce department sales growth of +3.8%.
Sales spiked to +23.2% the single week ending March 14.
“It is no surprise based on anecdotal reports that the inflection in sales gains between the weeks ending March 7 and 14 was so dramatic,” said Steve Lutz, SVP of insights and innovation. “As more data points roll in, we’re beginning to see some underlying patterns that reveal interesting new currents in the retail channel.”
- Further segmentation of the data revealed that while fruit sales are up +18.8% for the week of March 14,
- Vegetable sales surpassed fruit gaining +27.3% over the same week last year.
- Less perishable products like potatoes have seen larger sales spikes (+45%).
- Products that support home prepared meals like fresh tomatoes (+42%) for example are outpacing the strong produce department trends.
- Looking outside the department, there are big gains for less perishable products like frozen fruits (+73.2%) and frozen vegetables (+68.9%).
“As we look across individual categories in fresh produce as well as departments outside produce, the patterns are beginning to emerge,” said Lutz. “Highly perishable items are selling but experiencing smaller increases in sales. In general, the more an item or category is considered storable and a staple, the greater the increases in year-over-year growth triggered by the COVID-19 crisis. Consumers are still picking up highly perishable items for the next week, but they are stocking up on more ‘durable’ food items for a longer time horizon.”