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Judynyc
Wed, May-17-06, 07:15
Fat profits slim down as protein fad wanes
The meat industry faces a glut as people replace the Atkins and South Beach diet fads with pastas and breads.
Associated Press Tuesday May 16,2006

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -- Too much of a good thing isn't good for anyone. That goes for protein, too. After years of people stuffing themselves with chicken, pork and beef while they were following low-carb diets such as Atkins, the meat industry is looking at a glut as the diet trend turns toward a more balanced approach.

Benchmark wholesale prices for beef and pork are down more than 8 percent from a year ago and 20 percent for chicken, according to the Livestock Marketing Information Center.

"There is just an overabundance of protein on the market," the center's Jim Robb said.

Retail prices for meats are forecast to be flat to 1 percent lower this year compared with a 2 percent to 3 percent increase for all foods, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Agricultural economists said the oversupply and subsequent dip in prices is part of the normal business cycle. Good profits in 2004 and 2005 tempted farmers and agribusiness companies to raise production faster than the growth in demand.

But changing diets have helped pressure the market, as have export problems for beef and chicken.

Consumers are increasingly shunning high-protein diets such as Atkins and South Beach, which have been lauded for inducing rapid weight loss but criticized for raising the intake of fats and cholesterol.

"The popularity of high-protein, low-carb diets gave an extra kick to demand for meats," said Ronald Plain, professor of agricultural economics at the University of Missouri in Columbia.

"Now we're in a situation in 2006 where we see an increase in meat production and that [diet] popularity is going away, so the Atkins diet turned out to be like other diets, a passing fad," Plain said.

DeWayne Gray, a rancher who has 1,450 head of cattle southwest of Springfield, said he has been expecting prices to come down as the normal business cycle holds sway.

"We reached the apex of the cattle cycle around the first of the year," Gray said.

Big food processors are feeling the effect of what the industry calls an "oversupply of protein."

The nation's largest meat processor, Springdale, Ark.-based Tyson Foods, blamed a second-quarter loss in part on the protein glut. No. 2 processor Pilgrim's Pride, based in Pittsburg, Texas, also posted a loss for similar reasons; and Smithfield Foods, the world's largest pork processor, based in Smithfield, Va., said it expects its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings to fall short because of plummeting hog prices.

Overseas health scares are also dampening exports, putting more meat on the home market.

U.S. chicken exports are down as consumers in many foreign markets shun poultry in general over Asian avian bird flu, even though the World Health Organization says properly cooked chicken is no health threat. The H5N1 virus, lethal to bird flocks and blamed for at least 113 human deaths, has spread across Asia to Europe and Africa but has not been detected in the Americas.

Japan, meanwhile, is still barring U.S. beef after briefly lifting a two-year ban in December. The original import ban was imposed after the discovery of mad cow disease in a Canadian-born cow in Washington state. Other countries also shut their borders after the December 2003 discovery.

Since then, other countries have resumed imports and Japan was starting to allow in U.S. beef but stopped in January when inspectors found veal cuts containing backbone, which are deemed safe in the U.S. but not by Japan.

Japan was the U.S. beef industry's biggest foreign customer before the mad cow cases turned up here.

Despite diet fads, the long-term trend is for U.S. consumers to eat more meat and spend less for it as producers and processors become more efficient.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture projects a steady rise in annual per capita consumption of red meats and poultry from 220 pounds in 2005 to 231 pounds in 2015, while consumer meat expenditures decline from about 2 percent to 1.3 percent of disposable income.

http://www.roanoke.com/business/wb/65318

LC_Dave
Wed, May-17-06, 07:41
After years of people stuffing themselves with chicken, pork and beef while they were following low-carb diets such as Atkins, the meat industry is looking at a glut as the diet trend turns toward a more balanced approach.

Pheww...... I'm glad they have gone back to stuffing their face full of pasta & bread!

For a second there, the obesity & diabetes epidemic was almost over.....

Crisis averted!!! Roll on the sickness industry!!


In a less sarcastic note, whenever they say high carb is a 'balanced approach', I always think balanced is 33.3333% carbs 33.3333% Fat 33.333% protein. How can they call macronutrient ratios balanced if it's not that? Isn't balance like a seasaw, you have 60% carbs, then the seasaw is going to topple ?

bkloots
Wed, May-17-06, 07:50
Ha! My BIL is a major player with the American Italian Pasta Company. In addition to other troubles, they took a pounding when they offered a line of low-carb pasta (bought by NOBODY), in addition to the general decline in regular pasta consumption during the low-carb fad phase.

He and his stockholders would like to see a return to "normal," if there is any such thing when it comes to American consumers.

Judynyc
Wed, May-17-06, 08:01
hehehe.....it makes me happy to see the prices of meats come down..... :agree: better for us!! :thup:

Dodger
Wed, May-17-06, 08:15
In the low-carb community, at least on this site, there seems to be a large demand for grass-feed beef. If the ranchers want higher prices, they need to start supplying grass-fed, not grain-fed animals to the butchers and they can charge more.

LC FP
Wed, May-17-06, 11:57
while consumer meat expenditures decline from about 2 percent to 1.3 percent of disposable income.

Truly amazing what they can do with feed lots and hormones.

Frogbreath
Wed, May-17-06, 13:28
Indirectly the American public is in a feed lot being pumped with corn and hormones.

foxgluvs
Wed, May-17-06, 13:33
Pheww...... I'm glad they have gone back to stuffing their face full of pasta & bread!

For a second there, the obesity & diabetes epidemic was almost over.....



:lol:

Well, I for one am GLAD if everyone is going on to other diets....I mean, it makes sense doesn't it? MORE of the GOOD stuff for me at cheaper prices!! Whoopeee!!

dina1957
Wed, May-17-06, 13:37
I don't buy supermarket meat, but our grass fed suplier raises prices every year by at least, $25, for a spilt qurter (about 100 pounds). There are so many farmers now who raise grass fed beef, lamb and even pigs (a mystery for me how they make pigs eat grass). Since ppl are aware of hormones and feeding lots now more than a decade ago, many switched to a grass fed and natural meat.

pbowers
Wed, May-17-06, 19:02
definitely no such thing as a grass-fed pig. i think there has been an increase in free-range or free-roaming pork production though.

ThomasCGT
Thu, May-18-06, 04:02
Titled on the lo carbo forum '' AP confused reporter ends up looking biased for poorly researched journalistic effort''. ..Says Atkins diet criticised for heart disease..by whom, apart from ADA, and proof? Says less lo carbo people equals more and cheaper meat. Then, no, its only a seasonal variation, and oh yes, also because they cant export to Japan etc. At least they got a knock at the lo carbo people, which should keep ADA, AMA, FDA, MMM, (mad mainstream medicine), ie all their advertisers happy. We dont care. We bask in our alternative knowledge.

Frogbreath
Thu, May-18-06, 06:50
ADA - Association of Dying Americans

Nancy LC
Thu, May-18-06, 11:28
Yay! Cheaper meat. :p

Judynyc
Thu, May-18-06, 14:11
Yay! Cheaper meat. :p


Yeah...thats what I say!! ;)

lnrpoole
Thu, May-18-06, 20:10
definitely no such thing as a grass-fed pig. i think there has been an increase in free-range or free-roaming pork production though.
Oh great! And pigs are omnivores, so does that mean they are eating road kill or what ever they come across on the "Free Range"?

deb34
Fri, May-19-06, 06:51
1. export problems for beef and chicken.

2. Big food processors are feeling the effect of what the industry calls an "oversupply of protein

3. Overseas health scares are also dampening exports, putting more meat on the home market.

4. U.S. chicken exports are down as consumers in many foreign markets shun poultry in general over Asian avian bird flu, even though the World Health Organization says properly cooked chicken is no health threat.

5. Japan, meanwhile, is still barring U.S. beef after briefly lifting a two-year ban in December.

6. Other countries also shut their borders after the December 2003 discovery.

7. Japan was the U.S. beef industry's biggest foreign customer before the mad cow cases turned up here.

Here I see at least 7 concrete, factual reasons why there may be a glut of animal protein on the US market.


Below, is one weak and spineless supposition that the anti LC dweebs have propounded....i think i know what i believe from this article...talk about cheap shots... :yawn: :yawn: :yawn:

But changing diets have helped pressure the market,
we see an increase in meat production and that [diet] popularity is going away, so the Atkins diet turned out to be like other diets, a passing fad," Plain said.

No facts, just propaganda as usual...that's my .02 cents

kwikdriver
Fri, May-19-06, 10:43
No facts, just propaganda as usual...that's my .02 cents


That was my take as well. There are too many factors to be able to narrow this down to one thing. But when you present a journalist with the opportunity to tell a story (the low carb fad is over) instead of actually report an event, they'll tell the story every single time.

Judynyc
Fri, May-19-06, 13:12
That was my take as well. There are too many factors to be able to narrow this down to one thing. But when you present a journalist with the opportunity to tell a story (the low carb fad is over) instead of actually report an event, they'll tell the story every single time.


Hey Kwik!! We agree!! :agree: :D

This also makes me think wbout the fact that the grain lobbyists must be doing a bang up job lately with all the pushing of whole grains down our collective throats. Its really getting me angry.:mad: