Quantcast
Channel: Mississippi
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 249

A grocery chain says it's receiving just 40% of the items it orders from suppliers, and is making its own version of Lunchables because it can't get hold of the real thing

$
0
0

A grocery store worker bends down to pick up food items to stock shelves.

Summary List Placement

The CEO of a Southern supermarket chain says he's struggling to keep shelves full during a supply shortage, and that his company has resorted to creating its own version of Lunchables, Kraft Heinz's miniature cracker, cheese, and meat selection.

Donny Rouse, who runs Rouses Markets, told The Wall Street Journal that sometimes the chain receives about 40% of the items it orders from suppliers, compared to more than 90% before the pandemic. 

"It is difficult for customers to get everything they want to get," Rouse told The Journal. 

The chain — which has 65 stores across Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama — has found new ways to plug gaps in its inventory. Jason Martinolich, Rouses' vice president of center store, told The Journal that the chain had sourced items from different brands and bought more private-label products. 

Rouse told The Journal that he and his team had visited rival grocery stores to see what they were selling, and asked manufacturers why his competitors were able to get products that his company could not. He did not say whether he'd received answers.

Read more: The surging Delta variant is tanking air freight capacity out of China, and it's already a huge problem for holiday retail

The 7,000-employee supermarket chain has also struggled to get Lunchables — Kraft Heinz's miniature cracker, cheese, and meat selection — and has instead started to create its own version of the popular snack with crackers, cheese, grapes, and meat, The Journal reported. 

Kraft Heinz told The Journal there was record demand for Lunchables, that it was managing the supply chain, and that it was getting more products to customers.

Grocery stores have faced supply shortages in recent weeks, in part because of the labor shortage and high shipping costs.

Some retailers have stockpiled goods to keep their shelves full. Paul McLean, the chief merchandising officer of Stew Leonard's, a Connecticut supermarket chain, previously told Insider that the company had purchased 50% more items than usual, including pasta and olive oil. 

Some evidence suggests that shoppers are also stockpiling goods as the Delta variant of the coronavirus spreads throughout the country, as they did in the early days of the pandemic. 

Rouses and Kraft Heinz did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment. 

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The Japanese eat 10,000 tons of fugu each year. Here's what makes the poisonous pufferfish so expensive.


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 249

Trending Articles



<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>