Now Sam’s Club Limits Rice Purchases
April 24th, 2008Via: Bloomberg:
Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s Sam’s Club warehouse unit is restricting purchases of some types of rice to four bags a visit as prices reached a record in Chicago futures trading.
The limits on jasmine, basmati and long-grain white rice, a response to “recent supply and demand trends,” will be put into effect in all U.S. stores where allowed by law and are effective immediately, Sam’s Club spokeswoman Kristy Reed said today in an e-mailed statement.
Some consumers have started hoarding rice, the food staple for half the world as prices soar and supplies shrink. China, Vietnam, India and Egypt have curbed sales abroad to safeguard domestic supplies and cool inflation. Thailand also may restrict shipments, a World Bank official said today.
“The warehouse clubs are doing it to protect their business customers, like smaller restaurants, caterers, nursing homes, day-care centers,” said food consultant Jim Degen. “The business members are the most important members in warehouse clubs because they generate so much more revenue per member.” Degen is a principal of J.M. Degen & Co., a food industry marketing consulting firm based in Templeton, California.
Some of Costco Wholesale Corp.’s stores, including locations in California, have put limits on sales of rice and flour, Chief Executive Officer James Sinegal told Reuters yesterday. Sinegal didn’t return a phone call from Bloomberg News seeking comment.
Distribution Systems
Costco and Sam’s Club have extensive distribution systems and source worldwide, so they can redistribute their rice supplies within the United States, meaning limits on customers may not be a long-term problem, said Degen.
“We are working with our suppliers to address this matter to ensure we are in stock,” Sam’s Club’s Reed said. The stores aren’t limiting purchases of flour or oil, she said. Reached via phone, she declined to comment further.
Rice has more than doubled in the past year. Rice futures for July delivery rose 2.6 percent in Chicago today, touching a record $24.85 per 100 pounds, and have climbed 26 percent this month.
Wheat, corn and soybeans gained to records this year, spurring social unrest in Haiti and Egypt.
Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer, rose 37 cents to $56.92 at 4:15 p.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Costco, the largest U.S. warehouse club, climbed $1.52, or 2.2 percent, to $69.60.
Food Prices
The higher commodities prices are also pushing up U.S. food prices and spurring inflation. The consumer price index climbed 0.3 percent in March, after no change in the prior month, the Labor Department said April 16. Inflation, combined with falling home values and mounting job losses, is leading to cutbacks in consumer spending that may push the economy into a recession.
Limits on rice purchases will be felt the most in California and Texas, which have large Asian and Mexican populations, whose diets include rice, Degen said.
Soaring prices may put basic foods beyond the reach of the poorest people, raising the risk of a “silent famine” in Asia, a World Food Program official said April 21.
In the U.S., half of the domestic rice crop meets 88 percent of the country’s demand, said David Coia, a spokesman with the USA Rice Federation in Arlington, Virginia.
