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Joe Harvey
Marketplace for Local Food Service Professionals and Hospitality Industry|
Daily Market Update
Poultry The February broiler- feed price ratio was the highest in twenty six months suggesting improved profitability for chicken producers. The January broiler type chick hatch was .4% smaller than a year ago indicating that chicken output should trend very close to 2009 levels in the coming weeks. Still, due to improve margins, chicken produc....
Daily Market Editorial
Commodity Reports are like the weather. Blink twice and they change. LocalFoodService.com brings you a very robust look at commodities, but they alone are meaningless until you know how to use them in your food purchasing planning and menu adjustment process.
Most operators have a core list of commodities that they purchase from their suppliers on a daily or weekly basis. Do you know your list? That's the first step. We recommend going out to approximately twenty items. Once you have your list, take one commodity and run a hypothetical analysis. In our example we chose 189a Select Beef Tenderloin. According to our February 13th, 2009 report, Select Beef Tenderloin traded at $5.83 per pound as opposed to $8.07 per pound during the same time in 2008. Take your baseline trading price = $5.83 Add packaging costs of approximately of .20 - .25 per pound Add freight to the Distributor (not you) - .15 - .20 per pound on average Add Markup from the Distributor - now here is the tricky part. What is your agreement with your Distributor? Do you have an agreement with your Distributor? In this instance, we assume a 15% mark up, but always plan on a few percentage points over your agreement. If you do have a mark up agreement, you need to review our Market Reports to be sure they are being honored. Do the numbers: 5.83 + .23 +.18 + .94 = $7.18 per pound your cost. That's a theoretical difference of -.89 from last year's commodity price! Market Report Fundamentals Trading price + packaging costs+freight to DC + markup to operator = final cost to back door. Granted, it isn't always this easy. But the devil is in the details and it helps first to identify your core commodities and start from there. |
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