Private Label vs Brands - An Inseparable Combination
Rabobank says private label will take 50 per cent share of food retail market by 2025
A new global research report 'Private label vs. Brands - an inseparable combination' from Rabobank's Food and Agri Research division (FAR) shows that
• The global
market share of private/own label food products is set to
double from the current 25 percent to 50 percent in
2025
• A-brands will retain their importance
for retailers to anchor categories' price levels and give
consumers choice and familiarity
• Good news
for consumers is that they will still have access to
familiar brands and have greater access to lower priced
private label products
• Smaller secondary
brands (B-brands) will have to strategically reposition to
avoid being squeezed out of the market
• Two
strategies are open to B-brands suppliers: either invest in
quality and target the premium market, or specialise in
private label.
• A consolidation spree among
private label specialists is inevitable to achieve economies
of scale and reduce the cost base
Rabobank's conclusion
that global private-label penetration will reach 50 percent
by 2025 is based on assumptions about food retail market
structure. The report lists 11 drivers for private-label
growth including
• Continued industry
consolidation in developed food retail markets (western
Europe, the US and Australia)
• Adoption of
modern retail in developing markets (CEE, Russia and Turkey)
• Increased consumer acceptance of private
label following the recession
• Further growth
of the hard discount segment
•
Professionalisation of private label supply
Author of the report Sebastiaan Schreijen is Associate Director Processed Food & Retail at Rabobank. "Our research shows that private label and A-brands are an inseparable combination. Like love and marriage, you can't have one without the other. But where two's company, three's a crowd. This report is an early warning to B-brand suppliers to adapt their strategies to survive."
To see the full report: Private Label vs. Brands
ENDS