Russian poultry market braces for a price hike

05-03-2021 | | |
Russian supermarkets want to raise the price of poultry meat and eggs as their suppliers calculate higher prices too. Photo: ANP
Russian supermarkets want to raise the price of poultry meat and eggs as their suppliers calculate higher prices too. Photo: ANP

A group of retailers has appealed to the Russian government, seeking permission to sharply raise prices for poultry and eggs on the grocery shelves.

As poultry companies plan to increase their prices by about 10% against the backdrop of the continuing avian influenza (AI) epidemic, supermarkets want to safeguard their margins.

The product volumes on the market have shrunk recently due to a seasonal factor and due to the mass AI spread in Southern Russia, in Krasnodar Krai, Stavropol Krai, and Rostov Oblast. From there, the disease began spreading into European Russia, Sergey Belyakov, chairman of the Russian retail companies association told a newspaper Izvestia.

Avian influenza
Avian influenza is an issue for poultry producers worldwide. With this interactive map, Poultry World tracks the outbreaks and keeps you up-to-date on the latest information. Check it out…

Production costs are soaring

The companies are experiencing a significant decline in the poultry population, while production costs are soaring. So far, given the Russian population’s limited buying power, retailers never dared to increase their prices, Belyakov said. Even now, with margins thinning, it is very likely that retailers try to extend the price hike in a bid not to scare away their loyal customers. The Russian poultry industry’s production costs have jumped by nearly 6% in February, compared to January, the Russian union of poultry producers Rosptitsesoyuz estimated. In 2020, the production costs went up by 20% to 25%, but poultry companies constrained the rise in prices, bearing certain costs, Rosptitsesoyuz said.

Join 31,000+ subscribers

Subscribe to our newsletter to stay updated about all the need-to-know content in the poultry sector, three times a week.
Vorotnikov
Vladislav Vorotnikov Eastern European correspondent





Beheer