Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Ample strawberries put pricing on promotable levels

An ample volume of strawberries is available right now. “Most of the volume we’d been expecting and waiting for came right before Valentine’s Day, with the bulk of the product coming now. So we’re in the midst of the peak of fruit down in Florida. The quality is good as well,” says Gus Pappas, Co-CEO and berry expert of Pete Pappas and Sons in Jessup, Maryland. Pete Pappas and Sons sells conventional and organic berries from multiple growing areas throughout the year. 

He notes that typically at this time of year, Florida has an advantage in strawberry production given the freight differentials compared to pulling product out of California. The Central Mexican season is also winding down, and Baja California is starting up. “It’s hard to bring Baja product across right now, and California has also had four inches of rain in the last week with a few different storms, so they’re up and down as well,” says Pappas. He notes Pappas & Sons will stay with Florida production until the end of March and then begin the transition to Baja products.  

Managing volume
Meanwhile, demand is good for strawberries. “A lot of this extra volume came on unexpectedly this week and last week. We didn’t think it would come so soon, but demand is good for it,” he says.

That puts pricing at promotable levels. “I expect once this explosion of fruit gets through, that pricing will get back down to manageable levels. I think pricing will go up a little bit because right now they are hovering a little bit under production costs,” he says.

That’s the particularly delicate balance right now--balancing pricing between growers and retailers. “Growers would like to get prices up to where they can contend with the new costs they have in packaging, labor, etc. All costs are up exponentially, and if growers have to sell below production costs, that’s not a recipe for success,” says Pappas. “But the costs also translate to a certain price point, and retailers are looking for more aggressive prices to get that price per clamshell down to more promotable levels.”

For more information:
Helen Pappas
Pete Pappas & Sons
[email protected]  
https://www.petepappasinc.com/