With food prices still on the rise. Many of us would enjoy some way to recoup rising food liability costs, lost to increasing market inefficiency.
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As disposable income of consumers shrinks due to rising food and gas prices, more of us are forced to resort to microwave or canned food dinners. This drives demand, translating to higher profits and higher stock prices on average.
However, it could be a little late to be buying campbells foods.
Do we have better options? What is a good investment strategy to recoup losses attributable to rising food costs?
in the UK i have seen how the whole sale market have increased their cost vs price multiplier. and then the retailers do the same
meaning they make alot of profits
yet at the farmers side. their costs have not moved up much at all
it doesnt cost much diesel for a farmer to walk across a field and open a gate for cows to move to another grazing field
here in the UK buying directly from a farmers own shop has not increased as much as buying end-processed and packaged food at a retailer has increased.
you can see that buying 500g of diced (processed) meat in a retailer costs more then fresh unprocessed meat from the farmer
also that retailers meat is pumped full of excess brine where when heated it evaporates and releases the fluid to end up with only 250g-300g of actual meat, thus being bad value for true weight
i can get better quality meat from a farmer than i can from a retailer, meat that holds better weight when cooking
same goes for carrots, peas, potato's and such,
for ~ £6 i can make a beef and vegetable soup/stew with enough servings to fill 8tincans
meaning £0.75 a serving
however buying a meat and vegetable soup in a supermarket is £1.50
same goes for ready meals
if you look at the small thin slices of meat. the few spoonfuls of mixed veg.
but then look at the cost of "making your own" from scratch. you can make better portions of better ingredients by getting the raw ingredients
in short you can make 2x buy buying smart your own food
if you then want to make profit. you can then sell homemade food to neighbours/relatives that are disabled(the demand community for such ready to eat produce), at a far cheaper rate for them than using uber-eats./ready meal purchases. where you can still make a profit by offering it less than the retail rate/fast food delivery rate