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Pet Food in the U.S.: Cat Food: Health, Humanization and High Quality Ingredients in an Increasingly Value-Driven Global Market
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Jan 1, 2009
357 Pages - Pub ID: LA2088599
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- Chapter 1: Executive Summary
- Scope of Report
- Report Methodology
- Global Market Perspective
- Value of Pet Food Retail Sales
- Figure 1-1: Global Retail Sales of Pet Food: 2004, 2008 and 2013 (in billions of dollars)
- Trends by World Region
- Marketer Shares and Shifts
- Market Size and Growth
- U.S. Pet Food Sales Near $17.0 Billion in 2008
- 2008 Mass-Market Dollar Sales of Pet Food Up, But Volume Sales Down
- Dog Food Three-Fifths of the Market
- Market Share by Retail Channel
- Market to Approach $19 Billion by 2013
- Looking Ahead
- Competitive Overview
- Top Five Players Control Four-Fifths of the Market
- Figure 1-2: Top Five U.S. Marketers of Pet Food: 2006 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Four Companies Dominate Mass-Market Sales
- Pet Specialty Channel More Fragmented
- Mega Marketers Tap In to Natural Segment
- Multinational Powerhouse Cargill Taps Into Feed/Seed Channel
- Private Label Pet Food Has Room to Grow in the U.S.
- Pet Food Producers Position on Safety
- Marketing and New Product Trends
- Pet Market Advertising at $520 Million in 2007
- Marketers Embracing Non-Traditional Media
- Advertising Positioned on a Few Major Themes
- Celebrities Kick In
- 2008 a Record Year for New Pet Food Products
- Product Premiumization: Natural, Upscale and Functional Appeals
- Retail and Consumer Trends
- Economic Concerns and Increased Competition
- Over 60 Million Households Own Pets
- Dog/Cat Ownership Rates Edge Up
- Minorities Over-Index for Semi-Moist and Canned Products
- Canned Food Is Stronger in Cat Arena
- Chapter 2: Market Overview
- Introduction
- Scope of Report: Three Main Categories
- Terminology
- Exclusions
- Other Marketing Classifications
- Global Pet Food Market Perspective
- Value of Pet Food Retail Sales
- Figure 2-1: Global Retail Sales of Pet Food: 2004, 2008 and 2013 (in billions of dollars)
- Market Share and Trends by Region
- Figure 2-2: Share of Global Pet Food Sales by Region: 2008 (percent)
- Marketer Shares and Shifts
- Figure 2-3: Pet Food Global Market Leaders: 2008 (percent)
- Trends in New Product Introductions
- Figure 2-4: Number of Global Pet Food New Product Launches: Reports and SKUs, 2002-2008
- Figure 2-5: Share of Global Pet Food New Product Launches by Region: 2000, 2004 and 2008 (percent)
- Top Marketing Claims Involve Natural, Functional Appeals
- Figure 2-6: Top 20 Package Tags/Marketing Claims: By Number of Global Pet Food New Product Launches, 2008
- Global Market Outlook
- Table 2-1: Top Global Pet Food Industry Forecast Factors: 2007 (percent)
- Table 2-2: Top Global Pet Food Industry Forecast Trends: 2007 (percent)
- U.S. Pet Food Exports Up 15%
- Canada, Japan Are Top Export Markets for U.S. Pet Foods
- Table 2-3: U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Leading Country Markets: 2003-2007 (in thousands of dollars)
- Table 2-4: U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Leading Country Markets: January-September 2007 vs. January-September 2008 (in thousands of dollars)
- Figure 2-7: Top National Destinations for U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods: January-September 2008 (percent)
- Table 2-5: U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Regional Markets: 2003-2007 (in thousands of dollars)
- Table 2-6: U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Regional Markets: January-September 2007 vs. January-September 2008 (in thousands of dollars)
- Table 2-7: Export Concentration Ratios for U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Top, Top 4 and Top 8 Markets: 2003-September 2008 (% of total dollar value)
- European Union Down as Export Destination
- Figure 2-8: Share of Total U.S. Exports of Dog & Cat Foods by Top Destination Markets: Canada, Japan and the European Union, 1996 vs. 2008 (% of total dollar value)
- Mars Targets Export Growth Markets in Africa
- Figure 2-9: Percent of Survey Respondents Ranking Import/Export Trends as “Very Important” to Development of Pet Food Industry: By Global Region
- Rising Costs, Down Economy Shape Market Environment
- Market Size and Growth
- Pet Food Sales Near $17.0 Billion in 2008
- Table 2-8: U.S. Retail Sales of Pet Food: 2004-2008 (in millions of dollars)
- 2008 Mass-Market Dollar Sales of Pet Food Up, But Volume Sales Down
- Table 2-9: IRI-Tracked Dollar, Pound and Unit Sales of Pet Food: 2008 vs. 2007 (in millions of dollars, pound and unit sales)
- A Gradual Improvement from 2003 to 2007
- Figure 2-10: IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: 2003-2008 (in millions of dollars)
- Dog Food Delivers the Most Dollar Growth
- Table 2-10: IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: By Category, 2003- 2008 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 2-11: Annual Growth/Decline in IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: By Category, 2004-2008 (percent)
- Table 2-12: Total Growth/Decline in IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: By Category, 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 2-13: Total Growth/Decline in IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: By Segment, 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Market Composition
- Dog Food Three-Fifths of the Market
- Figure 2-11: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food by Category: 2001, 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2008 (percent)
- Figure 2-12: Share of Pet Food Sales in Natural Supermarkets: By Type, 2008 (percent)
- Dry Food Increasing in Market Share
- Figure 2-13: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Dog and Cat Food by Form: 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2008 (percent)
- Table 2-14: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food by Form: 2003, 2005 and 2007 (percent)
- Alternative Pet Food Share of Sales
- Independent Pet Stores: Share of Sales by Animal Type
- Table 2-15: Alternative Pet Food Segment Performance Relative to Total U.S. Pet Food Market: 2003-2007 (percent, growth rate)
- Table 2-16: Share of Independent Pet Store Pet Supply Sales by Animal Type: 2005-2007 (percent)
- Table 2-17: Pet Food and Treats Share of Category Sales by Animal Type in Independent Pet Stores: 2006 vs. 2007 (percent)
- Dog Food Is Top Category in Pet Specialty Stores
- Table 2-18: Share of Pet Specialty Retailer Sales by Category: 2006 vs. 2007 (percent)
- Market Share by Retail Channel
- Figure 2-14: Share of U.S. Pet Food Sales by Retail Outlet Type: 2008 (percent)
- Household Purchasing of Pet Supplies by Retail Outlet Type
- Table 2-19: Household Purchasing of Pet Products by Retail Channel: Total Purchasers and Sole Purchasers, 2006 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. households with pets)
- Figure 2-15: Degree of Channel Loyalty Among Purchasers of Pet Supplies by Outlet Type: 2008 (percent of U.S. households with pets)
- Chain Merchandising Trends in the Mass Market
- Dry Dog Food the Most Heavily Merchandised
- Ephemeral vs. Incremental Merchandising Gains
- Price Discounting in Chains Is Steepest for Cat Food
- Table 2-20: IRI-Tracked Retailer Merchandising Trends for Pet Food: By Category and Segment 4th Quarter 2006 through 3rd Quarter 2008 (percent of sales volume)
- Table 2-21: IRI-Tracked Promotion of Dog, Cat and Other Pet Food: Ratio of Average Promoted Price to Average Overall Price, 2003 - Third Quarter 2008 (percent)
- Market Outlook
- All Eyes on the Economy
- Figure 2-16: U.S. Grocery Industry Sales Growth: 2001-2007 (percent)
- Table 2-22: Percentage of Adults with Little or No Confidence in Short-Term Prospects for the Economy: April 2003-April 2008 (U.S. adults)
- Table 2-23: Percentage of Adults Who Are More Practical or Realistic in Their Purchases, Month Over Month: October 2007-April 2008 (U.S. adults)
- Pet Market Impact
- Pet Food Prices, Costs at Record Highs
- Figure 2-17: Consumer Price Index for Pet Food: 1998-2008
- Figure 2-18: Producer Price Index for Pet Food: 1998-2008
- Impact of Spring 2007 Pet Food Recalls
- Figure 2-19: Effect of Pet Food Recall on Pet Food Sales in Pet Specialty Stores: May 2007 (percent)
- Figure 2-20: Effect of Pet Food Recall on Pet Specialty Retailer Pet Food Selection: January 2008 (percent)
- Figure 2-21: Seasonal Pattern of Pet Food Sales in the Natural Supermarket Channel: January 2005-December 2007
- Product Premiumization and Premium Demographics
- Table 2-24: IRI-Tracked Volume Sales of Pet Food by Category and Segment: 2003 - Third Quarter 2008 (in millions of volume units)
- Table 2-25: Average U.S. Household Expenditures on Pet Food: 1997-2007 (in dollars)
- Figure 2-22: Share of Total U.S. Pet Market Expenditures: $70K+ vs. Under $70K Income Brackets, 1997-2007 (percent)
- Figure 2-23: Number of New Pet Food Product Introductions: 2001, 2004 and 2008
- Natural/Organic Pet Food Going Strong
- Figure 2-24: U.S. Retail Sales of Natural Pet Food: 2003, 2007 and 2012 (in millions of dollars)
- Pet Humanization a Potent Force
- Table 2-26: Mean Number of Veterinary Visits by Human-Animal Bond Among Dog and Cat Households: 2006
- Table 2-27: Mean Veterinary Expenditures by Human-Animal Bond Among Dog and Cat Households: 2006 (in dollars)
- Enhancing Pet Health
- Aging Pet Population Underpins Healthcare Boom
- Figure 2-25: Percentage of Dogs and Cats Age 6 and Over: 1996 vs. 2006 (percent)
- Number of Dog and Cat Households on the Ups
- Figure 2-26: Household Penetration Rates for Selected Dog- or Cat-Owning Classifications: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. dogor cat-owning households)
- The Boomer Factor
- Table 2-28: Dog and Cat Ownership by Adult Age Bracket: 2008 (number, percent and index of U.S. households)
- Figure 2-27: Dog or Cat Ownership Rates by Age Bracket: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. households)
- Figure 2-28: Share of Total U.S. Population Growth for Selected Age Brackets: 2007-2015 (percent)
- Dual-Adult/No-Kid Clout
- Figure 2-29: Two-Adult Households/No Kids as Pet Owners: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Celebrities Back Up and Coming Pet Food Lines
- Looking Ahead
- The New Value Equation
- Figure 2-30: Share of Total U.S. Pet Market Expenditures: $70K+ vs. Under $70K Income Brackets: 1997-2007 (percent)
- Market to Approach $19 Billion by 2013
- Table 2-29: Projected U.S. Retail Sales of Pet Food: 2008-2013 (in millions of dollars)
- Additional Market Consolidation
- Product Innovation
- Competitive Overview
- Acquisitions Intensify Market Consolidation
- Table 2-30: Timeline of U.S. Pet Food Market Acquisitions: 2002- 2008
- Mars Plus Nutro
- Castor & Pollux, Halo Backed by Private Equity Firms
- Top Five Players Control Four-Fifths of the Market
- Figure 2-31: Top Five U.S. Marketers of Pet Food: 2006 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Four Companies Dominate Mass-Market Sales
- Figure 2-32: Top Marketers of Pet Food by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales: 2007 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Table 2-31: Leading Marketers of Pet Food by Share of IRITracked Sales: 1999-2007 (percent)
- Table 2-32: Leading Marketers of Pet Food: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales by Product Segment: 2007 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Pet Specialty Channel More Fragmented
- Figure 2-33: No. 1 Brand Leaders in Pet Specialty Stores: 2007 (percent)
- Professional Channel Marketers
- Value and Superpremium Positioned Marketers
- Snacks and Treats Specialists, “Springboarding”
- Natural/Organic Specialists Exclusive to Specialty, Natural Channels
- Brand Leaders in the Natural Supermarket Channel
- Figure 2-34: Share of Sales of Pet Products in Natural Supermarkets by Marketer/Brand: 2008 (percent)
- Mega Marketers Tap In to Natural Segment
- Raw/Frozen and Homemade Pet Food Specialists
- Nature’s Variety a Leader in Raw/Frozen Foods
- Freshpet Makes Refrigerated Pet Food Splash
- Figure 2-35: IRI-Tracked U.S. Sales of Freshpet Refrigerated Pet Food: 2006-2008 (in millions of dollars)
- Channel-Specific Marketing
- Multinational Powerhouse Cargill Taps Into Feed/Seed Channel
- Crossing Pet Market Lines
- Table 2-33: The U.S. Pet Food Market: Selected Leading Marketers and Brands, 2008
- Focus on Private Label
- Room to Grow
- Table 2-34: Number of U.S. Private-Label Pet Food Product Introductions and SKUs: By Category, 2000-2008
- Evanger’s and Eagle Pack Report Recall-Related Gains
- Store-Brand Share Stabilizes at Mass-Market Level Following Steady Declines
- Table 2-35: Private-Label Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Pet Food: By Product Category and Segment, 1999-2007 (percent)
- Mars Plus Doane
- Whole Foods and Traders Joe’s Big on Private Label
- PetSmart and Petco Heavily Invested in Store Brands
- Figure 2-36: National Consumer Advertising Spending for PetSmart and Petco: 2006 and 2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 2-36: PetSmart and Petco Pet Food and Treat Private-Label Brands: By Trademark Name, Usage and Filing Date
- Independent Pet Stores Also Making a Bid
- Table 2-37: Purchasing Patterns for Selected Types of Store- Brand Dog and Cat Food: By Retail Channel Shopped, 2008 (percent)
- The Global Private-Label Pet Food Picture
- The Future of Private Label
- Focus on Pet Food Recalls and Product Safety
- Competitive Impact of Spring 2007 Pet Food Recalls
- Menu Foods Blindsided But on the Mend
- Lawsuits Consolidated, Settled
- Procter & Gamble’s Iams Unit Loses Sales and Share
- Mars Fares Well, Snaps up Nutro and Menu Foods Plant
- Pet Food Commission Releases Safety Recommendations
- Congress Passes Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007
- New Regulations Also Possible at the State Level
- New Requirements for Chinese Imports
- Pet Food Producers Position on Safety
- The New Food Safety Buzzword: Traceability
- Product Safety Still Under Consumer, Government Spotlight
- Consumer Website Accuses Nutro of Fielding Unsafe Foods
- FDA Targets Evanger’s Plant
- Petco Distribution Center Raided by FDA
- Mars Recalls Reveal Human-Pet Disease Link
- Marketing and New Product Trends
- Pet Market Advertising at $520 Million in 2007
- Figure 2-37: Media Breakout of National Consumer Advertising for Pet Food and Pet Care Products: 2007 (percent)
- Marketers Embracing Non-Traditional Media
- Online Marketing and Blogs
- Pet Food “SuperBrands”
- Advertising Positioned on a Few Major Themes
- Celebrities Kick In
- Ellen Buys into Halo
- Cesar Millan Shakes Hands with Castor & Pollux, Petco
- Rachael Ray Teams Up with Dad’s Pet Care
- Freshpet Launches Loved Dog Treats
- Cause-Related Marketing, Public Relations
- Going Green
- 2008 a Record Year for New Pet Food Products
- Table 2-38: Number of New Pet Food Product Introductions: 2001-2008
- Product Premiumization: Natural, Upscale and Functional Appeals
- Natural Products Go Mainstream
- Manufacturers Focusing on Fresh Ingredients
- New Goodlife Packaging Is Ingredient-Focused
- Safety Theme Apparent in Ingredient-Related Product Appeals
- Human-Grade Ingredients
- 100% US-Sourced Ingredients and “China-Free”
- Locally Sourced Ingredients
- Raw/Frozen Foods
- Homemade Pet Food
- “Holistic Labeling”
- Functional/Fortified Foods Cover All Bases
- Special Diet Formulas
- Table 2-39: Household Purchasing of Light/Weight Management and Senior Dry and Canned Dog and Cat Food: 2004 vs. 2008 (U.S. households with dogs or cats)
- Nutraceutical Treats
- Convenience Another Key Premium Appeal
- One Route to Cost Cutting: Smaller Package Sizes
- Table 2-40: Pet Food Product Selling Points by Package Tags: 2004-2008
- Examples of Advertising
- Retail Trends
- Economic Concerns and Increased Competition
- The PetSmart/Petco Dynamic Duo
- Table 2-41: PetSmart and Petco Combined Sales: 2000-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Company Profile: PetSmart, Inc.
- Table 2-42: PetSmart Sales: 2000-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Slower Expansion an “Economic Precaution”
- Services, Expertise Key to Success
- Company Profile: Petco
- Table 2-43: Petco Annual Sales: 2000-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Changes and Challenges
- Promoting Pet Relationships
- Cesar Millan and Ellen DeGeneres
- P.A.L.S., Petco.com and Petco Park
- Zootoo.com and Pet Welfare
- Other Top-Ranked Pet Specialty Chains
- Independent Pet Stores: Bad News and Good News
- Table 2-44: Top Challenges Pet Specialty Retailers Face in Next Two Years: 2006 vs. 2007 (percent)
- Table 2-45: Pet Food Share of Category Sales by Animal Type in Independent Pet Stores: 2006 vs. 2007 (percent)
- Walmart Bullish on Pet Supplies
- Target Also Coming on Strong
- Supermarkets Hanging on After 2007 Recalls
- Wholesale Clubs and Dollar Stores
- Natural Supermarkets Going Strong
- The Internet Effect
- Leading E-tailers of Pet Food and Supplies
- Pet Ownership Trends and Demographics
- The Simmons Survey System
- Over 60 Million Households Own Pets
- Table 2-46: Pet Ownership in the United States: 2008 (percent and number of U.S. households)
- Dog/Cat Ownership Rates Edge Up
- Table 2-47: Dog and Cat Ownership in the United States: 2004, 2006 and 2008 (percent and number of U.S. households)
- 38% of Pet Households Keep Multiple Types
- Figure 2-38: Ownership of Multiple Types of Pets: 2008 (percent of pet-owning U.S. households)
- 63% of Pet Households Keep More Than One Pet
- Table 2-48: Ownership of Multiple Pets of a Single Type: 2008 (percent of U.S. households who keep pets of a given type)
- Pet Household Demographics
- Pet Ownership Holds Up Across Age Brackets
- Figure 2-39: Dog or Cat Ownership Rates by Age Bracket: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. households)
- Demographic Variations by Type of Pets
- Table 2-49: Demographics for Keeping Pets, 2008 (percent, number and index among U.S. consumers)
- Table 2-50: Demographic Overview for Selected Pet Classifications, 2008 (percent of U.S. households)
- Pet Owners as Consumers
- Household Purchasing of Pet Supplies by Retail Outlet Type
- Table 2-51: Household Purchasing of Pet Products by Retail Channel: Total Purchasers and Sole Purchasers, 2006 vs. 2008 (U.S. households with pets)
- Table 2-52: Demographic Overview for Selected Pet Product Retail Channels, 2008 ( U.S. pet-owning households)
- Channel Choices in Organic Pet Food Purchasing
- Table 2-53: Where Groceries Are Most Often Purchased by Selected Retailer Type: Shoppers Overall vs. Organic Pet Food Purchasers, August 2008 (percentage of U.S. adults)
- Table 2-54: Where Groceries Are Most Often Purchased by Selected Retail Chain: Shoppers Overall vs. Organic Pet Food Purchasers, August 2008 (percentage of U.S. adults)
- Pet Food Purchasing Overview for Dog or Cat Owners
- Table 2-55: Household Purchasing of Packaged Dog and Cat Food by Type, 2008 (U.S. households with dogs or cats)
- Pet Owners Are Internet-Prone
- Figure 2-40: Use/Influence of the Internet: Adults Overall vs. Dog or Cat Owners, 2008 (percent of U.S. adults overall vs. dog or cat owners)
- Figure 2-41: Use/Influence of the Internet: Adults Overall vs. Dog or Cat Owners, 2008 (index for U.S. dog or cat owners)
- Figure 2-42: Dog or Cat Owners as Consumers: Selected Media & Marketing Psychographics, 2008 (percent and index for U.S. dog or cat owners)
- Not So “Green”
- Figure 2-43: Dog or Cat Owners as Consumers: Selected “Green” Psychographics, 2008 (percent and index for U.S. dog or cat owners)
- The Pet Food Coupon Clipper
- Table 2-56: Indicators for Use of Pet Food Coupons: 2008 (index among dog- or cat-owning households)
- Bulk of Redemption through Grocery Stores
- Table 2-57: Coupon Redemption Rates by Selected Retailer Type: 2004-2008 (percent)
- Figure 2-44: Coupon Redemption Rates Among Pet Food Coupon Users: By Selected Retailer Type, 2008 (percent)
- Grocery vs. Pet Food Coupon Usage Rates
- Table 2-58: Coupon Usage Rates by Product Type: 2004-2008 (percent)
- On-Shelf Coupons Generate Highest Usage
- Table 2-59: Coupon Usage Rates by Product Type: 2004-2008 (percent)
- Chapter 3: Cat Food
- Introduction
- Category Scope: Four Product Segments
- Market Size and Growth
- Total Cat Food Sales at $5.7 Billion in 2008
- Figure 3-1: U.S. Retail Sales of Cat Food: 2005, 2008 and 2013 (in millions of dollars)
- 2008 IRI-Tracked Dollar Sales of Cat Food Up, But Volume Sales Down
- Table 3-1: IRI-Tracked Dollar, Pound and Unit Sales of Cat Food: 2008 vs. 2007 (in millions of dollars, pounds and units)
- Meager Dollar Gains from 2001 to 2007
- Figure 3-2: IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food: 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Dry Food and Snacks Deliver Dollar Gains
- Table 3-2: IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food: By Segment, 2003- 2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Table 3-3: Annual Growth/Decline in IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food: By Segment, 2004-2007 (percent)
- Table 3-4: Total Growth/Decline in IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food: By Segment, 2003-2007 (in millions of dollars)
- Dry Food, Snacks Increase Category Share
- Table 3-5: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food by Segment: 2003, 2005 and 2007 (percent)
- Fortified, Premium and Hairball Formulas Are Most Commonly Purchased Types
- Table 3-6: Kind of Cat Food Purchased in Past 12 Months: 2002 vs. 2006 (percent)
- Table 3-7: Use of Specially Formulated Cat Food: 2004 vs. 2006 (percent)
- Household Purchasing of Pet Supplies by Retail Outlet Type
- Supermarkets Jump in Channel Loyalty
- Figure 3-3: Cat Owner Shopping for Pet Products by Retail Channel: 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Figure 3-4: Sole Purchaser Share of Total Purchasers of Pet Supplies by Outlet Type: 2006 vs. 2008 (U.S. households with cats)
- Cat Food Chain Merchandising Trends
- Table 3-8: IRI-Tracked Retailer Merchandising Trends for Cat Food: Overall and by Segment, 4th Quarter 2006 through 3rd Quarter 2008 (percent of sales volume)
- Chain Price Discounts Steepest for Wet Cat Food, Cat Snacks
- Table 3-9: IRI-Tracked Promotion of Cat Food by Category and Segment: Ratio of Average Promoted Price to Average Overall Price, 2003 - Third Quarter 2008 (percent)
- Marketer and Brand Shares
- Methodology
- Del Monte Jumps to No. 2 in Cat Food Market
- Figure 3-5: Top Cat Food Marketers by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales: 2008 (percent)
- Del Monte Plus Meow Mix
- Del Monte, Mars Recalibrate Wet/Dry/Snack Mix
- Del Monte Also Climbs to Second in Dry Cat Food
- Figure 3-6: Leading Marketers of Dry Cat Food by Share of IRITracked Sales: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Nestlé Purina Ups Ante in Wet Cat Food
- Figure 3-7: Leading Marketers of Wet Cat Food by Share of IRITracked Sales: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Mars Widens Leads in Cat Snacks Segment
- Figure 3-8: Leading Marketers of Cat Snacks by Share of IRITracked Sales: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Nestlé Purina Drops Out of Semi-Moist Segment
- Leading Pet Specialty Channel Brands
- Figure 3-9: Cat Food Brand Leaders in Pet Specialty Stores: 2005-2007 (percent)
- Table 3-10: Leading Cat Food Marketers by IRI-Tracked Sales and Market Share: 2007 vs. 2008 (in millions of dollars and percent)
- Table 3-11: Leading Cat Food Marketers by Share of IRI-Tracked Sales: 2004, 2006 and 2008 (percent)
- Table 3-12a: Leading Cat Food Marketers: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food by Segment: 2007 vs. 2008 (percent)
- Table 3-12b: Leading Cat Food Marketers: Share of IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Food by Segment: 2005 vs. 2006 (percent)
- Table 3-13: Marketers and Brands of Dry Cat Food by IRI-Tracked Sales and Market Share: 2007 vs. 2008 (in millions of dollars and percent)
- Table 3-14: Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Dry Cat Food: 2003-2007 (percent)
- Table 3-15: Marketers and Brands of Wet Cat Food by IRITracked Sales and Market Share: 2007 vs. 2008 (in millions of dollars and percent)
- Table 3-16: Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Wet Cat Food: 2003-2007 (percent)
- Table 3-17: Marketers and Brands of Cat Snacks by IRI-Tracked Sales and Market Share: 2007 vs. 2008 (in millions of dollars and percent)
- Table 3-18: Brand Shares of IRI-Tracked Sales of Cat Snacks: 2003-2007 (percent)
- Table 3-19: Top Cat Food Products by Dollar Gain in IRI-Tracked Sales: 2007 vs. 2008 (in millions of dollars)
- Marketing & New Product Trends
- Cat Food Advertising SuperBrands
- Meow Mix Investing in Branded Content, Event Marketing
- Product Introductions Rebound in 2008
- Figure 3-10: Number of New Cat Food Product Introductions: 2002-2008
- Top Product Themes: Upscale, Functional and Natural
- Figure 3-11: Top 10 Cat Food Package Claims: January- December 2008
- Healthfulness to the Fore
- Natural and Organic Expand Their Reach
- Special Diet and Functional Products
- Figure 3-12: Share of U.S. Retail Sales of Cat Supplements and Nutraceutical Treats by Function: 2007 (percent)
- Healthy Skin/Coat
- Senior/Joint
- Digestive/Immune System
- Grain-Free
- Indoor/Hairball Formula
- Healthy Weight
- Kitten Formulas
- Gourmet-Style, Variety Still Key Appeals
- Cat Treats Take Health, Indulgence to the Bank
- Premium and Convenience Packaging
- Table 3-20: Cat Food Product Selling Points by Package Tags: 2006-2008
- Examples of Cat Food Advertising
- Cat Ownership Trends and Demographics
- The Simmons Survey System
- 29 Million Households Keep Pet Cats
- Dog/Cat Ownership Rates Edge Up
- Figure 3-13: Cat Ownership in the United States: 2008 (percent and number of U.S. households)
- Table 3-21: Dog and Cat Ownership in the United States: 2004, 2006 and 2008 (percent and number of U.S. households)
- Cat Household Demographics
- Cat vs. Dog Ownership Patterns Diverge by Age Bracket
- Figure 3-14: Cat Ownership Rates by Age Bracket: 2003 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. households)
- Patterns by Number of Cats
- Table 3-22: Demographics for Keeping Pet Cats, 2008 (percent, number and index among U.S. households)
- Table 3-23: Demographic Overview for Selected Cat-Owning Classifications, 2008 (percent and index of U.S. households)
- Pet Retailer and Cat Food Preferences
- 53% of Cat Owners Shop Supermarkets for Pet Products
- Table 3-24: Cat Owner Shopping for Pet Products by Retail Channel: Total Purchasers and Sole Purchasers, 2006 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Demographic Patterns by Retail Channel
- Canned Food Is Stronger in Cat Arena
- Figure 3-15: Cat Food Purchasing Rates by Type: 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owing households)
- Table 3-25a: Demographic Overview: Pet Product Shopping Rates by Retail Channel, 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Table 3-25b: Demographic Overview: Pet Product Shopping Indexes by Retail Channel, 2008 (indexes for U.S. cat-owning households)
- Lower-Income and Hispanic Skews to Semi-Moist Cat Food
- Purchasing Rates for Treats Vary by Cat Food Preference
- Table 3-26a: Demographic Overview: Cat Food Purchasing Rates by Type, 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Table 3-26b: Demographic Overview: Cat Food Purchasing Indexes by Type, 2008 (indexes for U.S. cat-owning households)
- Table 3-27: Cat Food Cross-Purchasing Rates by Type: 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Use of Light/Weight Management Cat Food Jumps to 9%
- Table 3-28: Cat Food Purchasing Patterns by Type: 2004 vs. 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owing households)
- Table 3-29: Cat Food Purchasing Patterns by Type: Single vs. Multiple Cat Owners, 2008 (percent and index)
- Table 3-30: Cat Food Purchasing Rates by Type: By Retail Channels Shopped, 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owning households)
- Friskies Is Most Widely Used Brand Line
- Figure 3-16: Top Cat Food/Treat Brand Lines by Overall Usage Rates: 2008 (percent of U.S. cat-owing households)
- Highest Skews Are for Multiple-Cat Fanciers
- Table 3-31: Purchasing Patterns for Leading Cat Food/Treat Brand Lines: Single vs. Multiple Cat Owners, 2008 (percent and index)
- Table 3-32: Purchasing Patterns for Leading Cat Food/Treat Brand Lines: By Retail Channel Shopped, 2008 (percent)
- Demographic Skews: Cats and Crowded Households
- Table 3-33: Selected High-Indexing Demographics by Brand Line for Cat Food and Treats, 2008 (U.S. cat-owning households)
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U.S. Pet Market Outlook 2010-2011: Tapping into Post-Recession Pet Parent Spending
U.S. Pet Market Outlook 2011-2012
White Paper: Consumer Insights and Trends: Packaged Facts Forecasts the Product and Social Trends That Will Make Their Mark in 2011
Pet Product Retail Channel and Consumer Shopping Trends in the U.S.
Natural, Organic and Eco-Friendly Pet Products in the U.S., 3rd Edition
Pet Supplements and Nutraceutical Treats in the U.S., 3rd Edition
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