Bahlsen lowers prices for selected products

German biscuit maker Bahlsen has lowered selling prices for selected products. High chocolate prices had previously burdened the company. Initial price reductions are already visible in stores.

In Hannover, Bahlsen has lowered selling prices to retailers for selected products due to stabilized chocolate prices. High cocoa costs had recently burdened the maker, as its products contain a higher chocolate share than competitors.

"Due to the sharply increased chocolate prices, we had to raise our prices because the chocolate content in our products is higher than in the competition," CEO Alexander Kühnen told the Deutsche Presse-Agentur. Now, price cuts are being considered rather than further increases.

Changing recipes was not an option for Bahlsen. The products are shaped by habit and trust, it was stated. "If someone regularly buys our products and suddenly the taste changes because we cut costs on the recipe, you lose those customers very quickly and often permanently," Kühnen explained.

Other makers, such as Swiss group Lindt & Sprüngli, have also cut prices on individual products.

相关文章

Illustration of Deutsche Bahn ICE train announcing stable ticket prices for 12 months, with happy passengers and CEO Evelyn Palla.
AI 生成的图像

Deutsche Bahn to keep ICE prices stable for one year

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像

Deutsche Bahn announced it will keep ICE ticket prices stable for twelve months starting May 1. CEO Evelyn Palla revealed this in Bild am Sonntag. It marks the second year without the usual December price hike in long-distance services.

At its Polch headquarters, Griesson-de Beukelaer battles rising energy prices from the Iran war and volatile cocoa costs. CEO Dany Schmidt is developing recipes using chocolate and sugar alternatives, as weight-loss injections curb sweet cravings. The traditional company produces brands like Prinzenrolle exclusively in Germany.

由 AI 报道

Prices for dairy products have been heavily pressured recently, and combined with halved food VAT, it benefits consumers. Dairy farmer Kajsa Petersson in Horndal warns of farmers' tough situation and urges choosing Swedish products.

Parliament has decided to reduce VAT on foodstuffs from 12 to 6 percent from April 1, 2026, to December 31, 2027, to bolster household economies. The change takes effect today. Shoppers in Örebro have mixed reactions to the cut.

由 AI 报道

In Addis Abeba, bread prices have increased due to high food inflation and rising costs, turning a daily staple into a financial strain for households.

由于采购成本上涨导致供应紧张,Mizkan已暂停销售四款纳豆产品。该公司表示,中东地区的战争对预包装纳豆的生产造成了压力。

由 AI 报道

Over 200 stores will join the Black Mayorista initiative from Monday 18 to Sunday 24 May to boost consumption. The move comes amid falling sales and slowing inflation.

 

 

 

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝