Home / World Business
Thu, Oct 18, 2001 - Page 24 News List

Beef demand shrinks drastically

MEAT MARKETS With many would-be convention-goers canceling their trips to big US cities, steakhouses and restaurants will be hit hardest by the slowdown

BLOOMBERG , CHICAGO

Chef Mario Navarro checks on the steaks under the broiler at Gene & Georgetti steakhouse in Chicago, Illinois. Fewer people are eating out since the Sept. 11 attacks.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

Tony Durpetti estimates sales at his Chicago steakhouse, Gene & Georgetti, fell by US$150,000 last month because so many convention-goers and business travelers canceled trips to the city after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.

The number of patrons dropped as much as 40 percent in the week and a half after the attacks. With fewer people plunking down US$34.50 for an 500g filet mignon, Durpetti said he was forced to cut back on meat purchases that run US$200,000 a month.

"It was bad for everyone in September," Durpetti said.

"Convention people are a little bigger spenders. If they don't come here, we've got a problem." And so do meat producers. Gene & Georgetti, which had US$8 million in revenue last year, isn't the only restaurant to lose business. Fewer people are eating out since the attacks, eroding demand in the US$41 billion US beef industry.

About 15 percent of annual US beef production is consumed at steakhouses and restaurants where patrons pay US$20 or more for entrees, said Andy Gottschalk, an analyst at HedgersEdge.com LLC, a research firm in Greenwood Village, Colorado.

White Tablecloth

So-called white tablecloth restaurants will be hardest hit by the slowdown, which may trim overall beef demand by 1.5 percent over the next year, Gottschalk said. That could mean about US$600 million in lost revenue to beef producers, grocers and restaurants, analysts said.

"When you look at the price of beef, what supports it is not the price of a hamburger," said University of Missouri economist Ron Plain. The key to beef prices is demand for choice cuts, such as steaks and roasts "and a majority of that is consumed at restaurants rather than at home," he said.

The busiest month

October is usually the busiest month for conventions, which have mostly resumed their schedules but probably won't be as well attended, as businesses cut back on travel and spending. More than half the travel managers at 60 US companies told the National Business Travel Association they will plan fewer trips.

"The large corporations may be sending two people instead of four, and they're staying one to two days instead of four," said Susan Gayford, co-owner of the Chicago Chop House, which sells 450g roast prime rib for US$23.95 and a 1.8kg Porterhouse steak for US$85.95.

About 60 percent of Chop House revenue comes from business travelers. Sales are down as much as 25 percent since the attacks last month, though Gayford said business has mostly recovered.

"You tighten your belt a little," she said. "Things you may have spent money on before, you don't do it." Chicago last year hosted 7.6 million convention travelers who spent an estimated US$4.2 billion, according to the Chicago Convention and Tourism Bureau. Nationwide, business travelers accounted for spending of about US$185 billion, according to the Business Travel Association.

Even before the attacks, Chicago expected a drop to 7 million convention visitors because of the slowing economy, and restaurants in other cities are reporting fewer patrons.

Smith & Wollensky Restaurant Group Inc, with 14 restaurants in cities such as New York, Las Vegas and New Orleans, has reduced hours 15 percent for non-salary workers since last month, Chief Executive Alan Stillman said. The cuts affect more than half the workers at the company, which also won't hire more managers because of the slumping economy.

This story has been viewed 2586 times.
TOP top