After suffering from cost inflation nearly all of last year, relief from sky-high commodity and energy costs is here, and restaurant bottom lines should stand to benefit from deflated prices by the second half of this year, said UBS Securities analyst David Palmer.
In a note to investors Wednesday, Palmer projected that most chains could see flat year-to-year cost levels by the June-ending second quarter and deflationary levels by the September-ending third quarter. Leading the commodity decrease is significantly lower year-to-year costs for seafood, produce and wheat, Palmer said. Milk and cheese prices are down about 40 percent year-to-year. Hamburger prices are about flat, Palmer noted, and market prices for chicken are slightly up from a year ago.
“Diminishing food costs should significantly help restaurant chains with company-operated units, and those that can maintain traffic without additional heavy discounting,” Palmer said.
Lower energy inflation also can help restaurants in the form of reduced energy, packaging and distribution costs, along with lower gas prices for consumers, which may spark discretionary spending.
Like to receive news like this by email? Join and Subscribe!
NEW! Join Our BlueSky Channel for regular updates!
Related Topics:
Related News

六月 12, 2025
Polysense raises EUR 2 million to spice the food industry with AI to become more sustainable and profitable
Polysense, a Belgian technology start-up, raised EUR 2 million (USD 2.3 million) from tech entrepreneurs to further disrupt the food industry. The company specialises in AI solutions for production processes to reduce waste and increase efficiency. 
六月 08, 2025
TNA Solutions Marks World Food Safety Day with Expert Insights from Steve Burgess
In recognition of World Food Safety Day on June 7, TNA Solutions has presented a timely expert blog titled “Engineering Better Food Safety” by Steve Burgess, General Manager – Europe & Africa at TNA Solutions.
四月 30, 2025
Enactus UPEI's Spuds2Suds: Turning Potato Waste into Sustainable Soap and Community Support
UPEI students created Spuds2Suds, a soap made from surplus PEI potatoes. The eco-friendly project won top prizes at Enactus Regionals, donates a bar to food banks for each sold, and is now available locally. Next stop: Enactus Nationals in Calgary.Latest News
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
Sponsored Content
哪里
Sponsored Content