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Pet Care Industry Navigates Petflation and Supply Chain Challenges in 2026
Published 1 month, 1 week ago
Description
In the past 48 hours, the pet care industry shows steady but moderated growth amid petflation holding at 3.3 percent in February 2026, with prices rising across food by 0.5 percent, supplies by 0.9 percent, and services by 1.3 percent[5]. General Mills North America Pet segment reported third-quarter net sales up 3 percent to 640 million dollars, boosted by a 6-point gain from Whitebridge Pet Brands[8].
No major deals, partnerships, or new product launches surfaced in this window, though investor interest persists in pet supplements and science-backed foods ahead of potential M and A activity[11]. Pet supplement sales neared 3 billion dollars in 2025, but growth slowed to under 3 percent due to high interest rates and flat dog populations[7][12]. The global dog food and snacks market forecasts a 4.5 percent CAGR through 2036, led by treats and functional snacks for joint health and digestion, outpacing dry food[1].
Emerging pressures include supply chain disruptions from tariffs affecting 86 percent of industry leaders and input cost volatility like surging fertilizer prices up 71 percent in recent weeks[4][6]. E-commerce and direct-to-consumer models continue capturing value, while sustainability demands rise for traceable sourcing[2].
Consumer behavior emphasizes premiumization and pet humanization, with owners prioritizing preventive health via vaccines and wearables in animal health, projected to hit 199.1 billion dollars by 2035[3]. Leaders like General Mills respond by securing multi-year supply agreements to counter volatility[1][8].
Compared to prior reports, petflation stabilized from January, but supplement growth decelerated from double-digits, signaling a new normal versus 2025s boom. No regulatory changes or disruptions noted acutely, though broader agtech shocks indirectly threaten feed costs[4]. Overall, resilience hinges on innovation in functional products and omnichannel retail.
(Word count: 278)
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
No major deals, partnerships, or new product launches surfaced in this window, though investor interest persists in pet supplements and science-backed foods ahead of potential M and A activity[11]. Pet supplement sales neared 3 billion dollars in 2025, but growth slowed to under 3 percent due to high interest rates and flat dog populations[7][12]. The global dog food and snacks market forecasts a 4.5 percent CAGR through 2036, led by treats and functional snacks for joint health and digestion, outpacing dry food[1].
Emerging pressures include supply chain disruptions from tariffs affecting 86 percent of industry leaders and input cost volatility like surging fertilizer prices up 71 percent in recent weeks[4][6]. E-commerce and direct-to-consumer models continue capturing value, while sustainability demands rise for traceable sourcing[2].
Consumer behavior emphasizes premiumization and pet humanization, with owners prioritizing preventive health via vaccines and wearables in animal health, projected to hit 199.1 billion dollars by 2035[3]. Leaders like General Mills respond by securing multi-year supply agreements to counter volatility[1][8].
Compared to prior reports, petflation stabilized from January, but supplement growth decelerated from double-digits, signaling a new normal versus 2025s boom. No regulatory changes or disruptions noted acutely, though broader agtech shocks indirectly threaten feed costs[4]. Overall, resilience hinges on innovation in functional products and omnichannel retail.
(Word count: 278)
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI