Prepare For Permanently High Meat Prices, California Gas Prices Surge To Record High

3 years ago
56

Subscribe to http://youtube.com/c/growathome
follow our backup channel
http://bit.ly/odyseesru
http://silverreportuncut.com
Subscribe to the SRU podcast
http://soundcloud.com/silverreport
http://silverreportuncut.podbean.com
Follow Us On Telegram http://t.me/silverreport & https://parler.com/profile/silverreport/posts
anyone can post on our public group http://t.me/silverreportforum
Ad revenue is down almost 70%, it's viewers like you who help keep the sru coming! you can donate via crypto at our website or consider supporting our work on
http://buymeacoffee.com/silverreport
https://www.patreon.com/silverreport
And at the same time that gasoline prices are soaring into the stratosphere, the exact same thing is happening to meat prices. In fact, we just learned that the price of beef in the U.S. has risen more than 20 percent since last October…
Behind unleaded gasoline, beef prices have risen the most on the Consumer Price Index (CPI) since October 2020, rising 20.1% in the past year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

An increase of over 20 percent in one year is deeply alarming.

Unfortunately, it isn’t just the price of beef that is soaring. Tyson Foods just released some new numbers which show that beef, pork and chicken prices are all rising dramatically…
The biggest meat company by sales in the United States has announced significant price rises for the fourth quarter, as the impact of the highest inflation for 30 years continues to be felt.
Tyson Foods, based in Springdale, Arkansas, announced on Monday that chicken prices rose 19 percent during its fiscal fourth quarter, while beef and pork prices jumped 33 percent and 38 percent, respectively.
During the early portion of this crisis, Tyson Foods was reluctant to pass increasing costs along to consumers, but now we are being informed that they don’t intend to make the same mistake again…
Stewart Glendinning, the chief financial officer of Tyson Foods, said that they have been slow to increase their prices, in line with inflation, but are now making up for the delay.

‘We expect to take continued pricing actions to ensure that any inflationary cost increases that our business incurs are passed along,’ he said, on the company’s quarterly earnings call.
The gas prices just reached a record high in California.

Loading comments...