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UK supermarkets go all out for ‘Jab-uary’ with food for those on weight-loss drugs

about 6 hours ago
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Veganuary and dry January are among the new year health kicks enthusiastically endorsed by supermarkets, but this year the buzz is around “Jab-uary” as pricey diet foods aimed at people on weight-loss drugs hit the shelves,Marks & Spencer, Morrisons, Asda, Ocado and the Co-op are among the big names targeting shoppers who use weight-loss injections, known as GLP-1 agonists, but better known by brand names such as Wegovy and Mounjaro,Ocado’s new virtual “weight management” aisle includes a “curated range of GLP-1-friendly products” that runs the gamut from tiny (100g) portions of steak costing £3,50 to a trendy “powdered greens” supplement, AG1, at £107 a pack,The online supermarket said it was seeing strong demand for protein-rich staples such as steak, chicken, cottage cheese, health drinks and vitamins and supplements.

Ocado also sells M&S’s new “Nutrient Dense” range of meals, snacks and drinks that it says contain “high amounts of nutrients per calorie”.The £7 chicken satay ready meal and £2 coconut water shot “H₅O”, it says, are ideal for people “reducing their food intake”.Meanwhile, the Co-op is plugging “mini meals” – 250g-280g pots “inspired by global cuisines” costing £3.50 a go.About 6% of UK adults are thought to be taking GLP-1 drugs, said Jonny Forsyth, a senior analyst at the market research company Mintel.

However, he argues the hype around them is having an “outsize influence” on consumer behaviour and amplifying other diet trends, such as eating high protein foods,In the recent flurry of Christmas trading updates, some big high street names said the drugs were starting to change how people shopped,This included eating fewer sausage rolls, and Roisin Currie, the Greggs chief executive, commented that people were looking for “smaller portions” and healthier options,Sainsbury’s has also spotted new behaviour,“For customers using these products, we’re seeing more of that switch into healthier choices, into fresh food, into fibre,” said its chief executive, Simon Roberts.

This month the grocer introduced more low-calorie and high-protein ready meals.The 300g “Small but Mighty” range includes dishes such as teriyaki chicken and costs £3.Ken Murphy, the Tesco chief executive, said the supermarket was watching “very closely” how the GLP-1 trend was developing.Indeed, while total UK grocery sales rose 2.5% in value terms over the four weeks to 27 December, the amount of food and drink sold declined 0.

2% on a volume basis, according to the market researcher NielsenIQ,For food and hospitality businesses the fear is that the widespread uptake of these drugs could put a dent in profits,A 2024 Cornell University study found households with at least one GLP-1 user cut their grocery spend by 5,3% within six months, while for higher-income households it was 8,2%.

Although there were declines in most food categories over the period studied, in some areas they were marked, with savoury snacks such as crisps down 10.1% and an 8% drop in spending at fast-food chains and coffee shops.In the US almost 20% of adults are taking weight-loss drugs.However, can supermarkets turn small portions into a virtue, given consumers are fed up with shrinkflation (where shoppers get less product for the same or higher price)? There is also a question mark over whether people want ranges with “GLP-1” stamped on the front as they may not be open about the fact they are using medication.The Morrisons “GLP-1 friendly” own-label ready meals, which include a chicken casserole, weigh just 280g but cost the same as dishes in its other diet ranges.

The £3.75 price is fairly typical in ready meals, but if one compares the price per kilo it is a different story, said Charlotte Derra, fast-moving consumer goods category consultant.“Morrisons Counted and Protein ranges are the same price for typically 380g v the 280g GLP-1 friendly range,” she said.“At £0.99 v £1.

34 per 100g for the GLP-1 friendly ranges this is at a 35% price premium.” The M&S Nutrient Dense ready meals come in 400g packs and cost £7 (£1.75/100g), which she said was within typical ready meal pack sizes.M&S, Co-op and Iceland have “rightly” avoided explicitly mentioning GLP-1 drugs on the front of packs, Forsyth said.“This is smart marketing because we know from our data that if you group people into a club, such as Weight Watchers, where people feel there is a stigma attached to belonging, you restrict your potential audience.

”The M&S range is the “most likely to do well because its user base are among the minority of Brits who can afford to pay for these drugs privately” added Forsyth, who found it “bizarre” that Greggs had said the drugs were hitting sales.“I suspect it has more to do with people cutting back on discretionary food spend in response to much higher food prices since 2022.Even Greggs’ iconic sausage roll has soared in price by 30%,” he said.The GLP-1 ready meals in Morrisons mean it is now sells four healthy chicken tikka masala dishes.However, in a cutthroat UK grocery market worth £250bn a year, food market product developers are under pressure to react, given the outlook for some food categories is “pretty bleak”, said Mark Whalley, a co-founder of the video insights company Explners.

“UK supermarket retail is dominated by everybody worrying that the other guys are on to something,” he said,The hard part will be convincing shoppers: “Being small is in itself a benefit,That’s what they’re effectively saying when the price doesn’t go down with the portion size,“It’s just whether there’s an actual need for these products, or whether people could just eat a little bit less of the products that they already buy,Does it specifically need a new product, an extra thing on shelf that’s just 100g smaller?”
politicsSee all
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Ex-councillor jailed for stalking former Conservative MP Penny Mordaunt

A former councillor has been jailed for 20 weeks after stalking Penny Mordaunt, which the former cabinet minister said left her fearing “sexual violence”.Edward Brandt, a professional sailor, had been found guilty of the offence but was acquitted of a more serious charge of stalking involving serious alarm or distress.The trial was told he sent at least 17 emails and three phone messages to Mordaunt, as well as turning up at her Portsmouth constituency office out-of-hours between 11 September 2023 and 12 May 2024.She said in a statement to police that she “feared sexual violence” because of the defendant’s “creepy” behaviour.Brandt, 61, was also sentenced for seven breaches in December last year of a stalking protection order, in place until November 2034, by failing to notify police of devices capable of connecting to the internet and of the creation of accounts on Facebook and Snapchat

about 24 hours ago
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A linguistic own goal from Starmer’s critics | Letters

Jonathan Liew links rude football chants to the unmerited personal abuse which Keir Starmer is currently receiving (When crowds direct offensive chants at Keir Starmer, who’s to blame? I’m afraid he is, 13 January).Football managers are frequently the target for similar treatment. Like them, Starmer has to set his team’s strategy and tactics and produce results that please supporters.No matter that he saved his side from relegation and gained promotion last season, things are not going as well as expected – hence the abuse. In style and charisma, he may be more Sean Dyche than Carlo Ancelotti, and as an Arsenal fan, he should get some tips from Mikel Arteta

about 24 hours ago
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Reform UK’s London mayor candidate condemned for burqa stop and search remarks

Reform UK’s mayoral candidate for London has been accused of endangering Muslims after she said women wearing the burqa should be subject to stop and search.Laila Cunningham, who was announced as Reform’s candidate for the 2028 mayoral elections last week, said no one should cover their face “in an open society”, adding: “It has to be assumed that if you’re hiding your face, you’re hiding it for a criminal reason.”Cunningham told the Standard podcast: “If you go to parts of London, it does feel like a Muslim city. The signs are written in a different language. You’ve got burqas being sold in markets

1 day ago
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Jenrick says he hopes his defection to Reform UK will ‘unite the right’ after Badenoch says he ‘tells a lot of lies’ – as it happened

Robert Jenrick is now speaking exclusively to Laura Kuenssberg at BBC News and says he hopes his defection will “unite the right”.He said:This is uniting the right. My message for millions of people in the country who stuck with the Conservative party, often through gritted teeth because like me they were deeply frustrated, angry even, about what happened.They voted again in 2024 and many of those voters have now come to Reform over the course of the last year or so – but there are still people sticking with the party.If you want to get rid of this Labour government and have a strong reforming government to fix the country, there is frankly only one way to do that … that is to vote for Nigel and rally behind him and Reform

1 day ago
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Tory ‘arsonists’ still in charge of party, says Jenrick as he hits back at Badenoch

The “arsonists” who tanked the reputation of the Conservatives are still in charge of the party, Robert Jenrick has said as he and the Tory leader, Kemi Badenoch, trade blows a day after his dramatic defection to Reform UK.Giving his first interview since his announcement on Thursday, the former shadow justice secretary said the Conservatives had not changed since the election, while defending himself against allegations of lying from his former party leader.He told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg on Friday: “I came to the conclusion over the course of the last year or so that … the party hadn’t changed, that the people who’d made those mistakes were still sat around the shadow cabinet table, the arsonists were still in control of the party, and that this was not a party that was capable of even understanding what it had got wrong, let alone fixing it.”Jenrick insisted “I could not have been franker” about his intentions, despite telling the Conservative chief whip on Thursday he would never defect – an act that Badenoch said showed he “tells a lot of lies”.In her own set of broadcast interviews hours earlier, Badenoch said: “You can’t believe a word that comes out of his mouth

1 day ago
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Nigel Farage tricked into paying tribute to Lostprophets singer Ian Watkins

Nigel Farage has been targeted with another prank on the paid video service Cameo, this time paying tribute to the child sexual abuse offender Ian Watkins.Cameo allows fans to pay celebrities to make personalised video messages, with the Reform party leader offering his services from £78.45.In a 27-second video posted online by John Smith, who requested the clip, Farage called the former Lostprophets singer, who was killed in prison last year, “a good man, a really good guy” who “loved his children”.He pretended to know Watkins, whose victims included a baby boy, and said he was “very much in contact with me”

1 day ago
technologySee all
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Partly AI-generated folk-pop hit barred from Sweden’s official charts

1 day ago
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Prominent PR firm accused of commissioning favourable changes to Wikipedia pages

1 day ago
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Sacked TikTok workers in UK launch legal action over ‘union busting’

1 day ago
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TikTok to strengthen age-verification technology across EU

1 day ago
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X still allowing users to post sexualised images generated by Grok AI tool

1 day ago
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AI will transform the ‘human job’ and enhance skills, says science minister

1 day ago