Wal-Mart Pork Brouhaha Spotlights Food Risk 沃尔玛“标签门”表明中国严打决心

A new flurry of reports about mislabeled products at some of Wal-Mart’s (NYSE: WMT) China stores would be almost comical if they weren’t true, spotlighting just how sensitive the issue of food safety and false advertising has become in the country. The latest media reports say some Wal-Mart store managers have been detained and more than a dozen stores temporarily closed in this new crisis. And the reason for all the brouhaha? Believe it or not, it’s all because someone discovered that some pork products were falsely labeled as “organic” when in fact they weren’t. (English article) Don’t misunderstand me, I’m quite against the mislabeling of products, especially when such practices could result in health hazards to consumers. But in this case, there doesn’t appear to be any immediate health hazard, and the detention of employees over this kind of minor misdeed seems like a bit of an overreaction. All of this is no doubt part of Beijing’s desire to show it is taking false advertising and food safety very seriously, following a steady stream of much bigger scandals in the last 3 years that have sickened and even killed victims who ate unsafe and tainted food products. This kind of high-profile campaign carries big risk for companies like Wal-Mart, which will now face backlash from Chinese consumers. Hong Kong-listed Japanese noodle chain Ajisen (HKEx: 538) has experienced first-hand this kind of backlash, as its business has dropped dramatically since Chinese media recently exposed that its soups were made using packaged powder rather than fresh ingredients as the company had advertised. Its shares have lost about half their value since the scandal erupted in July. Wal-Mart, which is China’s second biggest supermarket operator, now faces similar fall-out, and other major chains like recently listed Sunart (HKEx: 6808) and Carrefour (Paris: CARR), China’s largest and third-largest supermarket operators, will also be exposed to similar risk. Restaurant operators like KFC parent Yum Brands (NYSE: YUM) and McDonalds (NYSE: MCD) will also be vulnerable, as Beijing looks for more high-profile targets to chase to ease broader public concerns over food safety and false advertising.

Bottom line: Major food-related firms will be highly vulnerable to negative publicity campaigns in the next 2-3 years, as China tries to ease public concerns over food safety and false advertising.

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