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Man Weight Loss Health "They're looking for that silver bullet right
now," said General Mills Inc. spokeswoman Marybeth Thorsgaard. "In the long term, General Mills believes that weight management is
about balance and calorie content and exercise, so a lot of our low-carb products offer other benefits as well," she said. "While
the low-carb trend may go, for example, our new Ultra Yoplait [low-carb] yogurt also has fewer calories, giving it sustaining
power."
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Magazine editor Rotbart estimates sales of products labeled as low-carb are between $3 billion and $5 billion a year -- out of what
the Food Marketing Institute says are annual sales of about $433 billion for the non-restaurant retail food industry. The market for
low-carb products has developed so quickly that there is little data to back up Rotbart's estimates.
And even if low-carb turns out to be a really big niche in the market, some entrepreneurs touting massive expansion plans are
disappearing. Brad Saltzman, profiled last month in a Time magazine cover story on the craze, is already backing out of the
business, for example.
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Just a couple of months ago, Saltzman was touting the astounding success of his two new low-carb stores in Los Angeles -- the first
in the city -- and saying he would have a chain of stores with $100 million in sales in five years. But that was when his tiny Santa
Monica store was doing $4,000 a day in sales. Now that location is ringing up less than $1,000 a day, Saltzman said, and sales are
"falling every week." He has already converted his Beverly Hills store, which opened in mid-February, almost entirely to sales of
gourmet foods with just a smattering of his original offerings.
"Our retail days in low-carb are over," he said.
Among the factors that hurt Saltzman's business was an investigation by a local television station in Los Angeles that found a
popular low-carb bagel actually contained three times the carbs indicated on the label. Consumers, Saltzman said, are nervous about
the claims made on so many low-carb products.
And in some cases, people just don't like the taste. Bey of Keto Foods said his sales are strong thanks to the demands of
traditional retailers, many of whom are trying to find brands that shoppers actually like enough to keep buying.
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"Many food companies, and even some major food companies . . . have placed substandard-tasting products on the shelves," Bey said.
"So what you then have is hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of trial purchasers who are disappointed, and therein lie the
seeds of a contraction of demand."
There is also consumer research that is discouraging to low-carb entrepreneurs. For example, NPD Group Inc.'s database of actual
food consumption shows that even people who consume the fewest carbohydrates are still eating an average of 128 carbs a day -- three
to four times the intake that low-carb diets recommend to lose weight.
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A survey by market research firm Opinion Dynamics Corp. also showed that three-quarters of the population has never tried a low-carb
diet. And only 9 percent of that large group said they might try one in the next two years. That small number "raises the question
of whether the market has already been defined," said Lawrence Shiman, project manager for Opinion Dynamics. "If they haven't tried
it till now, chances are they won't."
Industry executives also worry that all the new products are making it harder to lose weight. Rather than eating a steak and a salad
for dinner, as previous low-carb followers might have, it's now possible to have steak and salad and low-carb pasta. So latecomers
to the diet may not get one of the main weight-dropping advantages of a strict low-carb diet -- that it limits calorie intake.
A study by Consumer Reports magazine for its June issue found some new low-carb products have more calories and fat than regular
foods.
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