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Nestle and Unilever Raise Prices Without Stunting Growth

Published 04/18/2019, 04:52 AM
Updated 04/18/2019, 05:00 AM
© Bloomberg. KitKat bars in a variety of flavors and colors are displayed at the KitKat Chocolatory Ginza store, operated by Nestle SA, during a media preview in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday, July 24, 2017. Recent offerings in KitKat flavors from custard pudding to ginger have made Japan the go-to destination for picking up odd variations. They're so popular among tourists that Nestle is building its first KitKat factory in 26 years to meet booming demand. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

© Bloomberg. KitKat bars in a variety of flavors and colors are displayed at the KitKat Chocolatory Ginza store, operated by Nestle SA, during a media preview in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday, July 24, 2017. Recent offerings in KitKat flavors from custard pudding to ginger have made Japan the go-to destination for picking up odd variations. They're so popular among tourists that Nestle is building its first KitKat factory in 26 years to meet booming demand. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- Europe’s consumer-goods giants are showing new signs of life by selling more food and cleaning supplies, even at higher prices.

Nestle SA (SIX:NESN) and Unilever (LON:ULVR) surprised investors with strong starts to the year, reporting first-quarter sales growth that handily topped analysts’ estimates. The Swiss maker of KitKat bars and the Anglo-Dutch owner of Dove soap each cited a combination of improved pricing and higher volumes.

Unilever rose as much as 3.6 percent in Amsterdam as Nestle traded as much as 1.3 percent higher in Zurich.

The companies delivered a counterpoint to the cost-cut-driven performance of U.S. rival Kraft Heinz (NASDAQ:KHC) Co., which has slumped since a profit warning and asset write-down in February -- about two years after it made an unsuccessful approach to take over Unilever. Instead, the European multinationals joined U.S. peers like PepsiCo (NASDAQ:PEP) Inc. in selling more of their products. The companies also successfully passed higher raw-materials costs on to consumers.

At Nestle, for example, the pricing gain of 1.2 percent was the biggest in 10 quarters. The businesses most hit by inflation included bottled water, with higher oil prices making plastic and transport more expensive. Unilever also noted higher costs of petrochemicals such as linear alkylbenzene, an ingredient in biodegradable detergents, along with increased prices for raw materials in the food sector.

On Wednesday, Danone SA (PA:DANO) forecast milk-price inflation in high single digits this year, plus more expensive sugar and fruit. While sugar prices have risen over the past year, other commodities such as cocoa and coffee have fallen.

“What companies like ourselves face is the impact of the input-costs increases and commodity-driven gains on the ground,” Unilever Chief Financial Officer Graeme Pitkethly said by phone. PepsiCo Chief Financial Officer Hugh Johnston said earlier this week that the drinks and snacks giant expects commodity inflation to increase over the rest of the year.

While Europe and Japan are suffering from stubbornly low price increases or even deflation, higher rates of inflation are popping up in places like Turkey and Argentina. Moroccan consumers have held an informal boycott of Danone products via social media over the past year to protest what consumers see as unfair prices.

While managing to raise prices, Nestle and Unilever also benefited by expanding into new areas as their old-line brands stagnate. Sales in Unilever’s home-care division, which grew at about twice the pace of the group figure, were driven in part by more eco-conscious products under the company’s Seventh Generation and Omo laundry brands. Acquisitions the Anglo-Dutch company has made since 2015 collectively grew at a double-digit rate in the quarter.

Nestle Chief Executive Officer Mark Schneider has signed $14 billion of deals in 2018. The food giant has also been trying to fix or sell underperformers, with a sale for its Herta lunch-meat unit possibly coming by midyear and its dermatological business by year-end.

Beating Estimates

Nestle’s revenue climbed 3.4 percent on an organic basis in the first quarter, as Schneider beat the 2.8 percent analyst consensus by the biggest margin since he started leading the world’s largest food company in 2017.

At Unilever, underlying sales rose 3.1 percent in the quarter. As with Nestle, analysts had expected 2.8 percent.

A smaller consumer-focused company, Pernod Ricard (PA:PERP) SA, joined in the optimism on Thursday. While it missed sales-growth estimates for its fiscal third quarter, the French distiller raised its forecast for full-year growth in operating profit to about 8 percent from a range of 6 percent to 8 percent.

(Updates with shares in third paragraph, inflation examples in fifth paragraph.)

© Bloomberg. KitKat bars in a variety of flavors and colors are displayed at the KitKat Chocolatory Ginza store, operated by Nestle SA, during a media preview in Tokyo, Japan, on Monday, July 24, 2017. Recent offerings in KitKat flavors from custard pudding to ginger have made Japan the go-to destination for picking up odd variations. They're so popular among tourists that Nestle is building its first KitKat factory in 26 years to meet booming demand. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

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