26
Sat, Jul
530 New Articles

Nestle posts better-than-expected H1 sales growth

Nestle posts better-than-expected H1 sales growth

Finance News
Typography
  • Smaller Small Medium Big Bigger
  • Default Helvetica Segoe Georgia Times
Nestle posts better-than-expected H1 sales growth

(Corrects July 24 story to show sales figure in paragraph 6 pertains to brands under review, not whole VMS business)

By Alexander Marrow

LONDON (Reuters) -Nestle has launched a review of its underperforming vitamins business that could lead to the divestment of some brands, it said on Thursday, after reporting its first-half sales volumes grew more slowly than analysts expected.

Shares in Nestle, the world's biggest food producer, fell to a six-month low in early market trade and were 4.7% lower by 0950 GMT.

As the economic downturn globally has squeezed customers and driven them to cheaper alternatives, the Swiss-based maker of KitKat chocolate bars, Nespresso coffee and Maggi seasoning has found it harder to sell its branded projects.

Thursday's results add to investor pressure on CEO Laurent Freixe to revive the company's share price and sales. Since his appointment in August last year, Nestle's share price has lagged rivals, including Unilever and Danone.

The Swiss company on Thursday maintained its 2025 outlook, saying it expects organic sales growth to improve. It estimated an underlying trading operating profit margin at or above 16%, including the negative impact from tariffs and current FX rates.

The brands under review in Nestle's Vitamins, Minerals and Supplements business generate around 1 billion Swiss francs ($1.26 billion) in annual sales, Nestle said.

VMS is part of Nestle's wider Nutrition and Health Science division, which accounted for a little more than 16% of group sales in the first half and recorded a decline in real internal growth - or sales volumes - of 0.8%.

"We have launched a strategic review of our underperforming mainstream and value brands, including Nature's Bounty, Osteo Bi-Flex, Puritan's Pride, and U.S. private label, which may result in the divestment of these brands," Nestle said.

Freixe said Nestle would focus on its global premium VMS brands and that a potential divestment of the others could happen in 2026.

"To us, the highest potential is at the premium end," Freixe told reporters.

GROWTH DISAPPOINTS

Nestle said that first-half organic sales growth, which excludes the impact of currency movements and acquisitions, rose 2.9% in the six months through June, just above the average of analysts' forecasts of 2.8%.

But real internal growth, or RIG, was 0.2%, below the consensus forecast of 0.4%, reflecting softer demand as customers baulk at price increases.

Total reported sales decreased by 1.8% to 44.2 billion Swiss francs, compared to analyst expectations of 44.6 billion francs, a drop Nestle attributed in part to the negative impact of 4.7% from foreign exchange as the Swiss franc has strengthened this year.

Content Original Link:

Original Source FINANCE YAHOO

" target="_blank">

Original Source FINANCE YAHOO

Top Stories

Grid List

Exclusive-Mexico's antitrust watchdog accuses banks of joint price fixing

Finance News

Exclusive-Mexico's antitrust watchdog accuses banks of joint price fixing

Edwards Lifesciences Lifts 2025 Outlook On Strong First Half Performance

Finance News

Edwards Lifesciences Lifts 2025 Outlook On Strong First Half Performance

Novice investors are told to stick with ETFs, but one market legend makes the case for stock-picking

Finance News

Novice investors are told to stick with ETFs, but one market legend makes the case for stock-picking

Bitcoin Slips Below $117,000 On Whale Selling, Ethereum, XRP Hold Steady

Crypto News

Bitcoin Slips Below $117,000 On Whale Selling, Ethereum, XRP Hold Steady

Latham-Led Strategy Raises $2.5B To Acquire More Bitcoin

Crypto News

Latham-Led Strategy Raises $2.5B To Acquire More Bitcoin

One of the Biggest Bitcoin Whales in History Just Cashed Out $9 Billion

Crypto News

One of the Biggest Bitcoin Whales in History Just Cashed Out $9 Billion