Nestle says tough year coming

VEVEY, SWITZERLAND: Swiss-based food giant Nestle warned on Thursday (14 February) that business was likely to be tough this year, after its 2012 results showed a slowdown in growth in emerging markets.
Nestle says tough year coming

Nestle's net profit of 10.6bn Swiss francs (€8.8bn), representing an increase of 11.5% on the 2011 performance, was slightly ahead of analysts' forecasts.

Sales at what is the world's top food industry player, known for products such as Nespresso coffee capsules and Maggi stock cubes, rose by 10.2% to hit 92.2bn Swiss francs.

But in the Asia, Oceania and African regions, which have been Nestle's main growth drivers, sales rose by 8.4% to 18.9bn Swiss francs, down from an increase of 11.4% in 2011.

"In 2012 we delivered on our commitment: a good, broad-based performance building on the profitable growth achieved consistently over previous years," said Paul Bulcke, Nestle's Belgian chief executive.

He cautioned that Nestle did not expect an easy ride this year.

"The environment in 2013 looks to be every bit as challenging as it was in in 2012," he said.

British-Dutch rival Unilever recently warned of tough times, with intense competition and volatility on the raw materials market both playing a role.

Downbeat

Despite the relatively downbeat market outlook, Nestle stuck to its forecast for organic growth this year.

"Despite the many challenges 2013 will no doubt bring, we expect to deliver the Nestle model of organic growth between 5% and 6% as well as an improved margin and underlying earnings per share in constant currencies," said Bulcke.

In 2012, organic growth was 5.9% in the Americas, 2.4% in Europe and 10.3% in Asia, Oceania and Africa.

Price rises contributed 2.8% of the group's growth. Patrick Hasenboehler, an analyst of Bank Sarasin, said in a research note that the results were "solid" but highlighted the "only minor improvement" on emerging markets.

Jon Cox, of Kepler Capital Markets, said Nestle's performance was "solid enough overall".

"But emerging markets continue to decelerate and that might have spooked the markets a bit," he told AFP.

Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge


 
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