skip to main content

Nestle beats quarterly sales estimates on sharp price hikes

Nestle makes Maggi stock cubes, Kit Kat chocolate bars and Nescafe coffee
Nestle makes Maggi stock cubes, Kit Kat chocolate bars and Nescafe coffee

Nestle has today reported slightly better-than-expected first-quarter sales, as the world's biggest packaged food company increased prices to offset weak sales volumes.

The Swiss company, which makes KitKat chocolate bars, Nescafe coffee and Maggi stock cubes, said sales rose 5.6% to 23.5 billion Swiss francs ($26.48 billion) in the quarter ended March 31.

This was better than the average estimate of 23.27 billion francs in a company-provided analyst consensus.

The maker of Purina pet food increased its prices by 9.8% during the quarter but sales volumes - which the company calls real internal growth - fell 0.5%.

Confectionary and pet food sales were bright spots , with volumes rising in both categories.

Nestle shares were up 1.5% at a one-year high in morning trade. Analysts, including Bernstein, called the results "a strong start to the year".

Nestle's brands "have allowed the consumer giant to push through some pretty hefty price hikes with little impact on volumes", Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Matt Britzman said.

Consumer goods companies from Unilever to P&G have raised prices sharply over the last two years to battle rising commodities and supply chain costs.

Margins have been squeezed by the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which sent energy prices to record highs.

Some shoppers - particularly those in Europe - have balked at higher prices, prompting lower sales volumes across the industry as people buy less or trade down to cheaper brands.

Yet many consumer companies are still seeing resilient demand, especially from US shoppers.

Rival Unilever, which posts results later this week, said earlier this year that the industry was past "peak inflation, but not yet past peak pricing".

Food price inflation will start easing in the second half of this year, French ECB policymaker Francois Villeroy de Galhau said today, saying this is when a decrease in crop prices will bear fruit.

However, sugar producer Associated British Foods warned today that sugar could be an exception to the easing of prices in the second half.

It is unclear whether companies will prioritise volume sales growth by passing on declining costs to consumers or look to protect margins. Several investors have said consumer goods companies will ease price increases as supply chain costs decline, mindful of protecting market share.

P&G, which makes Tide laundry detergent, Pampers nappies and Gillette razors, last week reported a 10% increase in average prices across its categories during the quarter, and a 3% decline in volumes.