Houston Chronicle

Surprising sales growth by Procter & Gamble cheers investors.

- By Lauren Coleman-Lochner

Procter & Gamble Co. has been dinged over the years for being too big, too slow and too cautious as it tried to break out of tepid growth.

Today, it issued a rejoinder: the largest jump in five years of a key sales measure. Investors cheered the firstquart­er results, which the company says is proof its turnaround is working.

“It is broad based, both in geography and brand,” Chief Executive Officer David Taylor said in a phone interview Friday. “That’s indicative of a strategy and an organizati­on that is making progress.”

The surprise growth sent the shares up as much as 9 percent on Friday, the most since 2008. Organic sales, which exclude items like acquisitio­ns and currency effects, rose 4 percent, P&G said, more than double the gain projected by analysts.

Taylor took over three years ago, tasked with getting the world’s biggest consumer-products company back to its glory days, when newly affluent customers overseas and the launch of category-busting products like Crest tooth-bleaching kits ensured reliable growth and dominance. As CEO, he’s worked to streamline costs and the company’s sclerotic structure.

The pace of that change frustrated some investors, notably activist billionair­e Nelson Peltz, who waged an ultimately successful campaign for a board seat last year. Peltz pushed for more restructur­ing and efforts to court younger shoppers with newer brands.

In an environmen­t when growth is hard to come by for big consumer-products companies, P&G’s performanc­e was unexpected­ly strong. P&G said the U.S. drove much of the gain. The Cincinnati-based maker of Bounty and Pampers called out Olay — a long-struggling brand — and the new SK-II luxury skin cream, popular in Asia, as key drivers.

It was a “very solid quarter on which we need to build,” Chief Financial Officer Jon Moeller said on a call with reporters. The company said it gained market share in the first quarter which ended Sept. 30, and that eight out of 10 global categories either increased or maintained market share.

The shares rose as high as $87.45 in New York trading. They had lost 13 percent this year through Thursday’s close, compared with the 3.6 percent gain in the S&P 500 Index.

P&G, like many traditiona­l consumer-products companies, has been hurt by heightened competitio­n, including from upstart businesses. Higher commodity costs and unfavorabl­e foreign-exchange trends are still taking a toll on the company’s profitabil­ity. Gross margin fell to 49.2 percent from 50.3 percent a year earlier.

And one of its leading retailers, Amazon, is becoming more of a competitor by rolling out its own versions of some of P&G’s key products, including diapers.

Taylor said he’s not taking that encroachme­nt lightly, but earlier prediction­s of doom for big brands haven’t panned out. Amazon’s entry “causes me to double down about what makes a difference,” he said. “We don’t need 100 line extensions, we need meaningful innovation.” Brands still matter, he said.

He pointed to the Pampers Pure Protection line of greener diapers introduced this year. The company tested the product under several names, and the version with the Pampers name did significan­tly better, he said, because customers trusted that it would be effective.

 ?? Charles Krupa / Associated Press ?? Procter & Gamble says the jump is proof its turnaround is working after years of tepid growth.
Charles Krupa / Associated Press Procter & Gamble says the jump is proof its turnaround is working after years of tepid growth.

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