Bangkok Post

Danone eyes higher profit growth in ’18

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Food group Danone SA said yesteriday that it would accelerate sales growth this year and deliver a further rise in profits as it seeks to respond to pressure from investors.

The world’s l argest yoghurt maker reported overall 2017 earnings that slightly beat expectatio­ns, with solid demand for baby food and waters in China more than offsetting weak dairy sales.

Danone, whose brands include Evian Water, Activia yoghurt and Bledina baby food, said it was targeting a double-digit rise in 2018 underlying earnings per share (EPS), excluding the impact of the sale of a $1.9 billion stake in Japan’s Yakult Honsha Co announced this week.

The company, alongside consumer goods peers such as Nestle SA and Unilever Plc, is under investor pressure to improve results and it needs to deliver on 2020 profit margin and sales growth targets it set last year.

In August 2017, hedge fund and activist investor Corvex Management LP bought a 0.8% stake in Danone, following similar steps at Nestle and Procter & Gamble Co.

Danone has been touted as a potential target for suitors or shareholde­rs seeking better returns, given that profits and sales have disappoint­ed some investors in recent years.

The company trades at 17.1 times estimated 12-month forward earnings against 20.1 times for Nestle and 18.3 times for Unilever.

The purchase last year of US group WhiteWave Foods, which makes almond milk and organic products, is intended to boost Danone’s profit margins, given WhiteWave’s generally affluent clientele, while Danone has also been cutting costs.

Danone said yesterday that the integratio­n of WhiteWave was progressin­g well with more than $50 million of synergies delivered in 2017, ahead of target.

“We are starting 2018 with stronger foundation­s and I am confident that we are on track to accelerate towards our 2020 ambition,” chairman and CEO Emmanuel Faber said in a statement.

Danone is targeting an operating margin above 16% of its sales and like-for-like sales growth of 4-5% by 2020.

Its 2017 operating margin rose by 70 basis points to 14.36% of sales, slightly above analysts’ expectatio­ns.

Danone has suffered slower growth overall than its rivals, largely due to weakness in its dairy business in Europe, which has had to contend with sluggish demand and the relatively unsuccessf­ul Activia re-launch, while in China its baby food and waters businesses have had regulatory issues.

There were signs of an improvemen­t, with Danone noting stronger demand for baby milk formula in China, but the dairy business remained under pressure in general.

Like-for-like sales rose 2.5% to €24.677 billion ($31 billion), slightly above analysts’ expectatio­ns.

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