Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Unilever cutting 7,500 positions

Cost-cutting plan to spin-off ice cream maker Ben & Jerry’s

- COURTNEY BONNELL

LONDON — Unilever, the company that makes Ben & Jerry’s ice cream, Dove soaps and Vaseline, said Tuesday that it is cutting 7,500 jobs and spinning off its ice cream business to reduce costs and increase profits.

London-based Unilever said its ice cream business, which also includes Magnum bars, has “distinct characteri­stics” from its other brands and would benefit from separate ownership to increase growth. It said the split is expected to be completed by the end of next year.

The British consumer goods company with 128,000 employees also said it is starting a “productivi­ty program” that is expected to lead to a reduction of about 7,500 mostly office-based jobs worldwide.

Unilever said it will invest in technology to find efficienci­es and avoid duplicatio­n that it anticipate­s will help it save $867 million over the next three years. The company also eliminated 1,500 jobs in early 2022.

“Simplifyin­g our portfolio and driving greater productivi­ty will allow us to further unlock the potential of this business, supporting our ambition to position Unilever as a world-leading consumer goods company delivering strong, sustainabl­e growth and enhanced profitabil­ity,” said Chief Executive Officer Hein Schumacher, who took the helm at Unilever last summer.

The company’s shares jumped more than 3% in latemornin­g trading on the London Stock Exchange.

“The share price bounce goes some way in reversing what has been a difficult last year, as investors have fretted over a company with limited high growth prospects and in need of streamlini­ng,” said

Richard Hunter, head of markets for interactiv­e investor, an online investment service.

The company behind Hellman’s mayonnaise, Axe fragrances and Cif household cleaners said it is targeting underlying sales growth of midsingle digits after spinning off the ice cream business.

It saw sales volume drop 3.6% in 2022 after increasing prices 13.3% on average across its brands that year. In response, it raised prices just 2.8% last year, and sales rose 1.8%.

Some analysts pointed out that splitting from Ben & Jerry’s, which is known for social activism that has put it at odds at times with its corporate owner, could have an added upside for Unilever.

“A side benefit of the brand exiting Unilever’s portfolio is it might quieten the ‘go woke and go broke’ noise, but more widely the reasoning for the decision looks pretty sound,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, a financial services company.

He noted that the ice cream spinoff had not been widely anticipate­d by the market even if “political pronouncem­ents from Ben & Jerry’s had provoked a meltdown among some investors.”

Ben & Jerry’s has supported liberal issues including justice for migrants and efforts to fight climate change.

The brand announced in 2021 that it would stop selling its ice cream in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and contested east Jerusalem — territorie­s sought by the Palestinia­ns.

Unilever later announced that it was selling its business interest in Ben & Jerry’s in Israel to its Israeli licensee, which would market the products with Hebrew and Arabic labels. A U.S. judge rejected a lawsuit in 2022 from Ben & Jerry’s to block that plan.

More recently, since the Israel-Hamas war broke out, Ben & Jerry’s independen­t board chair Anuradha Mittal has called for a permanent cease-fire in Gaza.

 ?? (AP) ?? Pedestrian­s walk past the Ben & Jerry’s shop on Church St. in Burlington, Vt.
(AP) Pedestrian­s walk past the Ben & Jerry’s shop on Church St. in Burlington, Vt.

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