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Nestle says it will ‘moderate’ its price increases

ZURICH (AFP) – Nestle raised its sales outlook for 2023 yesterday as the maker of chocolate bars, baby food and pet-care products said it would temper price increases that boosted its half-year revenue.

The Swiss group, whose brands include KitKat bars, Nespresso coffee capsules and Purina dog food, said revenue reached CHF46.3 billion in the first six months of the year, up 1.6 percent from the same period in 2022.

Its net profit jumped 7.7 per cent to CHF5.6 billion, but it fell short of forecasts.

Organic sales growth – closely followed by financial analysts as it excludes currency fluctuations and acquisitions – fared better.

It was up 8.7 per cent, pulled up by double-digit growth in infant nutrition, sweets and pet products. This compared to 8.1 per cent expected by analysts surveyed by Swiss news agency AWP.

Nestle building in the western Swiss town of Vevey, Switzerland. PHOTO: AFP

Prices grew 9.5 per cent in the same period, though sales volume fell 0.8 per cent.

Inflation began to rise worldwide as economies emerged from COVID restrictions and it worsened as the situation Ukraine sent energy and commodity prices soaring last year.

Central banks have hiked interest rates in efforts to rein in consumer price inflation.

Nestle said it still faced “significant inflation” for commodities, packaging costs and wages in the first half. The company said price increases and cost efficiencies helped to partly offset the impact of higher costs.

“We are still repairing our gross margin which was significantly impacted over the last two years,” Nestle chief executive Mark Schneider told journalists.

“Looking forward, pricing actions will moderate and will be more targeted to products that are still subject to input costs inflation,” he said.

Inflation has slowed for some commodities but costs remain “quite high” for robusta coffee, cocoa and sugar, he said.

The company upgraded its outlook for organic sales growth to a range of seven to eight percent for 2023, up from six to eight percent previously, following the “strong performance” in the first half.

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