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Nestle nine-month sales soar on back of price hikes

Nestle posted its strongest nine-month sales growth in 14 years on Wednesday and raised its full-year guidance as the world's largest packaged food company lifted prices without losing many customers.

The maker of KitKat chocolate bars and Nescafe reported organic sales, which cut out the impact of currency movements and acquisitions, rising by 8.5 per cent in the nine months to end-September. It was the highest nine-month rise since 2008 and was driven by higher prices aimed at offsetting rising costs.


"We delivered strong organic growth as we continued to adjust prices responsibly to reflect inflation," the company's chief executive Mark Schneider said.

Despite the strong sales, some analysts worried price rises could soon push consumers too far, potentially pricing some of its products out of their reach amid a cost of living crisis that is seeing sales volumes across the industry decline.

Britain's consumer price index (CPI) increased by 10.1 per cent in September versus last year, the Office of National Statistics said on Wednesday, reporting the biggest jump in food prices since 1980 and matching a 40-year high hit in July. Euro zone inflation also zoomed past forecasts in September to hit 10%.

"You do worry about the pricing power category by category particularly for discretionary food – nobody really needs a KitKat or an ice cream," said Chris Beckett, head of equity research at Quilter Cheviot.

"Sales volumes have held up well so far but we are a way from peak cost of living squeeze."

Analyst Jon Cox of Kepler Cheuvreux said growing organic sales was a "decent" result for the company given the continued price increases even if third-quarter volumes dipped.

For the nine months to end-September, Nestle posted sales of 69.1 billion Swiss francs (£61.2bn), beating the 68.9 billion francs forecast in a company-gathered consensus of 23 analysts.

Most of the organic growth increase came from higher pricing, accounting for 7.5 percentage points of the 8.5 per cent increase, while volumes increased by 1 percentage point over the period.

As a result Nestle raised its full-year outlook, saying it now expected organic growth of "around 8 per cent" for 2022, up from a 7 to 8 per cent increase previously.

The Swiss company also confirmed its target for a trading operating profit margin of around 17 per cent.

Nestle also announced on Wednesday a deal to buy the Seattle's Best Coffee business from Starbucks.

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