Emerging markets come off the boil for Nestle and Unilever

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By Silke Koltrowitz and Siddharth Cavale

ZURICH/LONDON (Reuters) – Global consumer goods companies are banking on fast-growing emerging markets to drive their growth, so signs on Thursday that sales have come off the boil in the once-booming economies of China and India could set alarm bells ringing.

Unilever (L:), Nestle (S:) and drinks group Pernod Ricard (PA:) all pointed to slower progress in key Asian markets as a factor for muted sales growth over the last three months but for the time being are keeping targets intact.

Packaged goods companies like these have been relying more on emerging markets to offset changing habits in developed economies, where growing numbers of consumers are turning to fresher foods, niche brands or cutting back on spending.

Yet two of the biggest emerging markets are now showing signs of slowing growth, with trade tensions with the United States hitting domestic consumption in China and more erratic and damaging monsoons curbing rural spending in India.

Anglo-Dutch Unilever said growth “slowed a little” in China during the third quarter, while Nestle said its sales performance in China was flat over the first nine months of the year.

French drinks company Pernod Ricard said the pace of its sales growth in China slowed to 6% in the quarter from 27% a year earlier due to challenging market conditions.

“In China overall, we’re seeing a bit of a softer year when it comes to consumer products, and that includes food and beverage,” Nestle CEO Mark Schneider told reporters on a call.

Unilever finance chief Graeme Pitkethly said sales growth at China’s bricks-and-mortar retailers slowed to 1% in the third quarter from 2% a year earlier.

“There have definitely been signs of slowing markets in India and China,” Pitkethly told Reuters.

“In India, we are going from very high rates of market growth to growth rates in the mid-single digits,” he added.

In Argentina, another of Unilever’s big emerging markets, hyper-inflation has kept shoppers away from stores and led to a 4% drop in volumes.

Earlier this week, a poll showed that China’s economic growth was expected to decelerate to a near 30-year low.. The economy in India is growing at its slowest rate in six years.

TARGETS HELD FOR NOW

Pernod Ricard’s CFO Helene de Tissot blamed a softer trade environment for the drop in sales of its spirits such as Chivas in China.

However, she said Pernod was still confident of achieving its mid-term sales growth targets in India and China.

Nestle, known for KitKat chocolate bars and Maggi noodles, posted 3.7% organic sales growth in the third quarter, in line with expectations, while Unilever reported 2.9% growth, just shy of analysts’ estimates.

Both companies maintained their operating margin and sales targets for the year.

Unilever shares traded up 1.5% at 1105 GMT, while Nestle slipped 0.8%.

Pernod said its like-for-like sales rose only 1.3%, down from 10.4% a year ago and below analysts’ expectations.

Pernod shares fell 3.8%, trimming gains for the year to under 12%. The French company is facing U.S. tariffs as a result of a long-running dispute over aircraft subsidies.

Nestle has been the better performer over the year to date, gaining more than 30% as investors warmed to Schneider’s strategy. Unilever, under new CEO Alan Jope this year, has gained around 14%.