Nestle shuts Swiss skin
health products factory
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[August 31, 2017]
ZURICH (Reuters) - Nestle said on
Thursday it was closing a Swiss factory which makes products for its
skin health business, responding to a slowdown in a business once seen
as one of its rising stars.
Nestle Skin Health said it will close the Egerkingen factory in northern
Switzerland, where it makes Daylong sun cream and products for dry skin,
with the loss of 190 jobs.
Skin health has been part of the food maker's push into higher growth
and more profitable health products to counter a slowdown in its
traditional packaged food business.
The business was set up in 2014 when Nestle incorporated the half stake
in skin care company Galderma it bought from L'Oreal with the half it
already owned.
Nestle does not break out results for its skin health business
separately, but said in July the business had lower sales volumes and
pricing during the second quarter of this year as pressure on generics
in the prescription business weighed on growth as did China's soft
performance.
Patrik Schwendimann, an analyst at Zuercher Kantonalbank, estimates that
Nestle's Skin Health Business had sales of roughly 2.3 billion Swiss
francs ($2.38 billion) last year, up from 2.2 billion francs a year
earlier. Profit margins for skin health and Nestle Health Science
combined were around 9.2 percent last year, down from 12.5 percent in
2015.
"The business is still in the expansion phase, but the results have been
disappointing," said Schwendimann. "They are aiming for higher margins
and higher sales growth especially when companies in the health area
should be getting margins of at least 15 to 20 percent in the mid term."
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A logo is pictured outside the Nestle Institute of Health Sciences
in Lausanne, Switzeralnd, November 2, 2012. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File
Photo
Nestle has responded by launching an overhaul of its skin health business where
it aims to simplify its organization and its geographical footprint.
The company currently sells dozens of different products via prescription, over
the counter and as corrective and aesthetic products which are used by doctors.
Nestle said production costs at the Egerkingen site had been rising because
volumes were low and the factory was not running at full capacity.
"Nestle Skin Health does not foresee a significant volume increase over the next
years in Egerkingen, even taking into account growth forecasts for markets
served by the factory," the company said.
Production will be transferred to other Nestle skin health factories, with its
commercial business for Switzerland moved to Zurich and its team in consumer
products development moved to the Swiss canton of Vaud.
(Reporting by John Revill, editing by David Evans)
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