Investors find some Unilever foods hard to swallow
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[January 29, 2020] By
Siddharth Cavale
(Reuters) - Six months after Unilever's <ULVR.L>
<UNc.AS> Alan Jope suggested he may get rid of brands without "purpose",
investors are wondering when he will deliver.
Their sights have long been set on the Anglo-Dutch firm's foods
business, which has lagged growth in the rest of the consumer goods
giant for most of the past decade.
The CEO's definition of "purpose" is not focused on growth, although he
says brands that "communicate a strong environmental or social purpose"
also expand faster than the rest.
Unilever listed four food brands - Knorr Soups, Lipton Tea, Hellman's
sauces and Walls ice cream in June among 28 "purpose-led" brands it said
were growing 69% more quickly than the other parts of the business.
At the time, Jope said he would explore the idea of selling brands
without such purpose, hinting at Marmite, Magnum and Pot Noodle when
questioned over which. He did not set a time frame.
Yet there is no sign of divestiture activity from Jope ahead of
Thursday's release of full-year results, a banking source who has worked
with Unilever said. A tightening M&A environment means the time for such
deals may have passed, he added.
Unilever declined to comment on its performance or strategic plans ahead
of Thursday's earnings report.
Its peers, Nestle <NESN.S> and ABInBev <ABI.BR>, have sold food
operations worth billions of dollars each over the past year so they can
refocus on their core businesses.
Kraft Heinz <KHC.O> was reported early last year as looking to sell its
Maxwell House coffee and Ore-Ida tater tots businesses; Kraft declined
to comment.
Unilever has long emphasized the high adjusted operating margins in its
foods brands - 17.5%. This compares with 15% at Swiss group Nestle,
although the two companies do not compete head to head in many
categories.
Unilever also notes the role of foods in securing access to fragmented
emerging markets, including India.
But it tested investors' patience when it warned last month it would
just miss its 3-5% underlying sales growth target. Rivals Procter &
Gamble <PG.N> and Nestle are bullish about achieving their own targets
of 4%-5% and 3.5%, respectively.
"Actions speak louder than words," said Knut Gezelius, a portfolio
manager at Norway's SKAGEN Global, which owns 1.8 million of Unilever's
Netherlands-listed shares.
"Tangible signs of a get-it-done attitude may quickly take Unilever out
of investors' penalty box."
London-listed Unilever shares were down 0.3% at 4,485 pence at 1115 GMT
on Wednesday, when the broader blue-chip FTSE <.FTSE> was up by the same
amount. The company's stock is down 3% since its shock sales warning in
mid-December.
For a graphic on Unilever's F&R business organic growth vs. other
business units since 2009, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/13/1527/1502/
Unilever%20Food%20and%20Refreshment%20organic%20sales.jpg
CALL TO ACTION
Unilever’s food unit, which contributes 40% to total sales, has
underperformed the company's two other divisions - Beauty & Personal
Care and Home Care - on an organic sales basis in 38 out of 43 quarters
since 2009, according to Jefferies.
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Unilever headquarters in Rotterdam, Netherlands August 21, 2018.
REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw/File Photo
Four investors told Reuters it should hive off slow growing brands or buy in hot
categories like plant-based foods to lift growth, without splashing out just to
make an impression.
Analysts say center-store categories like tea, bouillon, mayo and condiments
have fallen out of favor with shoppers in search of niche brands and healthier
options.
Analysts at Liberum estimate three of the food division's seven big brands –
Knorr, Lipton tea and Hellmann’s sauces – are growing in the low single-digit
rate at best, making them good disposal candidates.
Freddie Lait, founder of boutique investment firm Latitude Investment
Management, which holds shares worth 7.6 million pounds in Unilever, said he was
looking for a meaningful action plan.
"The time is now to lay out the hard decisions in front of them and to set an
ambition to get back to a medium growth rate in line with their peers,” he said.
For a graphic on Unilever share price performance, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/13/1525/1500/unidata.png
ENTANGLED
Jope's predecessor Paul Polman focused on margin growth rather than reinvestment
in foods after seeing off a shock takeover offer from Kraft Heinz in 2017.
It was far from easy to disentangle underperforming brands from others and sell
them off, the banking source said, declining to be named due to the sensitivity
of his position.
Getting the right price is also a challenge.
Unilever did sell its spreads business, including Becel and Flora, to KKR for
6.8 billion pounds in 2017. But the valuation of 10 times earnings, before
interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) was viewed as
disappointing at the time.
And making up for the selling, general and administrative costs that the
business was supporting contributed to a surprise 7% earnings dilution in the
year after the deal’s close.
For a graphic on Possible EPS dilution from selling Unilever F&R businesses,
click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/13/1524/1499/EPS%20dilution.jpg
Based on Unilever's current enterprise value, its mayo and dressings business,
tea business in developed markets or total developed market foods could each
command a valuation of 13 times EBITDA, Jefferies analyst Martin Deboo said. A
clean exit from food would be easier to implement, but would also significantly
weaken Unilever’s business in emerging countries like India where scale helps
win fragmented markets.
"Unilever are in something of a pickle in Foods: a pickle that isn’t going to be
easy to get out of," Deboo said.
For a graphic on Estimated impact on Unilever from F&R disposals, click
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/editorcharts/UNILEVER-STRATEGY/0H001R87QBM1/eikon.png
Interactive graphic https://tmsnrt.rs/2O3SCU7 on estimated impact from F&R
disposals.
(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bengaluru; additional reporting by Simon
Jessop and Pamela Barbaglia in London; editing by Patrick Graham and Philippa
Fletcher)
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