A2 Milk's hopes to sell baby food in U.S. curdled, shares plunge
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[August 10, 2022]
By Harish Sridharan
(Reuters) -A2 Milk Company Ltd said on
Wednesday the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) deferred its
request to sell infant milk formula products in the United States,
sending its shares down more than 12%.
The dairy producer and rival Fonterra have been advised by U.S.-base
d trade group International Dairy Foods Association (IDFA) that the FDA
has sent similar letters to all firms seeking approvals to sell infant
milk formula in the United States.
Fonterra, however, told Reuters that it had not yet received any such
notice from the FDA itself.
An FDA spokesperson told Reuters in an email response that the FDA had
sent letters to some firms, not all, deferring further reviews of
applications due to a list of issues.
"For firms that received letters, they do not mean that the infant
formulas are unsafe; rather, they indicate that we have found issues
that would unlikely be resolved quickly," the spokesperson said.
The IDFA did not immediately respond to a Reuters' request for
clarification.
"At this time, the FDA is deferring further consideration of the
company's request for enforcement discretion to import infant milk
formula products," a2 Milk said on Wednesday. (https://bit.ly/3dnbRaA)
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A2 milk is seen on a supermarket shelf in Singapore April 16, 2018.
Picture taken April 16, 2018. REUTERS/Thomas White/File Photo
Shares of a2 Milk tumbled as much as
12.3% to NZ$4.94 after the new came in and were headed for their
biggest single-day drop since Aug. 26, 2021.
The FDA had previously said it would allow baby formula sold in
other countries into the United States under a temporary programme
with relaxed standards. The U.S. government has also flown in
formula from overseas plants.
The FDA has exercised its "enforcement discretion" provision to
import certain infant formula products from Bubs Australia Ltd,
UK-based Kendamil, Nestle SA and Danone SA.
However, companies like a2 Milk, Fonterra, Switzerland's Holle and
U.S.-based Nature's One are yet to receive approvals.
(Reporting by Harish Sridharan in Bengaluru; Additional reporting by
Upasana Singh and Sameer Manekar; Editing by Maju Samuel and
Subhranshu Sahu)
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