Reckitt Benckiser’s sales disappoint as it warns of margin squeeze

Growth slows in demand for products such as Lysol disinfectants and Finish dishwashing detergents

Reckitt Benckiser Group joined other top consumer goods companies with a warning its margins will be squeezed this year due to higher costs, sending its shares 9 per cent lower in early trading on Tuesday.

The FTSE-listed company also missed second-quarter sales growth estimates as growth slowed in demand for products such as Lysol disinfectants and Finish dishwashing detergents.

Chief financial officer Jeff Carr told journalists on a call that Reckitt had witnessed inflation across “most of its commodity groups”, with costs trending up between 8 per cent -9 per cent for the year.

Reckitt said it now expects its 2021 adjusted operating margins to fall to between 22.7 per cent and 23.2 per cent from 23.6 per cent in 2020.

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The company said it would take time to offset the inflationary headwinds with productivity and pricing action being implemented in the second half of the year and early 2022.

Reckitt's comments mirrored those of larger peer Unilever, which last week cut its margin guidance blaming higher raw material costs on everything from crude to palm and soybean oil.

“For years, the market has assumed that big consumer goods companies had such strong brands that it was easy to pass on any extra costs to the customer in the form of higher prices,” said Danni Hewson, financial analyst at AJ Bell.

“Unilever recently showed that wasn’t quite the case, and now Reckitt has also poured cold water on that theory. Its margins have taken a hit from higher raw material costs.”

The rollout of Covid-19 vaccinations, the re-opening of developed economies and nearly $6 trillion in US government relief announced since the pandemic’s outbreak are fuelling demand for everything from restaurant meals to cars, straining the supply chain, creating labour shortages and driving up commodity prices.

Reckitt’s shares, down 5 per cent this year, were the top loser on the FTSE 100 index in morning trading.

It posted a £1.82 billion first-half operating loss, due to a £3 billion charge it incurred on the sale of its infant nutrition business in China announced last month.

Quarter slows

The pandemic boosted Reckitt’s sales to record levels last year, but there are signs that momentum is easing as vaccinations gather pace and stay-at-home restrictions in developed economies are lifted.

Reckitt said brands including Dettol, Finish, Airwick, Harpic and Veet, which make up 70 per cent of its sales, are growing, but at slower rates than last year, while brands like Durex, Vanish and Nurofen are returning to growth as market conditions normalise.

Like-for-like sales rose 2.2 per cent for the three months to June 30th, excluding its infant nutrition business in China, lower than the 2.3 per cent growth analysts had expected, according to a company-supplied consensus. Second-quarter net revenue fell 8.2 per cent to £3.1 billion.

Reckitt said it expects third-quarter like-for-like sales to be slower than in the same period last year. Sales are expected to pick up in the fourth quarter led by cold and flu remedies, which were starting to show “positive momentum” in places such as Australia and in the United States in states where mask wearing is not mandated.

The company, which rebranded as Reckitt from RB earlier this year, maintained its full-year sales growth forecast of between 0 per cent and 2 per cent. – Reuters