Heineken hit as Brazil, currencies force margin outlook cut

Reuters  |  BRUSSELS 

By Philip Blenkinsop

The brewer of lager, Tiger, Sol and cider reported first-half earnings below market expectations and said its operating margin would decline by 20 basis points in 2018, compared with a previous forecast of a 25 basis point increase, after it fell sharply in the first six months.

Overall, the brewer sold more beer in the first six months of 2018 than expected, with growth rose steepest in its two most profitable markets, and Mexico, along with Brazil, Cambodia, South Africa, and

shares traded down 6.0 percent at 86.84 euros, by far the weakest performers in the index of leading European shares.

The Dutch brewer, whose lager is the top seller in Europe, said the new guidance was because of the negative translational hit from currencies concentrated more in its higher margin countries, such as Vietnam, and a larger dilutive effect of its expanding Brazilian business.

Heineken acquired the loss-making Brazilian operations of Japan's in 2017 to become the number two country, and had previously warned of an impact on its margins.

"We're bringing the margin up but it's not yet at group average and at the same time we have double-digit growth of volumes and revenue, which frankly we had not expected," told

She added that Heineken now believed Brazilian margins could climb to company-average levels.

"A year ago we did not want to say that because it was still to be seen, but at this stage we do think this is possible.... We say (in) three to five years," she said.

Trevor Stirling, analyst at Bernstein Securities, said there was "an arms-length list of factors and one-offs" explaining the first-half profit weakness.

"If you're an optimist, you'd say a lot of the first-half weakness is from one-offs and high growth in is a long-term positive, but then you need to do much better in the second half to hit the revised guidance," he said.

Stronger revenue growth was partly offset by higher expenses and increased input costs, notably for aluminium, Heineken said.

The brewer's first-half operating profit before one-offs grew 1.3 percent on a like-for-like basis to 1.75 billion euros ($2.04 billion), below average forecast of 1.89 billion euros in a poll.

The operating margin fell by 118 basis points. Excluding Brazil, this would have been a 76 basis point decline.

Earnings per share at 1.89 euros was also below the consensus forecast of 1.95 euros.

(Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu, and Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, July 30 2018. 13:39 IST