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Unilever: Volumes Disappoint but Core Categories Perform Well

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Securities In This Article
Unilever PLC
(ULVR)

Unilever’s ULVR third-quarter trading update showed sales growth at 5.2%, in line with company-compiled consensus of 5.2%. Although the headline growth number came in as expected, the driver was pricing, which was up 5.8% (versus 5.1% for consensus), with volumes being down 0.6% versus expectations for up 0.1%. Since volume growth, which is more maintainable long-term and contributes to durable margin improvement—admittedly a higher-quality growth driver than pricing (merely passing on input cost inflation—came in lower than expectations, the share price reaction this morning was somewhat negative, down about 3% at the time of writing. That said, management maintained fiscal 2023 organic growth guidance to higher than 5% versus 7.1% for consensus (prerelease), and 6.7% (unchanged) in our model. On profitability, Unilever continues to expect a modest improvement for the full year (up 37 basis points in our model, in line with company-compiled consensus). Net material inflation for 2023 is expected at about EUR 2 billion, of which EUR 0.4 billion in the second half, implying a significantly lower need for price rises in the second half (up about 3.5% in our model).

All in all, a mixed third quarter with volumes declining sequentially (negative 0.6% versus negative 0.3% and negative 0.2% in the second and first quarter, respectively) despite lighter pricing (5.8% in the third quarter versus 8.2% and 10.7% in the second and first quarters respectively). On a more positive note, core categories are performing well, while the action plan that the new CEO announced is in the right direction. Given the in-line growth number and guidance for the full year, our fair value estimate for Unilever is unchanged at EUR 52/USD 56/GBX 4,560, with minor adjustments for currency movements. Shares are undervalued.

The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.

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Ioannis Pontikis

Senior Equity Analyst
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Ioannis Pontikis, CFA, is a senior equity analyst for Morningstar Holland BV, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He covers European food retail and food ingredient companies such as Tesco, Carrefour, Associated British Foods, and Chr. Hansen.

Before joining Morningstar in 2017, Pontikis spent more than six years at Athens-based value shop SilentSeas, where he worked as a generalist covering small caps and focused on deep-value situations, particularly in companies owning hidden, undervalued assets. Prior to that role, he worked at Nestle as a financial analyst and at Ernst & Young as a consultant.

Pontikis holds a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the University of Piraeus and a master’s degree in finance from the London School of Economics. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation.

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