Carlsberg Boosts Profit Outlook as Drinkers Swallow Price Hikes

Carlsberg A/S increased its annual profit forecast again after a solid first half where the Danish brewer raised beer prices to offset rising costs.

(Bloomberg) — Carlsberg A/S increased its annual profit forecast again after a solid first half where the Danish brewer raised beer prices to offset rising costs. 

The maker of Tuborg and its namesake beer now expects annual operating profit growth of 4% to 7%. That compares to previous guidance of -2% to 5% and analyst consensus estimates of 5.8%.

The Danish brewer’s shares gained as much as 2.8%, following the statement Tuesday, which came a day ahead of a scheduled earnings release. 

It’s the second time since April that Carlsberg has upgraded its profit outlook on continued price increases.

Big brewers have been working hard to keep consumers drinking their premium suds after implementing the biggest price hikes in decades to offset higher input costs for everything from grains to freight and aluminum. 

Carlsberg’s bigger rival Heineken NV cut its profit forecast this month after drinkers switched to cheaper beer in some markets. Anheuser-Busch InBev NV’s profit growth managed to beat analysts’ expectations as strong growth in Latin America offset a marketing fiasco in the US that led to a slump in Bud Light sales. 

Read More: Heineken Drops as Brewer Cuts Forecast on Waning Consumption

Carlsberg posted a first half operating profit growth of 5.2% which was well ahead of analyst consensus estimates of 0.5% growth, RBC analyst James Edwardes Jones said in a report.

Organic revenue rose by double digits which was better than expected and driven mostly by price increases. Volume grew by less than 1% during the period, just below forecasts of 1.2%.

“Overall it is positive to see the guidance upgrade, but it should not be too surprising since the previous guidance was most likely too conservative,” Mads Rosendal, a credit analyst at Danske Bank A/S, said in a note.

Next month, Jacob Aarup-Andersen, a turnaround expert who revamped facility management company ISS A/S, will take over the running of Carlsberg, replacing Cees ‘t Hart who held the role for about eight years. 

Carlsberg’s upgrade follows a pattern of over-delivery that the market has become accustomed to, said Edward Mundy, an analyst at Jefferies. He added that with an easier prior-year comparison to beat in the second half and a new CEO starting in September “there could be an element of conservatism in the updated guidance.”

Carlsberg also said it will start a 1 billion-krone ($146 million) share buyback beginning Wednesday. 

–With assistance from Jonas Ekblom and Christian Wienberg.

(Updates throughout)

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