Heineken reported a stronger-than-expected start to the year, with first-quarter organic net revenue and volumes both outpacing market forecasts, but the Dutch brewer warned that rising energy costs and inflation - driven up by the war in Iran - pose a risk to consumer demand.
The company, the worlds second-largest brewer behind Anheuser-Busch InBev, said organic net revenue increased 2.8% in the first quarter, above analysts expectations for a 2.3% rise. Volumes rose 1.2% organically, beating forecasts that had predicted flat volume performance.
Despite the positive top-line surprise, Heineken highlighted growing cost pressures tied to the fuel required for brewing and to produce glass bottles, noting that energy is becoming more expensive. Management indicated these cost dynamics are occurring against a backdrop of sustained cost-of-living pressures for consumers, which it already expected would make 2024 another challenging year.
Heineken reiterated its full-year guidance, maintaining an outlook for organic operating profit growth in a range of 2% to 6%.
Corporate actions and leadership
The brewer has announced plans to cut 6,000 jobs as part of cost-reduction efforts. It is also searching for a new chief executive after the abrupt resignation of Dolf van den Brink in January. The company did not provide additional detail on the CEO succession process in its first-quarter release.
Management commentary
"Global trade has become more complex and volatile, with impacts on energy availability and costs in certain markets. This leads to inflationary pressures, which might affect consumer sentiment in the medium-term," van den Brink said in a statement, without mentioning the war directly.
The comment underscores managements concern that external geopolitical developments are feeding through to energy costs and inflation, which could influence consumer behaviour and demand for Heinekens brands.
Implications for markets and stakeholders
Investors and market participants will weigh the upside surprise in revenue and volumes against the headwinds of higher input costs and lingering consumer inflation. Heinekens planned workforce reductions and the ongoing CEO search add additional operational and governance considerations for stakeholders monitoring the groups execution and strategy.