By
Reuters
Published
October 31, 2024
Dutch chemicals maker DSM-Firmenich raised its annual adjusted core profit forecast on Thursday, citing a vitamin supply disruption that has increased prices, bringing a temporary earnings contribution in the fourth quarter.
Lower vitamin prices, paired with a destocking cycle took a toll on the company’s profit in 2023, it said in May, adding that these trends were expected to reverse.
The group, formed through a merger of Dutch speciality chemicals firm DSM and Swiss flavours and scents maker Firmenich, expects adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) of €2.1 billion ($2.28 billion) for 2024, slightly higher the €2 billion it forecast earlier this year.
To focus on perfumes and flavours – one of its main businesses – DSM-Firmenich said it plans to carve-out its Animal Health and Nutrition division by the end of 2025 after the business reported a 76% plunge in core earnings last year.
“Our strategic actions, including the carve-out of Animal Nutrition & Health and divestments of de-prioritized activities, are progressing well,” CEO Dimitri de Vreeze said in a statement.
The company, whose fragrances are used in the perfumes of French luxury giants LVMH and Kering, reported a 32% rise in third-quarter EBITDA to €541 million, outpacing the €536 million forecast by analysts in a company-compiled consensus.
The Dutch firm attributed the rise to strong organic sales growth and contributions from the synergies and the vitamin transformation program, despite a negative foreign exchange effect of around €15 million.
© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.
SelectFashion, the popular women's fashion retailer known for its affordable, trendy clothing, is set to close 35 stores within days, following a series of clo
One ranged from a gilded embassy or under the Louvre to an elegant br
Ms Rule is a special educational needs coordinator at Douay Martyrs Catholic Secondary School in Hillingdon but works on her business in the evenings and at wee
British fashion is under threat from artificial intelligence that can identify popular products and flood the market with cheap copies, designers have warned.Fu