By Lisa Beilfuss
Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. said first-quarter profit rose 2.5%,
though revenue slipped and the company trimmed its sales growth
expectation for the year amid unfavorable currency rates.
The Illinois-based company, which sells baby formula and
children's nutritional products, warned earlier this year it faced
significant headwinds from the strengthening dollar.
"With over 70% of our business outside the United States,
foreign currency translation negatively impacted our topline,"
Chief Executive Kasper Jakobsen said Thursday. While most of Mead
Johnson's revenue is denominated in foreign currencies, much of its
costs are in U.S. dollars.
In all, Mead Johnson reported a profit of $207.4 million, or
$1.02 a share, up from $202.4 million, or $1 per share, a year
earlier. Excluding items, including currency fluctuations,
per-share profit rose to $1.09 a share from $1.02.
Higher gross margins, lower operating expenses and a lower tax
rate were the main drivers of earnings growth, the company
said.
Revenue declined 1.7% to $1.09 billion.
Analysts were looking for $1.05 in profit per share on $1.113
billion in revenue
For the full year, the company continues to project $3.90 to $4
in adjusted per-share profit, but it trimmed its sales growth
estimate to 2% from 3% because of foreign-exchange impact.
Analysts are looking for a full-year profit of $4 a share on
$4.55 billion in revenue.
Gross margin improved to 64% from 63.6% in the first quarter, as
the company benefited from price increases and lower dairy
costs.
On a currency adjusted basis, sales in the company's North
America and Europe segment rose 3%, Latin America sales jumped 13%
and Asia sales were flat from a year earlier.
Write to Lisa Beilfuss at lisa.beilfuss@wsj.com
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