Campari’s “steady” Q1s – key takeaways

In This Article:

Matteo Fantacchiotti, Campari’s recently-installed CEO, described the spirits major’s first-quarter results as “steady as it goes” and, despite meagre organic sales growth that came in below analyst expectations, he was right.

“I would say no news for us, I believe, is good news,” Fantacchiotti, who took the helm last month, succeeding long-standing CEO Bob Kunze-Concewitz, told analysts yesterday (7 May) after the Aperol maker booked its Q1 numbers.

Campari’s first-quarter sales of €663.5m ($712.9m), were up 0.2% organically and down 0.7% on a reported basis.

The company did face a stiff comparison with the first quarter of 2023, when sales jumped 20% organically, boosted by higher shipments ahead of price increases the group introduced.

Campari said, therefore, that its organic sales growth in the opening three months of this year “versus a normalised Q1 2023” would have been around 6%.

The “temporary phasing of shipments” in last year’s first quarter also weighed on adjusted EBIT, which was down 2.3% organically and by 4.9% on a reported basis at €151.5m. Again, Campari produced a figure that excluded the impact of those pre-price-hike shipments in Q1 2023; it said its Q1 2024 adjusted EBIT would have been up around 13%.

Group profit before taxation was €145m, up 8.6% on a reported basis, and the company maintained its full-year guidance of “continued industry outperformance” and “consistent operating margin expansion”.

“We continue to grow and we continue to outperform the industry,” Fantacchiotti said. “Steady as it goes, continuing to outperform reference markets and prime us for sustainable medium to long term growth, that will be my summary.”

Equity analysts covering Campari broadly welcomed the first-quarter statement.

“Campari delivered a soft set of results in Q1, as expected, but indicated that underlying trends remain strong and the margin expansion story should accelerate during the year,” AllianceBernstein’s Trevor Stirling wrote in a note to clients.

“Across the course of 2024, top-line momentum should recover to what we believe is the new normal: high-single-digit. Indications on the margin expansion story were also encouraging. The group expects to benefit from the improving cost environment in H2, especially as agave prices fall, and even more so given the increasing size of Tequila in the mix. Plus, we expect some operating leverage on SG&A.”

At Stifel, Cedric Lecasble said: “Q1 2024 earnings came in line with estimates and confirmed a resilient quarter on very tough comps. We believe Campari is set to continue to outgrow industry peers, driven by its growth engines, apéritifs and Tequila.”