Unilever reported first-quarter underlying sales growth of 3.8%, ahead of the 3.6% analysts had expected. Volume growth of 2.9% also beat the 1.8% forecast.
The company’s Power Brands were the main driver. That group saw underlying sales rise 5.0% and volume grow 4.0% in the quarter.
Every business group posted volume gains. Home Care was a standout, fueled by accelerating demand across key emerging markets.
Unilever PLC, UL
Emerging markets as a whole grew underlying sales 5.7%. India delivered a strong performance, while Latin America bounced back following what the company called “decisive actions” taken in the region.
CEO Fernando Fernandez said the company started the year with “volume-led growth” and pointed to “broad-based momentum” across its emerging markets business.
He also noted that despite macroeconomic uncertainty, the company remains confident in its full-year guidance. Fernandez has been at the helm since last year and has overseen a broader restructuring of the business.
That restructuring has included replacing several senior leaders and cutting white-collar headcount.
The company struck a deal with spice-maker McCormick roughly a month ago to combine their food businesses into a new company valued at around $65 billion including debt.
Under the cash-and-stock deal, Unilever shareholders would receive a 65% stake in the new business. The deal hasn’t been warmly received by some European investors, who are wary of exposure to leveraged U.S.-listed food assets.
The McCormick deal fits into Unilever’s wider strategy to focus on beauty, personal care, and home products — shedding food exposure in the process.
Over recent years, Unilever has spun off its ice-cream arm into Magnum Ice Cream, sold its tea business, and divested its margarine and spreads brands.
Magnum Ice Cream, which includes Ben & Jerry’s, reported Q1 organic sales growth of 4.5%, beating the 2.6% analyst estimate. Revenue hit €1.77 billion for the quarter.
RBC Capital Markets analysts noted that Home Care and Latin America were the top performers for organic sales growth in Q1 — up 6.1% and 6.2% on year, respectively.
Home Care’s growth was entirely volume-driven. In Latin America, both volume and price contributed to the organic growth figure.
Turnover for the quarter fell to €12.6 billion, down 3.3% on year, largely in line with expectations.
Full-year guidance remains unchanged. Unilever expects underlying sales growth at the bottom end of its 4%–6% multi-year range, with at least 2% underlying volume growth, and a modest improvement in operating margin versus the 20.0% recorded in 2025.
The company also confirmed its €1.5 billion share buyback programme — announced in February — begins today and is expected to wrap up by July 6.
The post Unilever (UL) Stock: Power Brands and Emerging Markets Drive Q1 Beat appeared first on CoinCentral.

