Akzo Nobel suspends 2023 outlook, hit by destocking, high costs By Reuters


© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Cans of Dulux paint, an Akzo Nobel brand, are seen on the shelves of a hardware store near Manchester, Britain, April 24, 2017. REUTERS/Phil Noble

By Elena Vardon

(Reuters) -Dutch paints and coatings maker Akzo Nobel (OTC:) on Thursday warned of a continuing impact in its fourth quarter from high raw materials costs and too much stock as it suspended its 2023 profit guidance.

The Amsterdam-based group, which makes the Dulux and Flexa paints and supplies sectors ranging from aerospace to yachts, said it expects a core profit below 150 million euros ($146.73 million) for the fourth quarter after posting 201 million in the third quarter and 209 million euros in the fourth quarter last year.

“Softening demand and destocking means more negative pressure on our margins from weaker volumes before we start realizing the long-awaited margin expansion in 2023,” said chief executive Thierry Vanlancker, set to be replaced by French businessman Gregoire Poux-Guillaume on Nov. 1st.

“We’re lowering the expectation for all the dynamics we have”, he added on the company’s fourth-quarter assumptions.

Sales volumes for the fourth quarter are expected to drop by a mid- to high-single digit percentage compared to last year. The impact from raw material and freight inflation is expected to be in the range of 210-240 million euros, the company said.

The company’s significant inventories of raw materials bought at previous high prices still have “to be flushed out of the system”, Vanlancker said.

It had so far managed to pass on costs to consumers, increasing its prices by 22% in two years.

“That inflated balloon of raw material price really is deflating pretty quickly now, and that’s going to be a bit ugly for 3-4 months until it actually gets back to normal”, Vanlancker said.

The paintmaker’s shares fell 2-3% in morning trading.

Akzo Nobel suspended its core profit outlook of 2 billion euros in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) in 2023, blaming macroeconomic turbulence which is negatively affecting consumer confidence.

Analysts average consensus estimates stand at 1.22 billion euros for 2022 and 1.53 billion for 2023, according to a recent poll published on Akzo Nobel’s website.

($1 = 1.0223 euros)

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