Unilever aims to grow through volume, not price

In Unilever’s half-year results, the multinational’s food segments saw a slight increase in volume growth, complementing its aim to let volume drive growth. Conversely, commodity deflation in some areas has seen Unilever reducing price growth significantly compared to previous years.

Uptick in volume

Overall volume growth for the half-year was 2.6%, compared with a 2.2% volume growth in Q1​. According to Hein Schumacher, Unilever’s CEO, the company hopes growth to be driven by an improvement in volume sales.   

Nutrition, which in Q1 saw a decline in volume growth by 0.4%, has now reached a flat volume growth, with sales driven by ‘power brands’ Knorr and Hellman’s, collectively representing two thirds of turnover for the category.

However, growth in ice cream was ‘clearly below our ambition’, said Unilever’s COO Fernando Fernandez. It had an underlying volume growth of -1%, even more significant than the negative 0.9% underlying volume growth of Q1. Growth has been negatively affected by shortfalls in China due to tougher market conditions, and shortfalls in Europe due to poor weather at the start of the summer season. Unilever’s separation from ice-cream​ will be completed by 2025.

Europe also returned to volume growth from its -1.5% volume growth in Q1. Now, Europe has seen a volume growth of 0.5% in these half-year results.

The growth in prices for Unilever has also slowed due to the reversal of the commodities cycle, said Fernandez, with the moderate return of commodity inflation.