Unilever PLCULCOMMENTJun 03, 2014Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 05, 2026. Market Open.
New management has made this a growth business again. Earnings and margins are rising. Cost structure is fantastic. Are in 190 countries. Are spinning off their ice cream business which should create shareholder value. Trades at 17x PE and pays a 3.3% dividend. One of the fastest growing consumer products companies.
(Analysts’ price target is $69.60)Consumer staples are outperforming in the last few days, and that speaks to the advantage of having a balanced portfolio. Companies like KHC, UL, KVUE, and Nestle. It's not that they won't be affected (their costs would go up), but they're far less cyclical than other businesses. Earnings will be much more stable. Earnings could fall 10%, but not 50%. Dividends will be sustained.
Companies like Unilever and Nestle are huge in NA, but huge globally as well.
60% of revenues come outside North America, which are currencies that are fading against the strong US dollar which rose along with interest rates. If the USD falls, then the S&P could underperform (they've outperformed the past 10 years). UL needs a lower USD to increase earnings. He still owns it. Pays a near-4% dividend, so he's holding onto it and waiting.
This is in the category of a long-term, core holding for a lot of global fund managers. A 20 year chart for this company looks like an escalator. Return is about 12% per year. About 55% of the business comes from emerging markets, and management is looking to grow that more and more over time. Has a collection of very strong brands with over 400 brands in their portfolio, and 25 of them are equal to 70% of sales. Nice dividend yield of 3.8%.