P&G posts solid performance but is braced for tariff-related cost increases

Procter
FinanceNews

Procter & Gamble (P&G) – the parent company of Ariel, Fairy, Always and other brands – reported strong full-year results, with operating profit up 10% to approximately £15.4bn, in the year ending 30 June.

Net profit increased by 7% to around £12bn, while net sales remained flat year-over-year at £62.9bn. While higher pricing led to a 1% increase in sales, which was offset by negative foreign exchange impact.

The company also saw its organic sales increase by 2% in the fiscal year 2025.

Jon Moeller, P&G’s chief executive said: “We grew sales and profit in fiscal 2025 and returned high levels of cash to shareowners in a dynamic, difficult, and volatile environment. We’ve put in place strong plans to continue to deliver for all stakeholders in the current environment.


Subscribe to Grocery Gazette for free

Sign up here to get the latest grocery and food news each morning


“We remain committed to our integrated strategy, a focused product portfolio of daily use categories where performance drives brand choice and superiority across product performance, packaging, brand communication, retail execution, and consumer and customer value.”

Moving forward, the firm predicted a single-digit growth between 1% and 5% for all-in sales in the upcoming year. Additionally, the FMCG giant expects organic sales growth to be between 0% and 4%.

However, the US-headquartered company is anticipating a heavy hit from the additional tariffs, with an approximately £0.75bn loss being predicted for the upcoming year.

Earlier this year in April, P&G warned of price hikes as it tried to mitigate the costs of higher taxes on foreign goods.

Andre Schulten, chief financial officer of P&G, said in a call with journalists at the time: “We will have to pull every lever we have in our arsenal to mitigate the impact of tariffs within our cost structure and Procter & Gamble.”

FinanceNews

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

FinanceNews

Share:

P&G posts solid performance but is braced for tariff-related cost increases

Procter

Procter & Gamble (P&G) – the parent company of Ariel, Fairy, Always and other brands – reported strong full-year results, with operating profit up 10% to approximately £15.4bn, in the year ending 30 June.

Net profit increased by 7% to around £12bn, while net sales remained flat year-over-year at £62.9bn. While higher pricing led to a 1% increase in sales, which was offset by negative foreign exchange impact.

The company also saw its organic sales increase by 2% in the fiscal year 2025.

Jon Moeller, P&G’s chief executive said: “We grew sales and profit in fiscal 2025 and returned high levels of cash to shareowners in a dynamic, difficult, and volatile environment. We’ve put in place strong plans to continue to deliver for all stakeholders in the current environment.


Subscribe to Grocery Gazette for free

Sign up here to get the latest grocery and food news each morning


“We remain committed to our integrated strategy, a focused product portfolio of daily use categories where performance drives brand choice and superiority across product performance, packaging, brand communication, retail execution, and consumer and customer value.”

Moving forward, the firm predicted a single-digit growth between 1% and 5% for all-in sales in the upcoming year. Additionally, the FMCG giant expects organic sales growth to be between 0% and 4%.

However, the US-headquartered company is anticipating a heavy hit from the additional tariffs, with an approximately £0.75bn loss being predicted for the upcoming year.

Earlier this year in April, P&G warned of price hikes as it tried to mitigate the costs of higher taxes on foreign goods.

Andre Schulten, chief financial officer of P&G, said in a call with journalists at the time: “We will have to pull every lever we have in our arsenal to mitigate the impact of tariffs within our cost structure and Procter & Gamble.”

FinanceNews

Social

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR DAILY NEWSLETTER

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Most Read

FinanceNews

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.

RELATED STORIES

Most Read

Latest Feature

Menu

Please enter the verification code sent to your email: