Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Carlsberg Q1 2026 Trading Statement conference call. I am Healy, the conference call operator. I would like to remind you that all participants will be in listen-only mode, and the conference is being recorded. The presentation will be followed by a Q&A session. You can register for questions at any time by pressing star and one on your telephone. For operator assistance, please press star and zero. The conference must not be recorded for publication or broadcast. At this time, it's my pleasure to hand over to Jacob Aarup-Andersen, CEO. Please go ahead.
Thank you very much, operator, and good morning, everyone, and welcome to Carlsberg's Q1 2026 conference call. As said, my name is Jacob Aarup-Andersen, and I have with me, as always, our CFO, Ulrica Fearn, and Vice President Investor Relations, Peter Kondrup. Let me begin by summarizing the key headlines for the quarter.
First of all, we delivered a good start to the year. Our growth categories delivered strong results. Our Asia region returned to solid growth, and we confirm our earnings guidance for the year. Finally, last week, we reached another milestone with PepsiCo when we announced the takeover of the Pepsi franchises in Denmark, Finland, and the Baltics from first of January 2029. Now, let's turn to slide three and the key Q1 figures for the group. I said we had a good start to the year.
We delivered 2.8% organic volume growth. We delivered growth in all three regions, and that was supported by an aggregate growth of 7% for our growth categories. All three regions contributed to the 1% improvement in revenue per hectoliter. Organic revenue grew by 3.6%. Reported growth was 3% as the positive acquisition impact related to Britvic, which was 2.7%, was offset by currencies, in particular the Chinese, Indian, and British currencies.
Let's go to slide four and an update on our growth categories and, of course, our international brands. Premium beer volumes grew organically by 3%, with premium Carlsberg and Tuborg being particularly strong contributors. We saw good growth in all three regions, with particularly strong growth in the Nordics, U.K., the Baltics, and India.
Our soft drinks portfolio grew strongly by 10%, driven by really good growth across most markets, including the U.K., Nordics, Switzerland, Laos, and of course, Kazakhstan, where we are ramping up the Pepsi business. Excluding Kazakhstan, soft drinks still grew by an impressive 6%. Volume growth in the quarter was impacted by the SKU rationalization and exit of unprofitable contracts in France and Brazil in the latter part of Q1 and Q2 last year when we took over the Britvic business. Alcohol-free brews grew by double-digit in Western Europe. Growth was broad-based across markets, with Poland standing out, delivering very strong performance. We also saw good growth in most markets in Central and Eastern Europe, including in Ukraine. Total alcohol-free brew volumes grew by 7%.
In Beyond Beer, we saw solid growth for Garage, but that was offset by Somersby, which declined in markets such as Poland, Laos, and certain export and license markets. The Carlsberg brand saw volume growth of 10%, driven by very good growth in premium markets such as China and India and the mainstream U.K. market. Tuborg grew by 4%, this was supported by strong growth in markets such as China, India, and Nepal. 1664 Blanc grew by 2%. That was driven by good growth across many markets, including for the alcohol-free version of the brand, partly offset by lower volumes in China. Let's take slide five and a few words on the expanded partnership with Pepsi, which we announced last week.
From the 1st of January 2029, we're going to take over the bottling rights in Denmark, including the German border trade, Finland, and the three Baltic states. We're very excited about the agreement. It makes sense on so many levels when you look at our partnership and how it has evolved over the years. Carlsberg is already PepsiCo's largest bottler in Europe. This long-standing strategic partnership spans more than 25 years of successful bottling partnerships in markets across Europe, Central Asia, and Southeast Asia. The new agreement makes Carlsberg the sole Pepsi bottler in the Nordics and Baltics, and it further solidifies the partnership with PepsiCo. As part of the agreement, we've also extended the contracts in Norway and Sweden, giving us very long contracts in all four Nordic and the three Baltic markets.
Expanding our partnership with PepsiCo allows us to further benefit from its strong portfolio and the robust performance of the Pepsi brand, not least Pepsi Max within the no sugar segment. We believe we can further accelerate the growth of the Pepsi portfolio via our strong route to market, especially in the on-trade channel. We also see long-term growth prospects and value creation opportunities from launching more products and future innovations from the Pepsi portfolio.
Having one Nordic-Baltic Pepsi cluster will allow us to explore opportunities for cross-border synergies and scale benefits within areas such as production, new product launches, etc. Before moving on, I want to make it very clear that we've had a very good partnership with Coca-Cola, and we will remain a committed Coca-Cola bottler until expiration of the contract at the end of 2028.
Now slide six and our new ESG program, which we launched in early March. The new program is called Brewing Tomorrow, and it strengthens our commitment to sustainability. Built around four pillars, which is Cutting Carbon, Protecting Nature, Empowering People, and Inspiring Choice, Brewing Tomorrow provides a simple and actionable roadmap. We raised our climate ambition by introducing updated absolute Scope three carbon reduction targets in line with the requirements of the Science Based Targets Initiative.
We're also deepening our commitments to regenerative agriculture and recycled materials. Because of our increased exposure to soft drinks, we've added new sugar reduction targets. The program also introduces a new target focused on employees' experience of inclusion while maintaining the target on women in senior leadership position. Brewing Tomorrow builds on our learnings from the past and decades of reducing our impacts while updating our focus for the future and supporting business growth.
As with the previous ESG program, it's embedded in how we run our operations, how we engage across our value chain, and how we develop our people and create more choice across our expanding portfolio. Let's go to slide seven. Coinciding with the launch of Brewing Tomorrow, we launched our first-ever consolidated climate transition plan. This marks a milestone in our journey towards a low carbon future. Building on nearly a decade of progress, the plan lays out our decarbonization roadmap towards 2032, describing the key levers for reducing emissions across agriculture, processing, own operations, packaging, transportation, and distribution, and cooling.
Our emission reduction targets are approved by the Science Based Targets Initiative, it raises our climate ambition by introducing updated absolute Scope three reduction targets. While we recognize that global macroeconomic conditions and the pace of supplier decarbonization, which is often outside of our direct influence, that may affect how we quickly progress towards our goals, our focus remains clear. We want to deliver on our climate commitment to secure a sustainable future for our business, our people, our consumers, and for society as a whole. If you want to know more, the full plan is available on carlsberggroup.com. Now over to Ulrica, who will go through the regions and the outlook.
Thank you, Jacob, and good morning, everyone. Please go to slide eight and for Western Europe. Before we go into details here, remember that Q1 is the smallest quarter in this region. Nonetheless, we had a solid start to the year and delivered 1.2% organic volume growth, driven by 5% aggregate organic growth for our growth categories. In Western Europe, these account for around 70% of total volumes. The growth was supported by the earlier sell-in to the Easter than last year. Reported total volume growth was 6.6%, and this was due to the positive acquisition impact from Britvic of 5.4%.
Organic revenue growth was 1.5%, and reported revenue growth was 5.6%, and this as the Britvic acquisition contributed by 4.6% and partly offset by small currency impact by -0.5%. Revenue per hectoliter grew slightly, positively impacted by price increases and mix in beer, partly countered by category mix, and this is due to mid-single digit growth in soft drinks. Looking at the markets in the region, our U.K. business continued the good momentum from last year, delivering strong growth ahead of the market in both beer and soft drinks. The latter was supported by good results for the Pepsi portfolio, while the growth in beer was driven by very positive figures for Carlsberg, 1664, and Poretti.
Total volumes grew by mid-single digits, also supported by the sell-in to Easter, which was earlier than last year. The Nordics saw high single-digit volume growth, which was supported by the sell-in to Easter. Our growth categories, including soft drinks, premium beer, and alcohol-free brews, saw very good growth rates, and mainstream beer also saw positive growth rates in all markets except Finland. In a slightly growing beer market in France, we strengthened our beer market share driven by our premium brands. Volume in Teisseire, the former Britvic business in France, were down significantly due to last year's portfolio optimization actions and exits from unprofitable customer contracts. Our business in Switzerland was in the beginning of Q1 impacted by the customer conflict in Q4 last year.
Trade remained under pressure, our business caught up and total volumes for the quarter grew by low single digits, mainly driven by the local Feldschlösschen and Valaisanne brands. We also saw continued positive momentum for Pepsi. The Polish beer market was weak in Q1, that was impacted by cold weather. In addition, our volumes were impacted by price increases ahead of the market and stocking prior to the implementation of a deposit return system in December.
We were encouraged to see good results for our growth categories, albeit this was not enough to offset lower volumes for mainstream beer. Now let's go to slide nine and Asia. Here we saw solid organic volume growth of 3.4%, driven by 6% growth for our growth categories, which account for more than 40% of volumes, but also positive development of mainstream volumes.
Revenue per hectoliter improved by 1%, resulting in organic revenue growth of 4.4%. Due to a negative currency impact of -6.3%, reported revenue development was -1.9%. The revenue per hectoliter improvement was driven by positive category mix and price increases and partly offset by country mix. We did not see any impact from the conflict in the Middle East in the quarter. In China, we continued to grow in the big cities, driven by the premium brands such as Carlsberg, Tuborg, and Wind Flower Snow Moon and also Jing-A.
While mainstream volumes in some of our western strongholds were under pressure, impacted by the soft macro economy and tough competition. Our premium volumes grew 3%, and we also saw good initial traction of a local soft drinks launch. Total volumes and revenue per hectoliter were up slightly, the latter mainly due to a positive product mix. In Laos, our volumes grew by high single digits, supported by market growth and stabilization of the economy in January and February, and sell-in in March ahead of the Pi Mai celebrations in April, despite the increasing fuel shortage.
Growth was particularly strong for soft drinks, being in the mid-teens, and volume growth for beer was slow low single digits. Our business in Vietnam delivered very strong growth on the back of easy comps and good momentum during the festive season. The growth was in particular supported by very strong growth of the local Huda brand on the back of strong market demand in its stronghold in the central part of the country.
We saw very good growth for 1664 Blanc, supported by good performance in the modern channel during the festive season. Now Slide 10 and C&I, which delivered a set of strong figures for the first quarter. Volumes grew officially, organically by 4.6% with 14% aggregate growth post-defied growth categories. Revenue per hectoliter improved by 3%, leading to organic revenue growth of 8.1%. Reported revenue growth was 3.1% due to the depreciation of the currencies in India, Ukraine and Nepal.
Revenue per hectoliter was positively impacted by price increases and solid growth of premium beer and alcohol-free brews, partly offset by category mix due to the strong growth of soft drinks in Kazakhstan. We continued our strong performance in India, seeing double-digit volume growth supported by strong growth for Tuborg Strong and Carlsberg Elephant. The business delivered solid revenue per hectoliter growth due to premium growth and a positive state mix. In February, we said that we are exploring different options for increasing shareholder value, which may potentially include an IPO of our business in India, but no final decision has been made, and this remains the situation.
Our business in Nepal also saw strong volume growth with the local Gorkha brand and Tuborg being the main drivers. We did not see any impact from the conflict in the Middle East, in India and Nepal in Q1. Our business in Ukraine continued to be impacted by the war, leading to double-digit volume decline, and the volume decline decreased towards the end of the quarter as the intensity of large-scale attacks did decrease. In Kazakhstan, the growth was around 70% due to the ramp-up of the Pepsi business in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.
The team in Kazakhstan is doing a fantastic job building our Pepsi business, and we have achieved incredible results in just six months. We're looking forward to the peak season in Q2 and Q3, and also finalizing the construction of our facility later this year. Our volumes in Brazil declined due to last year's SKU rationalization and business optimization. Volume in export and license businesses declined slightly, and this was mainly due to lower Tuborg volumes in license market.
We continued to build new businesses and added a number of new license markets both in Central Europe and Africa. Now please go to slide 11 and a few comments on the current situation in the Middle East. To date, we have not seen any significant impact from the conflict on consumer sentiment or on our business. That said, we are monitoring the situation closely. Let me provide some context on how we're managing the situation and preparing the business should the conflict be prolonged and begin to impact consumers and or our operations.
We have considerable experience in successfully mitigating negative impacts from uncertainty and substantial changes in the operating environment in a fast and disciplined manner. Examples include COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine and the subsequent inflationary and commodity shocks. These experience have strengthened our processes and our preparedness for managing unforeseen large-scale disruptions.
Our focus is centered around three areas: consumer behavior, commodity development, and potential supply chain disruptions. With respect to consumer behavior, we are, we have prepared a range of commercial initiatives that can be deployed should we see meaningful changes in the consumer dynamics across our markets. Those initiatives are centered around price and pack initiatives, as well as certain brand initiatives.
On commodities, the situation remains highly volatile. We follow our usual practices for hedging with hedges in place for 2026 and into 2027 for key commodities such as aluminum, barley, sugar and energy. We are a bit more opportunistic in hedging than usual and try to take advantages when the market prices dip. As you know, our policy is to offset cost increases through increasing our revenue per hectoliter by utilizing the full value management toolbox, including levers such as prices, promo, and pack sizes, etc.
On supply chain disruption, we have mapped our key risk exposures, including the availability of critical raw and packaging materials and energy. We have mitigations plans in place such as alternative supplier and energy sources, which can be activated if required. Overall, we're in a good place and believe that we are well prepared. However, if the conflict were to continue for an extended period, it would inevitably make mitigation increasingly challenging over time. Please go to slide 12 and the earnings outlook for the year.
We had a good start of the year, of course, we still have the important summer months ahead of us. We maintain a full year expectation of flat-ish cost of sales per hectoliter for the group, albeit with variations between regions and markets. We confirm our earnings expectations for 2026 of an organic operating profit NPM growth of 2%-6%. We started the year with good momentum across most markets, have good commercial plans in place. We maintain tight cost discipline. The Britvic synergies are coming through.
Based on yesterday's FX rate, we assume a translation impact on operating profit of around 0% for 2026 compared to the previous expectations of DKK -100 million. Other relevant assumptions are unchanged. We expect financial expenses, excluding FX, of around DKK 2.2 billion, reported effective tax rate of around 23% and CapEx of around DKK 6 billion-DKK 7 billion. With that, back to you, Jacob.
Thank you, Ulrica. Let's turn to slide 13. Before opening up for Q&A, let me just summarize the first quarter. As Ulrica also evidenced here, we delivered a good start to the year. Our growth categories delivered strong results across the board. Our Asia region returned to solid growth. We can firmly confirm our earnings guidance for the year.
Last week, we reached another milestone with PepsiCo when we announced the takeover of the Pepsi franchises in Denmark, Finland and the Baltic States from the January 1st, 2029. Let's now begin the Q&A session as usual. We will limit the number of questions to two per person to ensure that as many as possible get a chance to get through. After your questions, you are, of course, very welcome to join the queue again. With that, handing over to you, operator.
We will now begin the question- and- answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the telephone. You will hear a tone to confirm that you have entered the queue. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Questioners on the phone are requested to disable the loudspeaker mode while asking a question. Anyone who has a question may press star and one at this time. The first question comes from the line of Andrea Pistacchi from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you. Good morning, Jacob, Ulrica, and Peter. I have two questions. The first one is this: I mean, there's been a lot of discussion in recent weeks about potential higher COGS inflation next year and uncertain environment in Europe. You commented a bit on this in your last slide. I just wanted to ask you how you feel about your ability to take enough price, particularly in Europe. How would you assess pricing power in soft drinks versus beer and differences in your ability to take price across different markets in Europe? Potentially, I don't know, easier in Scandinavia, for example. The second question is a bit about the phasing and technical effects impacting Q1.
Some were positive, like the Easter timing, first-time inclusion of Pepsi Kazakhstan, but also I think some negatives like the phasing you alluded to in Poland or discontinuation of some of Britvic's businesses. Where do you reckon all of this nets out? What do you think is a sort of underlying volume of sales growth for Q1, and how should we think about phasing effects impacting Q2? Thanks.
Hi, Andrea. Thank you so much. Now, on your detailed question here around higher cost COGS inflation in next year. Of course, I think it's a given, I think, for all companies that if you extrapolate the current spot prices and you expect those to continue throughout 2027 as well, it's of course higher prices than what everyone has on their current hedges. That's mathematically a given result. You are right. If that continues, it will have a cost impact on a business like ours. Ulrica just laid out very nicely how we're fully hedged in 2026 and of course, monitoring the situation. If this continues in 2027, there will be extra cost to cover.
I think, I would refer back to what Ulrica said, which is very clearly that we have a very, very well-drilled value management playbook that we have utilized again and again. You've seen that year in, year out, how we manage these types of external shocks, and we deliver earnings growth to our shareholders every single year. We are confident that that playbook is very well built for this situation as well. It involves everything around price pack promo as you would expect. You ask specifically in that context around price increases, and you are fully aware, I know that we cannot be specific around price increases on a call like this. Unfortunately, I cannot go into the details you ask around different countries versus each other and different categories versus each other.
What I can say with confidence is that the Carlsberg way has always been that if we see additional costs coming through, we will ensure that we utilize value management to cover that cost and protect our earnings. One of those tools is, of course, price increases. That has been the case all along, and it continues to be the case.
We also expect that there will be a clear understanding if we see that scenario you refer to, if that continues to play out, there will also be a clear understanding by everyone, all participants in the value chain, that these costs are coming through when they need to be addressed. That's our expectation. We, let's see, we're sitting here end of April, I think it's too early to have a firm view on where commodity prices are in a year's time. Of course, I can guarantee you that we are monitoring on a daily basis, and we have all the tools in the toolbox to ensure we protect our profitability. Ulrica, over to you.
Yeah. The question around facing in the many ups and downs, and you referred to Easter in Poland and also the couple of comments I made around Brazil and our French business from Britvic. There are many ups and downs, and all I can say is that, of course, Easter is a movement between March and April. I can also comment on the Britvic businesses in Brazil and France.
They did have an impact in Q1, and that impact will be less in Q2 as we took the action of taking away unprofitable volume growth volumes in both Brazil and Teisseire in Q1, that those volumes were still there in Q1. We saw a negative year-on-year growth from them, and that will not be there in Q2 when the actions were already taken. All in all, I can say that it was good results this quarter, and we're looking into a Q2 where we're seeing growth as well.
Thank you very much.
The next question comes from the line of Olivier Nicolai from GS. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, Jacob, Ulrica, and Peter. Two questions, please. Can you give a bit more details on the current trends you see in Asia? When China was back to growth in Q1, do you expect sustainable growth for the market this year? On Vietnam, Laos, and India, I know it's not in Asia for you, but do you see any impact on packaging supply due to the Middle East conflict?
Obviously, going back to last week's announcements on the expansion of your presence for Pepsi in the Nordics and Baltics, could you perhaps go through little bit more details on the synergies you will get from being the main Pepsi bottler for the whole region? Would you effectively expect the EBIT contribution from the new Pepsi license to be higher than what you get from Coca-Cola today once you take into account the synergies? Thank you.
Thank you, Olivier. Let me take both of those. Well, you're starting in Asia, let's start there. Thanks for the recognition that India is not in Carlsberg Asia. We do recognize it's probably in Asia in real world. If we look at it's been a good start for all the countries you mentioned. It's great to see a broad-based growth in Q1 across our Asian markets, including India and Nepal in the CNI region. If we take them, you asked about China. China, yes, China started in growth, not significant growth, but slight growth in the first quarter. When we look at the year, we do expect low single-digit growth in China.
We expect a relatively stable market. We're not seeing the consumer behavior change significantly in China, but we saw a relatively stable Q1 from a market perspective, and our current forecast is that that continues for the rest of the year, which also means that we should be up low single-digit growth in China. On Vietnam, strong recovery. You know, we worked incredibly hard in the second half of last year on our distribution and route to market, and refocused also some of our brand strategies there. We're seeing a good result of that, especially the Huda brand doing incredibly well in the central region. We're growing in Q1 by more than 30%.
When we look at the rest of the year, we expect continued growth in Vietnam, not those types of growth rates, but we expect positive growth for year to go in Vietnam as well. On Laos, same, I think we sat here a quarter ago and told you that we expected Vietnam and Laos to return to growth in 2026. You saw it in Q1. We also expect Laos to be delivering growth for the rest of the year. Both of them recovering after a tougher 2025 for different reasons, but both of them clearly executing on their plans. Also Laos, we're also seeing a stabilizing consumer helping out. Generally good developments across these key Asian markets. You asked about India.
Listen, India and Nepal, those two markets, both delivering double-digit growth in the quarter. As we look at the rest of the year, we are of course restricted on how we talk about India given the potential IPO we are considering. Generally, we see good developments in these markets. The question specifically was on packaging, you said in India. We have on supply chain, I think the only place where we have had to do extra work around suppliers, etc, has been in India and Nepal, where some suppliers have been under pressure in the short term. We have swiftly operated around that, given our global supply chain organization.
We do not have a concern around supply chain constraints in India and Nepal as we have secured alternative suppliers and are also working very well with our local Indian and Nepalese supply chain, who have also worked up different ways of securing their energy supplies. Overall, supply chain constraints are not a limiting factor for our growth in these markets. Your other question was on the Pepsi announcement last week. Listen, we're super excited about that. If you look at it, what it gives us is that we believe that the combined business will drive higher growth rates as we kick off from 2029 and onwards. We believe we can drive higher growth.
We can do that because we have a stronger route to market and, especially in on-trade. It's clearly more synergistic for us and for Pepsi, so we will create one system across the Nordic region and the Baltics. That one system has significant synergies over time, both in terms of production, distribution, sales, etc. It gives us a different level of flexibility around how we manage and build scale. We see some clear synergies and also an ability to now be one system around product innovation across markets.
I'm not gonna comment on EBIT. I think that would be sitting here commenting on an EBIT three, four years out, that would be a little bit too aggressive. Overall, we're not doing this because we wanna do something that's dilutive to us, of course. This is something that truly creates value for our shareholders. It also really consolidates and increases the partnership with Pepsi, which we also think will deliver more value-enhancing partnerships in other markets over the next couple of years.
Thank you very much.
We now have a question from the line of Simon Hales from Citi. Please go ahead.
Thanks. Morning, yeah, good morning, Ulrica. Good morning, Peter. A couple then. Can I just start on Kazakhstan and the 70% growth you saw in Q1 there? Clearly, it contributes to about 4%, which points to your group's soft drinks volumes in the quarter. How do we think about the performance of that business as we head into Q2 and Q3? I think obviously seasonality-wise, they're more important quarters. You know, should we expect a step up in the contribution of growth from Kazakhstan going forward? Are we still on track to open the plant on the ground in Q3? That was my first, you know, sort of question.
Going back to China, I mean, could you sort of just provide a bit more color on what gives you the confidence in that move up towards low single digit growth as we look forward over the next few quarters and think about the full year trend, given the difference in performance we're seeing between premium and mainstream on the ground there?
Yeah. Ulrica, do you wanna start on Kazakhstan?
I will start on Kazakhstan. As you said, we saw clearly good momentum in Kazakhstan in Q1, a lot of it was of course the selling also of the soft drinks portfolio. Your question around how that will face into the next quarter, we are of course standing in front of the two big quarters for Kazakhstan, Q2 and Q3, the volumes will be a little bit bigger in those two quarters. Overall, I think it will be a little bit bigger overall as the impact. However, I will also say that those are also two quarters that are bigger for the rest of the portfolio. Along the lines of what we've been seeing now, but maybe a little bit higher.
In terms of the production facilities and where we are, we are still, as I said before, very much up and pushing to get our facility up and running by the end of Q3 2026, and then start ramping up throughout the rest of the year. That's what we're still planning to do and are pushing to do and see the main scenario is absolutely that that will happen.
Simon, let me talk to China. Thanks, Ulrica. A little bit more color on China, of course. You're right, when we've seen over the first quarter, which is a continuation of what we've seen for a number of quarters, is that premium, we continue to see good premium growth for the business. You know, you of course know fully the fabric of our business, this bifurcation between the big cities and the strongholds. As we look at the performance again this quarter, we're seeing big cities do well. We see 4% growth in big cities, basically mid-single digit, we see the strongholds being down a little bit, single digit, a little bit more than 1%.
That mix is along the lines of what we've seen over the last couple of quarters. What we're seeing is for the rest of the year, we see a continuation of strong growth in e-commerce, in O2O, and in convenience and off-trade, which is where we have our continued growth vectors given our, the positioning of our portfolio. At the same time, we're also seeing that the new formats continue to drive significant growth. You know, I look at the 1 l cans in our numbers, they continue to grow very fast. We're adding more lines to the business.
If you look at our premium brands, I look at a Carlsberg growing by more than 20%. I look at a Tuborg with strong growth and a WuSu with good growth. All of that continuing good growth in the market. There is growth to be had in this market despite a relatively constrained consumer. What we expect for the rest of the year is that big cities will continue to deliver this type of growth, mid-single digit, probably a little bit better than at the moment. Then it's our strongholds, which have been under pressure for a little while because of broader macroeconomy, but also some tough competition in some of the big cities in our strongholds.
Of course, we're not sitting on our hands, so we're also looking at very hard and working very hard with our route to market, our distribution and also our more tactical initiatives around some of these stronghold cities to make sure that we regain momentum. Overall, I would expect as we look through the year that our strongholds pick up the performance a bit while the big cities continue their good growth.
Brilliant.
Thanks, Simon.
The next question comes from Søren Samsøe from SEB. Please go ahead.
Yes, good morning, Jacob, Ulrica, and Peter. If we zoom in a little bit on the soft drink business in Q1, maybe you can just break down how much of the growth is coming from your Pepsi franchise and how much is coming from Coca-Cola. Also, maybe sort of, give an indication of how much the non-sugar part of the portfolio is growing. The part with sugar, how much is that growing? Thank you.
Hey, Søren. Thanks for the questions. Unfortunately, we cannot comment on the difference between Pepsi and Coke performance because for contractual reasons. We are growing with both. When you look at the numbers here, there is growth in both the Coke portfolio and the Pepsi portfolio in Q1. Of course, as you know, at this stage, the Pepsi portfolio is significantly bigger than the Coke portfolio after the addition of Britvic, so U.K. and Ireland and Kazakhstan, etc. The Coke portfolio in the Danish and Finnish market is also providing growth in Q1. I can't give you the specific numbers. When you look at sugar, non-sugar, it's gonna be somewhat the same answer.
We don't give the split for competitive reasons, but It's very clear is that the non-sugar portfolio is growing significantly faster than the sugar portfolio. We're seeing significant growth in non-sugar versus sugar. Of course, on a like-for-like basis. Of course, that's also one of the reasons why we continue to expand our market presence, but especially Pepsi Max, which is a very strong winning formula in markets. That's also when you look at the conversations we're having around potential additional markets in the coming years, it's especially that Pepsi Max proposition that is one of the key value drivers as well.
Adding in Kazakhstan, the reason why I said like for like, adding in Kazakhstan is compared to the Western markets we have, Kazakhstan is higher, has a higher starting point on sugar, and they are earlier in the journey on moving towards non-sugar. That, by the way, we see as a great growth opportunity in Kazakhstan as well. Sorry about the, sorry about not being able to give you concrete numbers because we would breach contract. Hopefully, the direction helps you a little bit.
Yes, yes. Thank you. Maybe I can just throw in one more question, which is if you can talk a little bit about the opportunities it will give you to have the Pepsi products in the portfolio in these new five new countries?
Yeah, yeah. Happy to. Peter is allowing another question because the other one was a sort of one question. We'll go with it. No, if you look at it, first of all, of course, we are in no way diminishing the Coke portfolio we have in Denmark and Finland. It's a good portfolio. We're not saying that the Pepsi portfolio introduces many new categories or anything like that. We do believe that we have a very strong proven model around how we work with the Pepsi brands across markets, and we also have a very strong innovation model with Pepsi, which is especially one of the key advantages when we look at product portfolio going forward.
First of all, we think Pepsi Max has a very strong momentum also in the two markets you're talking about. It's an underlying structural momentum, which is more driven by consumer preference on longer term. The other element is that we see, we see the partnership we have with Pepsi in a number of markets and of course, especially post the U.K., entering our portfolio. We see a lot of innovation, collaborations, a lot of innovations around future portfolio that we can then extend to these markets as well, which can give us a competitive advantage. I think the Pepsi portfolio is moving in very exciting ways at the moment.
There's a lot of exciting innovations coming through in the coming years, and part of them are also innovations that we are working with Pepsi on. That makes us excited. Much more focus also on adding categories into categories of especially in the functional area where we see a lot of growth. You saw us adding for the first market outside of the U.S., we were the first ones to add Poppi in the U.K., which has so far been off to a great start in the U.K. Poppi, of course, is truly functional with prebiotic soft drinks, and I think Poppi is a great example of some of the innovation that will be coming through in the coming years.
The next question comes from the line of Edward Mundy from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Morning, Jacob, Ulrica, Peter. Two questions, please. The first is coming back to the Middle East. Appreciate that you haven't seen a change of behavior in Q1 in all of your markets, but since the end of the quarter, which markets are you monitoring most closely, and has there been any evolution in that? And as part of that same question, appreciate your key guidance two to six is unchanged.
But as part of that, you're looking at flattish, you know, cost of sales per hectoliter. Appreciate you're well hedged, but, you know, clearly there are some conversion costs within your COGS. Is that sort of still broadly achievable to get to flattish COGS per hectoliter, you know, given your hedging and supply chain efficiencies? That's my first question.
My second question is just, philosophically, I'd love to sort of pick your brains on sort of how you're thinking about the 4%-6%, you know, medium term, you know, revenue. You know, it's pretty clear that your growth categories, premium soft drinks, AFBs, and beyonds are flying, you know, growing +7%, and that's roughly half your business. The other sort of quote-unquote non-growth categories, you know, is there an opportunity to crank those up a little bit? Innovation, I mean, multi-bevs. How are you thinking philosophically about sort of the balance of getting to that 4%-6%, either through doing more with your growth or bringing up the non-growth?
Thank you so much, Edward. I think Ulrica will start, and then I will be philosophical with you afterwards.
We will start with the Middle East conflict. Yeah, as you heard, Ed, we have, and as you mentioned as well, we have not seen any material impact on consumer behavior in the regions. Jacob mentioned a little bit of action we took around India and Nepal around supply chain scenarios, which we've now got under control. In terms of areas that we're looking at, we're of course continuing across the whole world understanding what happens as this goes on.
Of course, Asia is one that we're looking very closely at, making sure that that is also continuing to run. We have mapped the different scenarios. We've understood where the risks lay. We have strong processes in place to ensure that we do have the transparency to see when things happen, we can take action quickly.
The same way as we did with COVID and the war in Ukraine, as both of those have unfortunately set us up in a good way in this scenario to make sure that we react quickly should something come up. That's how we're addressing it. Maybe then linked back to your flattish cost of sales per hectoliter comment, as I said, we have seen minimal supply chain disruption and so far. Of course, looking at our commodities are being very volatile at the moment and moving, specifically aluminum and energy are moving up.
We are well hedged in 2026, and we do of course also, as we always do, take a lot of action to make sure that it, the impact remains as low as it can be, and by taking all the actions we do around supply chain efficiencies, driving efficiencies through the breweries. Overall, there is a pressure on the way up, but we're confident we can hit our flattish cost of sales per hectoliter when we talk about that specifically.
I should say, though, as well, that generally overall costs are going up, and we will also make sure that we use our full armory around, also Jacob mentioned it earlier on, our value management actions as well when it comes to making sure we've got the right net revenue per hectoliter in this environment. We'll use the full range of pack, price, etc, to make sure that we mitigate in, on that line as well.
Thanks, Ulrica. Just echoing what Ulrica says, you're hearing a confident team because we know exactly what the playbook is, and we've unfortunately had to play this playbook a number of years in a row now, given the external environment. Just on your philosophical question of the 4%-6%, I think you're spot on, Ed, around the fact that we are really seeing the growth categories powering ahead. As you also know, it's now more than half of our business. Seeing these growth rates, it's very nice to see. We do expect them to continue to grow nicely. We for the coming years, we don't see any reason why they shouldn't.
Of course, quarters can be quarters, and you're probably not gonna deliver 10% soft drinks growth every quarter, but we do expect continued good growth. That leaves the philosophical question around the other part of the business being the more mainstream beer business. Actually, just a data point, because I think the news of the death of Western European beer is sometimes a little bit exaggerated. We look at Western Europe and we, if we take out Poland, which for all players has been a very, very tough market, of course, for all the reasons we all know. If you take out Poland, our Western European beer business grows by 2.5% in the quarter, and that's the mainstream beer business.
Of course, we are fully aware there's an Easter impact in there. It's just to say that Western European beer is a category that still has real potential in it. What we're doing at the moment is, we talked about that at the Capital Markets Day as well, we have a significant amount of work going into what we call reimagined beer in Carlsberg. I know our competitors have similar types of programs because we're all working incredibly hard on innovations around the core beer category. We think there's a lot of value to be had, and we also believe that we can bring core beer back to growth.
Some of it will be beer being mainstream beer volumes being converted into to premium and alcohol-free and functional types of alcohol products, etc. That's completely fine. We don't buy into the notion that the beer, the mainstream beer category is just a category in some type of terminal decline. It's definitely not, and you saw it also here in Q1.
I think there's a lot of innovation happening in the industry, and there's a lot of innovation coming out of us as well. Combine that with all the work on the growth categories, I think that all supports quite a healthy growth picture for the coming years. You saw a good Q1. When we look across the rest of the year, we expect that we can continue to grow volumes even in an environment with the uncertainty from the Middle East.
Thanks, Jacob. Just to follow up on mainstream beer, do you feel that the multi-bev model, given your multi-bev in lots of markets, does that give you a bit of an edge to sort of provide a boost to that mainstream beer, a bit more ballast to mainstream beer, as you try and, you know, kickstart that?
Yeah. Before I answer, Peter is signaling you owe him a beer now because this is your third question. The question is very, very spot on because what we do see is every market where we have a full multi-bev platform, we are not just driving good growth in those new multi-bev categories. We are also enhancing the value of our beer business. This creates true moats around our beer business, and it improves the beer performance.
Why? Because our portfolio becomes significantly more relevant to our customers, and in the end, that means it becomes more relevant to the consumer. We get better listings. We have a stronger and more important scale when we discuss listings with our, with our major retail customers, etc, etc. Multi-bev is not just around adding growth categories, it's also around enhancing the value of our beer business.
Great. Thank you.
We now have a question from the lines of Richard Withagen from Kepler Cheuvreux. Please go ahead.
Morning, Jacob, Ulrica, Peter. Two questions from me as well, please. First of all, on Vietnam, I mean, it's good to see you're back to growth, and the growth outlook you gave for the rest of the year, Jacob. But it's been volatile in the last few years. What are your, you know, what are the main strategic initiatives you're deploying to make the growth less volatile in Vietnam? The other question is on PepsiCo, on the new contract. What are the implications for the multi-bev business model in the new Nordics markets for you, as you need to convince your customers to swap the Coke portfolio for the Pepsi portfolio, and the Pepsi portfolio is probably a little bit less diversified than the Coke portfolio. Your thoughts on this, please.
Thanks, Richard. Happy to. Let me just talk to the two. On, on Vietnam, you're spot on. It's definitely been a volatile both market, but also, performance over the last nine to 12 months from our business. When you look at it, first of all, of course, the overall market first went through strong growth for a decade, then, a couple of very tough years also as new legislation came in at the same time as you saw a economic downturn. You had both the drink driving legislation at the same time as you had the macroeconomic downturn, and then we've seen growth return to the market now as things have stabilized.
In that period, we've grown a lot. Last year we had a significant setback, especially in the first half of the year. The work we've done, especially starting in Q2 and then work through second half, and we are continuing to work on that, is that we could see that we had simply grown too fast with too many distributors and being too dispersed, not having critical mass in a proper way throughout our value chain. We have scaled back on distributors. We've been more focused on the value management of a distributor. At the same time, we've also adjusted our go-to-market around our main brands. We focused more on Huda, our Vietnamese power brand, a little bit less on the international power brand as we've been rechecking the go-to-market.
Overall, we see that play out. We see good growth in Central Vietnam, which is our stronghold for Huda, and we actually see the brand strategies around South of Vietnam play out a little bit better than expected so far around the rechecked approach to Tuborg and 1664 Blanc in the South. This is a continuous improvement journey for the team. We've had new leadership in for a bit more than a year, and we see the team performing quite well in this. We're not saying that the Vietnamese business will now grow at the growth rates of Q1, but we're confident that we have a more solid and a well-developed growth model from here.
I think we have acquired confidence around the continued growth of Vietnam. On PepsiCo. Yeah, no, listen, of course, every time you change a brand like we do here, there's a conversion and there's a lot of customer conversations. Of course, we have a ton of respect for the power of the Coke portfolio, just like we see a lot of opportunities in the Pepsi portfolio. In many of the, your reference, of course, goes mainly towards the on-trade environment because of course, in off-trade, both Pepsi and Coke are on the shelf, it's not a major debate as to whether one should be there or one should not be there.
In the on-trade environment, and, of course, there's a lot of conversations to be had. We believe there's a great power to that portfolio, when especially in on-trade, there are few SKUs that are important, so than the broader portfolio. Of course, with the very strong go-to-market and, sorry, route to market and market share we have in general in Denmark and Finland, we believe that we can leverage that into creating a strong position.
More on that later. For now, it's two and half years out. For now, we will, as we said many times, we'll stay committed to delivering on our commitments towards what has been a good partner in Coca-Cola, and then we will, of course, in a respectful way, gradually make our plans for how we address 2029. We are, of course, doing this from a position of strength and a very strong knowledge around how we deploy the Pepsi portfolio.
Thanks, Jacob.
The next question comes from the line of Gen Cross from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Poland, Jacob, I think you kind of called out that Western European beer volumes would have been positive in the quarter were it not for the significant decline in Poland. Could you give us a bit more color on just what's going on, kind of on an underlying basis in the market, and whether you think that, you know, potentially the sellout should improve through the course of the year as consumers get a bit more used to the DRS scheme? The second question, just on France, I mean, comment on market share gain in Q1, just a bit more color on what's driving that positive share trend, and whether you think you can sustain this as retailer shelves are reset. Thank you.
Thank you so much. Again, just on Poland, because you cut out just in the beginning of your question, but I assume the question was specifically on Poland, right?
Yes.
It was specifically on Poland.
Okay. Good. Thank you so much. The other one was on France. On Poland, listen, last year was a tough year. The beginning of this year has been a tough year. It is, of course, there is the DRS, there's also been some pre-stocking ahead of those changes, etc. We also look at a quarter which had quite cold weather and snow in January. Underlying, it also has quite an intense price competition. We have a combination of a market where the consumer is under pressure. The starting point is a high consumption per hectoliter, competition is quite tough on the price side.
It is tough on the price side because we've been through a period of overall market decline, which of course hurts everyone's fixed cost absorption and therefore you then the response is often that you see even tougher price competition because people want to drive volume growth. Overall, it's been a little bit of a perfect storm. We should also remember it's a small quarter. We do expect Poland to see gradually improving trends during the year.
We are not calling Poland going back to growth in the near future. We can have a mild expectation that the worst negative growth rates are behind us in Poland, but it's gonna be a tough year in the Polish market overall. The effects, year-on-year effect, etc, will gradually ease during the year. Of course, we can hope that the year-on-year effect was the worst in Q1. I'm not gonna be the one be a CEO that calls the turnaround of the Polish market in the short term. I think we're all watching a tough market for the rest of the year.
I think you asked for more color on France as well. You are right. We had some market share growth in slight market share gain in the first quarter. We're basically seeing all of our focus brands growing share, which is great to see. The three key stronghold brands being 1664, Grimbergen, and Tourtel. They're all gaining a bit of share in the quarter, that's good to see. We have a quite a focused strategy under the new leadership of France around developing the three stronghold brands and then opportunistically driving our scale-up brands.
The one brand that we are seeing continuing under pressure is Kronenbourg Red and White, our economy brand, which has been in structural decline for, as you know, for a very long time because the category, the economy category is on in decline and is under is a very price sensitive category as well due to the economy segment being very often small glass bottles, which have a higher sensitivity to energy prices, etc. Overall, the focus brands for us are all developing well. When we look at France as an overall market, of course, we've just gone through customer negotiations.
They've all been concluded, and they have, they've concluded without any major disruptions, which we are of course pleased with. They were tough as you would expect them to be. We are constructive around France for this year. It's been an approved first quarter, and we think the market will be relatively benign for the rest of the year, without seeing any disruption from the Middle East as well. Hopefully that was a little bit of color on France for you when, at the same time I'm being asked. Thank you so much. Operator, I'm being asked that the next one is the last question. Thank you.
Now I have a question from Sanjeet Aujla from UBS. Please go ahead.
Hey. Morning, everyone. Just a quick couple from me. Can we just dig into the Britvic U.K. performance please, a year in now? What's working? What's not working? Where is there room for improvement? How would you assess the execution of the off-trade versus the on-trade? Just a technical one on the revenue per hectoliter in Europe. I appreciate there was a big negative category impact from the strong growth in soft drinks. Can you just help us understand the magnitude of that and just how pricing has landed now with through all of the retailer negotiations in Western Europe? Thanks.
Hey, Sanjeet. Thanks for those. Just starting on Britvic U.K. Of course, as you're fully aware, we're now running one business. Let me comment especially on the Britvic part of the business. The soft drinks part of the business. Overall, very pleased. We're more than a year in. First of all, we had a first year of 2025, where I think a lot of people had expected commercial momentum to suffer from the fact that we were doing a lot of integration work. The team did phenomenally well and continued very strong commercial momentum through 2025, and that momentum has continued in Q1, which is great to see. When we look at CSD overall, we have mid-single digit growth in the quarter.
It's driven by solid market share improvement, strong off-trade development with volume and value share growth, and quite a strong Pepsi performance, again, with value growth well ahead of volume growth. It's not a price-driven performance. In flavored CSDs, we see a strong 7Up. We saw a soft Tango in the quarter, a strong 7Up. On the Pepsi performance, I should mention that we see Pepsi Max taking share again in Q1, that's great. A strong performance from J2O as well.
On top of that, we had a very successful initial launch of Poppi, which I referenced earlier as well, which is of course so far only out with a couple of banners, key banners, and will gradually be expanded to more customers over time, but it's had a very, very strong launch. Overall, I think the team has done very well commercially across a number of categories and key brands. Of course, the overall assessment is definitely a very well approved quarter again from the team. Pluses and minuses, of course, there are always things that we wanna do faster or wanna do more of.
I think one brand that we where we have more potential to go it's Tango. Tango has had a little bit of a weakness in the last couple quarters, we have a lot of great plans on the Tango brand. I have no doubt that you're gonna see Tango bounce back. That's definitely more than compensated by such a strong performance from many of the other brands. I know you asked about Britvic. What I would say for the U.K., it's also great to see that the beer business delivers high single-digit growth. We again take market share in off-trade, we see continued good growth in both Carlsberg, 1664 and [Peroni].
We have launched Mythos, our Greek power brand, with quite a strong launch, we have to say, in the market as well. If you're missing a summer beer on your terrace and beer, you should try Mythos. It's a great alternative to so many other great beers. Good performance from the U.K. all around. You asked specifically around net revenue per hectoliter. Of course, you're spot on. There is a category mix effect here when you can say overall beer is down. We talked about the nuances of that beer performance in Western Europe, overall beer in Western Europe is down and CSD is growing strongly, that does impact net revenue per hectoliter.
That's a given the lower revenue per hectoliter for CSD. That's a given, and then we're also seeing, of course, on-trade being soft versus off-trade, and that also has an impact on net revenue per hectoliter. You asked specifically around price. No, we don't see any step change in price as such. This is not driven by a weakness in price in certain markets or anything like that.
I think the pricing environment remains roughly the same as it's been for the last couple of years. This is a category mix in a quarter where we saw really strong growth in soft drinks and overall beer being a bit weak. All right. On that note, as that was the last question, thank you for listening in, and thank you for your questions as always. Looking forward to meeting some of you during the coming days and weeks. Until then, have a nice day. Thank you so much.