Hello and welcome to the Croda Q1 2025 sales update. My name is Laura, and I will be your coordinator for today's event. Please note this call is being recorded, and for the duration of the call, the lines will be on listen-only mode. However, you will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of the call. This can be done by pressing star one on your telephone keypad to register your question. If you require assistance at any point, please press star zero, and you will be connected to an operator. I will now hand you over to your host, David Bishop, to begin today's conference. Thank you.
Good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us for an update on our Q1 sales performance. It's a busy day for us with board meetings and the AGM, so it's an earlier start than usual. I'm here with Steve Foots, our Chief Executive; Stephen Oxley, who joined as new CFO three weeks ago; and Anthony Fitzpatrick, who, as you know, preceded Stephen as interim CFO before now resuming his previous roles and so was CFO during Q1. Okay, hopefully you've all had the chance to read our RNS statement, but let me hand over to Steve for a brief overview, after which there will be time for questions from our covering analysts. Steve.
Thanks, David, and morning, everybody, from York. Yes, three quick summary points from me before we get to Q&A. Firstly, it's been an encouraging start to the year. Sales were up 8% reported and 9% at constant currency. This is driven by good sales volumes across all three businesses, with the price mix headwinds we saw in 2024 starting to diminish. Breaking that down, in Consumer Care, sales were up 8%, driven by demand from local customers, which are continuing to do well. We saw particularly strong growth in Fragrances and Flavours again. Beauty Care and Home Care grew sales mid-single digit, and whilst Beauty Actives were slightly down versus a good comparator, sales were significantly up compared with the fourth quarter of last year. Life Sciences grew 10% or by 11% at constant currency, with growth across all business units.
Sales were strong in Seed and Crop, with Pharma also higher than last year, as well as compared with quarter four. Although consumer health and veterinary markets remained soft, that was more than offset by continuing momentum in biopharma markets. Lastly, Industrial Specialties also saw higher sales volumes, driving continued sales growth. As I say, good growth across the board, and whilst this is a first quarter sales update, it is worth sharing that group pre-tax profit was in line with our expectations for the quarter. Secondly, as a result of higher sales volumes, asset utilization at our 11 shared manufacturing sites continued to improve. We are well on track implementing our plans to realize GBP 25 million of annualized cost savings this year, whilst simultaneously identifying further opportunities for efficiencies that will benefit future years.
Overall, we're making good progress across the five areas that we set out in February to improve the group's financial performance. Finally, whilst our well-balanced local manufacturing and procurement model limits the likely direct impact of tariffs, we're, of course, assessing the likely impact, monitoring the situation closely, and talking to our customers and suppliers, as you would expect us to do. We intend to apply a tariff surcharge to cover any associated incremental costs. Whilst the knock-on effect of tariffs has undoubtedly caused the global economic outlook to become less predictable, our guidance for the full year is unchanged. Let me stop there and let's take your questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, as a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. We'll pause for a brief moment. Thank you. We'll take our first question from Sebastian Bray of Berenberg. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hello, good morning, and thank you for taking my question. Could you let me—could you give us an idea of the percentage of sales to which tariffs or charges could be applied at the group or some type of annual impact guidance? How much of this is personal care? How much could be Pharma? I appreciate it's early days. Any comments on price versus volumes at the group level? Was pricing roughly flat? Thank you.
Yeah, I mean, I'll start with the pricing. I mean, it was all volume growth. There's a slightly negative price, but it's low single, very low single digits. It is big volume growth across virtually all of our business, which is good. I think in terms of the tariffs, we would say, look, the major, in terms of direct impact for Croda, the major flows are U.K. and Europe to America. We said GBP 97 million before. In February, it's going to be significantly less than that, given the exemptions that we have for some product streams going into America. The other major flow that we're more preoccupied with is America to China, and that's GBP 15 million, one five million, of revenue. That is much more modest that goes into China, and most of that GBP 15 million can be made in either Europe or in Asia for China.
That's helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. We'll now take our next question from Artem Chubarov of Redburn Atlantic. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Morning. Thanks for taking my question. First, quick follow-up on price volume. I think the press release reads as negative pricing, not as negative as the year before. Correct me if I'm wrong. If it's true, is that a function of raw materials turning more positive, so you have to price it in, or is it because the competitive environment is getting better, so you don't have to offer any price discounts? That's the first question. Secondly, on Crop Protection, would you provide a quick outlook by region? What are you hearing from your major customers in different regions in Crop Protection? Thanks very much.
Yeah, so I think the first point, I mean, we've been consistent with this, that we've said that there's been a very unusual price element in the mix for two years. That's a function of raw material inflation rather than a function of competition. As you start to see, we had strong volume growth last year, but quite negative price. That price is diminishing, and it's because the raw material background is more stable. It's not any competitive chain. What you're expecting, as we expected it to be, is that volume growth has continued this year, but because the negative price is not essentially in the mix in the same degree, you're getting strong revenue growth. The majority of that is a function of raw material. I think in Crop, three points. I mean, broad recovery in Tier 1 across the board.
That's the four big multinationals in all regions. Europe is the highlight. Europe is coming back. It's had its planting season or in the throes of its planting season now. Europe is leading the growth. We're seeing continued growth in the Tier 3, the local customers as well. The Croda model is picking up decent revenue growth from the smaller customers as well.
Thank you.
It's Anthony Fitzpatrick here. Maybe I could just add one more piece of detail for you. As Steve described on the pricing, I think it's important to note as well that our gross margin across the business was very stable. That trend that we described at the full year and beyond. The pricing is very much built into how we think about the business, and that gross margin stability is very much evident in our numbers as well.
Great, clear. Thank you.
Thank you. We will now take our next question from Lisa De Neve of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. I have two. The first one is you stated that you would be applying surcharges where needed. To which extent have you already engaged with customers on this? If required, how quickly would you apply these surcharges? That is my first question. The second one is, I mean, you have delivered quite a strong first quarter. I mean, congratulations on that. Can you give us an idea on the exit rates into the second quarter and your order book visibility given the uncertain backdrop? Thank you.
Yeah, fine. I mean, yeah, I mean, the surcharges is pretty straightforward. I mean, you know what we like with pricing. We'll recover margins, all of them. So we've agreed we will do that again this time around. I mean, interesting with customers, there's a lot of customer engagement because, as you can expect, quite a number of our bigger customers are trying to relocate production to manufacture in other locations. For example, L'Oréal are now ramping up CeraVe production in France rather than America. You've got a number of the Crop companies wanting to move production. Our job there is two things. One is to be clear on what the surcharges are so they can understand their total production hit or cost hit, which will help them decide on locations.
Secondly, it is obviously to make sure the stock's in the right place for a change in location. Yeah, we do not expect any significant issues with that. In terms of the trade flows that we have that we talked about earlier with the answer to a question, a lot of those where we have quite considerable pricing power, so we would expect to pass those on anyway. Yeah, we are applying surcharges to that, and they will go through immediately.
The second question was exit rates.
Yeah, I mean, exit rates, we had a good quarter one. I mean, macro environment, as you know, is uncertain. Visibility is still short. It is about four weeks in the order book. We are not seeing any clear signs of that uncertainty in our performance or in the order book, but quarter two may well be below quarter one, but we are expecting continued good sales growth.
Thank you very much.
Thank you. We'll now take our next question from Charles Eden of UBS. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Yeah, thanks for taking my questions. First one, just a quick clarification on Crop Protection's enhancement. You say strong sales growth in Q1. Any chance you could just help quantify that? So sort of the constant currency growth for both in Q1, if that's possible, please. Then second question is for Stephen. Obviously, you've had a whole 22 days to get your feet under the table now, so I just wanted to hear your very early thoughts on what you've seen and what you set as your initial key priorities as the new CFO. Thank you.
Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Hi, Charles. It's Stephen. I'll pick up the Crop one first, which is high teens over the quarter last year, which obviously is a strong recovery. You're right. Twenty days in is three weeks, so it's pretty quick. I've spent all of that time meeting lots of really great people, hearing really good stories about our technology and customer relationships. Really good start, but I think it's worth saying that the group's invested, Charles, as you know, an awful lot of money over the last few years in CapEx and OpEx. Quite frankly, the returns and margins on that is too low, hence the Five-Point Plan that Steve's outlined. In my view, there needs to be more of that.
For me, that starts with customer and focusing all of our efforts on pleasing our customer and driving the top line, and then really importantly, driving efficiency and discipline into the business. From my perspective, that includes the balance sheet and working capital. For sure, there are opportunities and areas where we need to be better, and that, quite frankly, is my focus. Charles, I think, look, it's a good, encouraging start to the year. I was really pleased to see that that's volume progression. As Steve said, the price mix headwinds that we've had are abating. That was low single digit for the quarter. I think, look, in the new world, being local and regional, I think, is a really good thing. We've just got to control the things that we can control. The world is getting harder. There's no doubt about that.
We have to respond. We have to respond through pricing. As the world gets harder, that also means driving transformation harder and faster, as far as I'm concerned. Lots to do, lots of opportunity, and great to finally be in here.
He's a veteran now, Charles. He does very well.
Yeah. Appreciate it. Thanks, Steve, and thanks, Fitz, for the help in the interim as well. Really appreciate it.
Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you once again. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. We'll now move on to our next question from Chetan of JP Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, morning, all. I had a couple of questions. First for Steve. L'Oréal mentioned last week that they were building stock ahead of demand to protect themselves from tariff-driven uncertainties. I am just curious, do you see any signs of rebuying in any of your businesses in Q1 or what you might have seen so far in the second quarter? The second question was, you had a EBIT margin of 18% in H2 last year. You are talking about volumes improving in Q1. Is it fair to assume that in Q1 you are probably at least at 18% or even slightly higher than that? Just to get a sense of how the phasing looks like, sorry, for full year now with Q1 behind us. Thank you.
Yeah. I mean, let me do the first question. I'll just play David in for the second question. I mean, no, we're looking right around our customer base, and we don't see any tangible evidence of rebuying as yet. I think there's positioning, and we have a lot of discussions with our customers. L'Oréal is a good example where we're in regular discussion with them. A reminder to you all, it's 80% of our revenue in Consumer Care is small and local. We have a good line of sight. The multinationals, there's probably about 8/10 of them, are the ones that we're spending most time with because they probably have the ability to move production much more than others. No, definitely not. Not in the other businesses as well. We're not seeing any evidence of that. On margins, David?
On the margins, there's a couple of slightly contradictory things going on. Firstly, you'll see in the business performance that mix was slightly unfavorable, both Consumer Care and in Life Sciences. As we've said for some time, we're expecting the product mix in 2025 in Industrial Specialties to normalize after a favorable mix in 2024. Having said that, as you point to, the volume-led sales growth is improving asset utilization at our 11 shared manufacturing sites, and we're on with the cost-saving program, which will continue to ramp through the year. Overall, the Q1 margin was higher than the Q1 margin in 2024, and we were happy with the margin performance in the first quarter.
Thank you.
Thank you. We will now take our next question from Nicola Tang of BNP Paribas Exane. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the question. I thought I'd ask one on Pharma. It seems like the consumer health and the vet side are the only areas that are still a little bit weak. Could you give any more commentary and what should we be looking for to indicate signs of improvement in this area? The second one, Steve, you mentioned Q2 might be below Q1, but you do not think there is pre-buying. Can you just help us to understand what might be driving that? Appreciate the low visibility at the moment, but any color you can give would be helpful. Thanks.
Yeah. I mean, on the Pharma, I mean, as you said, it's good growth in Pharma generally, driven by biopharma in part with all the new product growth, nucleic acid, protein delivery. Avanti's had a very good quarter one. We have actually seen some modest growth in consumer health and veterinary in quarter one, but still, it's below our midterm growth expectations for the business. There is still work to do there. We anticipate a slow recovery through the year. I think that's just going to, yeah, we'll just monitor and update you through the year on that. On the quarter two, I mean, there's no evidence in the order book that we're seeing a deterioration. It is more around the mood music and whether we do see a softer period or not. It's difficult to say.
There is nothing you can point to particularly at the moment around that. I think it is more around just managing, staying close to our customers in the right way, and making sure that we are doing everything we can to support things like relocation and price tariffs. We still expect sales growth as well. We would expect good sales growth in quarter two as well. I think as a reminder to you all, we said in February we expect gradual improvement in our core markets. We are seeing that improvement. A lot of customers are local and regional. We are in a good position to capitalize on that.
Thank you.
Thank you. Once again, as a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. We will now take our next question from Charles Bentley of Jefferies. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much. I just had a couple. Just kind of following up on Chetan's question just on the kind of principle of pre-buy. The messaging we've had from Crop kind of majors seems to suggest that there's been a bit of an attempt to move volumes into region, particularly from Chinese producers into the U.S. Just kind of any thoughts about, I mean, does it feel like you're seeing normal activity within that market, or has that seen any kind of sequential phasing? I mean, again, both thinking about how Q1 developed and then kind of the order book into Q2. That's the first question. The second one was just, I know you kind of keep on talking about this utilization rate across the shared manufacturing sites.
Can you just give an update as to where that stands today and kind of where it was for the quarter? Thank you.
Yeah. The Ag situation, we're not seeing any big change. I think we said before, the recovery is in Tier 1, so all the four multinationals are growing. Europe is the highlight of the growth. We do not have that China-America factor to really deal with. That is a different part of Crop. I think with that, we are just gradually, the Crop market is gradually recovering. The question for us is always making sure that we satisfy that growth as it comes through with stock in the right places. We are not seeing anything unusual. Order intake is what we would expect with that business, and the conversations are the normal conversations we would have. I think in terms of utilization rates, we showed you a graph in February.
If we flash that graph up now, it's on track to deliver on our two-year target of getting back to utilization rates of normalized levels. There's nothing more probably to say on that. If you look at Beauty Care, IS, and Crop are the three major volume drivers. They're all growing healthily in volume. We're pleased with that.
Thank you.
Thank you. We'll now take our next question from Georgina Fraser of Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning, everyone. Thanks for taking my questions, and congratulations on a very solid start to 2025. My first question is, Steve, really interested in this trend of relocation, and you highlighted L'Oréal and CeraVe looking at relocating from the U.S. to Europe. Could you say a bit more about the rationale for customers relocating? I mean, obviously, that's exactly the opposite of what the U.S. administration is trying to achieve. It's supposed to be onshoring to the U.S. I’d really love to hear more of your insights on that topic. The second question is, you said on the second quarter, no change in trend so far, obviously, that you appreciate the potential for things to get a little bit weaker given the macro picture. Where in your portfolio would you expect to see that materialize first?
If you could highlight the more sensitive parts to the macro in your portfolio, it would be helpful. Thank you.
Yeah. I mean, the L'Oréal example was one example on the relocation, but there's plenty of examples of people relocating to the U.S. as well. We would say that as well. It depends on your customer and their positions. I was just actually looking at Euromonitor for the beauty industry, and I know one or two of you have reported on this, but quite staggering stats that local manufacturers are making strong share gains across all categories in beauty now ahead of MNCs. Unusually, premium has underperformed mass in most categories as well. What you're seeing is this constant move to local demand, local production. I think this might drive, accepting the tariffs are probably a temporary sort of event. It will probably drive local and regional demand more and more, which is great for us.
We think that's a healthy move, and we're well positioned for that. I think that's that. Lots of moving parts, as you'd expect. I think the second thing, we're not seeing anything. I think if we're going to see it anyway, you're probably going to see it in Crop because of the seasonality and the repositionings and the breadth of the MNCs. There's nothing in our order book that would suggest there's any change. Stephen, can I ask something?
Maybe short. I think just standing back, what we do not know, obviously, is what happens with consumer confidence, particularly in the U.S., but obviously beyond as well. We are just going to keep a watching brief on that. Look, we track sales daily across the whole group, and there is nothing to suggest as of yesterday that we are seeing orders significantly softening or an acceleration with pre-buy. We have just got to remain focused and focus on what we can control, quite frankly.
Great. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you. There are no further questions in queue. I will now hand it back to David for closing remarks.
Thank you, Laura. An encouraging start with growth across all three businesses. We're delivering the Five-Point Plan , including the GBP 25 million of cost savings. Whilst the economic outlook is less clear, Q1 PBT was in line, and our four-year outlook is unchanged as things stand. You know where we are. If you have any follow-up, have a good day.
Thank you. This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.