Hello, and welcome to the Croda International Q1 2026 sales update call. Please note this call is being recorded, and for the duration of the call, your lines will be on listen- only. 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, Steve Foots, to begin today's conference. Please go ahead, sir.
Good morning, everyone. Many thanks for joining. I'm here with Stephen and David, and together, happy to take your questions. First, just a few overview comments from me. Overall, quarter one sales were as we expected it, up 1% at constant currency and similar to a very strong quarter last year. While we acknowledge the heightened uncertainty that the Middle East conflict has caused, it had no material effect on quarter one. There is no change to guidance for full year 2026. Breaking our quarter one sales performance down by business, our sales were up 4% in Consumer Care, driven by Beauty Actives and F&F. Life Sciences saw sales dip 3%, largely due to Crop Protection being 8% lower versus a strong prior year when we saw significant restocking. Industrial sales were down 2%, again, against a strong prior period.
Turning to performance on a regional basis, growth was strongest in Latin America and robust demand in agriculture and Consumer Care. EMEA and Asia sales were as we expected, and North America was weaker due to crop normalizing as expected and compounded by continued pressure on lower-income consumers and the poor weather. Finally, coming to events in the Middle East in more detail, our key priority has been the safety of our people and serving our customers. It's a small region for Croda, representing around 5% of group sales, most of which are in F&F. We saw no material impact on sales in the quarter, but with input costs increasing, we are raising prices to fully recover input cost and inflation. We're doing that transparently and in total collaboration with our customers.
As I said, while we recognize the elevated uncertainty the conflict has caused and continue to monitor this evolving situation, our outlook for full year 2026 remains unchanged. We are confident of delivering an improving performance over the next three years as outlined in February, combining innovation-led growth and our transformation program, which remains firmly on track. It's all about growth and transformation, which is in our control. Let me stop there and hand over to you all for questions. I'll now hand back to the operator for questions from covering analysts. Over to you, Radiv.
If you would like to ask a question, please signal by pressing star one on your telephone keypad. We will take our first questions from Matthew Yates from Bank of America. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hey, good morning, gentlemen. Thanks for doing the call. A couple of questions, please. You mentioned the uncertainty around the Middle East. I'm wondering if you could share any order of magnitude decline you've seen in the seven weeks or so since the conflict's been going. Appreciate you said it wasn't really relevant for Q1, but just as we think about Q2, what the most recent data points would point towards.
Then secondly, just around your sort of pricing commentary and your strategy. If I think about the last cycle we went through coming out of COVID, you push pricing pretty hard, and arguably it led to some issues in terms of competitiveness and negative impact on utilization rates. Does that in any way make you cautious about how you're going to market to pass through whatever order of magnitude inflation this cycle may require? Thank you.
Yeah. Thanks, Matthew. I'll do the pricing, and then Stephen can talk about the order book. Look, we've got pricing power, and we'll demonstrate it. We always do. I think I'd say that first. We have an agile pricing model, and we can move with speed as well. That's the second point. Our customer relationships are a priority, and we're being responsible in taking a balanced approach. We're taking them through that with us. We're increasing prices to fully recover the input cost inflation to all of that. All cost inflation will be recovered. We're taking a bottom-up approach, so there's not one blanket increase. Through our transformation program, we're segmenting customers.
We are putting prices up, and we will demonstrate the pricing power, but we'll use that on a case-by-case, one-to-one customer basis. There's no lag in our pricing. Our prices have gone up and are going up and continue to go up. The weight of the price increases started in April in Asia, as you'd expect, and in some of our products in Europe as well. Again, we'll go in May again with price increases if we need to. Obviously, we're monitoring the situation with all of our customers. We've got an organization that is very clued to moving quickly but considering our customers as well.
Matthew, morning. It's Stephen. Just on your question on order book, so just to remind you, so virtually no impact on the first quarter. The direct exposure to the Middle East, as you can see, is obviously small. We did actually see growth in Middle East sales, but it was pretty subdued. Order book is good going into Q2. There is absolutely no weakness whatsoever. We are encouraged as we sit here heading into the second quarter.
Thank you, both.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Charles Eden from UBS. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Two questions from me also, please. Firstly, just sort of a follow-up on the pricing, and I appreciate it is very fluid and prices moving around almost daily. Are you able to give us any indication of roughly what the pricing magnitudes are that you're looking to pass through in Asia and in Europe at this stage? I'm not expecting exact numbers, but is there any sort of rough indication?
Then my second question, just on crop. Obviously, a very tough Q1 comp from last year. With the 8% constant currency decline in Q1, was that in line with your expectations? Maybe what are you hearing from customers in terms of the impact of fertilizer prices? What does that mean for Croda? Do you get a bit of substitution? What's the outlook for crop, I guess, for the remaining three quarters of this year? Thank you.
Yeah. Let's do crop first, and then we'll come back to your pricing point. Look, we think it's rebalance. I call it rebalancing of stock. They've had four years, actually, two years of boom and two years of reset. The stock levels are broadly where they should be. I think that's the point. The rebalancing point is they're just fine-tuning stocking. The comparator was tough because they were still building stock last year. I think when you get behind that, the demand is okay. We think the demand is fine in crop. We don't think there's any weakness there.
I think your point on fertilizers, it has an impact to the farming economics. Actually, on the other side of that, you've got crop prices, commodity prices, food prices going up. Not massively, but going up 10%-15%. There's a benefit. That's partly offset that. We don't expect any demand change through that. The fertilizer chain doesn't really impact Croda in the same way. Our expectation of the year for crop is broadly where we saw it at the start of the year. We'll stop there and then we'll go on to your pricing. We'll see.
Yeah. Morning, Charles. I'll pick it up. Just on crop, it is exactly as we expected and exactly as we had signaled to investors, and it's consistent with what the Tier 1 players are saying themselves. No surprises there. On the magnitude of increases, look, to be honest, I don't want to give that. I think it would be misleading, because it is affecting different products in different ways in different regions. Just to remind you, when I think, or you should think about raw material inputs, the majority of the business is bio-based. That's about 55% by value. The rest is petro. Where we're seeing the most significant price changes is in EO, ethylene oxide and PO, but that represents only around 10% of our raw material cost base.
That's very clear. I appreciate the comments, both. Thanks.
Thanks, Charles.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Katie Richards from Barclays. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning, everyone. Just two questions from me, please. One, could you just give us some more color on the Pharma division, please? Because I believe it ended 2025 at quite a strong exit rate. I just would like to understand the reason for the decline at constant currency this quarter. Secondly, could you just give us some more color on the bridge to the full-year results? Because if I annualize the sales this morning, I'm getting to sales for the year of about GBP 1.63 billion, so that would still be quite about 7% below consensus forecasts as we stand. Can you talk us through the earnings cadence through the year, please?
Yeah, I mean, on Pharma, if you break Pharma down, let's do that first. Pharma Solutions, it's where we expected it to be, at the start of the year. It's a lumpy business. We've said that a few times. All it needs is one or two orders to go into one quarter or the other, and you get a big up or a slight negative. It's fine, and it's a tough comp. You don't need to read anything into Pharma Solutions. We're happy where it is. I think Pharma Ingredients, too. It's good in all regions, Pharma Ingredients, except Europe.
Actually underneath all of that for Pharma Ingredients, the high- purity excipient business, which is the big growth business there, is doing very well. It started weakly, and it's better in March with encouraging signs going forward. We'd expect the business to improve from here, or both businesses to improve from here through the next two or three quarters.
Katie, just on sales. Obviously Q1 in line with our expectations. I think probably currency is your delta. At constant currency, Q1 sales were GBP 446 million. We've talked previously about our budget being pretty consistent quarter by quarter. If you think about the shape of 2025, the comps get easier as we go through the year. That sales, we said before, sales will be broadly flat, half one versus half two. No change on full-year sales expectations.
Thank you.
Thank you. We'll take our next questions from Nicola Tang from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.
Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking the questions. First, just going back on the order book. You mentioned there's no weakness whatsoever. I was wondering if perhaps there'd been some pre-buying or some sense of customers increasing safety stocks or buying ahead of anticipation of higher prices. The second question, I appreciate you don't disclose profits at the Q1 stage, but I was wondering if you could give any comments on profitability and an update on the cost efficiency program that you have going on. Thanks.
Thanks, Nicola. Morning. Just going back to order book. Yeah, I said the order book is good, in response to Matthew's question. There's no weakness. It is good, and it is slightly higher than I would have expected. I read into that that there probably is an element of pre-buy, customers wanting to get ahead of increases and obviously secure inventory. We're monitoring that very closely. It's not out of control at all, but it does give us confidence going into Q2. That didn't affect Q1 sales, importantly. You just talked about profit and transformation. Likewise, as we think about profit for Q1, we don't disclose, but exactly as expected, which is great to see. The transformation is on track. We're not changing the targets, but we're obviously confident in what we can deliver.
Thank you. Our next questions come from Sebastian Bray from Berenberg. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hello. Good morning, and thank you for taking my questions. I had one on the Beauty Care development. I appreciate that the comparative number from last year is distorted because of pre-buying, but the -4% constant currency growth, is that what was expected at the start of the year or has something changed here? I'm trying to distinguish between if this was a deliberate choice to begin demarketing old products again or if demand was just not as good as had been hoped for.
My second question is on cash flow. Are there any indications of how this performed in the first quarter? If I may squeeze in another one, are there any outages at any of Croda's key competitors in personal care or Life Sciences at the moment related to feedstock shortages, or is that not visible? Thank you.
Yeah. Let's take them in turn. The question on Beauty Care, then cash for Stephen, and then outages for LS and Consumer Care. We'll do that one. There isn't—w e don't see much on any change in Life Sciences and Consumer Care on a competitive basis. Beauty Care, it's U.S. only is the weakness. It's on strong comps. We had a weather impact for the first six weeks, which was more - 29 degrees at our site, our East Coast site. We started the year softly but strengthening through the quarter. I think that's important. Beauty Care is starting to come back.
I think the other thing to make the point on is, in the lower- income end of North America, it's been under pressure, soft. Actually the premium end has been pretty strong. You see some very strong growth in actives, and that's consistent around the world. I think Beauty Care started weakly, strengthening in March. Order book looks good for quarter two. It's coming into some weak comps as well. We feel Beauty Care is in a good position. It's a quarter one impact, which is primarily based on those three points.
Hi, Sebastian, and just I'll pick up your question. Just on Beauty Care for U.S., you should think that we were lapping particularly a very strong quarter 2025 in addition to the weather, and actually also a very strong Q4 2025. You've got to frame that first quarter within those two points. Cash, obviously, we're just giving sales update for Q1. As with profit, cash is exactly on track. You'll remember at year end, we put out a working capital saving target of GBP 50 million. It's good to see some of the fruit, excuse me, on that coming through.
Thank you.
Thank you. We're now taking our next questions from Artem Chubarov from Rothschild & Co Redburn. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I would like to ask about capacity utilization rates at your shared manufacturing sites. If I think about the main moving parts, so Beauty Care was down and Crop Protection was down, and so was Industrial Specialties. Can we conclude that utilization rates have decreased or is it a bit more complex than that? Linked to that, how was the price mix volume interplay in the quarter, please? Thank you.
Morning, Artem. Yeah, I'll pick that up. Just the way you should think about this is as we talked about the progress through last year. We exited 2025 at around 93% of our 2019 volumes. We talked about the volume growth slowing. That has continued into the first quarter. Obviously we're talking about absolute sales growth of 1%, so it's pretty small, but it's positive. Just in the same way that trend on price mix, so coming down. As we went through 2025 to being quite small in the fourth quarter, that trend continues into quarter one this year, and I would expect that to continue looking forward.
Thank you. That's very helpful. Thanks.
Thank you. Our next question's from Lisa De Neve from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Please go ahead. Lisa, your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi. Sorry I was on mute. Apologies for that. Lisa De Neve from Morgan Stanley. Two questions, if I may. The first question, so as you're now pushing through these higher prices to offset inflation, how should we think about the volume cadence as we move through the year? Is there anything to call out across the portfolio? That's one. Two, a small follow-up on the earlier question on Pharma. Should we read it as you expect pharma to step higher through the year beyond the comparables effects? And also, can you tell me if there's any change or any pickup in your pipeline for Pharma? Thank you.
Yeah, thanks. Let's do the volume pricing. We expect volume growth to continue through the year. We're not expecting volume reduction. Actually the priority for customers right now and into quarter two is delivery, consistency and continuity of supply. There's an acceptance that inflation will go through the value chains that we're in. That's good. No impact to volume is the message there. I think on Pharma was a tough comp, so we're not seeing any trend changes from quarter four to quarter one. There's nothing in there.
We'd expect that Pharma to continue through the normal trend, and then as you come into some easier comps, then obviously that will help. Lots of good stuff in Pharma, both in Pharma Ingredients on flagship, which we're driving increased growth. I think the high- purity excipient business in there is very important business. That's growing at double digits. We've got some really good strength right across the group in liquid injectables, and Pharma Solutions is where we expected it to be, and there's no change to our outlook there. Did you have another question, Lisa? No, that was it. Okay.
These are the key questions. Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question's from Chetan Udeshi from JP Morgan. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my questions. The first question was just maybe a bit technical. I was just wondering, because you haven't been reporting your quarterly sales for that long, I'm just curious, what would you say is your normal seasonality these days in Q2 versus Q1? Most other companies in the sector would typically see second quarter absolute sales higher than Q1 just because of the higher working days, also season of the year. Can you just remind us how does the Q2 seasonality for Croda looks these days with different portfolio?
The second, I'm a bit curious, what would you think are the reasons why you haven't seen an impact in demand in your F&F business in Middle East? You would have thought with less tourists, maybe people going out less, there should have been a reduction in demand. Would you think this is mainly pre-buying? Just in Iberchem, my impression was you're sourcing all of your raw materials from others in terms of the aroma chemicals and ingredients. I was curious, you did not mention Iberchem as the place where you were seeing raw material inflation. Maybe you can help there as well. Thank you very much.
Yeah. Okay. Do you want to do the sales split?
Yeah.
[Amazing].
Morning, Chetan. We're expecting, as I said earlier, 50/50 sales split this year. That's pretty consistent, I think, to previous years, plus or minus a tiny bit. That is typical. As I think about profit, that is more second half weighted, and that's mainly as you think about this year, think about the benefits of transformation accumulating. Obviously that just affects the second half, has a better contribution than the first half as the program develops.
Yeah, on F&F, we've seen the continued growth. It continued to grow strongly in quarter one, 10% organic sales growth. It is below expectations in the Middle East, to be fair, but that's been fully offset by the strength in other regions. Western Europe really well ahead and also Africa very well ahead. Flavors and Fragrances both very healthy. The team have navigated many crises successfully over the last 15 years. Speed and responsiveness of that business model is helping maintain service levels. I think on the raw material position, yes, we're expecting raw materials to go up. We'll deal with that in the same way we're dealing with pricing elsewhere. It's not material impact in the books as yet. That, we'll have a plan for that.
Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star one now. We'll take our next questions from Georgina Fraser from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hello. Good morning, team. Couple of questions. I want to revisit the questions around feedstock shortages. Now you mentioned that you haven't seen any of this yet, but they're burning palm oil as fuel in Indonesia. How are you thinking about that risk for the balance of the year, kind of managing on your own raw material sides? A follow-up question, how would you be thinking about the risks that your local and regional customers face shortages? I would think these smaller customers would be most vulnerable to physical shortages. Last question, are there any opportunities to ramp up Atlas Point given the tightness in the ethylene oxide value chain? Thank you.
Yes. Good question. All good questions. Look, our job is to look around corners in crises like this, and particularly on feedstocks and things. We're not seeing anything yet, and we're monitoring that. I think your point on palm oil, we're such a tiny consumer of palm oil, in the value chain that, yes, we're seeing some of those things, but our demand is so small that we feel we would be comfortable with that. We don't buy palm oil, we buy derivatives of palm oil. That's that. I think local and regional customers, in many ways, it plays to our strengths. I think the important point for Croda is we've got a nice balance to our manufacturing portfolio and our distribution model allows us to put stock locally. The important thing is to make sure we put the stock in the right places and we're doing that.
On the economics at the Atlas Point platform, economics are more attractive on a relative basis, I think that's for sure. There's some tactical opportunities that we'll look to take in the short term, but most likely the approach would be to sell end ingredients from Atlas Point outside North America, dependent upon available capacity at the downstream plant. And a lot will depend on the longevity of the raw material inflation. More opportunities would come if petrochemical prices stay high for long.
Okay, understood. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Our next questions comes from Ranulf Orr from Citi. Your line is open. Please go ahead.
Hi. Morning, all. Just a quick follow-up actually on one of the very first questions around your pricing power and how you see your pricing dynamics evolving. I think it would just be interesting to hear you just compare, contrast maybe a little bit back to 2022, 2023 when I think you have acknowledged perhaps pricing was pushed a little bit too hard. How are you thinking about it differently today? Are you sort of benchmarking versus peers? How are you ensuring that some of those share losses don't come back through this time around? Thank you.
Yeah, thank you. We're doing much the same. The one change is around customer relationships, and it's all bottom-up. We're looking at products to customer on a targeted basis to make sure that we don't see any volume shocks, and we actually pass all full costs on. That's being done in a sophisticated way. There's no real change to the point that we've got pricing power and we'll demonstrate it. We're doing that with a customer segmentation lens on it.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. It appears there are no further questions. I'd now like to turn the conference back to Mr. Steve Foots for any additional or closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Well, thanks everybody for getting up early for us. Quarter one sales in line with expectations, and we're not seeing any material impact from the conflict in the quarter one numbers from the Middle East. We recognize the level, the elevated uncertainty the conflict has caused. Full year 2026 outlook is unchanged, and we're confident of delivering our three-year framework. It's all about innovation-led growth in Croda, and it's about the transformation which is on track. Thanks very much, and we'll see you in July.
This concludes today's call. Thank you for your participations. You may now disconnect.