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Tuesday 11 September 2018 8:05 am

Sticky business: Cadbury owner stockpiles chocs for hard Brexit

By: Joe Curtis

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Cadbury’s owner is stockpiling chocolate, biscuits and raw ingredients in the event of a hard Brexit, it has emerged.

Mondelez Europe warned that the UK cannot provide all its own ingredients to produce Cadbury chocolate, and so the firm is making other arrangements in case the UK spins out of the EU without a deal.

Read more: City business groups call for EU to match UK no-deal Brexit preparations

“Like the whole of the food and drink industry in the UK, we would prefer a good deal that allows the free flow of products as that would have less of an impact to the UK consumer,” Hubert Weber, president of Mondelez Europe, told The Times.

“However, we are also preparing for a hard Brexit and, from a buffering perspective for Mondelez, we are stocking higher levels of ingredients and finished products, although you can only do so much because of the shelf life of our products.

“We have a contingency plan in place to manage [a hard Brexit], as the UK is not self-sufficient in terms of food ingredients, so that could be a challenge.”

Mondelez’s Europe division accounted for over 40 per cent of the group’s $25bn revenue last year, and also makes other foods like Maynard Bassett’s wine gums, Ritz crackers and Oreos. It was spun out of Kraft Foods’ 2010 acquisition of Cadbury.

It is the latest in a line of warnings from organisations preparing for a hard Brexit, with London mayor Sadiq Khan warning the capital must prepare for such a scenario, as well as drugmaker Dechra suffering a stock price tumble when it shared its "hard Brexit mitigation plan".

Weber warned British shoppers will face higher prices if a Brexit deal isn’t agreed by next year.

Read more: European firms 'unprepared' for 'no deal' Brexit warn EU business groups

Mondelez’s announcement comes only a few days after its chief executive issued guidance for full-year 2018 results of up to two per cent net revenue growth of one to two per cent, and a 2019 outlook of two to three per cent net revenue growth.

He also outlined a long-term strategy to spur growth, by making the organisation more agile, and investing more in ecommerce and digital initiatives.

“We have developed a clear strategic plan to accelerate our growth and drive attractive total returns centered around three strategic priorities: accelerate consumer-centric growth, drive operational excellence and build a winning growth culture,” Dirk Van de Put, Mondelez International chief executive, said.

 

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