前收市價 | 58.64 |
開市 | 59.38 |
買盤 | 58.88 x 0 |
賣出價 | 59.02 x 0 |
今日波幅 | 58.74 - 59.72 |
52 週波幅 | 50.92 - 63.00 |
成交量 | |
平均成交量 | 1,570 |
市值 | 37.922B |
Beta 值 (5 年,每月) | 0.43 |
市盈率 (最近 12 個月) | 43.44 |
每股盈利 (最近 12 個月) | 1.36 |
業績公佈日 | 無 |
遠期股息及收益率 | 2.10 (3.58%) |
除息日 | 2024年5月03日 |
1 年預測目標價 | 無 |
Danone is recouping some of the market share it lost to retailers' private label brands with high prices, it said on Thursday, winning both cash-strapped and wealthy shoppers. In recent quarters, companies like Danone, Nestle and P&G have said they plan now to ease price hikes and invest more in improving products and launching new ones to win back share. "The low-price segment in Danone's categories is growing fast, but the high price segment is also growing fast -- but the middle segment is a bit squeezed," CFO Juergen Esser said in an interview following a sales update.
Danone, whose CEO first reached out to the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in mid-2022 to get involved, is betting on the Paris Games' focus on health and nutrition to boost summer sales of its yoghurts and plant-based products. Dozens of major French companies have emerged as first-time partners of the Olympic Games this year, hoping to take advantage of the sales opportunities and marketing exposure the event typically gives sponsors. Through press releases and marketing materials, the IOC has made it clear that sponsors selling food and beverages - including Coca Cola bottled water and Nestle's Garden Gourmet meat alternatives - are part of a drive by the Olympics to promote health and wellness.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday said it would allow yogurt makers to say that the dairy product may reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes as more Americans die from the disease and take medications like Ozempic to battle it. The FDA will permit dairy companies to say that eating yogurt regularly - at least two cups or three servings per week - may reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes, according to limited scientific evidence, according to a letter posted on the regulator's website. Yogurt maker Danone North America asked the FDA to greenlight the claim in 2018, after the subsidiary of the French company Danone SA "noticed the body of evidence was really growing and becoming more compelling" to support it, said Amanda Blechman, Danone North America's director of health and scientific affairs.