Procter & Gamble Co's quarterly profit met Wall Street's expectations on Friday helped by growth overseas, cost cuts and a lower tax rate, and the world's largest household products maker maintained its financial forecasts for the year.
Shares of P&G slipped 0.8 per cent to $80 in premarket trading.
The maker of Pampers diapers and Tide detergent said it still expected 5 per cent to 7 per cent growth in earnings per share this fiscal year, excluding restructuring charges. The company abandoned quarterly forecasts earlier this year.
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It still expects organic sales, which strip out the impact of currency changes, acquisitions and divestitures, to rise 3 per cent to 4 per cent this fiscal year.
P&G said it had earned $3.03 billion, or $1.04 per share, in the first quarter ended on September 30, up from $2.81 billion, or 96 cents per share, a year earlier. Core earnings per share, which exclude restructuring charges, fell 1 percent to $1.05 and met analysts' expectations, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Sales rose 2.2 per cent to $21.21 billion, topping Wall Street's forecast of $21.04 billion.
Organic sales rose 4 per cent. Such sales were up in every category except health care, where they were flat, due in part to a pet food recall.