Anglo-Dutch food and cosmetics giant Unilever, seen as a bellwether for global consumer spending, warned today of slowdown in sales growth brought on by weakened demand in emerging markets.
"Unilever has seen a weakening in the market growth of many emerging countries in the third quarter and now expects underlying sales growth of 3.0 to 3.5 per cent, as opposed to a predicted 5.0 per cent," Unilever spokesman Flip Dotsch told AFP.
"The emerging market slowdown has accelerated as a result of significant currency weakening," Unilever added in a statement.
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These emerging markets contribute to more than half of Unilever's sales, as the owner of Dove soaps and other common household brands shifted its attention away from developed markets which Unilever said "remain flat to down."
Unilever's first half profits for 2013 had jumped by 14.0 percent, while sales were up 0.4 per cent to 25.5 billion euros (USD 34 billion), mainly on the back of growth in emerging markets like China, Indonesia, Vietnam and Pakistan.