Hershey's Push Into High-End Chocolate Is Bittersweet
July 23 2009 - 2:56PM
Dow Jones News
Hershey Co. (HSY) is dropping some newer lines of premium
chocolate, but the company may have to find new ways to compete in
the high-end candy business when the economy rebounds.
Hershey said Thursday that it will no longer be marketing the
Starbucks Corp. (SBUX) brand of premium chocolate and is also
winding down its high-end Cacao Reserve line. Sales of pricier
chocolate have slowed as consumers have tightened their belts and
retailers have been reluctant to give up shelf space to
lower-performing products.
Before the recession began, Hershey's sales suffered because
consumers had been turning toward pricier chocolates, an area that
Hershey had been slow to get into. Privately held Mars Inc. and
specialty chocolate brands gained share. That pushed Hershey to
begin marketing more expensive chocolates. In mid-2007 it announced
a pact with Starbucks to develop and market a premium line.
But that new line was badly timed because the economy started
slowing soon after. Consumers slashed spending last year and early
this year, turning away from most extravagances, including pricey
chocolate. "The timing of the launch of the Starbucks proposition,
frankly, we just missed the window," said Hershey Chief Executive
David West during a Thursday conference call. "Our partner
obviously had some other business challenges and the consumer at
that price point wasn't sustainable."
A Starbucks spokesman, Alan Hilowitz, said the two companies
made the decision mutually and it was part of Starbucks' effort to
focus on its core businesses in supermarkets: packaged coffee,
ready-to-drink coffee and ice cream.
For Hershey, the moves on the Starbucks line and the Cacao
Reserve line probably made business sense since the company likely
found the brands not profitable enough, said Chris Growe, an
analyst at Stifel Nicolaus. The company didn't disclose sales on
these brands.
Hershey said that for now it will focus on its existing
Scharffen Berger and Dagoba lines to grow in the premium chocolate
space. The company is also hoping to get consumers to trade up to
its Bliss line of chocolates.
Still, these brands alone aren't likely to give Hershey a major
role in the premium chocolate segment, which is likely to pick up
steam again as consumer spending rebounds.
Growe thinks the super premium chocolate category will pick up
with the economy, but is unlikely to reach the growth rates of two
years ago. Still, he says, if the high-end category grows faster,
Hershey "may not be able to fully participate in that given their
current portfolio."
CEO West said Thursday that the company had "strategic work"
underway to study the premium segment and its brands there. "While
premium has slowed, we do believe it will have a role in the
category in the years to come," he said. A Hershey spokesman
declined further comment.
Meanwhile, the recession has been kind to the maker of the
namesake Kisses and Twizzlers. Many of its brands are at the lower
end of the price spectrum, helping earnings and sales, and even
allowing the company to gain market share.
On Thursday, the company reported a 72% jump in second-quarter
earnings from a year ago, beating Wall Street's view on rising
sales. Earnings were $71.3 million, or 31 cents a share, up from
$41.5 million, or 18 cents a share, a year ago.
Hershey's stock was recently up $2.72, or 7.5%, to $41.89.
-By Anjali Cordeiro, Dow Jones Newswires; 212-416-2200;
anjali.cordeiro@dowjones.com