Aryzta over worst but new CEO still faces challenges
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It’s arguably likely to be business as usual for Aryzta’s incoming CEO – keeping up the momentum in organic growth and cash-flow generation to reduce debt.

Michael Schai, who joins the Swiss bakery company from chocolate giant Lindt & Sprüngli on 1 January, was a former executive at Aryzta, holding key roles in the Asia-Pacific region, a major growth and market area for the group.

However, he left in 2018 before Urs Jordi became chairman and CEO at Aryzta in 2020, tasked with navigating the company through what it admits was a “period of significant financial risk and business uncertainty”.

One of those risks was debt, particularly the burden of financing hybrid debt instruments, an aspect that still plagues Aryzta today, albeit to a lesser degree than when Jordi took the helm.

Aryzta has mid-term targets in place through 2025 for debt leverage, organic growth, margins and capex. What freedom Schai will be given in that arena is yet unclear, whether he will be given the scope by the board and Jordi – who will remain chairman – to tweak those goals or see them through to fruition.

Speaking on a 2023 results analyst call in March, CFO Martin Huber said a review of the targets beyond 2025 would be conducted this year by the board and “management”.

Jordi has made inroads in relieving the debt burden, repaying €200m ($218.6m) and repurchasing some €120m ($131.2m) just last year. But Aryzta’s total debt pile still stands a tad over €1bn, including almost €500m in hybrid instruments, for a business that generated calendar-year revenue in 2023 of €2.2bn.

Aryzta is on track regarding its debt-reduction programme. Now the focus has to be on sustainable growth after it benefitted from the spike in prices
Jon Cox, Kepler Chevreux

Some analysts suggest Aryzta is passed the worst in tackling what has been a key impediment for the baker for some years, with volume restoration now an important consideration as the inflation-linked pricing effect on revenue fades.

“Aryzta is on track regarding its debt-reduction programme. Now the focus has to be on sustainable growth after it benefitted from the spike in prices. Now we are moving to more normalised pricing at the same time volumes are under pressure,” says Jon Cox, head of consumer equities at Zurich-based financial services company Kepler Cheuvreux.

“I suspect innovation is going to become more important in terms of delivering more bespoke products that excite customers and their consumers.”

Potential takeover bid

Arben Hasanaj, a consumer goods analyst at Vontobel investment management in Zurich, suggests Aryzta has inferred it could even become the target of another takeover bid amid rising competition and consolidation in bakery.