Jack Daniel's maker Brown-Forman misses profit estimate as costs pinch amid tepid demand

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Shares of the company were down about 4% in premarket trade as its net sales in the first quarter also fell marginally short of analysts’ expectations.

Higher input costs, including for agave, grains and wood, took a toll on the spirits maker, even as shipment volumes declined in the United States after wholesalers worked to trim inventories.

Excluding items, Brown-Forman earned 48 cents per share, compared with a profit estimate of 53 cents per share, as per Refinitiv data.

Advertising expenses in the quarter rose 19%, while overall expenses were up 14% as it also battled a tough labor market.

The company has increased the prices of its spirits between 2% and 3% year-on-year, in a bid to ease the damage to its margins as a fallout of supply-chain and input-cost issues that peaked in the last fiscal.

Gross margin for the quarter ended July 31 was 62.7%, up from 61.8% a year ago, as the company benefited from a let-up in supply-chain snags.

Distributor inventories – or the stock that wholesalers hold – declined 11% in the U.S. in the reported quarter, contributing to an 8% fall in the company’s net sales in the country.

Its quarterly net sales rose 3%, to $1.04 billion, compared with analysts’ average estimate of $1.05 billion.

Still, Brown-Forman reaffirmed its annual target of organic net sales growth between 5% to 7%.