Food distributor Sysco misses sales estimates on soft demand

A Sysco sign is shown outside one of their distribution centers in Poway, California·Reuters
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(Reuters) - Sysco Corp missed market expectations for quarterly sales on Tuesday, hurt by softer demand for the food distributor's products as budget-consious consumers cut back on discretionary items.

Surging inflation eating into household budgets continues to restrain consumer spending on non-essential items like custom cuts of meat and high-quality seafood.

Consumer-facing companies have raised product prices multiple times over the past year in a bid to shield their margins from spiraling costs but volatile and price-sensitive demand for its food-away-from-home products restricts Sysco to undertake price increases.

Sysco's net sales rose 2.6% to $19.6 billion in the first quarter ended Sept. 30, missing analysts' estimates of $19.73 billion, according to LSEG data.

The world's largest broadline food distributor reiterated its full-year 2024 outlook for adjusted profit per share between $4.20 and $4.40 and mid-single digit sales growth to about $80 billion.

Earlier this month, the company announced plans to acquire Edward Don & Co - a Chicago-based distributor of foodservice equipment, supplies and disposables - to create a specialty equipment and supplies platform.

Excluding items, Sysco earned $1.07 per share, topping analysts' average expectation of $1.04.

(Reporting by Aatrayee Chatterjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

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