<p>Swiss food giant Nestle's net profit and sales rose in 2021 as it sold shares in cosmetic company l'Oreal and hiked prices amid soaring global inflation, group results showed Thursday.</p>.<p>Businesses have faced supply chain disruptions and decades-high inflation as the global economy recovers from the Covid pandemic and energy prices surge.</p>.<p>Nestle -- the maker of everything from coffee to pet food and plant-based meat -- said its net profit bounced by 38.2 percent to 16.9 billion Swiss francs ($18.3 billion, 16.1 billion euros) last year.</p>.<p>Total sales rose 3.3 percent to 87.1 billion francs as restaurant sales improved and price hikes accelerated in the last quarter under inflationary pressure.</p>.<p>Its organic growth -- which excludes the effects of acquisitions or divestments to focus on a company's core operations -- reached 7.5 percent, with coffee the largest contributor.</p>.<p>Pet products also performed well, with double-digit growth for Purina PetCare.</p>.<p>Sales in vegetarian and plant-based food -- an area where Nestle and other food companies have been investing -- also grew at a double-digit rate to reach 800 million francs.</p>.<p>"In 2021, we remained focused on executing our long-term strategy and stepping up growth investments, while at the same time navigating global supply chain challenges," Nestle chief executive Mark Schneider said in a statement.</p>.<p>"We limited the impact of exceptional cost inflation through diligent cost management and responsible pricing," he said.</p>.<p><em><strong>Check out the latest DH videos here:</strong></em></p>
<p>Swiss food giant Nestle's net profit and sales rose in 2021 as it sold shares in cosmetic company l'Oreal and hiked prices amid soaring global inflation, group results showed Thursday.</p>.<p>Businesses have faced supply chain disruptions and decades-high inflation as the global economy recovers from the Covid pandemic and energy prices surge.</p>.<p>Nestle -- the maker of everything from coffee to pet food and plant-based meat -- said its net profit bounced by 38.2 percent to 16.9 billion Swiss francs ($18.3 billion, 16.1 billion euros) last year.</p>.<p>Total sales rose 3.3 percent to 87.1 billion francs as restaurant sales improved and price hikes accelerated in the last quarter under inflationary pressure.</p>.<p>Its organic growth -- which excludes the effects of acquisitions or divestments to focus on a company's core operations -- reached 7.5 percent, with coffee the largest contributor.</p>.<p>Pet products also performed well, with double-digit growth for Purina PetCare.</p>.<p>Sales in vegetarian and plant-based food -- an area where Nestle and other food companies have been investing -- also grew at a double-digit rate to reach 800 million francs.</p>.<p>"In 2021, we remained focused on executing our long-term strategy and stepping up growth investments, while at the same time navigating global supply chain challenges," Nestle chief executive Mark Schneider said in a statement.</p>.<p>"We limited the impact of exceptional cost inflation through diligent cost management and responsible pricing," he said.</p>.<p><em><strong>Check out the latest DH videos here:</strong></em></p>