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Nestlé (SWX:NESN) is refocusing around four core businesses: Coffee, Petcare, Nutrition, and Food & Snacks.

The company plans to sell its remaining ice cream and water operations as part of a wider portfolio reshaping.

Changes to the board and governance structure are being prepared to align with the new corporate focus.

Nestlé sits at the center of global consumer staples, with brands that reach into coffee, pet food, packaged nutrition, and everyday meals and snacks. By concentrating on these areas and moving away from ice cream and water, management is sharpening where time, capital, and executive attention go. For you as an investor, that means the story is shifting more toward categories that management has decided are core to the group.

The board and governance changes matter because they influence how decisions on capital allocation, risk, and long term priorities are made. As these changes filter through, you can observe how Nestlé (SWX:NESN) aligns incentives, refreshes oversight, and communicates its priorities across the new, more focused portfolio.

Stay updated on the most important news stories for Nestlé by adding it to your watchlist or portfolio. Alternatively, explore our Community to discover new perspectives on Nestlé.

SWX:NESN Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Feb 2026 SWX:NESN Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Feb 2026

We’ve flagged 1 risk for Nestlé. See which could impact your investment.

Nestlé’s refocus on coffee, petcare, nutrition, and food and snacks sits alongside a clean up of parts of the portfolio that have been more peripheral, such as ice cream and waters. That is happening at the same time as some pressure on the income statement, with 2025 sales of CHF 89,490m compared with CHF 91,354m a year earlier, and net income of CHF 9,033m compared with CHF 10,884m. You also have a proposed dividend of CHF 3.10 per share for 2025, slightly above the prior year, which shows the board wants to signal continuity in its cash return approach even while it reshapes the group.

The sharper focus on premium, health focused categories and portfolio pruning lines up with the narrative that Nestlé is leaning into health and wellness and using portfolio optimisation to support growth and margins.

The earnings pressure and working capital demands highlighted in recent results point to the execution risks flagged in the narrative, especially around input costs, foreign exchange, and keeping brands relevant as consumer tastes evolve.

The planned divestments in ice cream and waters, and possible moves around assets like Blue Bottle Coffee, go further than some earlier assumptions and may not be fully reflected in how the narrative treats portfolio optionality.

Knowing what a company is worth starts with understanding its story. Check out one of the top narratives in the Simply Wall St Community for Nestlé to help decide what it is worth to you.

⚠️ Earnings and net income for 2025 are lower than the prior year, which underlines pressure on profitability while the portfolio is being reshaped.

⚠️ Analysts have flagged a high level of debt and there is only one identified risk, so you may want to look closely at leverage and balance sheet flexibility as disposals and restructuring progress.

🎁 Nestlé pays a high and reliable dividend of 3.89%, and the proposed CHF 3.10 per share continues a very long record of maintaining or increasing the payout.

🎁 Rewards flagged by analysts include expectations that earnings grow 5.68% per year and that the shares are trading at 34.5% below one estimate of fair value, which some investors may see as room for a better risk or reward trade off if execution improves.

From here, it is worth tracking how quickly Nestlé executes on the planned sales of its ice cream and waters businesses, what valuations it achieves, and how that capital is used. You can also watch whether the new board members and governance structure translate into clearer priorities for growth categories like coffee and petcare versus lower growth segments. Finally, keep an eye on how margins and cash generation trend after the 2025 results, especially given peers such as Unilever, Danone, and Mondelez are also adjusting portfolios and pricing in response to similar pressures.

To ensure you are always in the loop on how the latest news impacts the investment narrative for Nestlé, head to the community page for Nestlé to never miss an update on the top community narratives.

This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

Companies discussed in this article include NESN.SW.

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