Lindt & SprĂĽngli Reverses Course on Pricing After Easter Sales Meltdown
13.05.2026 - 01:22:10 | boerse-global.de
German shoppers sent a clear message this Easter: even premium chocolate has its price ceiling. Lindt & Sprüngli saw Easter bunny sales collapse by 15% as customers balked at the cost, forcing the Swiss confectioner into an abrupt strategic U-turn. The classic 100-gram tablet will now retail at €2.19, down from €2.69 — the first significant price cut in years from a company that had raised prices by 37% over the previous two years.
The move marks a stark admission that the premium pricing strategy has hit a wall. Last year, revenue growth came entirely from those price increases; volumes actually fell by nearly 7%. On Tuesday, the participation certificate rose 2% to €10,030, lifting off the 52-week low hit the day before, but the stock is still down roughly 20% since January.
Adding to the pressure, the high-margin travel-retail channel — a cornerstone of Lindt’s profitability — is faltering. Chief Executive Adalbert Lechner has noted weaker sales at airports and in major cities like London, Paris and Vienna, where tourists typically spend freely. Vontobel analysts see this as more than a temporary dip, questioning whether the company can revive volumes at all this year.
Relief from lower cocoa prices won't come quickly. Although global cocoa prices have eased after better harvests in West Africa, Lindt has already locked in its 2026 requirements at elevated levels. Chief Financial Officer Martin Hug confirmed that large quantities of expensive cocoa remain in inventory, meaning broad price cuts across the entire product range are financially feasible only from 2027. The industry saw European chocolate prices rise an average of 34% over the past two years, but Lindt’s 37% hike put it above the trend.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Lindt & SprĂĽngli?
A bright spot remains the direct-to-consumer business. Lindt’s own stores and online shops grew nearly 21% last year, and the network now exceeds 600 locations. This cushion helps offset weakness in third-party retail, but it cannot fully compensate for the core brand’s volume erosion.
On the financial side, management is launching a charm offensive for shareholders. The expensive cocoa inventory of CHF 320 million from last year is winding down, and the group expects free cash flow of at least CHF 600 million. A share buyback program worth up to CHF 1 billion began in early May, while the board has proposed a higher dividend of CHF 1,800 per registered share.
Yet the stock remains expensive. With a price-to-earnings ratio of 37 for 2026, there is little room for error. Morningstar analysts point to the brand’s enduring power and dense retail network as medium-term recovery drivers, but the real test comes in the second half. Lindt’s management expects volumes to pick up again from mid-year, and the July half-year report will reveal whether targeted price cuts are enough to lure customers back.
Lindt & SprĂĽngli at a turning point? This analysis reveals what investors need to know now.
The autumn holiday season and Christmas 2026 will be pivotal: if shoppers still hesitate at the checkout, the premium strategy may need an even deeper rethink.
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