
Rabobank’s annual Global Dairy Top 20 highlights the results of industry leaders in one of the world’s most valuable food sectors. The combined turnover of the Global Dairy Top 20 companies jumped by 7.4% in US dollar terms, following the prior year’s gain of 9.3%. In euro terms, the combined turnover increased by a significant 21% due to the combination of a stronger US dollar, inflation, and tight market conditions during most of 2022, with many companies reporting record-high revenues in their local currencies.
Overall, only five companies held the same position as last year, indicating a reshuffle along the entire list. In 2022, merger and acquisition activity was nearly on par with the prior year, with almost 25 deals. A slowdown in activity was noted in the second half of the year, which continued into 1H 2023, with about eight deals announced in the first half of 2023 versus approximately 12 deals in the first six months of 2022. FX developments in 2022 contributed to the reshuffle and were particularly unfavorable for dairy companies reporting in euros, New Zealand dollars, renminbi, and yen.

While the first half of the ranking is divided by nearly USD 15bn in turnover between the first and tenth positions, a difference of about USD 3.2bn separates the ten companies in the second half of the list.
Amul has moved up by one step in 2023 becoming 12th largest dairy
Behind Unilever, India’s Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (Amul) (12th) and France- based Savencia (13th) swapped positions, but they remain closely paired with a difference in turnover of about USD 100m. Savencia’s announced acquisition of Argentina-based Williner in April 2023 is estimated to add about USD 250m in revenues once closed.
Looking ahead, we expect weakening dairy and retail prices will make 2023 a challenging year in terms of profitability for some companies in the ranking. Farmgate milk prices remain relatively high in some regions, which squeezed margins in 1H 2023. In terms of turnover, we expect more muted growth in 2023, with some companies unlikely to match the double-digit percentage revenue gains they experienced in 2022.