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New Zealand’s a2 Milk lifts FY revenue growth forecast; shares hit near 5‑year high

By Thomson Reuters Feb 15, 2026 | 1:49 PM

By Jasmeen Ara Islam Shaikh and Nichiket Sunil

Feb 16 (Reuters) – New Zealand’s a2 Milk raised its full-year revenue growth forecast on Monday after half-year profit beat expectations on ​strong sales momentum in its top market, China, sending ‌its shares to a near five-year high.

The dairy producer said it now expects fiscal 2026 revenue to rise by a mid-double-digit percentage from last year’s continuing operations, up from its prior forecast of low double-digit growth.

It ‌also ​expects fiscal 2026 net profit after ⁠tax to increase from last ⁠year’s reported level, compared with its earlier guidance that profit would be only “slightly up” year on year.

Shares jumped as much as 11.7% to NZ$11.17, their highest level since February ​24, 2021, before closing up 5%.

For the half-year ended December 31, the company’s net profit after tax attributable from continuing ⁠operations increased 9.4% to NZ$112.1 million ($67.66 ⁠million), topping a Visible Alpha consensus estimate of ​NZ$104 million.

Revenue from the firm’s key China-and-other-Asia segment jumped 20.3% ​during the period, helped by growth in its English-label infant ‌milk formula and other nutritionals.

Segment sales rose to NZ$739 million, above the Visible Alpha estimate of NZ$714 million, driven by 6.5% growth in China-label infant milk formula revenue and a 23.9% ⁠increase in English-label sales.

The company has stepped up marketing investment, particularly in China, while strengthening support for domestic growth and supply chain ⁠initiatives.

“Market share gains ‌are driving this growth along with new product ⁠launches – any slowdown to share gains or ​new product ‌traction presents a risk,” said Matt Montgomerie, ​senior equities ⁠analyst at Forsyth Barr.

A2 Milk declared an interim dividend of 11.5 New Zealand cents per share, up from 8.5 cents declared a year ago.

(Reporting by Jasmeen Ara Shaikh, Nichiket Sunil and Keshav Singh Chundawat in Bengaluru; Editing by Alexander Smith, Edmund Klamann, Chris Reese ​and Eileen Soreng)