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Vidrala Shares Rise After Plan to Adjust Capacity to Weaker Demand

By Helena Smolak

Vidrala shares rose after the company said it plans to control its capacity-utilization rates to adapt inventories in response to demand weakness.

Shares at 0851 GMT were up 3% at EUR78, having earlier risen as much as 5.4%.

The Spanish bottle manufacturer said its capacity measures, which don’t affect its full-year guidance, follow recent weakness in demand that reflects macroeconomic factors, temporary destocking effects and tough comparisons from the previous year.

For the first nine months, Vidrala said it made a net profit of 184.6 million euros ($195.2 million). Last year, it reported a net profit of EUR78.2 million for the same period.

Revenue rose 17% to EUR1.19 billion, while earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization nearly doubled to EUR315.6 million, the company said.

Vidrala said its results show the benefits of its recent deal making, particularly in a less buoyant economic context.

Vidrala’s comments about demand weakness shouldn’t come as a surprise for the market given share falls over recent weeks, and its results point to a third-quarter performance broadly aligned with expectations, Citi analysts James Perry and Ephrem Ravi said in a note.

After Wednesday’s early-trade gains, Vidrala shares were still down 14% over the last three months.


Write to Helena Smolak at helena.smolak@wsj.com


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