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Oatly aims to convert cow’s milk drinkers in pursuit of sales, and a better planet

Gilberto V. Sutton by Gilberto V. Sutton
in Parenting
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Framed by a backdrop that said “post-milk generation,” Oatly Group AB Chief Executive Toni Petersson reiterated his company’s mission to help save the environment and grow the number of people who are choosing Oatly over traditional cow’s milk.

“It’s about converting people who used to drink cow’s milk to people who drink oat milk,” he said to the group of global journalists gathered at the virtual press conference. “We will not lose track of that mission and continue to stay true to that.”

Oatly OTLY,
+9.31%
became a publicly traded company on Thursday, with shares soaring more than 30% above the $17 IPO price out of the gate before settling to a close 19% above it at $20.20.

See: Oatly IPO: 5 things to know about the plant-based dairy company

Before landing on the Nasdaq, Oatly, a 25-year-old company, was winning over consumers who are increasingly seeking out plant-based food options for health purposes and other reasons.

Oatly, like the growing number of plant-based alternative food products on the market including Beyond Meat Inc.
BYND,
+0.15%
and Impossible Foods, says it’s in business to generate sales, but also to help the planet.

“Knowing that each liter we sell is a step towards a better world transforms day-to-day business into something extraordinary,” reads the CEO letter in the Oatly prospectus.

“It demands that we see a much larger market than plant-based products have before. Our aim is to disrupt one of the world’s largest industries – dairy – and in the process lead a new way forward for the food system. This seismic change in the market has already begun. There is no going back.”

Diners are becoming more open to plant-based alternatives, with items like Oatly’s Oatgurt yogurt alternative, plant-based pizza toppings and Chik’n Tenders hitting the market.

Read: Spam parent Hormel soars as food-service rebound, pizza topping growth drive sales

Many of these items are gaining traction with help from major quick-service chains, like McDonald’s Corp.
MCD,
-0.30%
and Yum Brands Inc.
YUM,
+0.03%
chains like Pizza Hut, which provide diners with a chance to easily give plant-based foods a try. And Starbucks Corp.
SBUX,
-0.30%
experienced an oat-milk shortage in April, a month after introducing beverages made with Oatly.

Companies in the plant-based food space, including Tyson Foods Inc.
TSN,
+0.13%
and Hormel Foods Corp.
HRL,
+0.68%,
that also manufacture foods with traditional meat ingredients, anticipate growth in this category.

The Plant Based Foods Association and the Good Food Institute say plant-based-food sales reached $7 billion in sales in 2020, and organizations that advocate for the meat and dairy industries have also taken notice.

On Monday, the National Milk Producers Federation pushed out a news release with the headline “Dairy Defined: Dairy a Key to Your Plant-Based Diet.”

“Vegetarian isn’t the same as vegan. And deciding to move toward a diet more heavily weighted toward fruits, nuts and vegetables doesn’t mean a consumer has to travel to the fringe – or miss out on dairy’s many clear benefits,” the group said.

Last month, Wisconsin Sen. Tammy Baldwin and Idaho Sen. Jim Risch introduced the DAIRY PRIDE Act, which would prohibit nondairy items made from ingredients like nuts from being labeled “milk.”

“We can’t wait to see what the next 12, 24, or 36 months will bring,” Oatly’s Petersson told the assembled media. “The only thing to change that is if we change our mindset, which we won’t.”

Don’t miss: Walmart may have lost grocery share during COVID, but it’s well positioned to get it back

Oatly shares gained 9.1% in early Friday trading.

The Renaissance IPO ETF IPO,
+0.64%
has dropped 9.6% for the year to date while the S&P 500 index
SPX,
+0.26%
is up 11.3% for the period.

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Gilberto V. Sutton

Gilberto V. Sutton

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