Avery Dennison Corp
NYSE:AVY
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Avery Dennison Corp
NYSE:AVY
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Avery Dennison Corp
Avery Dennison makes the labels, stickers, tags, and adhesive materials that help products get identified, tracked, and branded. Its core business is pressure-sensitive materials, which are the sticky labels and films used on packaging, shipping items, apparel, and consumer goods. It also sells RFID inlays and tags, which let companies track inventory and products electronically. Its main customers are manufacturers, retailers, logistics companies, and apparel brands that need to label products or manage supply chains. Avery Dennison makes money by selling these materials and related converting services to business customers around the world. In many cases, it supplies the basic material layer that other companies turn into finished labels or use directly on products. What makes the business model distinctive is that it sits quietly inside everyday commerce: most consumers do not notice the company, but its products are embedded in packaging, shipping, and inventory systems. That gives Avery Dennison a role in both the physical branding of products and the digital tracking of goods, especially through RFID-based identification.
Avery Dennison makes the labels, stickers, tags, and adhesive materials that help products get identified, tracked, and branded. Its core business is pressure-sensitive materials, which are the sticky labels and films used on packaging, shipping items, apparel, and consumer goods. It also sells RFID inlays and tags, which let companies track inventory and products electronically.
Its main customers are manufacturers, retailers, logistics companies, and apparel brands that need to label products or manage supply chains. Avery Dennison makes money by selling these materials and related converting services to business customers around the world. In many cases, it supplies the basic material layer that other companies turn into finished labels or use directly on products.
What makes the business model distinctive is that it sits quietly inside everyday commerce: most consumers do not notice the company, but its products are embedded in packaging, shipping, and inventory systems. That gives Avery Dennison a role in both the physical branding of products and the digital tracking of goods, especially through RFID-based identification.
Topline: Avery Dennison said it had a strong start to 2026, with organic sales up 1% and adjusted EPS up 7% year over year, helped by volume growth, productivity and foreign exchange.
Inflation: Management said raw material inflation accelerated in March and is expected to stay elevated in Q2, so the company is pushing through price increases and material reengineering to protect margins.
Intelligent Labels: The platform came in slightly below expectations in Q1, mainly because of softer logistics demand and customer inventory moves, but management still expects 2026 growth to beat 2025, with most of the ramp in the second half.
Wiliot Deal: Avery Dennison agreed to invest an additional $75 million in Wiliot, deepening a long-term partnership and expanding its intelligent labels strategy into condition monitoring use cases.
Cash Return: The company generated $104 million of adjusted free cash flow and returned $133 million to shareholders through dividends and buybacks, while keeping net debt to adjusted EBITDA at 2.4.
Outlook: For Q2, management guided to reported sales growth of 2% to 4% and adjusted EPS of $2.43 to $2.53, while saying full-year earnings should rise sequentially through the year if current conditions hold.