Accessibility helpSkip to navigationSkip to contentSkip to footer
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
Open side navigation menuOpen search bar
Financial Times
SubscribeSign In
  • Home
  • World
    Sections
    • World Home
    • Israel-Hamas war
    • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • China
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Emerging Markets
    • Europe
    • War in Ukraine
    • Americas
    • Middle East & North Africa
    Most Read
    • Philippines secretly reinforces ship at centre of South China Sea dispute
    • US to redirect Patriot air defence orders to Ukraine
    • Birth rates in rich countries halve to hit record low
    • The man with a mission to save Emmanuel Macron’s movement
    • Israeli leader at odds with military over war with Hamas
  • UK
    Sections
    • UK Home
    • UK Economy
    • UK Politics
    • UK Companies
    • Personal Finance
    Most Read
    • Unusual burst of bets preceded Rishi Sunak’s election announcement
    • Tory election campaign director on ‘leave’ after gambling probe
    • ‘Every Tory I know is angry’: betting scandal sends election campaign into ‘freefall’
    • Bank of England holds rates at 5.25% in ‘finely balanced’ decision
    • Disenchantment with the Tories spreads to Rishi Sunak’s own seat
  • Companies
    Sections
    • Companies Home
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Media
    • Professional Services
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech Sector
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
    Most Read
    • Revolut seeks valuation of more than $40bn in employee share sale
    • Octopus to repay £3bn of Bulb nationalisation costs
    • KPMG to cut further 200 UK jobs amid market slowdown
    • Permira’s last-minute decision to kill the Golden Goose IPO
    • Deutsche’s private bank cuts spending on external consultants by 70%
  • Tech
  • Markets
    Sections
    • Markets Home
    • Alphaville
    • Markets Data
    • Cryptofinance
    • Capital Markets
    • Commodities
    • Currencies
    • Equities
    • Wealth Management
    • Moral Money
    • ETF Hub
    • Fund Management
    • Trading
    Most Read
    • Revolut seeks valuation of more than $40bn in employee share sale
    • News updates from June 20: Rutte to become Nato head; BoE keeps interest rates on hold
    • Live news: UK business activity expands at slowest pace since November
    • Permira’s last-minute decision to kill the Golden Goose IPO
    • Labour could borrow more without UK bond market backlash, say investors
  • Climate
  • Opinion
    Sections
    • Opinion Home
    • Columnists
    • The FT View
    • The Big Read
    • Lex
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
    Most Read
    • The mother of all US presidential debates
    • The danger of deepfakes is not what you think
    • Brace for the most distorted election result in British history
    • Zero-hours contracts — an obituary
    • AI is coming for our anger
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
    Sections
    • Work & Careers Home
    • Business School Rankings
    • Business Education
    • Europe's Start-Up Hubs
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Recruitment
    • Business Books
    • Business Travel
    • Working It
    Most Read
    • Making sense of Gen Z: employers seek answers on managing younger workers
    • Why tackling accent bias matters at work
    • Janus Henderson’s Ali Dibadj: ‘You’ve just got to roll with the punches’
    • Business books: what to read this month
  • Life & Arts
    Sections
    • Life & Arts Home
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Food & Drink
    • FT Magazine
    • House & Home
    • Style
    • Travel
    • FT Globetrotter
    Most Read
    • Where the ICC fails, others will prevail
    • Best summer books of 2024: Fiction
    • The FT’s guide to the best books to read this summer
    • The Centre Pompidou prepares for a controversial revamp
    • The Bikeriders film review — 1960s motorcycle saga fuelled by the spirit of Scorsese
  • HTSI
MenuSearch
  • Home
  • World
  • UK
  • Companies
  • Tech
  • Markets
  • Climate
  • Opinion
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
  • Life & Arts
  • HTSI
Financial Times
SubscribeSign In

Tate & Lyle PLC

  • Thursday, 20 June, 2024
    Tate & Lyle says $1.8bn ingredients deal will help boost health of products

    Maker of starches and fructose looks for ways to alter portfolio amid scrutiny of ultra-processed foods

  • Thursday, 20 June, 2024
    Lex
    Tate & Lyle buys big to try to make processed food healthier Premium content

    Acquisition of CP Kelco has logic but integrating such a large and underperforming business will be a challenge

    Tate & Lyle’s logo outside its innovation centre in Villeneuve d’Ascq, France,
  • Friday, 8 March, 2024
    Food Prices
    UK competition regulator raises price concerns over sugar deal

    CMA warns merger between makers of Tate & Lyle and Whitworths brands could leave only two large suppliers in UK

    A worker checks a pack of Tate & Lyle sugar in a packing room in London
  • Saturday, 24 February, 2024
    Harriet Fitch Little
    The great golden syrup rebrand should have leaned into the weird

    Tate & Lyle’s decision to remove a biblical dead lion from its branding replaces the surreal with the bland

    Closeup of a Tate & Lyle Golden Syrup tins with the old branding stacked on a supermarket shelf
  • Sunday, 1 October, 2023
    The Big Read
    Artificial sweeteners: the health controversy that will not go away

    Recent warnings are the latest in a series of scares, but the industry says sugar substitutes remain a vital weapon against obesity and diabetes

    Image shows Prof Dana Small, some brain dissections, saccharin tablets, and a diagram of E951 (aspartame) taken from the European Food Safety Authority site
  • Monday, 12 July, 2021
    Lex
    Tate & Lyle: JV deal is as fresh as paint Premium content

    Majority stake sale looks like a creative carve out rather than a typical buyout firm slash and burn

    Splenda sweetener next to a cup of coffee and a spoon
  • Monday, 12 July, 2021
    Tate & Lyle to sell controlling stake in sweeteners arm for $1.3bn

    Food group will offload holding to private equity group as it shifts towards healthier products

  • Monday, 26 April, 2021
    Lex
    Tate & Lyle: cutting down on sweeteners would make proposition tastier Premium content

    A break-up of the FTSE 250 group makes sense

    A Splenda sweetener container beside a cup of coffee
  • Sunday, 25 April, 2021
    Tate & Lyle eyes sale of controlling stake in sweeteners unit

    Break-up would allow 162-year-old UK company to focus on making healthier foods

    A cup of coffee with a sweetener beside it
  • Thursday, 7 November, 2019
    European companies
    Tate & Lyle profit rise driven by growth at ingredients unit

    Chief executive Nick Hampton says FTSE 250 group is still looking for acquisition opportunities

    Pic of Coffee and Splenda which has Sucralose in which is owned by tate and lyle 23/9/14
  • Monday, 29 April, 2019
    LexFood & Beverage
    Tate & Lyle: sweet talk Premium content

    It is hard to see how UK group could make a transformational deal

    Pic of Coffee and Splenda which has Sucralose in which is owned by tate and lyle 23/9/14
  • Monday, 29 April, 2019
    Tate & Lyle scouts for acquisitions to build its ingredients arm

    Chief seeks shift away from commodities to help food companies make healthier products

    11th November 1974: Hundreds of bags of sugar at the Tate & Lyle warehouse. (Photo by D. Morrison/Express/Getty Images)
  • Monday, 12 November, 2018
    Tate & Lyle fights higher costs by charging more for low calorie sweeteners
    Sachets of Splenda sweetner are arranged in London, U.K., on Friday, Sept. 28, 2007.  Tate & Lyle Plc fell the most in two decades in London after predicting a loss for its sugar-trading division and saying higher corn prices will dent profit. Photographer: Hannah Songer/Bloomberg News
  • Thursday, 8 November, 2018
    Tate & Lyle posts small rise in core profits despite higher costs
  • Monday, 15 October, 2018
    Andrew Hill
    Not every company is a technology company

    Solid, long-established corporate names are confusing customers with sector-fluidity

    CHICAGO, IL - 01 APRIL, 2016: Under Armour on Michigan Avenue in Chicago. Under Armour, Inc. is an American sports clothing and accessories company.
  • Thursday, 24 May, 2018
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle sets out $100m savings plan

    Ingredients company posts 23% jump in profit as it takes stake in US stevia group

    Agricultural engineer Edgar Alvarez holds a stevia seedling at a plantation in Santani, Paraguay, May 25, 2016. The leaves of the full-grown stevia are used to extract sweetener for food and beverages. REUTERS/Jorge Adorno - S1BETGJCXTAB
  • Thursday, 24 May, 2018
    Food & Beverage
    Tate & Lyle profits pick up but sales drop

    Sucralose sweetener-maker warns high oil and commodity prices to weigh on earnings

  • Friday, 6 April, 2018
    LexTax
    Sugar tax: sweet spot Premium content

    Food bosses are fretting about appetite for levies on ingredients

    The sugar levy is expected to raise £240m a year
  • Tuesday, 16 January, 2018
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle names former PepsiCo executive as CEO

    Nick Hampton to take over after helping steer ingredients group through torrid period

    Tate & Lyle posted three profit warnings between 2014 and 2015, triggered by a collapse in sucralose prices — one of its key sweeteners
  • Tuesday, 16 January, 2018
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle CEO steps down
  • Friday, 10 November, 2017
    The State of Britain
    Business can sugar the Brexit pill

    Two food producers believe leaving EU will help raise agricultural productivity

    AB Food Products Ahead Of Earnings...Packets of Silver Spoon granulated sugar, produced by Associated British Foods Plc, sits displayed for sale at a supermarket in London, U.K., on Monday, Nov. 5, 2012. AB Foods shares have gained 17 percent this year, fueled by the growth of the sugar unit and Primark, the company's two main profit contributors. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
  • Thursday, 2 November, 2017
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle result helped by demand for sweeteners

    Outlook for profits brightens and dividend rises for first time since 2015

    London-listed Tate & Lyle is one of the UK companies most exposed to Mexico
  • Thursday, 2 November, 2017
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Ingredients maker Tate & Lyle lifts full year profit outlook
  • Thursday, 25 May, 2017
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle profit rises 85% as it gets £40m currency boost

    UK ingredients maker upbeat on year ahead but cautious about changes to Nafta

    An unidentifed woman pours Splenda into a cup in a coffee shop in Boston Friday, Dec. 3, 2004. Dieters hoping for a slew of new products with the sugar substitute Splenda may be disappointed next year. That's because the maker of sucralose, the key ingredient behind the increasingly ubiquitous no-calorie sweetener, is having trouble keeping up with demand. (AP Photo/Winslow Townson)
  • Thursday, 25 May, 2017
    Retail & Consumer industry
    Tate & Lyle profits rise 85%
Previous page You are on page 1 Next page

Useful links

Support

View Site TipsHelp CentreContact UsAbout UsAccessibilitymyFT TourCareers

Legal & Privacy

Terms & ConditionsPrivacy PolicyCookie PolicyManage CookiesCopyrightSlavery Statement & Policies

Services

Share News Tips SecurelyIndividual SubscriptionsProfessional SubscriptionsRepublishingExecutive Job SearchAdvertise with the FTFollow the FT on XFT ChannelsFT Schools

Tools

PortfolioFT AppFT Digital EditionFT EditAlerts HubBusiness School RankingsSubscription ManagerNews feedNewslettersCurrency Converter

Community & Events

FT CommunityFT Live EventsFT ForumsBoard Director Programme

More from the FT Group

Markets data delayed by at least 15 minutes. © THE FINANCIAL TIMES LTD 2024. FT and ‘Financial Times’ are trademarks of The Financial Times Ltd.
The Financial Times and its journalism are subject to a self-regulation regime under the FT Editorial Code of Practice.
Financial Times

UK Edition

Subscribe for full access
  • Switch to International Edition

Top sections

  • Home
  • World
    • Israel-Hamas war
    • Global Economy
    • UK
    • US
    • China
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Emerging Markets
    • Europe
    • War in Ukraine
    • Americas
    • Middle East & North Africa
  • UK
    • UK Economy
    • UK Politics
    • UK Companies
    • Personal Finance
  • Companies
    • Energy
    • Financials
    • Health
    • Industrials
    • Media
    • Professional Services
    • Retail & Consumer
    • Tech Sector
    • Telecoms
    • Transport
  • Tech
    • Artificial intelligence
    • Semiconductors
    • Cyber Security
    • Social Media
  • Markets
    • Alphaville
    • Markets Data
    • Cryptofinance
    • Capital Markets
    • Commodities
    • Currencies
    • Equities
    • Wealth Management
    • Moral Money
    • ETF Hub
    • Fund Management
    • Trading
  • Climate
  • Opinion
    • Columnists
    • The FT View
    • The Big Read
    • Lex
    • Obituaries
    • Letters
  • Lex
  • Work & Careers
    • Business School Rankings
    • Business Education
    • Europe's Start-Up Hubs
    • Entrepreneurship
    • Recruitment
    • Business Books
    • Business Travel
    • Working It
  • Life & Arts
    • Arts
    • Books
    • Food & Drink
    • FT Magazine
    • House & Home
    • Style
    • Travel
    • FT Globetrotter
  • Personal Finance
    • Property & Mortgages
    • Investments
    • Pensions
    • Tax
    • Banking & Savings
    • Advice & Comment
    • Next Act
  • HTSI
  • Special Reports

FT recommends

  • Alphaville
  • FT Edit
  • Lunch with the FT
  • FT Globetrotter
  • #techAsia
  • Moral Money
  • Visual and data journalism
  • Newsletters
  • Video
  • Podcasts
  • News feed
  • FT Live Events
  • FT Forums
  • Board Director Programme
  • myFT Feed
  • Portfolio
  • FT Digital Edition
  • Crossword
  • Our Apps
  • Help Centre
  • Subscribe
  • Sign In