How Nestle bounced back from the Maggi crisis

in food •  6 years ago 

Some time in the late evening of May 17, Nestle India's stock was exchanging at Rs 9,865 a piece at the Bombay Stock Exchange.

The cost was almost the twofold the low point it contacted since an emergency that genuinely debilitated the organization in 2015. That was the point at which a panicky government, spooked by claims of contaminants in Maggi moment noodles, forced a nation wide prohibition on Nestle's crown gem.

Last fortnight's securities exchange execution - the most elevated cost since Nestle recorded on the Indian bourses in 1996 - saw the organization quickly enter the alliance of best 30 most esteemed recorded elements on BSE (in light of market capitalisation).

At the end of the day, the organization had ricocheted once again from the greatest existential danger in its 104-year history in India.

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