Chinese distributors are demanding refunds from Swiss food giant Nestlé, claiming the company pressured them to buy excessive stock of infant formula and milk powder as market demand fell. The dispute has left distributors with unsellable inventory and mounting debts.

"My expenses keep accumulating... my bank loans have to be repaid. So now I truly can’t sustain it anymore."
Nestlé’s century-long dominance in the Far East is facing a brutal reckoning as grassroots distributors launch an unprecedented revolt against the Swiss food titan. In the heart of Hebei province, the dream of Western expansion has soured into a nightmare of mounting debt and rotting inventory. For entrepreneurs like Feng Liqing, the reality is a staggering Rmb1 million ($147,000) in unsold milk powder—goods she claims she was coerced into buying. This isn't just a logistical hiccup; it is a full-blown insurrection. Distributors are now storming Nestlé’s Beijing offices, demanding refunds for products the market simply refuses to absorb. While Nestlé once provided the very blueprint for Western success in China, it now finds itself accused of predatory sales tactics to mask a deeper rot in consumer demand. The stakes are massive: Greater China represents 5% of the group’s CHF89.5 billion global revenue, and that foundation is currently shaking.
A devastating 10.2% plunge in sales has exposed a controversial practice known as 'channel stuffing' within Nestlé’s Chinese operations. Former and current executives admit that the company oversupplied the market with products to hit artificial internal targets, even as demand plummeted. This aggressive maneuver creates a short-term revenue illusion but leaves the supply chain bloated and distributors bankrupt. Nestlé has blamed the crisis on China’s declining birth rate, but the numbers tell a more aggressive story of corporate pressure. In six of the last seven years, sales in the region have retreated, yet the pressure on local distributors to take on more stock reportedly intensified. This systemic failure has turned loyal partners into bitter enemies, as the gap between corporate projections and the reality on the ground becomes an unbridgeable chasm. The world's largest food company is now learning that you cannot force-feed a market that is already full.
The crisis in China is unfolding against a backdrop of unprecedented instability at Nestlé’s headquarters in Vevey. The 159-year-old institution has been rocked by a leadership vacuum that would have been unthinkable a decade ago. In 2024, CEO Mark Schneider was abruptly ousted by Chair Paul Bulcke. His successor, Laurent Freixe, lasted a mere year before being terminated for a scandalous affair with a subordinate. The subsequent resignation of Bulcke himself, under intense shareholder fire, has left the company rudderless at its most critical juncture. This internal turmoil has directly impacted the firm's ability to manage its international crises. While the boardroom in Switzerland burned, the Chinese market was left to fester under outdated strategies and questionable sales practices. For a company that prides itself on Swiss precision and stability, the current state of affairs is nothing short of a reputational catastrophe. Investors are now questioning if the group can ever regain its footing in a post-scandal era.
China is no longer the easy win it was when Nestlé first arrived in 1908; today, it is a battlefield where local competitors are outmaneuvering the Swiss giant. Domestic brands are surging, capturing the hearts—and wallets—of Chinese parents who are increasingly wary of foreign conglomerates. This shift is compounded by a slowing economy and the looming threat of international trade tariffs that are expected to weigh on growth through 2026. Nestlé’s historic role in building China’s dairy industry, even shipping cows from Australia in the 1980s, offers no protection against modern market dynamics. The company now faces a choice: radically restructure its Chinese operations or risk a permanent decline in one of the world’s most vital economies. For Switzerland, the 'Nestlé problem' is a warning shot. As domestic demand weakens and global uncertainty rises, the resilience of Swiss exports is being tested like never before. The revolt in Hebei is not just a local dispute; it is a signal that the era of Western corporate dominance in China is reaching its endgame.