By Peter Evans 

LONDON-- Unilever PLC said it would separate its struggling spreads division into a stand-alone company, potentially the first step toward the sale of a legacy business founded in 1872.

Unilever said Thursday the separation would help it stabilize sales in a business that has become a drag on overall growth as margarine has fallen out of favor with shoppers.

Consumers in the developed world are eating less bread than ever before and, when they do, are increasingly choosing to use butter instead of margarine. Americans in 2013 for the third straight year bought more butter than margarine, according to IRI, a market-research firm.

Unilever's spreads division, which includes brands such as Flora and Bertolli margarine, will have a separate management team, be able to set its own strategy and will report its own earnings, Unilever Chief Financial Officer Jean-Marc Huët said at an investor conference Thursday. The new business doesn't include Hellmann's mayonnaise or Marmite sandwich spread.

The company will operate in developed markets only and will be called Baking, Cooking & Spreading Co. It will be 100% owned by Unilever and "continue to benefit from Unilever's scale," Mr. Huët said. Unilever expects the new business to be operating by the middle of 2015.

Spreads currently account for around 7% of Unilever's EUR49.8 billion ($61.37 billion) in revenue and about a quarter of its foods division.

The spreads division has looked increasingly incongruous in recent years as Unilever has shifted its focus toward high-margin personal-care brands such as TRESemmé shampoo and Axe deodorant. In the nine months ended Sept. 30, underlying sales (excluding currency effects, acquisitions and disposals) in the spreads business declined 3.2%, compared with an increase of 3.2% on that basis across the whole company.

The decision to separate spreads is another step away from Unilever's once-core food business. In the last two years, the company has sold many of its big-name food brands, such as Skippy peanut butter and Ragú pasta sauce. Food, which in 2008 accounted for 35% of Unilever's business, now makes up 25%.

News of the separation caused Unilever's shares to rise strongly in early trading and revived long-standing rumors that the business eventually would be sold.

A Unilever spokeswoman said there were "no plans" to sell the new company. "It remains a core part of our business and the cash delivery is important to us," she said.

Still, many analysts said an eventual sale was inevitable, with the business valued between EUR5.5 billion and EUR8 billion.

"This is definitely the start of a sales process," said Fintan Ryan, an analyst at Berenberg Bank, who added that private-equity investors were the most likely buyers.

If Unilever were to sell, the company would have more firepower to pursue acquisitions in personal care. It sees that category as the fastest way to growth, especially in emerging markets.

One possible target suggested by analysts is the personal-care unit of Energizer Holdings Inc., for around $10 billion. That would give Unilever the Schick brand of razors and the opportunity to develop a category only just taking hold in the developing world. Another potential deal is a $75 billion merger with Colgate-Palmolive Co.

Unilever was created in 1929 through the merger of British soap maker Lever Brothers and Dutch firm Margarine Unie. The Dutch side of the business started producing margarine in 1872.

The spreads business "is an important part of our heritage, but this will never be a barrier to us taking decisive action," Mr. Huët said.

Write to Peter Evans at peter.evans@wsj.com

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