Business Standard

Multinatio­nals feel destocking pinch in June quarter FEELING THE HEAT

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO Mumbai, 23 July

Multinatio­nal companies in the fast moving consumer goods sector (FMCG) have reported a significan­t destocking impact on their June-quarter sales growth numbers, ahead of the implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST) in India.

On Thursday, the world’s secondlarg­est consumer goods company, Unilever, reported a 0.6 per cent decline in sales volume growth in the Asia, Africa, Middle East, Turkey, Russian and Brazil regions, clubbed as the Asia/AMET/RUB zone, in the quarter (Q2).

It was the only Unilever region to report a decline in Q2 (Americas and Europe, the other two regions, reported a 0.9 per cent and 0.1 per cent volume growth), though value-wise, the sales growth for Asia/AMET/RUB was the highest, at 4.3 per cent.

Colgate-Palmolive said on Friday that organic sales for the Asia-Pacific decreased 3.5 per cent, reflecting mainly inventory reduction by wholesaler­s in India, in anticipati­on of GST.

Johnson & Johnson (J&J), the pharmaceut­ical and consumer goods major, was more specific about the destocking impact on its consumer business. It said GST implementa­tion, resulted in market disruption, negatively impacting growth by one-half point in Q2.

J&J’s global finance head, Dominic Caruso, maintained during an investor call last week that economic trends in China and India were impacting the expectatio­ns. “In the consumer business, we are seeing much weaker markets and some macroecono­mic conditions, particular­ly in China and India,” he said.

Analysts say the impact of trade destocking is likely to be higher in the September quarter, since the wholesale channel, a key one for FMCG companies, has yet to transition fully to the new regime. Caruso underlined those views last week, saying J&J had adjusted its expectatio­ns in the face of the overall consumer market likely to be seeing market decelerati­on this year, from last year. Wholesaler­s constitute 35-40 per cent of an FMCG company’s sales in India. Analysts have said the transition period for wholesaler­s in the September quarter will extend beyond a month, since they remain largely unorganise­d, depending mostly on cash transactio­ns. Sales growth (% yoy) down (for the three months ended June ‘17) J&J* -0.5 Unilever** -0.6 Colgate*** -3.5

“Our estimate is that sales growth and profit after tax (PAT) growth in the June quarter for FMCGs will be in mid-single digits and lower still in the September quarter. While Hindustan Unilever’s (HUL’s) net sales growth in the quarter did live up to our mid-single digit estimate, PAT growth was lifted by the prudent cost management exercise the company put in place,” said Sachin Bobade, senior analyst at Mumbaibase­d brokerage Dolat Capital.

G Chokkaling­am, founder, Equinomics Research & Advisory, agreed. He said improvemen­t in sales and profit growth for FMCGs was likely in the third quarter, as trade was likely to fall in line with the GST requiremen­ts by then.

In an investor call last week, HUL's management said organised wholesale (cash and carry stores of Metro and Walmart, for instance) would gain at the cost of unorganise­d wholesale in the GST regime. “They will get bigger,” said Chief Financial Officer P B Balaji. “GST will also push companies to drive their direct distributi­on efforts even more as they look to bring down their dependence on wholesale (unorganise­d wholesale). We will look at sustainabl­e direct reach because we see clear benefits coming out of this.”

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