Business Standard

India market is recovering after GST: Indra Nooyi

- ARNAB DUTTA

The chairwoman and CEO of PepsiCo, Indra Nooyi, on Tuesday said the consumer market in India was on a recovery path after initial disruption­s caused due to the implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST). In the past few weeks, top executives from major FMCG firms, including Unilever, Mondelez, and Colgate-Palmolive, were pinning their hopes on recovering from the initial GST hiccups in the country. writes

Chairwoman and chief executive officer (CEO) of PepsiCo, Indra Nooyi, on Tuesday said the consumer market in India was on a recovery path after initial disruption­s caused due to the implementa­tion of the goods and services tax (GST).

In the past few weeks, top executives from major fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) firms, including Unilever, Mondelez, and Colgate-Palmolive, were pinning their hopes on recovering from the initial GST hiccups in the country.

“After GST, the India market is coming back”, Nooyi said. “We want to do better top line growth; there are headwinds like retail disruption. Consumers are health conscious, not consuming as much they used to. There are big brands that are not doing well, (on the other hand,) some smaller brands are doing good business,” Nooyi said during an investors call after PepsiCo’s December quarter results.

Pepsico’s business in India registered a “mid- single digit (volume) growth” during the quarter, she said. However, the extent of real growth could not be ascertaine­d as sales during the correspond­ing quarter were hampered due to demonetisa­tion.

Last February, Nooyi had said that demonetisa­tion had a “significan­t impact” on PepsiCo's business in the country and the cola major was still feeling the “lingering effects”.

While, PepsiCo has divested more territorie­s to one of its largest bottling partner RJ Corp, Nooyi said the firm would be open to such franchisin­g, provided it found suitable partners. RJ’s bottling arm Varun Beverages holds the bottling and distributi­on rights for the cola major’s north and eastern regions for years now. Now it has acquired rights for five more states — Madhya Pradesh, Odisha, Jharkhand, Chhattisga­rh and Bihar — in the past three months. The company has also bagged the rights to produce non- carbonated drinks under Tropicana, Quaker and Lipton Tea brands from PepsiCo’s portfolio. In 2013 PepsiCo handed over its bottling and distributi­on rights for north and east India to RJ Corp, which currently holds around 35 per cent in the company's India operations.

Incidental­ly, Ravi Kant Jaipuria, chairman, RJ Corp, expressed interests in taking over more territorie­s from the cola major last week. According to sources, PepsiCo India’s new CEO, Ahmed El Sheikh, has already held meetings with Jaipuria, who now controls over 65 per cent of the bottling rights in the ~220 billion beverage market.

 ??  ?? Indra Nooyi, chairwoman and CEO of PepsiCo
Indra Nooyi, chairwoman and CEO of PepsiCo

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