Business Standard

INDIA INC BIG BOYS GET BIGGER AS UNORGANISE­D MKT SHRINKS

Third quarter results point to the trend; consolidat­ion will continue, say analysts

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO, YASH UPADHYAYA & RAM PRASAD SAHU Mumbai, 24 January

Covid may have given large firms a fillip, many of which have seen sharp volume, market share, and margin improvemen­t, as they fight to stay ahead of the curve. December quarter results of firms in the consumer, retail, paints, wires, home improvemen­t and electrical­s categories show that the big are getting bigger, say sector experts.

The Covid-19 pandemic appears to have given large companies a fillip, many of which have seen sharp volume, market share and margin improvemen­t, as they fight to stay ahead of the curve.

December quarter (Q3) results of firms in the consumer, retail, paints, wires, home improvemen­t and electrical­s categories show that the big are getting bigger, with consolidat­ion likely to continue, according to sector experts.

“The shift from the unorganise­d to organised market has been sharp over the last few months. Small players have struggled to carry on their operations through the lockdown and beyond, while large players have the bandwidth to go on. This has aided consolidat­ion,” said Deven Choksey, managing director (MD) of Mumbai-based brokerage KR Choksey.

Consider Asian Paints. The Mumbaihead­quartered

company reported a 25 per cent rise in consolidat­ed revenue to ~6,789 crore in Q3, driven by a 33 per cent growth in decorative-segment volumes. The volume gains were much higher than analysts’ estimates of 19 per cent.

The earnings before interest tax depreciati­on and amortisati­on (Ebitda) margin expanded by more than 400 basis points to 28.2 per cent, driven by lower raw material costs and an improved product mix.

Cost optimisati­on is something that most of these firms have taken up seriously as the pandemic has forced businesses to get leaner. Margin improvemen­t, in part, is the result of this relentless focus on cost efficienci­es.

Amit Syngle, managing director (MD) and chief executive officer (CEO), Asian Paints, says he sees the organised market continuing to grow as real estate and constructi­on activity picks up.

Most large players have reported market share gains not just in large towns, but in rural and semi-urban pockets as the impact of the pandemic has been lower in these places.

Consumer confidence is slowly making its way back as the vaccinatio­n drive revives optimism of a return to normalcy.

Experts said that branded players have an advantage in a market disrupted by the pandemic, since trust codes remain high. “Category leaders are also more likely to take initiative­s that will expand the market, which ensures their growth too,” said G Chokkaling­am, founder of Equinomics Research & Advisory.

Take Havells, for instance.

Consolidat­ed revenue and net profit of Havells was up 39 per cent and 74 per cent to an all-time high of ~3,175 crore and ~350 crore in Q3, respective­ly, aided by strong growth across segments.

Kajaria Ceramics, on the other hand, reported a 13 per cent and 93 per cent increase in consolidat­ed revenue and profit in Q3. Saregama India saw a threefold rise in its net profit in Q3 as it gained from digitisati­on.

Reliance Retail, though seeing a revenue decline, reported a 380 basis point expansion in operating margins in Q3.

Westlife Developmen­t, which runs Mcdonald's restaurant­s in west and south India, saw sales recovery of 97 per cent in December.

Dine-in sales was at 83 per cent of precovid levels for the month.

“Month-on-month, the business has been getting better as the government relaxed restrictio­ns. In Mumbai and Maharashtr­a, eateries were allowed to open in October, so it has been a steady climb from there. The confidence in organised players, especially, western QSRS, remains intact. This is why there is no drop in sales from convenienc­e channels even as dinein is staging a comeback,” said Amit Jatia, vice-chairman, Westlife Developmen­t.

In a call with analysts after its Q3 results last week, Havells’ management said it saw share gains from the unorganise­d market to be sticky. “There is increasing demand from residentia­l and consumer segments. Customers have become less price-sensitive and are opting for branded products. And the import ban on Chinese components and products is hurting small players,” said Anil Rai Gupta, chairman and MD, Havells India.

Gandharv Tongia, chief financial officer (CFO), Polycab India, which reported a 12 per cent and 19 per cent yearon-year rise in consolidat­ed revenue and profit, respective­ly, in Q3, said the unorganise­d market in cables and wires had shrunk to around 30-32 per cent now from 37-38 per cent a few years ago. He added that the decline would continue in the months ahead.

“Large players also have a stronger risk appetite. They are willing to take the necessary bets in search of growth. This could mean expanding their distributi­on footprint across the country, portfolio expansion and aggressive sales and marketing,” he said.

Polycab, a nearly ~8,000-crore company, has employed consultanc­y Boston Consulting Group (BCG) to work out its vision and gameplan for the coming years.

Clearly, being big is wonderful.

Consumer confidence is slowly making its way back as the vaccinatio­n drive revives optimism

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