Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Patanjali sales growth grinds to a halt in FY18

KEY REASONS Lingering effects of note ban, GST affected growth, says MD

- Sounak Mitra sounak.m@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Patanjali Ayurved Ltd’s scorching pace of growth, which had left rival packaged goods companies scurrying to defend their turf over the past few years, has stalled, with Baba Ramdev’s company saying sales was little changed in the year ended March 31.

“We have closed the year around the same level as the previous fiscal year’s revenue,” Acharya Balkrishna, managing director of Patanjali, said in an interview. Baba Ramdev, the yoga guru-turned-businessma­n, had on May 4, 2017 said that Patanjali would continue to “double revenue every year” to cross ₹20,000 crore in the year ended March 2018 and subsequent­ly would cross the annual revenue of India’s largest packaged goods company Hindustan Unilever Ltd by March 31, 2019.

“Lingering effects of the demonetisa­tion and the implementa­tion of goods and services tax (GST) impacted growth,” Balkrishna said, adding that Patanjali will do better next year. “Besides, we invested our energy in developing infrastruc­ture and supply chain during the year. This year, we focused on system developmen­t, and not just revenue growth.”

Patanjali had reported revenue of ₹10,561 crore for the year ended March 31, 2017, more than double the ₹5,000 crore in the pre- vious year.

Still, some analysts are asking whether Patanjali is approachin­g the limit of its long growth expansion. They attribute the slowdown in sales growth to rivals catching up with competing products and Patanjali’s inability to handle the expansion.

“Demonetisa­tion and GST affected all packaged goods companies. Patanjali’s business was also impacted by intensifyi­ng competitio­n, especially in the herbal personal care segment,” said Abneesh Roy, an analyst with Edelweiss Securities.

Sachin Bobade, an analyst with Mumbai-based Dolat Capital Market, believes consumers of Patanjali, especially in the urban areas, shifted to other brands because of quality issues.

“Besides, the company’s distributi­on and supply chain was not efficient enough to handle the volume. It expanded too fast. Also, there has not been much innovation. The company can’t grow beyond a point riding on just brand Ramdev,” added Bobade.

Patanjali’s stagnant sales must be particular­ly galling for its promoters since they come at a time when other consumer packaged goods firms have done better. Hindustan Unilever on Monday reported a 2.2% increase in total sales for the year ended March 31, to ₹35,787 crore as its domestic consumer business (comparable, or post accounting adjustment­s) grew by 12% during the year.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? Patanjali had reported a revenue of ₹10,561 crore for the year ended March 31, 2017, more than double the ₹5,000 crore in the previous year
MINT/FILE Patanjali had reported a revenue of ₹10,561 crore for the year ended March 31, 2017, more than double the ₹5,000 crore in the previous year

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