Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Urban recovery may be muted compared to the first wave: ITC

- Suneera Tandon

NEW DELHI: ITC Ltd has flagged “heightened uncertaint­y” around the timing and shape of India’s economic recovery trajectory following the second wave of Covid-19 infections.

Urban recovery could be muted compared with the first wave and the spread of infection to villages may impact rural demand, said the hotelsto-cigarettes conglomera­te.

A rapid pace of vaccinatio­n and a stronger healthcare infrastruc­ture would be critical to mitigating the impact of any impending outbreaks, it said in its annual report for FY21.

It expects rural demand, robust in FY21, to be impacted owing to the virus spreading in rural areas on a relatively higher scale as compared with the first wave.

Consumers are also setting aside resources for medical needs, it said.

“On the consumptio­n side, urban-led recovery may be relatively muted compared to the first wave as consumers switch to precaution­ary savings mode and rising healthcare costs eat into household spending,” it said.

“Rural demand, which remained strong in FY21 on the back of robust agricultur­al output, government support and reverse migration, may also be blunted by the spread of the virus to the hinterland in the second wave,” it added.

ITC’S gross revenue stood at ₹48,151.24 crore in FY21, while profit after tax stood at ₹13,031.64 crore.

ITC said the progressiv­e easing of restrictio­ns and improvemen­t of mobility led to a pick-up in economic activity in the second half of FY21.

Meanwhile, the “ferocity” of the second wave since February has adversely impacted the country’s projected economic prospects for FY22, it said. That’s because most states imposed partial restrictio­ns to contain the spread of the virus. This has slackened the recovery momentum significan­tly.

ITC’S varied business interests were impacted to different degrees. Its fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) business benefited on account of increased consumptio­n of health-hygiene products such as soaps and sanitizers as well as staples such as pulses, spices, flour and convenienc­e foods in the first half of FY21, while the discretion­ary and out-of-home portfolio reported strong recovery in the latter half.

 ??  ?? ITC also expects rural demand to be impacted owing to the virus spreading on a relatively higher scale compared to the first wave.
ITC also expects rural demand to be impacted owing to the virus spreading on a relatively higher scale compared to the first wave.
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