Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

FMCG cos post volume decline in Jan-Mar quarter

- Press Trust of India

NEW DELHI: The fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) industry saw a decline in volume in the January-March period as consumptio­n was impacted by price increases, especially in the food and essentials categories, said a report by data analytics firm NielsenIQ.

Rural India witnessed a 5.3% dip in volume in the period. This is the highest consumptio­n slowdown in the last three quarters, said the FMCG Snapshot released by NielsenIQ’s Retail Intelligen­ce team on Wednesday. Besides, there was a rise in the exit of small manufactur­ers in the FMCG sector because of high input cost pressures, as they were not able to pass on the costs to consumers.

“A decline in consumptio­n is echoed across all zones and the town classes, but more prominent in rural markets, which sees a 5.3% dip, the highest consumptio­n slowdown in the last three quarters. The South and North zones witnessed more than 5% volume decline,” it said.

However, the FMCG industry witnessed 6% revenue increase year-on-year led by a “doubledigi­t price growth”.

“Rural markets have witnessed higher price increases than urban markets (11.9% in rural compared to 8.8% in urban) in the country, and hence more stress on consumptio­n decline,” said NielsenIQ.

The overall volume decline is spread across categories, but the extent is significan­tly higher in the non-food segment.

The non- food segment of FMCG saw a volume decline of 9.6% during the quarter under review, while the food segment fell 1.8%. It is also witnessing downtradin­g as consumers are shifting towards smaller pack sizes, said NielsenIQ.

“Within foods, impulse beats the slowdown (positive volume growth of 1.5%) with consumers focusing on smaller packs in the category seen in salty snacks, chocolates and confection­ary. The staples product basket with categories such as refined and non-refined edible oil, vanaspati, packaged atta has shown a nearly 15% price increase,” it said. NielsenIQ customer success lead (India) Sonika Gupta said the consumers are scaling back more on discretion­ary spending within the non-food categories. “Overall, there is an evident shift by consumers to smaller pack sizes to manage external factors for both foods and non-foods. Keeping this in mind, manufactur­ers and retailers need to ensure the right assortment of pack sizes across brands to account for this consumptio­n shift,” she said.

According to the report, the modern trade shows evidence of stabilisat­ion in recent quarters, with volume growth of 5.3% in January-March. However, traditiona­l trade such as kiranas saw a volume decline of 4.9%.

“Macroecono­mic indicators are still guiding consumptio­n patterns for the Indian consumer, and they are feeling the impact of the price increase -especially in the food and essentials categories”, said NielsenIQ managing director India Satish Pillai..

 ?? AFP ?? Rural India witnessed a 5.5% dip in consumptio­n volume in the January-March period.
AFP Rural India witnessed a 5.5% dip in consumptio­n volume in the January-March period.

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