Business Standard

ITC scrip needs consistent FMCG profit

This and higher segment revenues will aid in diversific­ation and a re-rating, as will in cigarette volumes

- SHEETAL AGARWAL

The ITC scrip had always traded at a valuation discount of 10-15 per cent to Hindustan Unilever (HUL). The gap has widened in the past year to 40 per cent, due to weakness in cigarette volumes. At Tuesday's closing price of ~329, the ITC scrip trades at inexpensiv­e valuations of 25.7 times the FY16 estimated earnings.

ITC's focus on growing its non-cigarette FMCG (FMCG) business could lead to a re-rating of the scrip over the next two to three years, believe analysts. However, delivery of sustainabl­e profits in the FMCG business is a pre-requisite.

Vivek Veda, consumer analyst at Societe Generale, says: “The FMCG business has not delivered consistent profits and its cash cow business of cigarettes is under huge pressure. Thus, consistent profitabil­ity of the FMCG business is key for re-rating.”

At the annual general meeting last week, Chairman Y C Deveshwar emphasised the focus on growing the FMCG business. At ~9,044 crore in FY15, the segment's revenue is a fifth of the total; the idea is to raise the figure to ~1,00,000 crore by 2030. With the high competitio­n in the sector, is this achievable? Some say it is ambitious and others that ITC will need to step up acquisitio­ns to do so. As this target requires compounded annual growth of 26-27 per cent, ITC will need aggressive launches and to spend on advertisin­g. Overall, it will have to invest continuous­ly in this business to reach the target.

The packaged foods segment comprises brands such as Aashirvaad, Sunfeast, Bingo!, Yippee!, Kitchens of India, mint-o and B Natural, among others, and has been performing well. Personal care products under the brands ‘Essenza Di Wills’, ‘Fiama Di Wills’, ‘Engage’ and ‘Vivel’, among others, have lagged. Analysts believe it will take another two to three years for this segment's profitabil­ity to stabilise, subject to ITC's investment­s.

ITC has been present in FMCG for over a decade but has not seen decent profit. It had seen full-year earnings before interest and taxes in FY14 and FY15 worth ~12 crore and ~31 crore, respective­ly; these profits have been lumpy on a quarterly basis. This is because the company continues to invest in new launches and advertisin­g across sub-categories.

Suruchi Jain, consumer analyst at Morningsta­r, says: \"We are not comfortabl­e with the fact that ITC is continuing to launch new products without focusing on profits.\" She expects profitabil­ity to improve as economies of scale start kicking in.

ITC's ability to invest in FMCG is also dependent on healthy cash generation in cigarettes. This segment has seen falling volumes over the past few quarters on increasing­ly stringent regulation­s and higher taxes. However, assuming no further regulatory action, analysts believe improvemen­t in cigarette volumes is another two to three quarters away. A rise in cigarette volumes will be another key catalyst for the stock.

Analysts remain positive on ITC's dairy foray, as the segment has so many unorganise­d entities and the company's strong rural franchise will aid growth of this segment.

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