Business Standard

HUL puts note ban impact behind, net up 6%

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Hindustan Unilever (HUL), the country’s largest consumer goods company, lived up to the expectatio­ns of a good March-quarter result, reporting on Wednesday a 6.2 per cent increase in net profit compared to the correspond­ing quarter of the previous year. The maker of Dove shampoo and Knorr soups saw its Q4 net profit come in at R1,183 crore, ahead of Street estimates. Bloomberg consensus estimates for the March quarter had pegged HUL’s net profit at R1,085 crore, but the actual number was ahead of the estimates by nine per cent.

Hindustan Unilever (HUL), the country’s largest consumer goods company, lived up to the expectatio­ns of a good Marchquart­er result, reporting on Wednesday a 6.2 per cent increase in net profit compared to the correspond­ing quarter of the previous year.

The maker of Dove shampoo and Knorr soups saw its fourth-quarter net profit come in at R1,183 crore, ahead of Street estimates. Bloomberg consensus estimates for the March quarter had pegged HUL’s net profit at R1,085 crore, but the actual number was ahead of the estimates by nine per cent.

Fourth-quarter net sales of HUL, though, came in just below Bloomberg consensus estimates of R8,114 crore. It was R8,100 crore for the quarter ended March 2017, a year-on-year increase of 6.8 per cent.

Volume growth, a crucial metric tracked by most analysts and investors, came in at four per cent for the March quarter, after two consecutiv­e quarters of decline. Price-led growth was nearly three per cent as the company undertook price hikes in soaps and detergents.

Abneesh Roy, senior vicepresid­ent, research, institutio­nal equities, Edelweiss, admitted the four per cent volume growth reported by HUL for the quarter under review was ahead of his estimate of two per cent.

“With this, HUL has returned to the mid-single-digit volume growth trend it saw in financial years 2014-15 (FY15) and 2015-16 (FY16),” said Kaustubh Pawaskar, senior research analyst at brokerage Sharekhan.

In FY15 and FY16, HUL’s volume growth hovered largely between four and six per cent. While HUL did begin the 2016-17 financial year, reporting a four per cent volume growth in the June quarter, the company wasn’t able to sustain this in the September and December quarters as slowdown and note ban challenges took a toll on business.

Harish Manwani, chairman, HUL, said, “This has been a strong quarter with profitable volume-driven growth. In a challengin­g year, we delivered a resilient performanc­e by managing our business dynamicall­y and responding with agility to the changing external environmen­t. We remain optimistic about the medium-term outlook.”

HUL’s earnings before interest tax depreciati­on and amortisati­on (Ebitda) increased 12.2 per cent year-on-year to R1,651 crore. Ebitda (operating) margins increased 98 basis points year-on-year as the company cut ad spends 1.4 per cent and reduced staff costs by 12 per cent over the year-on-year period.

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