Business Standard

FMCG takes the road to recovery

- VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO

Amidst the gloom and despair spread by the pandemic, there are a few bright spots. Business Standard looks at five such sectors witnessing ‘green shoots’. The first one is on the fast-moving consumer goods sector.

VIVEAT SUSAN PINTO writes

Amid the gloom and despair spread by the pandemic, which has led to experts predicting a 5% contractio­n in India’s 2020-21 GDP, there are a few bright spots. Business Standard looks at five such sectors that are witnessing ‘green shoots’ with growth rates rebounding to near or above pre-covid levels

An uptick in rural areas, as well as a focus on essential products, has helped bring fast-moving consumer goods (FMCGS) companies back on the growth track, and much faster than in most other sectors.

In the past one week, two companies — Godrej Consumer (GCPL) and Marico — have experience­d strong underlying consumer demand in June, led by the hygiene and food categories. This is in step with firms that have indicated similar trends recently.

Britannia, Parle Products, and Nestle India, for instance, have said it is the smaller towns and cities that are feeding their supplies better than larger urban centres. Though local lockdowns in several cities across states in the past few days are a concern, the impact would be limited, analysts tracking the market said.

“Most companies are coming out of the difficult period that the national lockdown had induced in the first part of the AprilJune period (Q1). The recovery in demand seen in June implies that Q1 will not be a complete washout as anticipate­d earlier,” said Kaustubh Pawaskar, associate vice-president, research, Sharekhan

On the outlook, he added, “We expect a gradual recovery from here onwards in terms of sales for most players. And, if capacity utilisatio­n by companies is taken into account, there is a vast improvemen­t in production, which points to underlying demand in the marketplac­e.”

The Nielsen data, sourced from the industry, shows that consumptio­n growth in rural areas reached 85-90 per cent of pre- Covid levels in June against 50-60 per cent in urban areas. This has been led by fewer infections and lockdowns in rural areas, greater focus by the government on rural welfare, and the reverse migration of people from cities to villages, which is pushing up the consumptio­n of staple products, said experts.

One-third of sales by FMCG companies is in rural areas. Companies such as Dabur and Hindustan Unilever (HUL) have a higher exposure to them, at over 40 per cent of the total, sector experts said.

“We were ramping up production in the

June quarter after manufactur­ing virtually came to a standstill at the end of March. Capacity utilisatio­n is now at 90-100 per cent of pre-covid levels,” Sanjiv Mehta, chairman and managing director (MD), HUL, said during the company’s recent annual general meeting (AGM).

“Seventy-five per cent of our portfolio focuses on essential products and is therefore robust. Twenty per cent is discretion­ary in nature and is under stress due to disruption­s in the marketplac­e, while 5 per cent of the business, which has to do with out-of-home consumptio­n such as ice-creams, has been severely impacted,” Mehta added.

N Chandrasek­aran, chairman, Tata Consumer Products, the maker of Tata Salt and Tata Tea, said demand was bouncing back.

“In certain markets, demand has been a little higher than usual because people have been stocking up when it comes to packaged foods,” he said in response to shareholde­r queries during the firm’s AGM last week.

Brokerage Motilal Oswal Securities said in a recent report the month of July would be critical on account of the progress of the monsoon and its impact on sowing and cultivatio­n. At the same time, the government’s incrementa­l spending in rural areas, including increasing allocation to rural welfare schemes such as the one under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA), augured well for the FMCG market.

The data by the Centre of Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) said the rural job loss rate fell to 6.34 per cent in the week ended July 12 against 7.78 per cent in the previous week, which was a fourmonth low. The overall unemployme­nt rate, as a result, stood at 7.44 per cent for the week ended July 12 versus 8.87 per cent in the previous week, the CMIE said, because joblessnes­s was falling sharply in rural areas. The urban job loss rate, on the other hand, remained elevated at nearly 10 per cent in the week ended July 12, though it had moderated in comparison to the previous week (11.22 per cent).

The uptick in rural areas is prompting companies to take note. Dabur India Chief Executive Officer Mohit Malhotra said the offtake of value packs, especially in rural areas, had increased in oral care and health care, pushing the company to put up additional manufactur­ing lines.

Biscuit majors, on the other hand, were introducin­g packs at ~5 and ~10 for all their brands in a bid to capitalise on demand in rural areas.

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