Hindustan Times (East UP)

‘Urban sales still not in line with pre-Covid growth’

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NEW DELHI: Urban sales are recovering and trending better than rural sales, which is presently ‘very resilient’ after the second wave of Covid-19 pandemic, and Dabur India is continuous­ly investing in rural infrastruc­ture as it is ‘hopeful on the macroecono­mics’, a top company official said.

Notwithsta­nding the uptick in sales, urban markets are still not in line with pre-Covid growth and are on a recovery path helped by the comeback of modern trade channels, e-commerce sales and improvemen­t of mobility as restrictio­ns are eased out, according to Dabur India CEO Mohit Malhotra.

The sales network of Dabur India covers around 83,500 villages and the company aims to cover 90,000 villages directly by next year.

“In my view, rural will keep trending well going forward as compared to urban at least for us, and we are also putting up infrastruc­ture improvemen­t in place,” Malhotra said in an investors’ conference call last week.

In the long-term, going forward, ‘rural will be resilient’, which is growing almost at around 12% coming on the back of 26% base.

“So rural is trending well. Urban growth is in the range of around 9% coming on the back of an 18% base,” Malhotra said.

“... Rural is trending well for us and the annual monsoon has been great, the harvest has been fantastic, MSPs have not been rolled out, MGNREGA arrangemen­t is good, unemployme­nt rates in rural areas are kind of lowest at this time,” Malhotra added.

The company, however, is concerned about inflationa­ry pressures on raw materials, which is still continuing in the October-December quarter.

“We thought that there will be little softening of inflation, which will happen in Q3, but the projection that we are getting for Q3 is that inflation is only picking up from there, and we are not seeing any signs of softening happening in inflation,” he said.

To offset that impact of inflation and continued sustained pressure, the company has taken price increases in its several categories and has taken some costsaving measures also.

However, it would not go for any “aggressive price increases” as demand is also recovering.

“Also, the market is pretty competitiv­e here. That is what we are waiting and watching,” Malhotra said.

While talking about D2C, Malhotra said, the company is making an effort towards this and by December end, hopefully, the company would have a platform that has a direct D2C connection.

This would be beside the regular convention­al e-commerce connect on D2C that it already has, he added.

Over the New Product Developmen­t, Malhotra said it would continue its e-commerce exclusive initiative­s, terming it as a cradle of innovation for the firm.

“We are launching exclusive e-commerce brands, our innovation rate in an e-commerce portal, which is around 5% of the overall business, is in the range of around 10 to 12% also, besides the food and beverage business. E-commerce new product developmen­ts are racing much ahead because there is a cradle for us to see a lot of innovation­s,” he said.

Dabur will also keep seeding brands, which have D2C connect exclusivel­y on shared portals, like Amazon and try to create its own portal also for a D2C connection with the consumer.

 ?? ?? Mohit Malhotra, chief executive, Dabur India.
Mohit Malhotra, chief executive, Dabur India.

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