Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Noodles, flour makers feel pinch of high wheat prices

- Suneera Tandon suneera.t@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: Packaged foods companies are taking price hikes, or cutting down grammage in packs of biscuits, noodles, and atta as wheat prices have skyrockete­d over the last month. Wholesale wheat prices rose 14% in March—the highest in 63 months.

Companies facing inflationa­ry headwinds because of high palm oil and crude prices may be in for more trouble if domestic wheat prices continue to rise. Kolkata-based ITC Ltd said it took “calibrated price revisions” for Aashirvaad Atta, Sunfeast biscuits and Yippee noodles, given the magnitude of the price increase.

“ITC is the largest private-sector procurer of wheat in India, and this lends a source of competitiv­e advantage to the foods business. However, inflation and increase in raw material prices remain a concern. We have been closely monitoring costs and have brought in efficienci­es across every node of the value chain right from raw material sourcing to delivery to the consumer,” said Hemant Malik, divisional chief executive, foods division, ITC.

Biscuit makers said prices of wheat were up by 10-15% from a month ago, not to mention the uncertaint­ies around planned oil imports that could exacerbate inflationa­ry trends.

Surya Food and Agro Ltd, which sells biscuits under the Priyagold brand, said it was becoming difficult to manufactur­e biscuits at lower price points. This is on account of inflation across key raw materials, including edible oil, milk and wheat, he said. “Because of high export demand, prices of wheat have been going up—it has already increased 10-15% in the last month. Sugar and milk prices have also increased. The biscuit industry is in a very bad shape,” said Shekhar Agarwal, director of the packaged foods company.

The Ukraine-Russia conflict has impacted wheat production and global supplies. Conflict in the region, which accounts for over a quarter of global wheat imports, has shored up demand for Indian wheat. India has promised to increase exports to plug global wheat supply shortages. A report in Hindustan Times on Thursday said that private traders are stocking up large quantities of wheat, hoping for a strong export-linked demand leading to higher prices in the domestic markets. Meanwhile, a harsher summer is impacting yield across major wheat harvesting states.

To be sure, India is the second-largest producer of wheat.

Compared with a year-ago period, prices of packaged atta in retail stores grew more than 6%, while bread grew 11.6%, according to data sourced from retail intelligen­ce firm Bizom.

“We do see that there could be a further increase in prices of value-added products as there remains strong export demand for wheat which will put pressure on prices locally,” said Akshay D’Souza, chief of growth and insights, Bizom.

D’Souza said there would be further pressure on products as edible oils become costly because of the palm oil ban by Indonesia. “It just seems like a matter of time before we have another round of price hikes,” D’Souza said.

Biscuit makers, which predominan­tly sell packets at ₹5 and ₹10 price points, have been reducing grammages instead of taking direct price hikes. 70% of Surya Food & Agro’s portfolio is priced at ₹5-10. Agarwal said it is becoming difficult for companies to sustain the ₹5 price pack.

 ?? HT ?? Wholesale wheat prices rose 14% in March—the highest in 63 months.
HT Wholesale wheat prices rose 14% in March—the highest in 63 months.

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