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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 08 Dec 2021

    Analyst Call: Outlook for the Indian Dairy Industry

    Webinar with ICRA Analysts on the Outlook for the Indian Dairy Sector. Watch the full webinar.
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 23 Jul 2021
    Up, up and away: How bad is the input costs spiral, and how is FMCG responding?

    Up, up and away: How bad is the input costs spiral, and how is FMCG responding?

    By Aakash Athawasya

    This is Part 1 of a series on rising input costs. Read Part 2 on rising costs for the Cement Industry, and Part 3 on rising costs for the Auto Industry.

    Early 2020 saw the pandemic and a standstill in economic activity, resulting in staggered supply chains. This caused a shortage in the supply of raw materials like copra and …

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    This is Part 1 of a series on rising input costs. Read Part 2 on rising costs for the Cement Industry, and Part 3 on rising costs for the Auto Industry.

    Early 2020 saw the pandemic and a standstill in economic activity, resulting in staggered supply chains. This caused a shortage in the supply of raw materials like copra and palm oil for FMCG companies, crude oil and petroleum for construction companies, and steel and copper for automobile companies. 

    As economic activity improved from Q2FY21, the supply of these inputs recovered. But the demand for their resulting products overtook the supply. As demand exceeded supply, the price of these inputs began to rise.

    This led to a massive price increase in everything from copra to crude oil in Q3FY21. Many companies witnessed this input price rise as early as June 2020. However, they expected the prices would moderate in Q4FY21, as supply recovered. That did not happen in 2021. That did not happen in 2021, instead, prices rose even further.

    With India entering FY22 amid a second Covid-19 wave, inputs were once again hard to source due to lockdowns. Now, with one quarter of the new financial year already over, how are companies dealing with the input costs storm? And what does this indicate for their Q1FY22?

    Rising agro-inputs force FMCG companies to hike prices, abandon volume growth

    An inkling of input costs-related pressures began in Q1FY21 for the FMCG industry. Godrej Consumer Products (Godrej Consumer) felt the pinch of higher palm oil prices in its margins which declined by 4.1 percentage points in Q1FY21. In August 2020, the company’s management noted in their call that cost pressures should ease off by Q2FY21. This was based on the rising level of economic activity in Q2FY21 and the lower premium on palm oil derivatives till the end of 2020. Senior management across other FMCG companies echoed this sentiment. 

    Based on this optimistic outlook on the input prices front, there were no price hikes in FMCG companies in Q1FY21 or even in Q2FY22. Companies like Hindustan Unilever (HUL) and Tata Consumer Products (Tata Consumer) planned on hiking tea and coffee prices. However, they held off price hikes as coffee and tea farmers resumed production in Q2FY21

    Consumer spending on FMCG products ramped up in Q3FY21 due to the festive season and pent-up demand, leading to a rise in sales volumes. In order to keep volumes going, FMCG companies limited their price hikes to a minimum. In October 2020, the largest domestic FMCG company HUL said it would focus on volume growth for the rest of FY21. To enable this, price hikes on its FMCG portfolio (barring soap) would be held off despite rising input prices. This helped HUL’s volumes recover from Q2FY21.

    FMCG HUL

    In Q4FY21, with input prices still elevated, FMCG companies began hiking prices in concert as they could no longer absorb the inflation in the raw materials like copra, rice bran, palm oil, high-density polyethylene, or HDPE (a chemical used to make packages for FMCG products), and crude oil. Hence, these companies passed on higher raw material prices to consumers through price hikes.

    For the majority of Q4FY21, economic activity was strong, sustaining higher sales volumes. And with price hikes, albeit mild ones (3-4% increases), implemented, FMCG companies’ revenues rose. 

    FMCG revenue

    In Q4FY21, FMCG companies indicated that consumers absorbed these ones. In Q1FY22, input prices continued to stay elevated as demand was hit due to the second wave and resulting lockdowns. In order to pass on input costs once again, FMCG companies like HUL, Marico, Tata Consumer, and Godrej Consumer, hiked prices for the second time in four months. 

    Marico hiked the price of Saffola vegetable oil by 50% between September 2020 and April 2021 (30% in H2FY21, and 20% in April 2021). Emami and Dabur raised hair oil prices by 5-7%. HUL raised the price of Lux and Lifebuoy soaps by 7%. Tata Consumer and HUL raised prices on their tea and coffee products by 10%. Even Amul, the largest milk producer in the country raised milk prices by Rs 2 per litre across India due to higher costs of edible palm oil, tea, and packaging materials.

    These price hikes were the result of a continued increase in inputs like rice bran and palm oil, which are up even in July 2021. Copra and HDPE prices have dropped by 21% and 18% since April. 

    FMCG Input costsWith the second round of price hikes in place, what investors in the FMCG space will hope for is continued volume growth in Q1FY22 and Q2FY22. Companies have suggested that volumes continued to sustain in Q1FY22, in part because e-commerce distribution was strengthened in H2FY21, helping FMCG companies to cope with the second wave. 

    Another factor is the contraction in companies’ earnings before interest taxes depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) margins. With input prices rising, FMCG companies need to take pressure off their bottom line by reducing costs. Analysts suggest FMCG companies will reduce non-operating costs (primarily marketing expenses) in H1FY22 in order to help margins recover. 

    FMCG MarginsFor companies relying on agricultural inputs like copra, rice bran, palm oil, coconut oil, tea, coffee, etc, the challenge will be in sustaining volumes. At the risk of maintaining higher volumes, FMCG companies delayed price hikes to 2021. The companies that hiked prices early (Marico, Tata Consumer, Nestle India) in H2FY21, saw volumes taper in the last quarter of FY21. Now, heading into FY22, as price hikes are at an industry level, the companies that delayed price hikes could see revenues declining sequentially as volumes take a beating. 

    With some inputs’ prices like rice bran and palm oil still elevated, we have not seen the last of price hikes in the FMCG space.

    This is part 1 of 3 in a series on rising input costs.

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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 05 Jul 2021

    Apr-Jun'21 Earnings Preview - Valuations factor in strong post covid recovery

    buy
    FMCG
    by Prabhudas Lilladhar
    Prabhudas Lilladhar
    Consumer stocks have seen sustained re-rating since 2009, resulting in most stocks trading at life time high PE with life time high profit margins. We note that FY21 growth was driven by market share gains on the back of superior supply chain and distribution at expense of unorganized players. Although we believe that structural drivers led by strong rural demand outlook and gains from digitization and supply chain automation are positive, further rerating looks a daunting task. We remain structurally positive on HUL, Britannia, JUBI, TTAN and APNT, however return expectations need to be moderate. We rate D'Mart, NEST and KNPL as top picks in consumption...
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 22 Jun 2021
    What lessons have India's FMCG companies learned from Covid-19?

    What lessons have India's FMCG companies learned from Covid-19?

    By Aakash Athawasya

    Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) makers are back to square one in FY22. Even though the economy is opening back up, with discretionary sales being allowed, consumer goods companies are dealing with a situation much like last year’s.

    Companies are hiking prices, altering product portfolios, switching from traditional to e-commerce channels, and finding new ways to deliver products to buyers. Last …

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    Fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) makers are back to square one in FY22. Even though the economy is opening back up, with discretionary sales being allowed, consumer goods companies are dealing with a situation much like last year’s.

    Companies are hiking prices, altering product portfolios, switching from traditional to e-commerce channels, and finding new ways to deliver products to buyers. Last year, many of these changes were a knee-jerk reaction to the pandemic. FMCG companies pivoted to rural areas in the second half of FY21, strengthening their base. But with rural areas faring just as bad, if not worse than urban areas amid the second Covid-19 wave, the rural advantage is weakening in FY22. However, some changes turned out to be more fortuitous than others, like leveraging e-commerce channels and distributing products through chemist stores. 

    In FY22, companies will ignore short-term margin improvement and cater to changing customer preferences. This will be by focusing on entry-level products over premium products, and food, health, and hygiene segments over beauty and personal care segments. Distribution-wise companies will focus on shoring up e-commerce channels, as traditional channels remain under pressure amid the lockdowns. With rural India hit hard in the second Covid-19 wave, FMCG companies focused on rural areas face a tough year.

    Let’s look at some of the lessons India’s FMCG market leaders learned from Covid-19 and what it means for FY22.

    Commodity pricing pressure eat into margins

    India’s retail inflation reached 6.3% in May 2021. This was higher than analyst estimates of 5.3%. One of the reasons for this increase in retail inflation is the rising price of daily-use food products produced by FMCG companies. However, FMCG companies are caught in a pricing storm of their own.

    After the first wave of Covid-19 in Q1FY21, the price of commodities used by FMCG companies rose steadily. FMCG companies noticed the rising prices as early as June 2020, but they went unaddressed till Q3FY21. 

    During the Q1FY21 conference call, Sanjiv Mehta, the CEO of India’s largest FMCG company, Hindustan Unilever (HUL) said, “We have seen some inflation in the quarter, especially in the month of June.” Mehta and former CFO Srinivas Phatak said with commodity inflation rising, HUL would be eyeing price hikes in vegetable oils, tea, and milk powder. Varun Berry, the CEO of Britannia Industries echoed a similar sentiment. In Q1FY21, the CEO of India’s largest biscuit company predicted that “gentle commodity inflation would continue.” 

    Like the rest of the market, FMCG companies expected commodity prices to moderate in 2021. But not only did commodity prices fail to moderate - they continued to rise. Take palm oil, a commodity used in the production of processed foods like biscuits and bread, vegetable oils, and home and personal care products like soaps, shampoos, and detergents. In May 2021, palm oil cost $1,100 (Rs 84,000) per ton, a rise of 120% YoY. The price of rice bran (used to produce edible oils), copra (used to produce hair oils), and high-density polyethylene or HDPE (a chemical used to make packages for FMCG products) are all up in 2021.

    Input commodity pricesIn response to rising commodity prices, all FMCG companies hiked consumer prices in the second half of FY21. Godrej Consumer Products and Wipro Consumer Care raised soap prices by 6-7%, Marico, Dabur, and Emami’s hair oil and value-added hair oil (VAHO) prices were raised by 5%. HUL raised skincare and haircare product prices by 8% and maintained price hikes for tea products. As commodity prices are still up in Q1FY22, FMCG companies will maintain if not add to these price hikes. However, even after the industry-wide increase in prices, save HUL, FMCG companies’ margins steadily declined in H2FY21.

    FMCG companies margins

    With no let up in the rise in input costs, the price hikes might not help shore up margins in the coming quarters of FY22 for many FMCG companies. What’s worse is that sales of FMCG companies’ high margin products will also decline in Q1FY22 and Q2FY22 because of the pandemic and lockdowns.

    Premium products take a back seat

    FMCG companies’ premium products come with higher margins. Hence, companies engage in the promotion of these products, especially in urban areas where disposable incomes are higher. A simple upgrade from an entry-level product to a premium product increases the value that accrues to FMCG companies.

    Due to the pandemic, the demand for premium products dropped. Consumers who preferred body wash settled for soap. With hair parlors and skin clinics closed, haircare and skincare were limited to ordinary coconut hair oils and skin creams, not value-added products like hair tonics and skin serums. With distribution limited to essentials, glucose biscuits’ sales rose and cream and digestive biscuits’ sales dropped.

    This shift away from premiumisation affected FMCG companies’ revenue mix and hence margins. Take the case of HUL, which sells premium products under its beauty and personal care segment (shampoos, soaps, moisturisers, deodorants). This segment contributed 44% of revenues quarterly before the first wave of the pandemic. At the end of Q4FY21, its revenue share dropped to 36%. 

    HUL Rev share

    With lower sales, premium products’ margins decreased as well. As raw material costs rose and the second wave pinched discretionary spending in Q4FY21, premium products’ margins declined sequentially. In the March 2021 quarter, HUL’s beauty and personal care products’ (besides Lifebuoy soaps and Closeup and Pepsodent toothpaste, HUL’s beauty and personal care portfolio falls under premium products) margins fell by 170 basis points QoQ, compared to a 220 basis points and a 230 basis points increase in home care and food products’ margins, respectively.

    HUL MarginsFMCG companies haven’t pulled back from their efforts to sell premium products in FY22, despite the second wave. Britannia’s target in FY22 is to gain market share in the milk and glucose biscuit markets through its brands Milk Bikis and Tiger. The biscuit maker is taking Milk Bikis to the Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Bihar, Haryana, and Rajasthan markets. However, Parle, the market leader in glucose biscuits (through Parle G), is priced 30% lower than Britannia’s biscuits. Varun Berry said Britannia will not lower its prices to gain market share. Rather, the company will increase advertising spends in H1FY22 to increase its brand’s awareness.

    The decline in premium product sales led to a 12% drop in revenues for Godrej Consumer sequentially in Q4FY21. Over 80% of the company’s revenues come from premium products like mosquito repellent (GoodKnight), and 20% from haircare and skincare products. In the Q4 earnings call, Godrej Consumer’s Managing Director Nisaba Godrej said that the non-premium category has headroom for growth in Q1FY22 and Q2FY22, given its strong demand during Q4FY21.

    Marico’s premium products (VAHO, hair serums, male grooming products, etc.) saw poor sales since the first wave. In Q1FY21, premium product volumes dropped by 30% YoY, compared to an 11% drop in volumes of entry-level hair oils. As the economy recovered in Q3FY21 and Q4FY21, premium product volumes rose steadily. 

    Marico VolumeThe growth in volumes of Marico’s premium products didn’t translate into revenues as sales declined in Q4FY21. Premiumisation is unlikely to pay dividends until the second wave and the resulting economic distress is over. Saugata Gupta, the Managing Director of Marcio made no qualms about the FY22 outlook, stating during the Q4FY21 earnings call, “Taking cognizance of the fact that the pandemic has severely hit the consuming class this time around, we believe it is the premium, indulgence based categories that will be more affected this time.” Needless to say, with the pandemic becoming worse in Q1FY22, premium product sales will continue to remain low. This will hit urban-centric FMCG companies like HUL, Nestle India, and ITC worse than others.

    E-commerce and rural markets recover after the pandemic

    FMCG companies distribute goods through three channels - traditional trade (unorganised outlets like kirana stores), modern trade (organised outlets like department stores), and e-commerce. During the national lockdown in Q1FY21, traditional and modern trade plunged and only e-commerce distribution survived in urban areas. This allowed urban-focused companies to come out of Q1FY21 relatively unscathed with revenues flat on a YoY basis. However, rural FMCG companies’ (Marico, Dabur, and Emami) revenues declined by 11-26% YoY.

    As India gradually unlocked in Q2FY21, the momentum in rural sales outpaced urban sales. This was because rural areas opened up quicker than urban areas and the incidence of Covid-19 cases was lower. Disposable income in rural areas rose in Q2FY21 and Q3FY21 due to normal monsoon, reverse migration from urban to rural areas and government subsidies like the expansion of the rural jobs guarantee program and the increase of the minimum support price for crops.

    FMCG companies with a strong rural base suffered in Q1FY21 due to low demand. However, these companies’ revenues recovered sharply in H2FY22.

    FMCG rural

    The rural market wasn’t the only market to give FMCG companies wind in their sails. E-commerce momentum continued even after the lockdown. A report from management consultancy company Nielsen said e-commerce spends rose 17% QoQ in Q2FY21 to Rs 1,184 per customer, and the number of items ordered was up 23% to 3.8 items per order. 

    Expecting this rural and e-commerce momentum to continue, Lalit Malik, the Chief Financial Officer at Dabur said this during the Q2FY21 earnings call, “We have seen a steady recovery in demand sequentially with some channels and geographies, like e-commerce and rural, growing at a fast pace...we are hopeful that H2 would be better than H1.”

    The momentum in rural and e-commerce sales proved vital for the domestic FMCG industry. In Q3FY21, Nielsen said the FMCG market’s value grew by 7.1% YoY (compared to a 0.9% growth in Q2). As economic conditions improved in Q4FY21, the industry’s value grew by 9.4% YoY. As the trend from H1FY21 indicated, this growth was led by e-commerce distribution channels and rural areas.

    FMCG E-commerce

    The main positive for the FMCG industry is the double-digit growth of the traditional trade channel. The modern trade channel, through department stores, has still not recovered since the first wave of the pandemic. FMCG product sales through traditional and modern trade channels will remain under pressure in the first half of FY22 as economic activity will take time to recover. Analysts estimate that traditional trade will recover by Q3FY22, with modern trade unlikely to recover to pre-Covid levels in FY22.

    Rural remains under pressure, e-commerce and chemist shops the next frontier

    The second Covid-19 wave affected rural areas worse than the first wave. FMCG companies strengthened their rural base through wider distribution, product launches, and increased marketing in rural areas. However, even this won’t help rural-focused FMCG companies because of the severity of the second wave.

    FMCG companies are split on the pace of recovery of rural areas post the second wave. Varun Berry said Britannia will see a fall in rural sales because of distribution bottlenecks. Direct sales to traditional trade outlets like kirana stores all but stopped in Q1FY22. The biscuit maker is only distributing products to wholesalers and via telephone sales. Mohan Goenka, director at Emami said the rural market was “badly impacted” in April and May. This was because labourers left factories in April and 90% of its wholesale market was closed because of lockdowns.

    FMCG sourceOthers expect rural areas to remain resilient post the second wave. Sameer Shah, the Chief Financial Officer of Godrej Consumer expects the second wave’s impact on rural areas to be made up by a good monsoon season and reverse migration from urban to rural areas. Mohit Malhotra, CEO of Dabur said the government’s fiscal stimulus to rural workers will help demand conditions. These incentives, he expects, will set rural on a recovery path only in Q2FY22.

    While FMCG companies’ hopes on rural sales are dampened because of the second wave, their hopes on e-commerce are high. HUL plans to gradually increase premiumisation through e-commerce channels, starting with its beauty and personal care segments. Sameer Shah of Godrej Consumer said e-commerce is still firing on all cylinders despite the second wave, and e-commerce sales are expected to grow. Marico’s e-commerce sales hover at 8% of total sales. Saugata Gupta said this share will be ramped up in the next 3-4 years, driven by premiumisation.

    FMCG companies will also increase distribution via chemist stores in FY22. This is because chemist stores are less prone to lockdowns and are open longer. However, premium products with high margins cannot be distributed through chemist stores.

    Emami will add 20,000 chemist stores in rural areas. Godrej Consumer increased its distribution via chemist stores by 20% in FY21 and will bolster this further in FY22. HUL’s chemist distribution increased post its acquisition of Horlicks and its merger with GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare. This distribution will be limited to beauty and food products and FMCG companies with a weak portfolio (ITC, Tata Consumer) will be unable to make piggyback off chemist stores.

    Margins are not a concern for FMCG companies despite high input costs. Their priority is changing customer preferences post-pandemic. Companies with a heavy beauty and personal care portfolio will see lower sales in Q1FY22 due to lockdowns. This category will only recover by Q3FY22, provided there is no third wave. Non-premium products will see strong sales in H1FY22. 

    Rural areas will not replicate their FY21 success in FY22, due to distribution disruptions. Chemist stores and e-commerce channels will continue their momentum in FY22. FMCG companies learned a lot in the last twelve months, but whether they’ll put this in practice remains to be seen

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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 07 Jan 2021

    Oct-Dec'20 Earnings Preview - Demand traction building up

    buy
    FMCG
    by Prabhudas Lilladhar
    Prabhudas Lilladhar
    Most companies to record growth in 3QFY21 3QFY21 performance is likely to show signs of recovery led by sustained rural demand and gradual pickup in urban demand post unlock and normalization of supply chain. We believe that margins for select players will start correcting QoQ given rising commodity costs and comeback of ad spends, marketing and Apart from Titan and ITC(Cigarettes), we expect volume growth across all companies. Due to improvement in consumer sentiment and declining covid cases,...
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 08 Jul 2020

    Energy: Sector Update

    buy
    FMCG
    by IDBI Capital
    IDBI Capital
    As most of the economies are opening up and gaining momentum, demand for crude oil has also picked up amid tight supply as OPEC and Non-OPEC both cut its production level. Consequently, crude oil price (Brent) increased 29% MoM to average US$39.9/bbl. We expect oil price to remain in the broader range of US$35-45/bbl over the next quarter as demand would continue to be on a rising trend but higher price would bring back lost supply from US shale assets, which would keep price under check. However, on a medium to long-run we expect crude oil price to stabilise near US$50-55/bbl. OPEC cut its production level further to reach to the lowest level since May 1991 to 22.6mbpd vs 24.6mbpd in May'20 (30.4mbpd in Apr'20). Saudi Arabia was in a lead role with a production cut of 1.13mbpd MoM to 7.5mbpd in Jun'20 (11.6mbpd in Apr'20) while other countries saw a minor cut in production. This is in line with their commitment to bring down supply by 9.5mbpd which has further extended to Jul'20. We expect, if demand scenario doesn't improve much, production cut would be extended till year-end....
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 30 May 2020

    Consumer Sector Insights

    buy
    FMCG
    by ICICI Securities Limited
    ICICI Securities Limited
    The Indian consumer sector has been going through volatile times as the lockdown across the country, due to Covid-19, has disrupted the entire manufacturing, supply chain & retail operations. Though essential categories continue to see strong growth due to pre-buying or bulk buying, some discretionary categories witnessed a slack in demand conditions. New trends have also emerged with sanitisers, disinfectants & immunity booster products staring at exponential growth in next few years. Even distribution channels have been seeing a swift change with e-commerce & digital space...
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 13 Apr 2020

    FMCG: Defensive businesses but not valuations

    buy
    FMCG
    by HDFC Securities
    HDFC Securities
    We downgrade rating on DABUR, BRITANNIA and EMAMI from ADD to REDUCE and UNSP from BUY to ADD. We also initiate coverage on NESTLE and GCPL with REDUCE rating. Within our existing coverage, we remain positive on ITC, UNSP, JUBI, COLGATE and RADICO. FMCG sector witnessed growth slowdown in FY20, in-line with nominal GDP moderation. Sector posted 5% revenue growth in 9MFY20 vs. 12% CAGR over the last 10 years. Covid-19 will further delay the macro recovery which was earlier expected in 1HFY21. In the current slowdown, while FMCG cos will be better than other sectors, however, their growth trajectory will also taper down. Staples consumption will see moderation in FY21 particularly with further weakness in income for rural and urban poor households. We believe street is not factoring volume hit and down trading risk in this sector and cos which are more resilient to near term disruption have already seen re-rating. Thereby, risk-reward has become unattractive for most stocks from medium term perspective. We remain selective in sector as extremely stretched valuations keep us on sidelines, esp. on large caps
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 15 Dec 2016, 12:00AM

    Patanjali - Axis Direct -Visit Note

    buy
    FMCG
    by Axis Direct
    Axis Direct
    Against insipid demand backdrop where most MNC and domestic FMCG players have struggled to deliver growth, Patanjali Ayurveda Limited (Patanjali) has posted >100% sales growth in FY16 (from Rs21 bn in FY15 to ~Rs50bn in FY16), virtually entering every FMCG category. To assess sustainability of its g..
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    FMCG
    SECTOR | 08 Oct 2016

    Consumer: 2QFY17E Results Preview

    buy
    FMCG
    by HDFC Securities
    HDFC Securities
    Consumer: 2QFY17E Results Preview
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