Tag: Dabur

  • Ogilvy unveils the #Sabkochabajaayenge campaign for Dabur Red Paste

    By A Correspondent

     

    Bringing together the product truth of healthy teeth and the Cricket World Cup, Dabur Red Paste has launched its latest ad film titled #Sabkochabajaayenge.  The brand campaign comprising a series of films for digital and TV has been conceptualised by Ogilvy North.

     

    Said Kapil Arora, President, Ogilvy North: “When Dabur Red Paste spoke to us about building a connect with fans during the Cricket World Cup, we knew we needed to make it both fun and brand relevant, to stand out in the clutter. Making the cricket connect with Dabur Red Pastes brand promise was the key. Once we had that  we had a ball (literally). The result? Five kadak films that are testament to a fabulous client and brand.”

     

    Added Harkawal Singh, Head Marketing, Oral Care, Dabur India: “Protection from Dental Problems for Strong Teeth and Healthy Gums is the core promise of Dabur Red Paste. Cricket is one of those opportunities that allows your brand to reach out and engage with a large audience. Sabko chaba jaayenge gave us the perfect plank to have this conversation in a fun and engaging way while subtly plugging in the Dabur Red Paste benefit.”

     

     

  • Dabur Amla Hair Oil ropes in Kareena Kapoor Khan as brand ambassador

     

     

    Personal care company Dabur India Ltd, announced Bollywood Actress Kareena Kapoor Khan as the new face of the preferred hair oil brand, DaburAmla Hair Oil. The oil brand’s new identity now has Kareena Kapoor Khan’s face on the front label, making the 75-year-old brand more contemporary and appropriate in consonance with today’s lifestyle.

     

    “We are proud to welcome Kareena Kapoor Khan into the DaburAmla family. DaburAmla hair Oil has always been associated with beauty and has been known as the key behind strong, healthy, long and beautiful hair. Kareena’s vibrant persona, pan-India appeal and her confident attitude makes her a great fit for our brand,” said Rajat Nanda, DGM – Hair Oils, Dabur India Ltd.

     

  • Dabur, Thums Up to be sponsors of the Pro-Wrestling League

    By Arka Bhattacharya

     

    After the successes of the IPL, the ISL and the Pro-Kabaddi League, corporates have queued up to become sponsors of the brand-new Pro-Wrestling League, scheduled to start on December 10.

     

    Kartik Sharma

    Kartikeya Sharma, CMD, Pro-Sportify Ltd, which started the PWL, says that they have four main sponsors for this year. The title sponsorship has been picked up Dabur Chawanprash while Thums Up is the ‘Powered By’ Sponsor. Other sponsors associated with the league this year are Jaguar Lighting and Dabur Red Toothpaste. The cumulative amount of sponsorship that has poured in is estimated to be around Rs 22 crore.

     

    Says Sharma, “When one of the largest brands, Coke has sponsored you, you know it is going to be big. Year-on-year, we’re looking increase the marketing spend and we’ll change the way brands derive ROI from sporting properties and the way they want to get value out of sports.”

     

    The success of the existing leagues in India has convinced the founders of the PWL that the league will be immensely successful in the years to come. Sharma said that the sponsorship for season 2 is already being planned and is estimated to show an 81% increase to Rs 40 crore.

     

    The net marketing spend for the league is upwards of Rs. 20 crore. Vishal Gurnani, Director, Pro-Sportify says that almost 70% of this budget has been poured into television media, and the rest mainly into radio, print and outdoor campaigns. Gurnani says that they have about 600,000 seconds of inventory footage for the promotion of the league and massive outdoor campaigns have been undertaken in Bombay, Delhi, Gurgaon, Ludhiana.

     

    When asked if the league would expand next year, Gurnani replied in the affirmative. He said, “The PWL might add two franchises next year. A lot of cities and a lot of corporates have shown interest this year, but due to logistical challenges, we decided to restrict the number of teams to six. We are looking ahead to next year, where we are expanding this to eight teams with the most likely cities being Ahmedabad and Hyderabad.”

     

    Pro-Sportify are also looking at introducing merchandising post the league’s completion. Gurnani said, “We’ll looking at building up the brand during the league and selling our merchandising at online platforms and airports afterwards. We’re coming up with interesting and quirky merchandising with lines like ‘Real Men deal with it on the mat’ and ‘Asli Mard Akhade Waala Baaki Sab Chauhare mein’.”

     

    The other partners of the league include the hospitality partner – Picadilly hotels, Radio partner – Big FM, Outdoor partner – Bright Outdoor and Ticketing partner – BookmyShow.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Achche or Burre Din for FMCGs?

     

    By Sagar Malviya & Ratna Bhushan

     

    Chief Executive Officers of FMCG companies and market research firm are at loggerheads yet again, this time over what is an accurate measure of current growth in consumption.

     

    Nielsen data suggests the industry is experiencing a strong revival now, compared to last year which witnessed the slowest growth in a decade. It estimates that FMCG sales grew 11.8% in the first nine months of this calendar year compared to the 6.8% growth the industry experienced during the same months of 2014.

     

    But CEOs of FMCG companies dismiss these estimates as faulty. The market researcher is overestimating growth and is not capturing pricecuts accurately, they argue. “There are no signs of improvement and the market is not supporting demand revival,” said Sunil Duggal, CEO of Dabur.

     

    “We are well into the festive season and two weeks away from Diwali, but there’s no visible uptick in consumption. The outlook continues to look challenging,” he added.

     

    “Our sense is that demand revival is still a few quarters away,” the chairman of another leading foods maker said. “Nielsen is over reporting growth.”

     

    Dabur on Wednesday, reported a 5% domestic volume growth during the quarter ended September, but managed an 18.7% increase in consolidated net profit to Rs 341 crore.

     

    During the same period, HUL, Dabur and Jyothy Laboratories all reported sales growth that was substantially lower than the previous year. Godrej Consumer Products, with a slight improvement in revenue growth, was the only exception. Other companies are yet to announce their last quarter results.

     

    Sanjiv Mehta

    A fortnight ago, HUL’s CEO Sanjiv Mehta had said that Nielsen has failed to capture sales trend accurately for a year now. It is still showing price inflation when most companies are taking price cuts to post higher volume growth, not value growth, he had argued.

     

    Nielsen though is singing a different tune. “2015 has seen revival of conspicuous consumption. Positive macro environment, lower inflation and consumer confidence is leading to improved consumption across all key FMCG categories,” Vijay Udasi, senior VP, Nielsen India said. Nielsen said price growth rose 3.9% during last nine months ended September compared to 4.7% last year. However, companies including HUL, Procter & Gamble and Nestle have all taken average 10% price-cuts on most products from detergents and shampoo to dairy after commodity (crude oil and LAB) prices declined by 20- 50%. This, in turn, boosted growth for companies such as HUL and Godrej Consumers that saw last quarter performance entirely driven by volume growth.

     

    Consumer goods companies and Nielsen have had a love-hate relationship since more than five years, after HUL first disputed its data in 2009 when Nielsen contradicted the consumer product maker’s internal estimates as well as data from other research firms. Yet, most companies use their data regularly during presentations, especially when it shows an increased market share for their brands.

     

    But some are hopeful. “We remain optimistic that as the economy improves, the FMCG sector should see a gradual uptick in demand,” said Adi Godrej, chairman, Godrej Group, after reporting 9% increase in sales for the domestic market. The growth was entirely volume-led.

     

    Stockmarket analysts are enthused by growing sales, but they are trimming their profit estimates due to price-cuts. Still, the MSCI India Consumer Staples Index is currently trading at a 12-month forward price-to-earning ratio of 32.5x, a.29% premium to its 10 year average.

     

    “Despite sturdy commodity tailwind benefits, the sector’s margin expansion has not been striking. These elevated valuations warrant our cautious stance,” said Nitin Mathur, an analyst at French financial services firm Societe Generale.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2015, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Shortlists for Indian Marketing Awards announced

    By A Correspondent

     

    Dabur, BJP, Infosys, HUL, Satyamev Jayate topped the list of campaigns shortlisted for the Indian Marketing Awards 2014 (IMA), which will be handed out at the awards gala on December 12 at Hotel Leela, Gurgaon. The shortlist includes 88 cutting-edge campaigns hailing from different parts of the country and reflects the finest work in setting new standards of marketing excellence today, while also pointing to the trends that will drive tomorrow’s marketing arena.

     

    The first part of the two-stage judging process was completed last week by a pre-screening jury comprising of leading industry leaders. The members of the pre-screening jury include Debabrata Mukherjee of Coca Cola, Vivek Sharma of Philips, Dinesh Garg of TTK Prestige, Prabhakar Tiwari of Ceat India, Aarti Ahuja of TCNS Clothing, Girish Shah of Godrej Properties, Sandipan Ghosh of Ruchi Soya Group, Anshul Punhani of Monster.com, Sandeep Aurora of Intel, Apurva Chamaria of HCL, Devendra Chawla of Future Retail and Saujanya Shrivastava of Bharti Axa Life Insurance.

     

    The IMA jury is headed by Vinita Bali, former Managing Director, Britannia and the jury members include RanjanKapur, Country Manager – India at WPP; Prema Sagar, Principal & Founder at Genesis Burson-Marsteller; Thomas Puliyel, President at IMRB International, Mumbai; Vijay Subramaniam, Managing Director – India & South East Asia, Bacardi India; Kamal Bali, Managing Director, Volvo India; Dr. Amarnath Anantha narayanan, Managing Director & CEO, Bharti AXA General Insurance; Amit Burman, Vice Chairman, Dabur; Geetu Verma, Executive Director – Foods & Refreshments, HUL; HaritNagpal, CEO, Tatasky; Sangeeta Pendurkar, Managing Director, Kellogg and Saugata Gupta, Managing Director & CEO, Marico.

     

    350 entries were received across 14 categories, which comprise Brand Activation; Brand Extension; Brand Revitalisation; Business-to-Business Marketing; Cause Related Marketing; Consumer Insight; Customer Relationship Marketing; Digital Marketing, Social Media, Mobile Marketing; E-Commerce; Global Marketing; Marketing Communication; Marketing on a Small Budget; New Brand, Product or Service Launch and Not-For-Profit Marketing.

     

    Leading communication agencies Contract Advertising, Genesis Burson-Marsteller and Landor have partnered with Indian Marketing Awards 2014. The awards are presented by Hindustan Times and powered by Colors, VIACOM 18.

     

    Anurag Batra

    Announcing the shortlisted campaigns, Anurag Batra, Chairman & Editor-in-Chief, Exchange4media group, said, “Indian Marketing Awards is our biggest and most prestigious competition, aimed at advancing the marketing profession and identifying the emerging trends in marketing. The awards will be presented to organizations, individuals and teams who have achieved extraordinary success from innovative and effective marketing practices, having regard to the particular circumstances of different industries and diversity of marketing programs”.

     

    “Indian Marketing Awards 2014 offers the chance for the next benchmark to be set for marketing effectiveness within the country. We have an exciting mixture of work on the shortlist and we will watch with interest to see which pieces the jury deem worthy of being elevated to prize winning status and in turn, set the new precedent,” says Vinita Bali, Non-Executive Director CRISIL, Titan Industries Ltd., The Wadia Group Companies and Piramal Glass Limited.

     

  • Top FMCG brands gain market share during economic slump

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    Mondelez India, maker of the country’s top chocolate brand Cadbury, had been struggling to hold on to its market share over the past few years, but in the January-March quarter it managed to improve its share for chocolates by 2.5%. With new chocolate capacity in place in India, the company has been able to regain the share it lost in the first half of last year, Mondelez International CEO Irene Rosenfeld said in an earnings call for the quarter two weeks ago.

     

    Perhaps it’s not just about higher capacity. It seems that in a downturn consumers tend to lose their impulse to experiment and stick to established ones, as around a dozen market leaders including Gillette, Colgate, Dabur Real and Chyawanprash, Godrej’s Good Knight and Jyothy Laboratories’ Ujala, have improved their market share in their core categories over the past one year.

     

    “In a downturn, consumers might not want to risk and experiment buying new brands and generally stick to trusted or established brands especially in the health space even if it has a slightly premium pricing,” said Sunil Duggal, CEO at Dabur. The Delhi-based firm’s Real juice and Chyawanprash have gained around 200 basis points to improve their market share to 54% and 64%, respectively.

     

    While several small players could not hold their price lines in the wake of inflating input costs since last year, several large companies increased their marketing spends and focused on innovations to push growth amid weakening consumer demand for most daily products.

     

    The overall consumer goods market growth fell to nearly 6% during the January-March quarter compared to 18% in the same period last year. Top companies aggressively tried to develop mass-products that would be easy on consumer wallets. “We have continued to focus on launching some great innovations,” Vivek Gambhir, managing director at Godrej Consumer Products, said. “For instance, we have launched three innovations in home insecticides over the last 12 months — more than the previous ten years,” he said, adding that new products accounted for more than a third of the firm’s incremental growth.

     

    Top oral care brand Colgate claimed a 60 basis points gain in its toothpaste market share year-on-year at 53.8% in the March quarter despite increased competition driven by new entrant and global rival Procter & Gamble. Colgate launched newer products and stepped up its reach and advertising spends substantially on the face of heightened competition. “Strong communication and trade plans have helped drive these results,” it said in a global earnings call last month.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2014, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

    Licensed to republish

     

  • Saugato Bhowmik is Head, Consumer Products at Viacom18

    By A Correspondent

     

    Saugato Bhowmik

    Viacome18 has announced the appointment of Saugato Bhowmik as Head of Consumer Products Business. The responsibility was held earlier by Sandeep Dahiya who has since joined The Times of India group.

     

    Mr Bhowmik brings to the table experience of 12 years across consumer brands in Dabur India and Hindustan Unilever.  He has led brands in home and personal care categories based in India and Singapore. In Singapore, he led the Unilever Business for toothbrushes for Asia within the Oral Care Category. In most recent role, he was leading the sales strategy development for general trade business of Unilever across all key markets.

     

    Sudhanshu Vats

    Said Sudhanshu Vats, Group CEO, Viacom18, Media Networks: “Saugato brings with him business experience from FMCGs with a good understanding of brands, distribution landscape in India, dealing with large retailers and managing Business P&L.”

     

    Speaking about his appointment, Saugato Bhowmik said, “The dynamic nature of the broadcast industry presents multiple opportunities for marketers to leverage the power of our brands across multiple consumer touchpoints, and I hope to apply my experience and contribute to the rapid growth of consumer products business at Viacom18”.

     

  • Radio Mirchi appoints Starcom as media partner

    By A Correspondent

     

    Starcom Worldwide has bagged the media mandate of leading radio network Radio Mirchi. The account will be handled from Starcom’s Mumbai office. It was previously with Madison. The agency is reported to started work on the new business.

     

    The win adds to a series of new business wins at Starcom MediaVest Group (SMG) since the middle of last year, among which are Aircel, Dabur, Axis Bank, Zee Learning, Supermax, Sterling Holidays etc. SMG has also been aggressively strengthening their media product in India. The agency recently launched its proprietary Web+TV optimiser, billed as the first of its kind in the market.

     

    Confirming the news, G G Jayanta, National Head of Marketing, Radio Mirchi said: “we are pleased to appoint Starcom since we needed a partner who is future focussed and can help us navigate the new media landscape. Their in-house research and tools are very impressive and their media product and philosophy are pretty solid. We look forward to a long and rewarding association with Team Starcom”.

     

    Commenting on the win, Malli CR, CEO of SMG India said: “We are thrilled to win the Radio Mirchi account. Given the developments in this sector, we look forward to exciting times. We have planned some specific research and insights projects using our proprietary tools and optimisers”.

     

  • FMCG biggies HUL, Godrej, Dabur report higher sales growth numbers than estimated by Nielsen

    By Sagar Malviya & Ratna Bhushan

     

    Market research firm Nielsen and India’s consumer goods companies are in sharp disagreement over growth rates in the sector. In the April-June quarter of 2012, sales growth in value terms of some of India’s biggest fast-moving consumer goods companies is higher than Nielsen’s growth estimate for the overall FMCG market, raising concerns over the world’s largest research firm’s accuracy in India.

     

    Seven listed domestic companies, which control over 70 per cent of the FMCG market, have posted an average value sales growth of 19.28 per cent in the first quarter of fiscal 2013. A Nielsen spokesperson says their figure for this period is 17.6 per cent. Even in categories such as soaps, juices, oral care and hair oils, leading players, which contribute between 60 per cent and 75 per cent to each segment, have posted much higher volume growth than what Nielsen’s data suggests. When contacted, Nielsen did not validate the numbers that ET has obtained from the research firm’s FMCG clients.

     

    For instance, Godrej Consumer Products Ltd saw a 24 per cent spurt in soap volumes even as Nielsen estimates growth for the overall segment at a sombre 5 per cent in the April-June quarter. “There is a bit of under-reporting by Nielsen. The issue lies with its statistical method,” said Adi Godrej, chairman of Godrej Group.

     

    “We generally use Nielsen’s data for market share as there isn’t any other option for us. However, for category growth, we rely on our sales numbers and listed companies’ performance,” said Vineet Agrawal, president at Wipro Consumer Care & Lighting, which saw a 15 per cent jump in volume growth in soaps in the first quarter of the fiscal year.

     

    It’s a similar story in toothpastes, a category that grew 9 per cent in volumes according to Nielsen; however, this doesn’t tally with internal sales data of Colgate and Hindustan Unilever Ltd (HUL), which together command roughly 80 per cent of the market. Colgate saw a 13 per cent rise in volume growth. For HUL also it was higher, said CFO R Sridhar at a recent financial results’ presentation.

     

    In packaged juices, Nielsen says the category grew 18-19 per cent in the April-June quarter in value terms and that Dabur grew 24 per cent. But Dabur’s quarterly sales numbers show its juice business grew 34 per cent. Dabur leads the packaged juices market with the Real brand, which accounts for more than half of all juices sold.

     

    Dabur CEO Sunil Duggal said: “Our quarterly growth numbers are generally ahead of what Nielsen reports. So we prefer to study Nielsen numbers as a longer-term trend – over a 12-month period – because that evens out errors.”

     

    Nielsen counters that the retail audit cannot be compared with sales numbers that companies report. A Nielsen spokesperson said: “The retail audit is focused on sales offtake through a sample of retail stores that tracks sales to the end consumer. It is technically incorrect to compare it to the financial results of companies, which report sales to distribution channels.” The research firm also said sales reported by companies may include those beyond retail stores from institutions such as army canteens, restaurants and transport hubs, which are outside the scope of its retail audit.

     

    An FMCG analyst points out on condition of anonymity that ignoring the Canteen Services Department (CSD), which caters to the Indian defence services, may be one explanation for the discrepancies.

     

    After all, CSD can easily qualify as India’s largest retailer with some 3,500 outlets across the country. Nielsen is no stranger to controversy on the market share front. In May 2009, HUL disputed the researcher’s data that showed a steady fall in the company’s market share across segments, saying it contradicted internal estimates as well as data from household research firm IMRB. The issue snowballed into a crisis when Dabur, Godrej and Marico echoed similar doubts over Nielsen data. Dabur and Perfetti Van Melle even went so far as to cancel Nielsen’s subscriptions in categories such as hair oils, juices, candies and confectionery.

     

    A year ago, Unilever CEO Paul Polman questioned the accuracy of Nielsen’s data for India, underlining that the country’s largest consumer product maker was still unhappy with the market researcher two years after first raising the issue. “I know you all like to write about it. But they (Nielsen) are not very accurate with what their numbers are,” Mr Polman had said while commenting on the performance of Unilever’s Indian arm.

     

    Nielsen has increased its sampling size to 22,000 outlets from 16,000 over the past three years, included more modern trade outlets and uncovered channels in rural markets, prompting some companies to be optimistic about the research firm’s data. “We are worried, but the fact remains that at least it is not deteriorating. They have been changing panels and we have to pick up points where there are issues and work with them on it,” said Saugata Gupta, CEO of Marico, which saw its hair oil business grow over 15 per cent in volumes while Nielsen’s data shows a growth of 4.7 per cent for the category.

     

    Also, companies are now slightly at ease after Nielsen decided not to share data with market analysts and investors who depend on the data to track the performance of consumer product companies and rate the stock accordingly. “While we are glad that analysts can’t access the data easily, even we have stopped taking the research seriously and rely on it just for trends. Nielsen’s numbers is not a bible to us,” said a CEO of a leading homegrown consumer firm who didn’t wish to be identified.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • HUL, Dabur & Colgate Q1 sales up 20%, next few Qs challenging

    By A Correspondent

     

    Consumer goods companies Hindustan Unilever, Colgate-Palmolive and Dabur said the next few quarters could be challenging if the monsoon is weak and the rupee continues to fall after reporting about 20 per cent jump in their first quarter sales.

     

    Hindustan Unilever, the country’s largest consumer goods company, whose presence in a range of daily consumption items such as soaps, shampoos and food makes its performance a good proxy for consumer sentiment, said it has not seen any evidence yet of customers trading down for cheaper products but delayed monsoon, weak rupee and volatile raw-material prices remain a concern.

     

    “When we look into the medium term, we believe that the growth drivers for FMCG are really positive,” said R Sridhar, chief financial officer at Hindustan Unilever. “But when we look at the next 2-3 quarters, clearly there are few challenges-the final shape of how monsoon distribution happens, rupee has depreciated quite significantly and inflation continues to be at a very high level,” he said.

     

    Dabur CEO Sunil Duggal too said: “As of now, we have not witnessed any slowdown in rural consumption, but there could be some amount of demand contraction this (July-September) quarter.”

     

    HUL’s total income rose 20 per cent to Rs6,378.7 crore in the April-June quarter from Rs5,323.6 crore in the year-ago period, outperforming the broader FMCG industry that grew 16 per cent during the quarter. Profit after tax before exceptional items at the Indian unit of Anglo-Dutch Unilever rose 48 per cent to Rs855 crore in the three months to June. Exceptional items included sale of properties worth Rs607 crore.

     

    The company said it was able to increase its operating profit margins by 180 basis points. Its cost of goods sold during the period was 200 basis points lower than in the year-ago period.

     

    During the quarter, HUL’s sales of soaps and detergents-its largest business segment-rose 24 per cent to Rs3,163.05 crore, helped mainly by price increases. Double-digit volume growth drove up sales of personal care products by 17per cent  to Rs1,847.08 crore, while beverages sales were 7per cent  higher at Rs654.07 crore. New launches in brands such as Kwality Walls helped its packaged foods business grow 17 per cent to Rs436.98 crore.

     

    What pleased analysts the most about the results was the companies’ sustainable volume growth. HUL, Dabur and Colgate-Palmolive grew their volumes between 9-12 per cent as the makers of daily household products sold more goods despite increasing prices. “Across companies, margins have expanded and ad spends increased too. With sales of premium products growing, there isn’t even first signs of slowdown yet,” said Anand Mour of Ambit Capital. Colgate-Palmolive reported a 17 per cent jump in first quarter profit at Rs117 crore, while its sales grew 20 per cent at Rs736 crore. “In an inflationary environment, the company’s continuing efforts and focussed programs to enhance efficiencies and reduce costs continue to yield strong, positive results, helping to maintain margin and fund investments in building and strengthening brand equity and the business,” Colgate said in a statement. The company said prudent price increases and cost management helped it maintain its strong gross margin.

     

    Dabur reported 21 per cent jump in April-June sales at Rs1,461.9 crore, while net profit increased 17 per cent year-on-year to Rs149.4 crore, riding on categories like health supplements, shampoos and food. Faster network expansion in rural markets too helped the firm drive sales. Dabur CEO Duggal said the company was forecasting double-digit growth over the next two quarters although there could be some slowdown in demand.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • FMCGs brace for a weak monsoon

    By Ratna Bhushan & Sagar Malviya

     

    Consumer goods companies are busy firming up contingency plans to stem any decline in volume sales in case a deficit in monsoon rainfall hit crop yields, escalate food prices and impact consumer spend.

     

    Companies such as Dabur and Parle Products said they will delay price increases, emphasise on low-priced packs of Rs2, 5 and 10, explore new value price points and step up promotions to prevent possible downtrading, or consumers switching to cheaper products, in case of a crisis.

     

    “If there’s a monsoon deficit, we would obviously look at protecting volumes,” said Sunil Duggal, CEO of Dabur, which makes Vatika shampoo and Babool toothpaste.

     

    “Contingency plans could include a combination of things like putting off price increases, accelerating focus on smaller packs and allocating more spends on consumer promotions, depending on where the deficit is,” he added.

     

    BK Rao, general manager at top biscuits maker Parle Products said the maker of Parle-G, Monaco and Hide & Seek biscuits will focus on smaller price points if the situation is bad.

     

    The monsoon has revived significantly in the past week to reduce total deficit in the country so far to 22 per cent from 31 per cent and accelerated crop planting. But crop yields may still be lower as rainfall has been uneven, with some regions, including parts of Karnataka and Maharashtra, remaining practically dry for three weeks. Economists warn that food prices may rise sharply if rainfall weakens again.

     

    FMCG companies have been bucking the overall slowdown in the economy and posting an average 15 per cent growth, but a weak monsoon could change it.

     

    “A weak monsoon will naturally reflect on costs and we will have to work around that. The industry will feel the impact around September-October,” said Chitranjan Dar, divisional chief executive of tobacco-to-chips maker ITC Foods.

     

    While impact of inflation on the premium urban rich is not very significant, mid-rung and rural demand is strongly linked to the monsoons. Thus, top FMCG firm Hindustan Unilever, Dabur and biscuit maker Britannia, which have large rural presence, could be hurt more than Nestle and GlaxoSmithKline Consumer, which have an urban focus for their products, say experts.

     

    Analysts say consumer goods companies tend to push ‘magic price points’ of Rs2, 3, 5 and 10 in an inflationary scenario to minimise any negative impact on discretionary spends. Such low-unit packs account for over 25-30 per cent sales of makers of shampoos, hair dyes, biscuits and snack foods.

     

    Also, with local competition always posing a threat, established players would have to step up volume discounts and consumer promotions in a weak monsoon scenario. A significant 70 per cent of low unit packs are sold through kirana shops (mom and pop stores).

     

    “Small SKUs and distribution expansion may save the day. Downtrading too would be arrested at the small-pack level,” Shirish Pardeshi, executive director and co-head, research, at financial services firm Anand Rathi Securities, wrote in an investor note two weeks back. “Rural expansion of distribution (for example, HUL’s Project Shakti and Emami’s Swadesh initiatives – both aimed at accelerating expansion in rural markets) would help arrest drop in consumption,” the note said.

     

    Some analysts, however, believe the impact of a weak monsoon will be limited on rural consumption because dependence on agricultural income has been declining. “Our discussions with rural trade and consumers have always highlighted that one bad monsoon does not result in consumption declining. Instead, it leads to trade credit terms becoming more onerous in rural India,” Ambit Capital’s Anand Mour wrote in a report.

     

    Some companies such as Marico, maker of Saffola edible oil, say they would wait for some more time before start worrying about monsoon. “The June-July period is too early to take any decision. We will have to wait for August to check the monsoon trend and get a clearer picture,” said Marico CEO Saugata Gupta.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

    Copyright © 2012, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All Rights Reserved

     

  • Kiranas dump big brands for high margin Bharti Walmart wares

    By Sagar Malviya

     

    A few months ago, Dhananjay Jain, a grocery owner at Vidisha Road in Bhopal, decided to stock two alien brands – Right Buy and Members Mark – because they offered much higher margins than national brands and had lower price tags. Today, these floor cleaners, tea and cornflakes brands contribute nearly 20 per cent to his monthly sales.

     

    Many of his consumers may still have no idea where these brands priced 10-30 per cent less than those of Hindustan Unilever, Dabur and PepsiCo are sourced from. Well, they come from the world’s largest retailer, Walmart.

     

    Mr Jain gets these brands from a Best Price Modern Wholesale outlet – run by Walmart’s joint venture with Bharti Enterprises – just two kilometres from his store.

     

    Walmart is not allowed to sell directly to Indian consumers yet, but its brands across some three dozen categories have started sliding into Indian homes, as its cash-and-carry venture becomes a hit among grocery shop owners.

     

    “The idea is that the reseller should make more profits by selling our brands than he does by selling national brands,” said Arvind Mediratta, chief operating officer of Bharti Walmart. He said the firm’s private labels adhere to all the quality norms despite their lower price tags.

     

    Bharti Walmart operates 17 cashand-carry format Best Price Wholesale outlets, selling products to licensed neighbourhood stores, schools, offices and large enterprises. It has more than 3 lakh members, who own grocery stores.

     

    The firm launched Right Buy and Members Mark after phasing out its earlier brand Great Value, which is now restricted to Bharti’s Easy Day supermarket chain.

     

    So far, Walmart has developed a network of 100 suppliers to make private label products ranging from groceries, home care and personal care products to apparel and stationery. And it may soon get into categories such as soaps, shampoos and detergent. “We are planning to add several more categories in coming months and open over 10 outlets by next year,” Mr Mediratta said.

     

    Company officials say its brands already control 20-22 per cent share in most categories at its members’ outlets. Some shop owners even say they have stopped stocking national brands. “In categories such as floor cleaners and dish washing, we have stopped stocking national brands as consumers just want the lowest priced products in these segments,” said Mohammed Fayaz, a storeowner at Guntur in Andhra Pradesh, where Walmart has opened two wholesale outlets.

     

    What excites kiranawallahs is the huge margin they get. For instance, a 500ml bottle of Walmart’s toilet cleaner brand sports a price tag of Rs55 but is available to a kirana owner at Rs37. That makes the retailer’s margin a whopping 48 per cent. National rivals such as Reckitt Benckiser’s Harpic and HUL’s Domex are sold at Rs58, with the grocer earning 12-15 per cent margin on an average. Bharti Walmart also provides 10-30 per cent higher margins than national brands on tea, colas and juices that allow shopkeepers earn 10-30 per cent higher margins than national brands. Consumer products companies have been increasingly fighting private labels of modern retailers.

     

    In fact, private labels outsell several national brands in home care and packaged food categories at the outlets of retailers such as Future Group, Reliance Retail and Aditya Birla Group.

     

    FMCG companies didn’t feel too threatened because modern trade accounts for just 7-10 per cent of their total sales. But now, with Walmart’s private labels finding place in consumer companies’ largest sales channel – the country’s ubiquitous neighbourhood stores – this trend could become a headache for them.

     

    “As Walmart and other similar players scale up their cash-and-carry operations, given the price consciousness of the Indian consumer and the fact that kirana stores are here to stay, it is likely that this trend will start to worry large consumer goods companies,” said Siddharth Bafna, partner at advisory firm Lodha & Co.

     

    Not everybody agrees. The chief executive of a leading consumer products firm, however, said such private labels would not challenge big brands in evolved categories such as personal care. “There are always some categories, especially commodities, that are more prone to losing out to private labels because of pricing. However, several brands in the personal care segment that keep innovating aren’t threatened by private labels even in markets where modern trade is evolved,” the person said, requesting anonymity because Walmart is one of its partners.

     

    Some shopkeepers say it’s not easy to make people try new brands. “We are able to convince some consumers to opt for lower priced Walmart brands. But there are still many consumers who want to buy popular brands from national companies even if the price is higher,” said Jas Karan Singh, a store owner in Amritsar, where Walmart opened its first cash-and-carry outlet four years ago. Private labels accounted for around 7 per cent of Bharti Walmart’s annual sales of Rs 1,876 crore last calendar at over Rs 130 crore.

     

    Worldwide, the US retail giant is performing well despite the slowdown. For the fiscal year ended January 2012, it increased net sales by 5.9 per cent to $443.9 billion and ranked first on the 2011 Fortune 500 list of the world’s largest companies by revenues.

     

    Source: The Economic Times

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