From PepsiCo to P&G, India becomes next big growth bet as China lags
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[August 09, 2024] By
Ananya Mariam Rajesh
(Reuters) - India has become the next big bet for PepsiCo, Unilever and
other packaged goods giants looking to fill the growth vacuum left by an
uneven recovery in China.
With India's economy expanding at the fastest pace among major emerging
markets, companies are trying to serve its diverse palette by launching
new flavors and size variants aimed at attracting the country's vast
population and untapped rural market.
"While the last decade had companies focused on selling into China, the
next decade is about selling into India," said Brian Jacobsen, chief
economist at Annex Wealth Management.
"You have to go where the demographic and economic tailwinds are at your
back."
Major consumer goods companies based in India, the world's most populous
country, are expecting higher government spending, a better monsoon
season and a resurgence in private consumption to help consumer spending
recover in the coming quarters.
That is expected to boost the combined market share of the top five
multinational companies - Coca-Cola, P&G, PepsiCo, Unilever and Reckitt
- to 20.53% in 2023 from 19.27% in 2022, mainly in the baby care,
consumer health, cosmetics, beverage and household categories, according
to research firm GlobalData.
Their total market share in China is forecast to shrink to 4.30% in 2023
from 4.37% in 2022, the data showed.
"China went through a long and extended COVID ... they even went through
a brief period of negative growth, and after this, growth has been very
sluggish. In comparison to that, the growth rate in India hovering
around 4% seems like a healthy growth for total fast-moving consumer
goods," said K Ramakrishnan, Managing Director, South Asia, at Kantar's
Worldpanel Division.
Both the urban and rural segments in India have seen growth, but rural
has fared a little better, he said.
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Shoppers crowd at a market place in Mumbai, India, October 22, 2022.
REUTERS/Niharika Kulkarni
Consumer goods companies have also been pumping money into India
with launches like PepsiCo's Kurkure Chaat Fills, Coca-Cola's
packaging upgrades to increase the shelf-life of its products and
Nestle's plans to introduce its premium coffee brand Nespresso at
year-end.
As a result, Coca-Cola's household penetration in India increased by
24% for the 12 months ended June, PepsiCo's by 12.7%, Nestle's by
6.7% and Reckitt's about 3.8%, data from Kantar showed.
Mondelez International is partnering with the Lotus Biscoff cookie
brand to sell its products, and plans to launch new Oreo pack sizes
this month. The company reported a mid-single-digit percentage
growth in the chocolate category in India in the second quarter.
Coca-Cola also posted double-digit volume growth in India, while
Unilever recorded sequential improvement in the country. PepsiCo's
Africa, Middle East and South Asia region reported a rise, with the
company expecting India to be the "big growth space" there.
The results contrast muted volume growth in the region last year for
most of these companies.
On the flip side, China has seen feeble demand.
KitKat maker Nestle reported a fall in total sales in the Greater
China region in the latest quarter and said overall economic and
consumer sentiment there was "clearly weaker than expected".
"China has always been considered kind of the darling of growth for
investors, but as we have seen that bloom is off the rose there,"
said Don Nesbitt, senior portfolio manager at F/m Investments.
(Reporting by Ananya Mariam Rajesh in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika
Syamnath)
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