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The Two Conflicting Sides Of India’s Reviving Consumer Demand

Consumer goods distributors say inventory stays with them for longer as demand remains stagnant.

Vendors and customers stand near food stalls at Rusell Market in Bengaluru. (Photographer: Lakshmi Samyukta/Bloomberg)
Vendors and customers stand near food stalls at Rusell Market in Bengaluru. (Photographer: Lakshmi Samyukta/Bloomberg)

Consumer goods makers say demand for everything from chocolates and biscuits to shampoos and toothpastes has revived after the economy stumbled from a cash purge to a uniform sales tax. That’s just half the story.

Demand has stayed stagnant since demonetisation and companies are pushing goods into the supply chain to meet their targets, Dhairyashil Patil, a Kolhapur stockist and president of All India Consumer Products Distributors’ Federation, told BloombergQuint. “That’s led to an inventory pile-up.”

One data point underscores the divergence: inventory days.

The number of days for which distributors hold stock has risen from 7-10 to 15 in the last one year, according to heads of distributors’ associations in five states BloombergQuint spoke to. In smaller towns, said Patil, it has almost doubled to about a month.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi scrapped 86 percent of the currency in circulation in November 2016. The resultant cash crunch hurt demand for everything from household goods to real estate. As the economy was recovering from the impact, the government rolled out the Goods and Services Tax in July last year.

The only time inventories were thin, said stockists, was ahead of the GST implementation when distributors cut stock fearing losses due to a change in rates and tax refund rules. But consumer goods makers began forecasting an early revival.

Hindustan Unilever Ltd., India’s largest consumer goods company, told investors that demand was stable as it reported higher volumes and revenues in the quarter ended September. Likewise, Godrej Consumer Products Ltd. in its analysts call said the demand had improved.

Even the manufacturing activity, as reflected by Nikkei India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index, has improved since July, rising at its fastest pace in five months in December.

These numbers reflect primary sales from the companies to distributors. The picture isn’t that rosy in terms of demand from consumers, said stockists for companies like Hindustan Unilever, Godrej Consumer, Wipro Consumer Care & Lightning, Mondelez India, Britannia Industries Ltd. and Dabur India Ltd.

“Companies keep pressuring us to take more stock,” said Amit Darji, the Ahmedabad-based head of Gujarat distributors’ association. “They have asked us to increase the number of salesmen and also increase the capacity of our warehouses.”

Tulsi Das, his peer from Tamil Nadu, agreed. The distributor from Coimbatore said 70 percent consumer goods companies keep pushing their stocks down the chain to meet their sales targets.

Uttrakhand-based Nitin Sharma reiterated it. Demand hasn’t improved in the last one year while companies continue to push their goods down, he said. And that’s pushed up the days for which Shyam Prasad Menon from Kerala holds inventory to 15 compared to 7-10 earlier— at times it goes up to 30.

HUL refused to comment citing its silent period ahead of earnings, while BloomberQuint’s emailed queries to Godrej Consumer, Mondelez and Britannia remained unanswered.

Dabur India Ltd., in an emailed reply, said the inventory of its distributors hasn’t gone up. “In fact, it has reduced considerably... We have also seen demand coming back to normal.” Wipro Consumer said it follows “best-in-class trade practices” and has a “robust mechanism in place that enables distributors to share grievances, raise issues about wrong dispatches or return of stocks. These are addressed promptly and with alacrity”.

Shift To Modern Retail

Distributors typically sell stock to kirana stores that have seen demand fall after demonetisation encouraged the shift towards formalisation of retail. Supermarkets and hypermarkets also offers attractive schemes to the consumer, said Dhanraj Bhagat, consumer and retail partner at consultancy Grant Thornton India LLP. Kirana stores need to also offer schemes to lure customers, he said.

Menon said the consumption pattern has also changed. Instead of buying bigger packs, customers opt for smaller ones. The frequency of buying has increased but the overall demand hasn’t gone up, he said. Impulse purchases like chocolates are among the worst hit.