In the quarter ended June, the segment showed signs of the stress that has hit sectors such as capital goods, power, infrastructure and automobiles.
Hindustan Unilever Ltd, India’s largest fast-moving consumer goods company, reported sales growth of seven per cent during the June quarter, its slowest in three years.
Underlying volume growth, tracked keenly by analysts, fell to four per cent, as consumers kept away from the marketplace.
Kolkata-based ITC reported lower-than-estimated net sales growth of 10 per cent during the quarter, as cigarette volumes continued to disappoint, growing only 7.1 per cent.
The usually buoyant FMCG portfolio, which helped the company report good numbers in the last few quarters, was also a bit of a drag, growing 18.4 per cent between April and June.
For this segment, analysts had expected growth of 22-23 per cent.
What drove the weakness in FMCG for ITC?
Abneesh Roy, associate director (research), Edelweiss, said the low growth resulted from categories such as biscuits, soaps and shampoos.
As the slowdown persists, categories from staples to discretionary items are beginning to feel the pinch.
Mumbai-based Marico, for instance, reported four per cent volume growth for Parachute, one of its key brands, during the June quarter.
The company attributed this to the high base effect in the corresponding period last year, as well as the closure of retail outlets in Maharashtra, an important market, due to a strike over the levy of local body tax.
Analysts say Parachute also took a knock on account of the consumer slowdown, which has finally caught up with the Rs 1.8-lakh-crore
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