FMCG is seen everywhere as one of the safest defensive sectors – it’s classified as a non-cyclical perennial by many analysts.
This is because people continue to buy soaps and toothpaste even in a recession. So earnings are predictable.
In India, FMCG is also seen as a growth area, apart from being a defensive haven.
The logic is linked to poverty reduction and GDP growth.
As millions move up the income ladder from poverty, to the lower income group and from LIG to middle income group, and so on, they also aspire to using more in the way of personal care products.
There have been big gains in rural and semi-urban areas.
Despite the slowdown of the past three years, poverty reduction is still occurring at a substantial rate.
So, FMCG should continue growing. Plus, as logistics get better, distribution costs come down, allowing for superior margins and better penetration of undeserved markets.
This is a dynamic we have seen for the last 15 years.
The poor growth rates of this fiscal will generally be discounted as a worst case scenario occurring deep into a recession.
FMCG stocks continue to enjoy high PE ratios and they also continue to find high levels of support from FIIs and domestic institutions.
Everybody, including me, has cheerfully recommended these stocks for their combination of defensive strength and potential growth upside.
Now a researcher, Rahul Bhangadia, has written a piece in the personal finance magazine, Moneylife speculating that there’s a strong correlation between rising fiscal deficits and growth in FMCG sector.
Actually the hypothesis is broader, suggesting that consumption is driven by a higher deficit.
The data is spotty.
The published piece takes growth rates of a small group of FMCG companies and shows that the growth rates for FMCG stocks rose as the fiscal deficit started expanding in 2008-09.
As we know, attempts are being made in this fiscal year to curtail deficits -- that effort really started in the second half of the last fiscal.
As Plan expenditure has been slashed to cut the fisc, the growth rates of that basket of FMCG companies has reduced.
The author speculates that, perhaps growth in FMCG is connected to the fisc and if the government adopts more coherent deficit slashing measures, the growth rates in FMCG (and more broadly private consumption)
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