How ITC is working its way down in FMCG markets - The Economic Times
  October 30, 2011
  
When ITC chairman YC Deveshwar told shareholders  at the company's 100th annual general meeting in July that he wants to turn the  non-cigarette FMCG business profitable before he hangs up his boots in six  years time, the 64-yearold was most probably just buying himself breathing time  - a lot of it.
Today, despite its eponymous stature in the  cigarette business, nearly 21% of ITC's Rs 21,168 crore of 2010-11 net revenues  come from its non-cigarette FMCG business. In the past five years, this segment  - which includes everything from packaged food to personal care, lifestyle  retailing to stationery, safety matches and agarbatti - has emerged as ITC's  largest revenue engine, clocking a growth of 35% CAGR. In 2010-11, the division  clocked revenues of Rs 4,482 crore, up from Rs 3,014 crore in 2008-09.
More importantly, the company has been cutting  its losses in the non-cigarette FMCG business to Rs 297 crore in 2010-11 from  Rs 483 crore in 2008-09. 
What will also give Deveshwar great confidence  in the future of these businesses is that things are looking up for quite a few  of them, despite rising input costs. The food business, for instance, recorded  its maiden profit last fiscal and analysts say the stationery product business  is not too far from profitability. The personal-care business is also reducing  losses despite the growing investment in new product launches and marketing. In  fact, leading broking firms like HDFC Securities and Angel Broking are betting  that ITC's non-cigarette FMCG business would breakeven by next financial year. 
"The losses are reducing due to favourable  product mix, higher realisations and a combination of smart sourcing and cost  saving across supply chain," says broking firm Sharekhan analyst Kaustubh  Pawaskar. 
Top-down Strategy
Company officials attribute this turnaround to  the company's "top-down" approach to cracking categories in the FMCG  business. It's a strategy the company perfected in its mainstay cigarette  business and has replicated in the personal care, food and stationery  operations.
 Typically,  ITC enters any new category at the premium end, builds its brands, and then  rolls out the mass range. For example, it entered the stationery segment with  the premium Paperkraft range in 2002 and then followed it up with the  massmarket Classmate range the next year. By 2007, Classmate became the largest  notebook brand in the country. "Indian consumers love premium and imported  products. Hence, had we started from the bottom end of the market, consumers  would have never accepted us when we entered the premium segment, "ITC's  executive director Kurush N Grant told ET on Sunday during a recent  interaction. 
Add to that the advantages of better margins and  a juicy sales mix, its no wonder that ITC is replicating the strategy across  categories. ITC entered the food business in 2001 with premium ready-to-eat  brand Kitchens of India and in 2003, launched the Aashirvaad range of  mid-segment ready meals at a price range of Rs 35-50. 
Similarly, in 2005 when it forayed into the  personal-care market, it was through the super-premium brand Essenza Di Wills  in perfumes, bath and body care. This was followed by premium brand Fiama Di  Wills in 2007, the mid-market brand Vivel and eventually the mass-market Superia.
As per a recent HDFC Securities report, ITC has  some 6% market share in the fiercely competitive soap market and is increasing  its 2-3% market share in shampoos. While staples, confectionery, biscuits have  become profitable, the Bingo! range of snacks is close to breakeven.
Smart Backward Integration
ITC has great ambitions for this place. It plans  to invest Rs 8,000 crore in the noncigarette FMCG segment over the next 7-8  years. Deveshwar has clearly laid the goal: to become the country's largest  non-cigarette FMCG company.
It's an audacious goal that will see ITC take on  global behemoths like Unilever, Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo and Nestle, and a  bunch of domestic players like Godrej, Britannia and Dabur.
Over the years, ITC has diligently worked on  building what's now one of its key strengths - backward integration. It sources  commodities through its e-Choupal with its 4-million-plus farmer network and  uses its expertise in hotel business (ITC owns the second largest hotel chain  in India) to understand the Indian palette for the food business. Its paper  mills supply paper and recycled board for notebooks and the packaging and  printing division packaging for all FMCG products.
In short, it has reasonable control over input  costs and margins, which have become the biggest headaches for it rival  consumer-goods makers.
"Sourcing integration acts like an  insurance in times of high inflation. But what will be more important is to win  the consumers. In the long run, ITC's consumer franchisee must stay intact and  then it can play magic with its back-end integration," says Devendra  Chawla, president (food & FMCG) at Future Group, the country's largest  retailer. Industry watchers also feel it will be an uphill task for ITC to grow  its personalcare business unless it rapidly gains its distribution and reach.
"The way Unilever has made deep  penetrations, it will take several years for ITC to replicate its scale. Of  course, it can use its wide penetration of panwallahs and cigarette shops to  generate trials and ensure that the products reach nearby kiranas. But reaching  smallest of kiranas will take time," says the CEO of a top domestic FMCG  company, requesting anonymity.
ITC is aware of that. It has already started  tapping its eponymous cigarette distribution channel. It's also focusing on  creating product differentiation in the personal-care market. It is closely  studying consumer needs to develop value-added products.
All it Wants Now is Some Time 
"It's true we have been a late starter in  the personal care business. But we are here to stay and need to give that much  time to grow the business," says Grant. Given ITC's hurry to make it big,  that time may be not too far away.