From consumer electronics to industrial electronic goods, everything has seen a surge in sales. | Express Photo Service 
Business

FMCG industry likely to grow by over 15 per cent in 2-3 years

During the slowdown, FMCG companies scaled back growth-oriented investments and shifted focus to sustaining profits—all at the cost of the top line.

From our online archive

MUMBAI: The fast moving consumer goods industry, that witnessed a slowdown for the past three years, has a potential to grow by more than 15 per cent over the next 2-3 years if players in the sector focus on improving brand penetration, a recent study revealed.

"India is at the cusp of the FMCG S-curve and there is significant room to grow over the next 5-10 years. A nominal GDP growth rate of roughly 12 per cent over the next three years could signal an FMCG growth by over 15 per cent, depending on player action," the CII-Bain & Company said.

The industry's growth rate compared to GDP has fallen to 0.8 from a historical ratio of 1.2, it said.

"This slowdown is perplexing; it cannot be fully explained either by changes in consumer spending power—which have only marginally decelerated in growth or any significant shifts to non-FMCG categories, including the rise of e-tailing," the report said.

During the slowdown, FMCG companies scaled back growth-oriented investments and shifted focus to sustaining profits—all at the cost of the top line.

The report noted that the industry has seen the growth rate accelerating in 2016 over the previous two years, with 18 of the 22 categories recording an uptick, driven by rural markets.

Last year, the FMCG industry grew at 9 per cent till October and rural growth was 1.7 times the urban.

Across these 22 categories, volume growth was driven by underlying penetration gains and even highly penetrated categories such as toothpaste and hair oil, both with over 95 per cent penetration, recorded material penetration gains, it added.

"Food emerged as the fastest growing segment at 10 per cent, with larger towns and more affluent consumers driving this growth. On the other hand, home care grew at 9 per cent, which was driven by less affluent consumers residing in small towns and rural areas," it said. 

TN polls 2026: How Sonia and the seniors stopped Congress-DMK ties from fracturing

LIVE | West Asia conflict: Iran vows 'eye for eye' response to attacks; UAE shuts largest refinery after drone strikes

Air India, Air India Express ticket prices to rise as fuel surcharge imposed amid West Asia war

Indigo CEO Pieter Elbers resigns with 'immediate effect' three months after airline faced massive crisis

Fewer dishes, dosas could be worst hit?: Restaurants across India battle LPG shortage

SCROLL FOR NEXT