BFSI: Rural demand for FMCG weak By Nuvama Research Rural FMCG demand will remain weak in Q3FY23. Granted, overall rainfall has been ample, but the metric discounts the deficit in 3-4 populous states and overall inflation remains a spot of bother. Lower-end of the rural job market seems upbeat, but still these are early days and sustainability is crucial. Due to favourable base, the extent of a y-o-y slowdown in rural is easing in Q3FY23; we expect market share gains among leaders (HUL/Britannia/Nestle) to continue. Foods will outperform personal care. First half (H1) will also see recovery after many quarters as seasonality was not abnormal. We expect y-o-y margins for the sector to remain under pressure in Q3FY23, with slight improvement q-o-q. Top picks are HUL, Britannia, Nestle and GCPL. Rural India contributes about 36% to a typical consumer company’s sales and is an important focus area given a much lower per-capita consumption thereof. More importantly, it makes up roughly two–thirds of India’s population. Inflationary pressures pushed rural consumers to ration their consumption, which hurt volumes even in Q3FY23. The government is continuing to support the free food programme in CY23. This, along with MSP hikes, will better farm output; further, the likely cooling of inflation bodes well for FY24. Sops for rural consumers will likely remain high due to elections in many states and general elections in six quarters. With start-up capital drying, we expect listed consumer players to dominate D2C. Q4FY23E onwards, base for rural FMCG demand will grow more favourable, and conceivably set real recovery in motion.
Last Friday, WTI and Brent slid 3% after strong U.S. jobs data raised concerns that the Federal Reserve would keep raising interest rates, which in turn boosted the dollar. While recession fears dominated the market last week, on Sunday International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol highlighted that China’s recovery remains a key driver for oil prices.
“If demand goes up very strongly, if the Chinese economy rebounds, then there will be a need, in my view, for the OPEC+ countries to look at their (output) policies,” Birol told Reuters on the sidelines of a conference in India.Price caps on Russian products took effect on Sunday, with the Group of Seven (G7), the European Union and Australia agreeing on caps of $100 per barrel on diesel and other products that trade at a premium to crude, and $45 per barrel for products that trade at a discount, such as fuel oil.
“For the moment, the market expects non-EU countries will increase imports of refined Russian crude, thus creating little disruption to overall supplies,” ANZ analysts said in a client note. “Nevertheless, OPEC’s continued constraint on supply should keep the market tight,” they said.