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Godrej Consumer Products Limited (GODREJCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Godrej Consumer Products Limited (NSE: GODREJCP) Q1 2026 Earnings Call dated Aug. 07, 2025

Corporate Participants:

Vishal KediaGlobal Head, Strategy & Planning, FP&A, Investor Relations

Sudhir SitapatiManaging Director & Chief Executive Officer

Aasif MalbariChief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Aditya SomanAnalyst

Abneesh RoyAnalyst

Percy PanthakiAnalyst

Karthik ChellappaAnalyst

Harit KapoorAnalyst

Arnab MitraAnalyst

Nihal Mahesh JhamAnalyst

Mihir ShahAnalyst

Presentation:

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to the Godrej Consumer Products Q1 FY ’26 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Please note that this conference is being recorded.

I now hand the conference over to Mr. Vishal Kedia. Thank you. And over to you, sir.

Vishal KediaGlobal Head, Strategy & Planning, FP&A, Investor Relations

Good evening to all present. Welcome to the Q1 conference call for Godrej Consumer Products Limited. We have with us Mr. Sudhir Sitapati and Mr. Aasif Malbari. We’ll start with opening remarks from Mr. Sudhir Sitapati, following which we will go into Q&A.

I now hand over to Mr. Sudhir Sitapati for his opening remarks.

Sudhir SitapatiManaging Director & Chief Executive Officer

Good evening to all.

Q1 FY ’26 has been a good quarter for GCPL. In particular, our standalone ex-soaps business has had an excellent performance, delivering an underlying volume growth of mid-teens, led by robust broad-based performance. Our international business has been affected due to macro headwinds and competitive pressures in Indonesia, which was compensated by a robust performance in Africa.

On a consolidated basis, our revenues grew 10% in INR terms, with 8% underlying volume and minus 3% on EBITDA. India has had a good quarter with a revenue growth of 8%. Our volume growth was 5% and EBITDA growth was minus 6%. However, excluding soaps, we grew underlying volumes by mid-teens, with soap volumes being affected by volume price rebalancing and a very poor season in May, especially in North India.

We had a robust performance in household insecticide, which grew volumes in high single digits, led by electrics growing double digits. We have gained market share in electrics on the back of the relaunched products and are very happy with the outcome of our actions. Our categories of air fresheners, laundry liquids, etc., have continued to deliver strong underlying volume growth. All our products like Bloq, the anti-perspirant, AirPlug and Amazon Woods 4X, have been launched successfully and are seeing good consumer traction and repeat sales.

Furthermore, as guided in the investor meet, we are on track to deliver 150 bps to 200 bps of savings in A&P investments. Over the last three years, we have doubled our A&P spend and trebled our working media. With this kind of scale, we have been able to accrue savings on account of better planning, automations and negotiations with a new agency in place. This has been done without impacting media reach.

Our Indonesia business has been impacted by macro headwinds and competitive pricing pressures. However, we expect this to be transitory in nature with the situation improving in a few months. Our Africa business continued its solid performance with sales growing at 30% and EBITDA at 15%. We successfully launched Aer Pocket across all markets in Africa and are seeing a very positive consumer response.

Latin America continues to do extremely well with high single-digit underlying volume growths and EBITDA margins now in the double digits. As guided during our latest investor meet in May 2025, we expect performance to improve sequentially in FY ’26, with the second half performance better than the first half performance in terms of margin. Standalone EBITDA margins in H1 ’26 is likely to be below our normative range but is expected to improve in the second half.

While palm oil prices have started moderating towards June, benefits of this moderation will only be realized in H2 FY ’26. We believe for FY2 ‘6, we are on track for mid-to-high single-digit UVG for standalone business, high single-digit consolidated INR revenue growth and double-digit consolidated EBITDA growth for the full year.

Thank you. I’d be happy to take questions now.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you very much. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Aditya Soman from CLSA. Please go ahead.

Aditya Soman

Yeah. Hi. Good evening. Sir, two questions for me. Firstly, you indicated the impact of the early monsoons potentially on soaps. Was there also a similar positive impact on home insecticides, given that we had an early rain and typically insecticides does well in the rainy season?

Second question on the liquid detergent business. We’ve seen Unilever get very aggressive in the space. They have recently launched Sunlight at INR70 a liter, actually even — significantly undercutting even Fab. Do you see this as being a challenge to growth and margins going forward? Thanks.

Sudhir Sitapati

So to answer — thanks, Aditya. To answer your first question on whether there was a positive impact on household insecticide, we have something called an infestation index for the quarter. The overall quarter was at about 100. That’s because April was very low and May and June were good. April was very low because it was a particularly hot April. It became hot early this year, and then it cooled down in May and June. So April, normally where the season changes in the North, that season changed in March.

So overall, actually, we didn’t have a particularly good seasonality index in — it was an average seasonality index on household insecticide. And April is normally a much bigger month than May and June. May and June are good summer months. The index was higher, the volumes are lower. April, the volumes are higher, the index was lower and it was roughly the same. So, I don’t think we got any particular benefit in terms of household insecticide in terms of season this quarter, which we did a little bit last quarter, which was in Q4.

To answer your second question, Fab continues to do extremely well for us. It is sequentially gaining share. It is much loved by consumers, and it is heading towards unprecedented levels of revenue in FY ’26. We do not see Fab as a price competitor. We think that there’s an overall mix to Fab that is good. In fact, we have taken up prices by 5% on Fab in the last quarter and have seen no impact of it despite a lot of price competition in the market. We are very convinced that this is a good mix and a fundamentally good mix.

Aditya Soman

Thanks, Sudhir. That’s very clear. Thanks for the clarification for both. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Abneesh Roy from Nuvama. Please go ahead.

Abneesh Roy

Yeah. Thanks. My first question is on the India HI. Most of the subsegments of the India HI seems to have grown in double digit. If you could clarify how much is the decline in coils and would you see that as a structural issue? And it’s a good long-term issue to have, given the premium products can grow faster, differentiated products can grow faster.

And second is Q2, obviously, currently, the expectation is monsoon is going to be high, till now it is high only. So generally when monsoon is high, the mosquito larvae gets flooded away, which is not a good development from a HI construct. So would you be a bit cautious on the Q2 demand? Based on this premise, obviously, it’s too early to comment on the quarter from an overall projection perspective, but from a monsoon perspective, would you say that that’s not a supportive premise?

Sudhir Sitapati

So to answer your first question, Abneesh, coils, of course, is declining. We don’t usually give numbers at a subsegment level. So it’s probably not proper for me to give it. But I feel like last quarter was an average quarter in terms of season. And we have done this high single-digit volume growth, which, other things being equal, I think will persist in the future. If you have a good season, we may go to high single digit. If you have a bad season, we may go to low single digit. So that kind of variance will be there. But we seem to be on that kind of trajectory. We’ll see how to take this up further. I still feel that there are ways in which we can take this up further and we are working on it.

One obvious way is to see how we can upgrade faster from incense sticks, but that’s work to be done, but at least this battle seems to be a little behind us. This is, in fact, third quarter in which electrics has done well. So that we continue to be quite positive about. In terms of Q2, in terms of seasonality, it’s hard to say, Abneesh. It’s hard to predict what’s going to happen. Actually, July was a little bit of a poor monsoon in South India. But again, the monsoon has come back in August.

There’s been a bit of a strain season where the July — normally, kind of what happens in August is happening in July and everything is getting changed a little bit by 15 days, 20 days. But sitting here today, I don’t think this is going to be a particularly good or bad season. Sitting here today, I don’t know what August and September will bear. Last year in Q3, there was a particularly poor season. So one can be hopeful that, that will improve. But, I mean, I can’t really answer that question with more clarity than that. Sorry.

Abneesh Roy

Sure. That is absolutely reasonable. In terms of the new formula, now it has been few quarters, how is the competition responding because India is all about jugaad, reverse engineering. And even if reverse engineering doesn’t give the same product, Indian companies are very happy to copy the messaging. So if you could comment on the competitive landscape from a new formula perspective how things have changed?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, firstly, within electrics, we have had unprecedented share gains over the last few months and genuinely unprecedented share gains.

Abneesh Roy

Is that Nielsen market share gains?

Sudhir Sitapati

Nielsen market share gains. Again, I don’t want to give exact numbers, but they’re very high. In fact, for the first time in a decade, we have gained share of overall HI because in the past we would gain and lose share, a little bit of share in electrics, but then the market was reshaping so rapidly that we were losing overall share of HI as were all branded players because illegal sticks were gaining shares for all branded share. But this is the first quarter, except for one quarter in the middle of COVID when Chinese imports and all stopped one or two quarters, it’s the first quarter really in a regular quarter in a decade that overall HI shares we’ve gained, which is very, very heartening, which means you really have to gain a lot of share in electrics to compensate because incense sticks still continues to grow fast. So, that’s been very encouraging for us.

I mean, look, the RNF molecule is a competitive moat for us because, as I said, when we launched RNF, you guys were here in the last analyst call, we have exclusivity for some time on this and the lead time for new molecules in India is long. So in the short-to-medium term, we don’t expect any challenge in terms of product. We are convinced that this is the best molecule in India. It has shown results. I hope it shows even better results in the future, and it’s not easy to copy this. And mere proposition doesn’t help. I mean, in the last decade, everyone’s tried a lot of propositions, but mere propositions don’t help in the absence of a solid product.

Abneesh Roy

Sudhir, one last follow-up on this. You have shown us live experiment in your office when we had come on the new formula. But real world is different. And real world, there is so many other uncertainty and all that. What is the customer saying on the efficacy of this product, the general view?

Sudhir Sitapati

The customer is — see, qualitatively, it has been very good, which we knew for some time. But quantitatively, if you’re able to gain enough share in electrics to compensate for the headwind loss of incense stick growth, I mean, that kind of share doesn’t happen without a genuine product differentiation. And consumers genuinely loving it, which we are hearing from a lot of consumers, plus this advertising also seems to have clicked. We went in with the proposition of lasts for two hours after the electricity goes off. This seems to have been a good proposition that consumers are recalling as well.

Abneesh Roy

Sure. My second quick question, India perfumes and deo mid-teens growth, say, 15%, 16%. If you could comment on a two-year basis, how the growth is? I understand this was not a very favorable quarter, given most summer categories did not do well.

And second sub-question there, the Bloq antiperspirant, that formulation, the way it is applied, I think India — we haven’t seen too many products really become successful. It has been tried earlier. So to that extent, from an application perspective, would you need a lot of time for a customer to be taught how this is used so that the traction is there?

Sudhir Sitapati

So, I think, again, I don’t want to give specific numbers on a two-year basis, though last year same quarter was also a very high growth quarter for us because that was on the base on a low base. So two-year numbers are very high, but three-year number may not. But I would say, the two-year number will be high only because last quarter, the growth number that we had because the previous year, we acquired the business. But one thing is that the traction is good.

We’ve done two, three things that seem to be working. This Amazon Woods 4X, which is an innovation, seems to be working well because the market was disrupted by 2 times, and this is 4 times. And in Tamil Nadu, we did a pilot which seems to be working very well where we bought the MRP of the category down to INR99. Many of you will know this category and a lot of questions were asked on whether it’s a trade-driven category. And that time I had said that our job is to convert it from a trade-driven category to a consumer-driven category.

So in Tamil Nadu, what we did is the category MRP was INR230 and the trade price was INR100. In Tamil Nadu, what we did is we brought down the MRP to INR99, and we bought down the trade price to INR90 and converted 150 ML to 125 ML, so the rough gross margins remain the same. That has had explosive growth in terms of volume shares, volume growth and even NSV growth. So, we are now convinced that, that is the right way for us to compete in this market, not give so much margin to the trade. Give trade the margin that they earn on the rest of HPC and bring down price. That has been in one state, but that has been a delta contributor.

Bloq, I agree with you is a long, hard battle because converting this country to antiperspirants is not going to be easy. But I just met some consumer. Yesterday, I was in Chennai where we’ve launched Bloq and consumer acceptance is hard. Again, remember that this category of antiperspirants is selling at INR200 to INR220, and Bloq is a INR99 disruption. So, we seem to be having a lot of these INR99 products that seem to be doing quite well for us. Bloq, Aero, KS Deodorant INR99. But to answer your question, is Bloq going to give us a lot of revenue in the next two years? I doubt it. But it is one of the key reasons why we did this acquisition, which is to build the antiperspirant category.

Abneesh Roy

Sir, last question, I’ll end there. So liquid detergent, you did extremely good disruption with the pricing, packaging, product, etc. Now, legacy detergent powder players have quickly caught on. And now I think their pricing is even lower than Fab detergent. Modern trade has also quickly caught on. So currently, you are doing quite well. So, my question is not on the current quarter.

My question is, eventually, what we see is the legacy player in any category, eventually they come back because they have much higher advertising budget in this category to really get back that initial delay of loss, plus definitely, their economies of scale will be much, much higher to initially cross-subsidize, etc. So, how do you see Fab now competing against the Rin at a lower pricing and say even modern trade? Modern trade, of course, the quality will be different. So if you could comment long term, how do you see this threat?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, firstly, Abneesh, laundry liquids is a category we built in India with Ezee. And the category is quite analogous to soaps 20, 25 years ago. It’s a category that we’ve done well over a long period of time. So, we are certainly one among a few players. So, I don’t think that there is a question of right to win in this category, both because we were pioneers in liquid and the detergent category has a lot of similarities to soap. I think we look at our mix from a consumer’s lens.

We feel that a combination of the product, the pricing, the packaging and the advertising is a sweet spot for consumers. We have, in fact, as I said, gone the other way around and taken up prices on Fab because actually, raw material costs have gone up, SLES, which is a big component, is linked to the palm complex and so on. We have not seen any — you know these kind of things if you’re purely playing on a commodity basis, you’ll see things falling immediately. But we have not seen that.

We have only seen our sequential revenues go high. We will play a branded game here. We are not going to play a pricing game on Fab. I mean, it came at a disruptive pricing because we felt that’s the right price for consumers, not because WE want to discount the category. We feel the right price for consumers to upgrade from powders to liquids, our job is to upgrade from powders to liquid. And our focus is on that, I mean, so that consumers get a better experience with liquids.

Abneesh Roy

So thanks. That’s all from me. Thank you.

Sudhir Sitapati

Thanks, Abneesh.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Percy Panthaki from IIFL Securities. Please go ahead.

Percy Panthaki

Hi, sir. My first question is on soaps. So suddenly, we’ve seen such a huge volume growth coming in this quarter. So, what really has changed? Sorry?

Sudhir Sitapati

Are you talking about shops or ex-soaps?

Percy Panthaki

You said that soaps has grown 15%, right? Or did I hear that wrong?

Sudhir Sitapati

No, I said ex-soaps. You heard it wrong. I said our business ex-soaps has grown 15%. Soaps has done badly this quarter, both because of grammage cuts, which are very sharp and also because of a poor season in May. So, we overall grew 5% in India, but we grew ex-soaps in the mid-teens.

Percy Panthaki

Understood. And with this import duty cut, does that benefit us in terms of RM and when do we see the margins sort of normalizing for soaps division?

Sudhir Sitapati

So the import duty cut benefit us. However, in the last few weeks, there has been a bit of a rally again in palm oil prices. So palm oil prices fell, not hugely up, but they’ve gone back up 10%. So from their peak, they fell 30%. They’ve gone back up 10%, but that’s in the realm of [Technical Issues]. But because of the inventory that we hold, I think the benefits of soap margins will only come in towards the beginning of Q3.

Percy Panthaki

Okay. Understood. And on Indonesia, we keep having these issues every three years or so. I think now it’s been like 12 years or so since our acquisition. More or less three times or four times, we have seen this cycle repeat that things are going good, then we have some competitive intensity. And then two, three quarters down the line, we realize that we should have responded more forcefully early on. So, what actions are we taking now to sort of protect our business against competition?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, primarily, I feel like in Q4 itself, Indonesia FMCG had slowed down. And I think a lot of our peers and competitors reported that in Q4 and the beginning of Q1, things seem to be — so the primary cause in Indonesia seems to be macro. So before acting, one needs to understand whether it’s a macro cause or a micro cause. Primarily, we see this as macro. I mean, I could be wrong, Percy. I could come back and say, hey, listen, maybe we missed something.

But there have been some price competition, which has, I think, been in response to the macro because when the macro is poor four months, five months, a lot of competition also wants to react. We have to defend market share unblinkingly, so that we’ve done because our objective is to defend market share. But I’m also going to Indonesia next month to assess for myself. But from what I’ve read from the data I’ve seen, it does seem to be — from what I’ve spoken to others, it does seem to be a little bit of a sudden slowdown that Indonesian economy had in Q4 and the beginning of Q1. It also seems to be doing a little better now.

Percy Panthaki

Understood. And this price competition is in wet pipes or something else?

Sudhir Sitapati

No, in household insecticide and air fresheners. Basically, in general, because Q4 was so bad that, I guess, everybody was saddled with inventory. Nobody’s plans happened. So what, I meant, I suspect that’s what must have happened there. So, I also feel that this is a temporary kind of a response to what went wrong in the Indonesian economy in Q4 and beginning of Q1. I don’t have a clear answer, but a lot of people have written about it and a lot of competitors have spoken about it. I don’t know what happened in that quarter, but it seems to be a response to that.

Percy Panthaki

So in a situation where we have a slow macro plus some discounting and price-led competition, will your priority be to protect the margins? Or will it be to sort of make sure that whatever little bit of growth you can get in the poor macros, you get that?

Sudhir Sitapati

Our objective is always to defend our shares and to grow our shares. That is number one priority, even if the macros are poor. So whatever the consequence of defending shares we have to bear it, we have to bear it.

Percy Panthaki

Understood, sir. So, any call out here on margins like you had called out a few quarters earlier that India margins will remain below normative levels? Any such possibility in Indonesia that for a few quarters it will below be normative levels because of price competition or something like that?

Sudhir Sitapati

I have a feeling again — look again, Percy, I’m not 100% sure here, but I have a feeling that this is a bit of a temporary drop and it should come back in the next few months. Again, this quarter we have kind of continued to invest on pricing, but I have a feeling that the pressure should lift by Q3 here is what I think will happen in Indonesia. It doesn’t look like a deep structural margin correction that we have to take.

Percy Panthaki

And lastly on Africa. You have done a very good top line growth, whereas the bottom line also has grown, but there has been a margin compression here. So, what is the reason for that margin compression?

Sudhir Sitapati

I think the primary reason is that one of our products, which is Aer Pocket has been doing well across the world, and we have launched it in many countries in Africa and invested quite a lot in Aer Pocket in terms of media and on-ground activities in BTL. So, I think that has been the main reason for a slight bit of dilution in Africa margins. And also consequently, the growth is — we are also pivoting that business to an FMCG business, and Aer has been such a big success in India that we see a big opportunity, not just in Africa, actually, but across the world on Aer Pocket.

Percy Panthaki

Got it, sir. That’s it from me. Thanks, and all the best.

Sudhir Sitapati

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Karthik Chellappa from Indus Capital Advisors. Please go ahead.

Karthik Chellappa

Yes. Thank you very much for the opportunity. Sir, I have two questions. The first one…

Operator

Sorry to interrupt. Karthik sir, you are sounding too soft. If you are using an external device — if you can use a handset, please?

Karthik Chellappa

Yeah. Sure. How is this one? Is this any better?

Sudhir Sitapati

We can hear, Karthik, just about, but go on.

Karthik Chellappa

Okay. Sure. I’ll try to be loud as well. So, my first question is on the standalone business. If I were to exclude soaps and look at the margins on a year-on-year basis, directionally, how do you think that trended?

Sudhir Sitapati

Directionally, we also, on ex-soaps, have taken some price corrections in some part of our portfolio, including household insecticide, hair color, which also explains the high growths in the rest of the business. So even there, the margins have not been much, but they have come down. But we have had spectacular mid-teens growth there. We felt there were some parts of the portfolio, for example, the aerosol part of the portfolio when compared to the rest of the world, prices were high.

Margins in an absolute level are high. So, we’ve dropped prices there. In some parts of our hair color portfolio, where margins are high, we’ve dropped some prices. All these businesses have exploded, but we have taken some kind of margin correction there. We will recover those margins as the year goes along through cost savings. We have very aggressive cost saving programs, including in the first quarter, a lot of it has come through media negotiations. But we have some big budget savings, including from supply chain, from our new factories, etc. So, our strategy on ex-soaps, soaps is to recover to normative margins with pricing. Ex-soap is to be a little bit aggressive on pricing and recover those margins back through costs.

Karthik Chellappa

So in the second half when we talk about margin recovery, it will be on the back of soaps normalizing plus as well as ex-soaps also improving, but not to the extent that we will see in soaps, right?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah. But we should in the second half go close to our normative kind of margins. That’s what I think. Unless, of course, there’s another rude shock on oil prices. But if assuming oil prices are roughly where they are today, which is higher than their low, but lower than their high, we should kind of roughly get to nominative margins, that’s what our calculations suggest.

Karthik Chellappa

Okay. Great. On Indonesia, if I were to look at your price levels in the first quarter, for the competitive categories, whether it’s household insecticides or air fresheners, what would be your gap vis-a-vis these aggressive challenges, if I take the first quarter price level as a reference point?

Sudhir Sitapati

Compared to where we should be, I think we were about 7%, 8% higher than where we should have been, which we took corrective action in the quarter itself. So towards the end of Q4 and beginning of Q1, we saw some sharp price drops on household insecticide aerosol, which we waited for a month and then we’ve kind of gone and matched and so on. But we were off by about 7%, 8% for a period of two months.

Karthik Chellappa

So which means if the price aggression from the challengers don’t get worse from here, our price levels are probably where they should be from a competitive standpoint, right?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yes.

Karthik Chellappa

Okay. Great. Okay. That’s all from my side. Wish the team all the very best for the remaining quarters. Thank you.

Sudhir Sitapati

Thank you, Karthik.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Harit Kapoor from Investec. Please go ahead.

Harit Kapoor

Yeah. Hi. Good evening. So, my first question was on pricing, gross margins in standalone. So. soaps has declined. Within HI also, the premium categories have done well. And most of your higher gross margin categories have actually done quite well and we’ve seen still a slight sequential drop from quarter four to quarter one. So, what I’m trying to ask is mix has dramatically — at least looks like has significantly improved, but the drop is still there. So is that largely inventory price led? Is it what you mentioned in the earlier participant’s question that you’ve taken some price drops in the non-soap portfolio? Could you just help me understand this change?

Sudhir Sitapati

Largely, we’ve taken some price drops in the non-soap part of the portfolio, especially on aerosols on what we call CIK, which is crawling insect, flying insect, which is mosquito and cockroach. And also on hair color, we brought down the price of our large pack by about 5%. So on three big packs, we have taken down prices to aid volume growth.

Harit Kapoor

Got it. Got it. Okay. And the soaps, what if I just do a back of the envelope calculation, it looks like a mid-teen volume decline. When do you see.

Sudhir Sitapati

It wasn’t that high, Harit. It wasn’t a mid-teen volume decline or not.

Harit Kapoor

Okay. So whatever a double-digit kind of a number, at least it looks like, just wanted to get your sense on when do you see and how does this easing happen through the quarter? Is it just a base effect which anniversarizes from, say, third and fourth quarter? And part of it is seasonal, so that should ideally play out from quarter two itself? Is that the way to think about it?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah, it will. We’ll definitely see better volume performance. See, a good part of the volumes decline, UVG decline is just grammage. So about half our business or 40% of our business is price point packs. For example, on Godrej number one, INR10, last year, same quarter, I think we were 55 grams or 56 grams. This year, we’re about 43 grams. That’s the kind of grammage cut that we’ve had to take, which is almost 20% grammage cuts, right, on 40% of your portfolio. That accounts for most of the volume decline.

And then there was a volume decline, which was an unusually poor May that we had. So the unusually poor May will disappear in Q2. What will happen on grammage cuts is those will continue because — but as we go through the year, the base also has smaller and smaller grammages and units also tends to increase over a period of time. So while our UVG is 5%, my reckoning is that our unit growth should have been in double digits this quarter.

Harit Kapoor

Fair. And one last question on soap. I mean, as you track competitive intensity, have you seen market share stay largely intact in that space?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, we are still gaining, in this quarter, market share on soaps despite all this, but it is less than we usually gain. So, I have to say that, we have, for a long time, been gaining significant share on soaps. That significant share has reduced to a marginal gain on soaps. But we’re still gaining. We’re not losing share on soaps.

Harit Kapoor

Got it. Wish you all the best. Thank you.

Sudhir Sitapati

Thanks, Harit.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Arnab Mitra from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.

Arnab Mitra

Yeah. Hi, team. So, I think my first question, again, actually is on soaps. So, what I wanted to understand is whenever you’ve historically seen this very large decline in volumes in soaps like 8%, 10% or high-single digit declines in any year, because long term, there is still some low single digit growth in the category? Do you expect volume growth to come back to a reasonably good number at some stage to make up for this decline? Or does the usage actually drop and does not recover when you take these grammage cuts? So what I’m asking is once the base normalizes, do you just think you get to a zero kind of a territory or there is a year when you actually make up and therefore, get to the long term trend line growth of the industry?

Sudhir Sitapati

I think you will get to the long line [Technical Issues] the industry from my past experience, Arnab, because people don’t reduce the number of baths. It’s an inelastic category. So, similarly, you see, we’re also lapping bases where the other way around happened, where you suddenly give grammage increases and then it looks like you have high UVG. But I do expect that the long-term volume growth on soaps to be in the low single digit, which is 2% odd. 2 to 3% is what I expect the long term volume growth on soaps to be.

Arnab Mitra

Got it, Sudhir. And the second question related on soaps is, I heard your answer on market shares, but sometimes Nielsen share can be a bit off short term. So, this quarter again was the first quarter in a long time where I think HUL grew slightly better than GCPL on soap volumes. So anything you read from that in terms of your on-ground understanding of how things have gone after the formulation change or pricing actions? Or do you not worry about it much? It could be a quarterly thing that one company would have a slightly higher number. I just wanted to get a sense of anything that worries you on the competitive performance in soaps?

Sudhir Sitapati

No, I think, Arnab, it’s one quarter, we still gained share. We have a large business in North India and North India had a particularly poor summer. We had a really poor May in North India, and 70% of our business comes from North India. So, there’s a little bit of geographic stuff here. I would say that we have been a little aggressive on soap pricing over the last few years, generated quite a lot of margins. But I would not read too much into one quarter. If this continues for a few quarters — I mean, the market share gain that we’ve got in this quarter is less than what we want, to be honest. So, leave alone whatever reports come externally, that itself, we’ve got to improve a little bit more. But I would still kind of leave a quarter aside because it’s also been an unusual quarter in terms of various kinds of prices and the weather. And the weather does affect soap sales. So, I’d probably do not react too quickly to this, wait for a quarter or so and then probably kind of think about it.

Arnab Mitra

Got it. And my last question, Sudhir, is, generally, what we’ve heard from most companies is this slight — like broad-based pickup we are seeing in some parts from — across mass consumption. Now, I know your categories have different drivers, especially HI is quite season-driven. But any thoughts you have on — are you seeing broader consumption trends slightly improving and therefore, like the second half recovery, which is right now more predicated on soaps recovering, is there also some chance that you do get a little bit of uplift from a broader consumption recovery? So, any thoughts or anything you have picked up on the ground there would be helpful.

Sudhir Sitapati

I think so Arnab. I think that one can say that this quarter growth has been slightly easier than the previous quarter and the previous quarter was much better than the previous one. So, I mean, it’s too hard to say there’s like some big boom in consumption and all, but certainly it looks in the right direction because soap numbers that are affected by a lot of things. So ex-soap is a good way to kind of look at the overall consumption basket. Those numbers have been quite unprecedented for us this quarter.

Arnab Mitra

Got it. Got it. Thanks. That’s it from my side. All the best.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Nihal Mahesh Jham from HSBC. Please go ahead.

Nihal Mahesh Jham

Yes. Good evening, Sudhir. Am I audible?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah.

Nihal Mahesh Jham

Sir, the first question was on HI itself, specifically post RNF launch. Is it, say, either via Nielsen or any other medium, there is a potential to get a feedback on the repeat because I’m sure there will be a novelty factor associated with the advertising campaign that you’re running. But any sense on, say, the repeat factor for the new molecule/product?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah. See, we’ve now launched — see, we launched a new molecule in September last year. So, this kind of market share gains cannot happen without repeats. So, I mean, you can get — after advertising the first three, four months, your trials can go up and then the repeats can come down, etc. So, that alone tells us that the repeats are high because the scale of market share gain is very high.

Nihal Mahesh Jham

Got that. And at least in our understanding, maybe our share in electricals is north of 60% before the recent share gain that you’re speaking of. So potentially, leaving apart the focus on trying to transition a lot of the incense market into LVs, where can we potentially take our share of in the long term?

Sudhir Sitapati

I mean, that’s a good question to ask because let’s take in FIK, our share is 85. In cockroaches, it’s 90 plus. So, I mean, when you have a differentiated product and you have a moat, I suppose the sky’s the limit.

Nihal Mahesh Jham

Got that. The final bit is during the Analyst Meet, you did mention about obviously revamping the channel margin in architecture for the deodorant portfolio and the new launches. Just feedback on that, because obviously, at that time also, there was a slight apprehension given it was the first time that any company was trying to implement it. So just initial feedback on that?

Sudhir Sitapati

We’re very happy. As I told you, we launched it in Tamil Nadu. Now, Tamil Nadu is the easiest states, by the way, because it’s the lowest wholesale component, the most retail component and wholesale doesn’t like this. But the lesson that we’ve learned is doubling of volumes and doubling of volume shares and actually doubling of revenue also, because we’ve not really dropped price because price per ML, we’ve kept the same or our NSV per ML. I mean, shows us that this is a powerful idea, which is if you bring this category to INR99, now it’s a hard transition to do.

So, we’ll have to do this slowly and not like one shot. Because you do it in one shot, you can really lose a lot. But certainly, the right thing to do is to get this category to INR100, and then this category has to explore. So, I hope that takes the growth of the category up. We’re also unique because among the top couple of players, we probably have the best distribution for this kind of thing because you need a wide distribution to compensate for initial loss of wholesale traction. So, I guess we are quite well placed as well among the top three players to kind of capitalize on this from a distribution point of view.

Nihal Mahesh Jham

Understood. That’s it, Sudhir. Thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Mihir Shah from Nomura. Please go ahead.

Mihir Shah

Hi, team. Thank you for taking my question. Firstly, on the Africa business, after the cleanup, the growth seems to have been quite strong. Firstly, is this growth sustainable and/or what can be a reasonable growth for Africa on a sustainable basis and in FY ’26? So that’s my first question?

Sudhir Sitapati

I’ll ask Aasif to answer that.

Aasif Malbari

Sure. So, I think one is we’ve kind of taken in a lot of interventions over the last year. Some bit of the growth is obviously kind of coming in because of, I would say, corrections or base corrections, which we’ve done in the past because we had taken down dealer inventory. I would kind of attribute around 10%, 12% of the growth to that. So should we be able to kind of grow by double digit over the next few quarters? I think we should, with macros being where they are.

Mihir Shah

Understood. Secondly, on competitive intensity, Sweden, Indonesia, do you expect all the higher promotions, etc., that have happened to match competition? The impact of all this are already factored into the margins this quarter or do you think that we can see some more margin pressure in coming quarters as well?

Sudhir Sitapati

Look, it’s hard to predict this. I can only guess this. I can’t predict it. My guess is that margins may have bottomed out in Indonesia because of pricing pressure because my guess is that the market will grow faster. If the market grows faster, the kind of need for competitors to drop prices kind of slightly reduces. So that’s my guess.

Mihir Shah

Understood. Understood. No, I was just asking on a Semper Paratus basis, have you taken into account that [Speech Overlap].

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah. I think a good model is to think that this is not — anyway maybe we can have a conversation in a quarter or two on this for us to assess whether — my guess sitting here today is it’s a bit temporary and it will improve in a quarter or so.

Mihir Shah

Got it. One on HI, if I can. The best of HI quarter sales are likely to come in the coming quarters. Should one revisit the HI guidance that you had called out? How do you see this rolling out during the year?

Sudhir Sitapati

So, I mean, look, I think we have achieved a certain kind of momentum on HI, which we are convinced of, which is kind of moving from a zero to low single-digit volume growth to a high single-digit volume growth in HI. And I think we should probably kind of — that’s the guidance we should stick to for some time. I mean, there will be, by the way, another event where this should change because there has to be a limit to incense sticks’ growth. And when incense sticks growth taper off and then start declining, then it is suddenly upgrade and we will have a lot of high market share in the premium segment. So, there will be a second wind of growth. When that second wind comes, I don’t know, but certainly, this first wind seems to be reasonably secure.

Mihir Shah

I was thinking maybe we should up the guidance, given the strong growth that we’ve seen.

Sudhir Sitapati

Probably not because the relative growth of incense sticks continues unabated. See, so we can gain share within electrics, that you can plan for. But if incense sticks continues to grow, even if it doesn’t downgrade from premium, it doesn’t allow upgradation of premium. So, I would still say at this rate that stick to the guidance. When we see incense sticks slowing down, we see [Technical Issues] HI to come back to you. But for the time being, I would say that this high single digit kind of growth in HI in a norm. And this also will vary between low single digit and double-digit depending on season, by the way. But on average kind of this is what we should probably think of for some time.

Mihir Shah

Understood. That’s very clear. Thanks, and very helpful as well. Lastly, on soaps, if you can share when does this price hike actually anniversarize, if you can share that one? And that’s the last one. Thanks for all. They were all my questions. Wishing you all the best.

Sudhir Sitapati

Thanks. I think second quarter, it anniversarizes. So this quarter and by next quarter, Q3, it would have fully anniversarized. We should have good results, but by this quarter itself, it will anniversarize.

Mihir Shah

And sorry, on the volume bit, do you think that we can see sharp improvement in volumes, if that be the case with pricing?

Sudhir Sitapati

Yeah. I think, globally, we may not see. From a consol basis, we grew 8% volume. I don’t think that will improve because this one-time Africa has done really well in quarter. I don’t think that’s the sustained number for Africa. But India, I think, will edge up because see, India, as I told you, ex-soaps was mid-teens. Now soaps is a composite of bad season and also this grammage cuts. And as I was telling, Arnab, ultimately consumption doesn’t fall. So, I would be disappointed if India doesn’t move from mid-single digits to high single digits in the next few quarters.

Mihir Shah

Got it. Thank you very much. Wishing all the best.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Abneesh Roy from Nuvama. Please go ahead.

Abneesh Roy

Yeah. Sorry. Two quick questions. On the pet food, any initial update you have? You showed us the product, very good consumption, live consumption you showed. Any further update on the initial market study, market foray, any pilot initial study you can share with us?

Sudhir Sitapati

No, Abneesh. It’s early days. We’ve launched it in TN. We’ve sold in — again, I was in Chennai yesterday, both to look at Bloq and to look at our pet business. And the first question I asked more than anything else is, is the product acceptance good? And among consumers whose pets have used Ninja, the product acceptance is good. So, I think at this early stage, that’s the only relevant question, which is, is the product doing well or not? I would say it’s doing well, but this is a long gestation. Like Bloq, it’s a long gestation thing where there will be lots of ups and downs. It’s a several year commitment where we will — probably the focus has really to be on consumer delight for now and numbers and all we can really get into in a few years.

Abneesh Roy

Sure. Sudhir, I wanted to understand on the pricing bit, you mentioned some price cuts in the bigger packs of hair color and in the spray, dye, etc. What is leading to this? Is it a benign raw material or desire to gain more market share in the larger packs of hair color, for example?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, in the case of household insecticide, we saw that our price per ml was very different from the rest of the world. And one of the barriers for aerosol penetration is pricing. And India was an overpriced market when compared to even our own markets of Indonesia and other markets that we operate. So, our bet here is that it is better to have benchmark the prices versus the world, get to that price and get to volume growths, rather than not having volume growth. There we’ve thrown the kitchen sink. We’ve put the new formulation and dropped the price. I’m quite sure we’ll see volume growths go up in that business.

In the case of hair color, the driver of price drop is we had launched a INR15 pack, which has done explosively well for us. But we did feel that the gap versus the large pack was too high. And we wanted to adjust our price pack architecture, which is what we’ve done with reducing the large pack from INR42 to INR37, so that the per ml price is still much better for the small pack, but that gap we kind of narrowed. These were the two drivers for the price drops.

Abneesh Roy

Sure. Last quick question and it’s more a question on the overall industry, wanted to understand a bit more. So, Sudhir, if you see biscuits also currently, the INR5, INR10 pack is exactly seeing the same thing, where the grammage cut is optically leading to impact on the volume growth for, say, Britannia. Now, biscuit is a impulse category versus a soap, which is a daily one [Phonetic] as you rightly said. So in soaps, after two, three quarters, doesn’t the consumption mirror the actual growth? Because still, how will the price cut be absorbed, right? Ultimately, as you rightly said [Speech Overlap].

Sudhir Sitapati

I think it will, Abneesh. I think there’s no reason for it not to.

Abneesh Roy

Does it take one year?

Sudhir Sitapati

See, it could because you’re also sitting on bases where there was extra grammage, then you’re going to less grammage. There’s a lot of inventory lying. Inventory is lying at various parts, including the consumer’s pantry. There might be an initial kind of titration, but my own experience, this is a necessity. Consumers use two grams of soap per bath. They need that towel. I mean, it’s not the kind of thing that is such a large component of household expenditure that people titrate and it’s not doing it. So it has to come back. It has not come back. I see the thing is that the grammage cuts have been really sharp. Like, I don’t remember the number, but from 56 grams, you’ve gone to 44 grams in like 12 months. So every quarter you’re cutting and cutting and cutting. So every time the pipeline is going down, but look, if you do the maths over a two, three-year period, the volume growth of soaps has to mirror the volume growth of the population.

Abneesh Roy

Absolutely. One last follow-up and that’s the last question, Sudhir. And this question was asked, say, around three, four quarters back. So on the formulation by the number one player, that time you had said you would evaluate it. Now, some time has gone and still if you see palm oil goes up, palm oil goes down, The number one player’s requirement of palm oil in Lifebuoy and Lux is lower by 20% versus say earlier. So in that context, what will be your analysis? Do you need an answer from a formulation perspective at some stage?

Sudhir Sitapati

No. I think, Abneesh, I have to answer this in a slightly general terms, which is, we have to do what we at one point think is right for the consumers. And right now, we think our formulation is right for the consumers. And we’ll have to play our game on this, which is it’s a long game we have to play. And we will continue to do that and see the situation. We are not happy with our market shares and so, but we’re not unhappy with it either. So, we just have to wait and watch a little bit more on this, Abneesh. I still feel that our path is probably the right one, and we should probably stick to it. But look, we are also ready to learn at any point in time on anything.

Abneesh Roy

Okay. That’s all from me.

Sudhir Sitapati

Okay. If there are no more questions, then thank you very much and have a good day. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]