Hi Donald,
What makes you say they are hoarding cash? Cash on BS does not seem to have increased much. Dividend payout has reduced, but capex has increased.
Regards,
Akbar
Hi Donald,
What makes you say they are hoarding cash? Cash on BS does not seem to have increased much. Dividend payout has reduced, but capex has increased.
Regards,
Akbar
Hey folks,
Some points worth noting about the expansion plans undertaken over last 3 years:
1.Nestl© plans to expand the production capacity of its existing factory in Ponda, Goa state, India, as part of its Rs7bn ($126m) investment in the state over the last three years.The factory extension will boost the production of Nestl©’s confectionery brands such as Kit Kat and Munch.
2.In 2011, the company opened a Rs3.6bn ($64.90m) factory in Nanjangud, Karnataka, for the production of Maggi sauces, noodles, bouillons and seasoning.
3). For the ninth plant as part of its aggressive business expansion policy in the western and eastern States by doubling capacities,Nestlehad acquired about 50 acres of land at Sanand, nearly 30 kilometres from Ahmedabadto produce confectionery products and Maggie noodles(However, the company has clarified that it has no plans, for now, to enter the dairy sector in Gujarat where Amul is in a commanding position.).The proposed investment was estimated to be about Rs 400 crore. The company had bought land at the Gujarat Industrial Development Corporation (GIDC) estate by paying Rs 1.3 crore per acre.
4.In 2012, it opened a Rs2.5bn ($45.07m) factory at Tahliwal, Himachal Pradesh state, for the production of Maggi noodles as well as chocolate and confectionery products.
5.The company is expected to launch new products this year, and according to market expectations, the Switzerland-headquartered FMCG major may launch breakfast cereals in the Indian market. This is a category where Nestle has a strong presence worldwide.
(Conclusion:The conclusion we can draw from the above facts and figures is that the company isaggressively expanding the production capacity of Food and confectionery businesses and hence is bullish on the future of these segments and probably wants to reduce its revenuedependency from Milk and Milk products.The plans of introducing its established product breakfast cereal has a highprobability of being successful because of its brand name and established distribution network.)
The facts and figures have been picked from the following articles:
http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/companies/article2728853.ece
Regards,
Shrey.
Hey Folks,
Doing a timeseriesanalysis of Nestle’s solvency ratios one gets a feeling that the company has become moreleveraged in the last 1 year.It has indeed, but the loan has come from Papa(its parent company Nestle S.A.):D.following are the details of the loan.
The company has drawn US$157 mn from Nestle SA for five years under the ECB approval route to fund its capex plans.it has not hedged the outstanding ECB repayment of US$157 mn.
Having an unhedged position seems logical as the Indian Currency which is now near all time high and as the economy grows the currency will most probably strengthen(highprobabilitythat the rate per dollar will be less than 54-55 per dollar).Infact the naked position has higher chances of generating profit.
Following is the source of this fact:
http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-05-03/news/31559120_1_nestle-india-mn-nestle-sa
Regards,
Shrey.
Hey Folks,
Here is a snapshot of distribution network and revenue split up of the above discussed companies. These might help us in assessing business potential/strategies adopted going forward.
Please have a good look and help us take these forward.
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Source(s):HDFC Securities Report 21 Dec 2012, I-Sec Report 12 Dec 2012, Company AR and Investor Presentations
Some inference of the above data and additional information:
HUL: It has the largest distribution network and the highest rural revenue contribution among the FMCG players.It has tripled its distribution network in last 3 years.Working on further increasing the rural reach.
GSK Consumer: The company generates ~93% of its revenue from sale of Horlicks and Boost alone.These come under Health food drinkcategory,which is consumed on theconsumptiontheme of being healthy. So,its obvious that it is consumed more by people who live in urban areas. Still the company is focusing on expanding its distribution network in Rural areas.The company is targeting an incremental reach of ~10000 villages,this will take the total tally to ~50000 villages.The sachets of 18 grams (Rs.5/-) intended to make the productaccessible for low income stratum has grown at a robust ~45%,this initiative has contributed an incremental revenue of Rs.75 Cr to top line.The company has strong hold in south and east India and is planning to increase its presence in west and north India.
Nestle:The company's products Portfolio comprises of Beverages, Milk and Milk products(including infant food solutions),confectioneries and prepared food products.The company in its recent analyst meet presentation has made clear its strategy of premiumisation,which implies that it is more keen to sell products to urban crowd. However itsConfectionery and small SKUs of processed food generates decent revenue from the rural areas. It has areasonable distribution reach and it is growing it at 12% per annum.
Dabur: It has a good distribution reach and generates significant portion of its domestic revenue from rural India. It has recently taken steps to double its rural reach under a project called "project double".The company plans to increase its direct reach to 27000 villages with more than 3000 people this year.The company has made an effort to improve its marketing by separating products into 2categories 1.Those operating in large urban markets requiring exclusive focus and 2.Those meant for small towns and rural markets requiringintegratedsales force.
MARICO: It is focused on expanding its rural network and rural revenue contribution.The company claims that its products are used by 1 out of every 3 Indians.
Colgate: The company has a strong distribution network. A look at the penetration of toothpaste(`85% revenue contributor) in rural areas gives a strong indication that the company's rural revenue contribution is good.
GCPL:Integrationwith home care portfolio added distribution reach synergy for the company.
Emami: It has a decent distribution network (especially in East India) and generates a significant revenue from rural India. It initiated a project called "swadesh", targeting towns and villages with population less than 50000.The company claims to be selling 85 products every second!
ITC: The retail network is far stronger than it looks, as the company generates maximum revenue from unorganized retail. ITC not only sells cigarettes through the Beetel shops but alsoconfectioneries, biscuits, snacks, Match boxes, Agarbattis and a lot more. In factit has the most established distribution network.This gives it the additional freedom toaudaciouslyallocate capital.The company generates a significant portion of its revenue from rural India.
P&GHygiene & Healthcare: The company has a very basic distribution network,with the structure as follows manufacturer to marketing agents (state wise) to retailer/whole seller/distributorto chemist shops/retail outlets etc.Where HUL has multiple marketing agents in districts and even in Important cities, the company has 1 marketing agent per state. The company has to work a lot to strengthen/optimize its distribution network. Over the past couple of years, P&G has doubled its distribution network with a direct reach to 1.3 million outlets.
Thanks Shrey. This is very good data you have pointed us to.
I think we can go further in our quest if we bring in additional data points for
1). Category Penetration - like for Soaps, Biscuits, Noodles, Health Food Drinks, Snacks, Hair Oil, etc
2). Category split - rural/urban - and Companies likely to benefit most
3). Growth Categories (showing CAGR of categories and food vs Non-food, etc)
4). Competition Intensity - map each category & consequently the company to the competition intensity level in its key product segments
5). Incremental capacity put up in recent years (Capex+Capital work in progress ~~Units capacity increase)
6). Other factors like category affinity for Modern trade, etc (may not be that significant a factor)
Historical Performance data (which we already have) already points us to sort of categorise these companies in a few slots. Similarly the above data points will point the way to next 2-3-5 years potential for growth. Together I am getting convinced we may have a good FMCG map finally!
That’s the beauty with Large Caps - you are never short of data points. Institutional research helps you come upto speed very very quickly. But our interpretation of the mix of these 2 things - Historical & Future Potential - is already pointing us to some conclusions - different from the Consensus:)
Thanks again for your sustained efforts. Good value-additive work.
Thanks donald and shrey for all the efforts you have been putting up.
I think the most interesting company in this exercise comes out to be ITC with its range of products and distribution might. What I am most impressed about the company is that in the fmcg category, it has started invading the moats of other established players in a very serious manner and has started denting the moats.
e.g HUL – ITC has tackled the soaps and shampoos category very effectively through its vivel and fiama range of products and products extensions.
Britannia – Here ITC is providing stiff competition to the established Britannia with its Sunfeast brand of biscuits. In fact the biscuits brand Sunfeast now is being extended to noodles with Sunfeast Yipee range – they also try to differentiate their products from Maggi brand trying to establish that their noodles can be eaten even after they are cold and dont stick together forming a goo like thing.
In the aata category, they have started establishing themselves with the aashirwad brand.
There might be more moats they might be invading which I might be forgetting.
And with their distribution might and cash flows from cigarette business, they can invade more moats to achieve the complete range of fmcg products.
The other company that comes out different and successful is emami – their strategy is to fill in gaps in products and establish their products in that range. They are quite innovative and seem to be quite successful at what they are doing.
Dabur with its project double seems to be interesting to watch. It also has an enviable range of products and good distribution reach.
Would be interesting to look at the picks that come out through the excellent scientific method you guys are following.
Hey Folks,
The following is the market size,penetration and growth rate data.This can serve as the first base of a top-down methodology and give us an idea about the potentialopportunity sizeand an estimate of the growth rates.The next step would befollowing this up with Companies most affected,having competition intensity, the capacityadditionmaps,well positioned to take advantage of the opportunity etc.Please help me take this work forward through active participation.Over to you guys. :)
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This is what I could collect so far from various reports and news articles for the top 16-17 categories. The penetration, volume and value growth figures are yet to be filled-in completely. We are looking for authentic sources. If anyone has access to Nielson data or other reports that cite such data kindly point to that/help.
Excellent work! Thanks for all the efforts Shrey.
Yes Shrey…just excellent work, thanks
Excellent Shrey…you proved yourself the best again.
If anybody can add info as organized/unorganized in the data, that might be good. Let us assume that people might try unorganized local biscuit but might not take chance with unbranded hair oil or skin cream…kind or thought
Fantastic value addition being done. Good to see work being done on the drivers of the business in these biggies. Lets try to focus on future and see if there are any mismatch in valuation vs expected growth in some of these top quality cos.
Ayush
FMCG Decoding Part I: Hindustan Unilever Ltd. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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FMCG Decoding Part I: Nestle India | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Donald,
For HUL, the royalty to the parent Unilever-UK is going to be hiked in staggered manner in the next three years. Thecurrent royalty is 2.5% of sales which is going to be hiked to 4%(please do re-check the exact figures).
Hi Manish,
Thanks for the pointer.
Please note for our purposes, we always use Consolidated figures. Royalty outgo for HUL in 2012 at 307 Cr is 1.39 % of Sales (same as in 2011) and double that of 2010.
Even as this goes up, it is not that significant when you compare with MNC peers. Nestle 3.44%, and I would argue that is justified considering strong parent portfolio & support. Colgate at 5.24% and GSK at 3.37% of Sales. HUL may be is only catching up:)
Please keep questioning the data thrown up. It helps us look more closely and refine the thinking process.
-Donald
Donald,
It was not included in the table anywhere so I thought of pointing to this increase in royatly(although I do not remember the exact increase in %age of sales). It may not be significant but still it has to be included in the calculations for future projections.
The calculations are there in the HUL spreadsheet attached with the table (in the same post). The Cost Analysis sheet has all the heads and common size expenses including Royalty fees. Please download and have a look at the details.
The idea of the table is to summarise the significant things that help to separate one player from another - the Men from the Boys.When convinced at the high level, one can go into as much details as one wants, or is needed.
Not sure how this plays in to the HUL analysis but HUL seems to be selling a lot of their residential properties in South/Central Mumbai. I must have counted about 20 odd flats till now. Maybe they are buying in the suburbs. Also saw an ad today about the sale of HUL land near Hyderabad.
Yes HG.
I have also noticed that HUL has been disposing of non-core prime properties. There was a sizeable property in Bangalore, erstwhile Brook Bond (acquired by HUL) Corp HQ I think, which they disposed of 4 years back.
Dunno, if these are of any significance, as you say:)
-Donald
FMCG Decoding Part I: Colgate Palmolive Ltd. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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