NEW DELHI | KOLKATA:
Faced with an early festive season, consumer goods
and durables companies are concerned about smooth and quick
implementation of the goods and services tax (GST), to avoid any
negative trade impact in the crucial third quarter.
Varun
Berry, MD, Britannia, said, "While GST is a huge long-term positive
development, there are bound to be trade disruptions. Procedural details
have to be sorted out on a priority basis across stakeholders before
September 1, with the festive quarter being earlier this year." Already,
trade channels are destocking to avoid tax payout disparity ahead of
the GST rollout.
Sunil Duggal, chief executive, Dabur,
said, "Last year, the festive season was impacted by demonetisation. We
hope to get GST issues streamlined by August-end and mitigate its
impact. We may choose to reduce inventory pipelines even if it means
taking a sales hit in June."
Debashish Mukherjee, head of
consumer and retail at management consulting firm AT Kearney, said,
"Anything from 45 to 75 days of stock needs to be in the system. It is
critical to sort out GST implications on transition inventory. Fast
moving consumer goods and durables are seeing green shoots of sustained
growth now, after demonetisation and general economic softness. It is
important that momentum is maintained this year, including into the
festive season."
The festive season starts in the fourth
week of September this year. The wholesale distribution channel — which
contributes up to half of the revenue of FMCG companies — is under
pressure. Television
and home appliance makers are equally worried about GST impacting
festive sales, contemplating ways to soften the expected price hike and
planning larger consumer promotions.
"The most obvious way
to mitigate poor sentiment is to opt for smaller hikes —instead of
straightaway passing on the full price increase — to cushion demand
ahead of the festive season," said CM Singh, chief operating officer,
Videocon. A two-phased price hike would serve to alleviate any immediate
4-5 per cent increase and also helping absorb part of the price
increase if demand does not revive by August, so the festive season
remains insulated, said two senior industry executives.
Pulkit Baid, director, durables retailer Great Eastern, said brands are
in a catch-22 situation on post-GST pricing. "They can neither absorb
costs nor pass it to the consumers. They may break the price hike in two
phases so the transition appears smoother."
Kamal Nandi, business head, Godrej Appliances, said all brands will go
big on promotions and offers this festive season to offset losses from
already weakening sales, which may stay this way till June. "The ray of
hope is expectation of a normal monsoon, which will boost rural demand.
Also, some arrears of the Seventh Pay Commission are likely to come in,
helping push urban demand and upgrade."
Prices of televisions, refrigerators and air-conditioners are set to go up by 4-5 per cent from July, with the GST Council proposing the 28 per cent bracket for consumer electronics and durables,
compared to the current tax rate of 23-24 per cent. Mass consumption
products like toothpaste, soaps and hair oil have been taxed at 18 per
cent, which is significantly lower than the earlier 22-24 per cent.
Others such as detergents, shampoo, softdrinks, liquid soaps are in the
tax slab of 28 per cent.
30 May 2017, 10:18 AM