Explorer

Britannia Industries Plans Price Hike To Offset Rising Input Costs And Protect Margins

"The price hikes will make the margins better, but as I said on the commodity side, the inflation is also a lot bigger than what we'd expected," Berry said

Varun Berry, Managing Director and Vice Chairman of Britannia Industries said, “We're seeing a tough demand scenario in the urban areas coupled with high inflation.” He highlighted this during the company's post-earnings conference call with investors. As a result, Britannia is considering a price increase across its entire product portfolio.

Berry further noted that while value growth in the FMCG sector is declining, input cost inflation continues to rise, creating a challenging operating environment. The company has already implemented a price hike of around 4-5 per cent across its product range to cope with this. However, additional price increases are expected to ensure margin protection, according to a Moneycontrol report.

Berry added that the price hikes will be gradual and will take effect over December and January.

"The price hikes will make the margins better, but as I said on the commodity side, the inflation is also a lot bigger than what we'd expected," he said.   

Talking about the competition, Berry added, "There is inflation in the market. So, in times like this, there will always be a few players who want to drive demand and don't want to take price increases. Then they realise that their entire profit has gone to hell. And hence, they will then take some knee-jerk reactions and go out of the market."

According to Britannia Industries, two key factors are contributing to the slowdown in urban consumption, impacting its earnings for the September quarter.

The first factor is the rise in housing costs, which account for 22 per cent of the Consumer Price Index (CPI) basket in urban areas. "That's creating stress for most consumers in large cities and metro," said Berry. The second factor is the slowdown in wage growth among the non-salaried workforce in urban areas, which has risen by just 3.4 per cent—a rate slower than inflation.

“So, there's stress in almost 51 per cent of the workforce sitting in urban areas. So, that is the double whammy, which is creating a demand shortfall as far as urban and especially metro is concerned,” Berry explained.

The FMCG company reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 531.5 crore for the September quarter, marking a 9.4 per cent decline from Rs 586.5 crore in the same period last year. Revenue from operations stood at Rs 4,667.6 crore, reflecting a 5 per cent increase compared to Rs 4,432.88 crore in the corresponding quarter of the previous financial year.

Also Read : Zomato CEO Deepinder Goyal Responds To Bengaluru Man’s Feedback, Extends Job Opportunity

Top Headlines

LPG Crackdown: HPCL Suspends 10 Dealers As Govt Warns Against Hoarding
LPG Crackdown: HPCL Suspends 10 Dealers As Govt Warns Against Hoarding
From High Dues To Missed EMIs: Signs Your Credit Use Is Getting Risky
Are You Using Credit Too Much? 5 Warning Signs To Watch In FY 2026
UP Expressway Toll Hike From April 1: Check New Rates Across Key Routes
From Cars To Trucks: New UP Toll Rates Across Expressways Revealed
US Slaps 100% Tariff On Patented Drug Imports: What It Means For India
Trump’s New Pharma Tariffs: 100% Duty On Patented Drugs, Relief For Generics

Videos

Breaking Update: US-Iran Talks Collapse; Middle East Conflict Escalates, Civilian Targets Hit
Breaking Update: Iran Strikes Iraq and Israel with Drones & Missiles, Escalating Middle East Conflict
Breaking Update: Iran Claims Multiple US F-35 Strikes Amid Rising Middle East Missile Tensions
War Alert: Iran Claims Two U.S. F-35 Fighter Jets Shot Down Amid Escalating Middle East Conflict
Middle East conflict: Iran, Oman Launch Joint Protocol for Strait of Hormuz Amid Rising Middle East Tensions

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget