Channel checks indicate that leading players are moving early to protect shelf space, smoothen inventory transitions, and capture trade mindshare during the festive season.
After a prolonged stretch of subdued demand, the GST cut is being viewed as a catalyst for consumption revival. With large categories migrating into the 5% GST slab, companies are aligning pricing strategies to ensure benefits reach consumers directly.
Trade margins are expected to remain intact, while system efficiencies are likely to improve as leakages decline. The move is also seen as accelerating the shift from unorganized to branded players by narrowing price gaps and easing compliance burdens.
A two-pronged strategy is emerging across the sector: upfront trade schemes to encourage pre-transition stocking and clear communication of revised MRPs effective post-September 22.
Companies are actively liquidating old inventory through targeted offers, minimizing the risk of stock build-up. Importantly, input tax credit (ITC) availability on pre-GST stock has been assured, reducing the risk of trade disruption.However, some distributors remain cautious, citing working capital constraints and reluctance to tie up funds ahead of the transition.In categories where low-unit packs dominate, grammage increases are expected rather than price cuts, given packaging changes required post-GST. Larger packs, particularly in personal care, food, and household categories, are witnessing direct discounts.
Retailers confirm that these proactive measures are fostering confidence, with expectations of faster consumer offtake once price reductions flow through to end-users.
Industry stakeholders broadly view GST 2.0 as a structural positive. Beyond short-term inventory management, the tax cut is expected to trigger a sustained consumption boost, reinforce trade relationships, and drive market share gains for organized players.
The festive season provides a timely backdrop, with early stocking and attractive schemes positioning FMCG firms to capture incremental demand.
In sum, the sector is entering the transition with greater preparedness than in earlier tax reforms. While short-term execution risks exist, GST 2.0 is poised to reset the consumption landscape, strengthening the growth outlook for branded FMCG players in the medium term.
HUL: Buy| Target Rs 3050| LTP Rs 2558| Upside 19%
Hindustan Unilever (HUVR) remains a structurally strong play in India’s FMCG sector, supported by its deep distribution, robust brand portfolio, and focus on volume-led growth.
Recent initiatives under the ASPIRE strategy—superior brands, innovation, and digital-first engagement—are translating into improving underlying volume growth (4% in 1QFY26).
Rural recovery (~1/3rd of revenues) and premium portfolio expansion are key structural drivers, while digital-first acquisitions like Minimalist and Oziva enhance exposure to high-growth adjacencies.
GST reduction on personal care (18%→5%) and packaged foods (18%→5) is set to enhance category growth and consumer demand. With macro tailwinds from lower inflation, supportive policy measures, and benign commodities, operating performance is set to strengthen. We model a revenue/EBITDA/APAT CAGR of 7%/7%/8% over FY25–28E.
(The author is Head – Research, Wealth Management, Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd)
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)