Surajeet Das Gupta

Ravi Naware
Tobacco major ITC is gearing up for
a sustained battle in the food business where it wants to take the leadership position
ITC. Tobacco, right? Er, right - and wrong.
Wrong, because it's also been into hotels
for three decades (ah yes, you say), but over the last few years, and pretty much under
your nose, it's become a huge FMCG and lifestyle brand that, even though you buy it
(perhaps unknowingly, unconsciously), still surprises you with the breadth of its spread.
Shirts and skirts. Pasta and paper. Biscuits and candy. Soaps and perfumes. Cigarettes
too, of course. All ITC products. India Tobacco Company? Yes, it still drives the business
- there wouldn't be an ITC without the filter tip that earns the company 87 per cent of
its revenue. But now, three years after it was set up, ITC Foods is nudging up the ladder.
It might be a distant fourth (it contributes over 5 per cent of the turnover) in terms of
revenue to tobacco, agri-business, and paperboards but it has already surpassed revenues
from hotels in the last quarter.
And it is certainly a formidable force in
the country's organised food biz. Ravi Naware is the dapper divisional chief executive of
ITC Foods and he doesn't believe in mincing words. "We want to become the number one
foods company in India within the next five years" he says. Wishful thinking? You
couldn't be faulted for thinking so - after all there's tough competition entrenched into
the trade by big boys Unilever, Nestle and Britannia whose distribution prowess and
popularity (some of the key brands are virtually household names) have to be matched,
exceeded even, if it's to succeed.
But ITC Foods isn't balking at the
challenge. Already, customer loyalty is being built up for its buffet of food products -
from biscuits, pasta, spices, confectionery and ready-to-eat foods to branded commodity
products like flour, salt and spices. The conglomerate has begun to grab slices of the
market share from its rivals in the game. Aashirwad atta, for instance, is already the
number one flour brand with a 40 per cent market share, virtually forcing Unilever to slow
down its Annapurna atta. Five months after its ready-to-eat pasta under the Sunfeast brand
was pitted against kiddie favourite Maggi noodles, it has established its presence with 6
per cent in volumes of the branded noodles market.
Its Sunfeast biscuits are at number three
position (after Britannia and Parle) with an overall 10 per cent share of the branded
market. And in ready-to-eat foods, it's a close number two behind MTR Foods. A slow
starter in the confectionery segment (at number four position), its Mint-O has managed to
grab a 40 per cent market share in its category. The sales figures reflect this market
thrust. This year, ITC Foods hopes to do sales in excess of Rs 800 crore, and analysts
reckon this as a growth of over 90 per cent over the previous year.
At this point, it's already 50 per cent of
sales for both Hindustan Lever and Britannia, and a third those of Nestle. And its target
for 2006? To double sales once again, to Rs 1,600 crore. Overall, ITC Foods has managed a
10 per cent market share in segments in which the others are operating - biscuits (Rs
4,500 crore), confectionery (Rs 2,000 crore), atta and salt (over Rs 1,000 crore) among
others. Says Naware: "For the next year or two, our strategy will be to consolidate
and offer a greater range in the existing categories and grow these markets."
Strategically, the company has kept away from those markets where it does not have the
back-end or does not see value additions. So it is unlikely to make forays into tea and
coffee ("highly commoditised") or dairy products ("needs a very large
infrastructure to source milk"). In both cases too, giants in the business (Unilever,
Tata Tea, local brands and a huge unbranded tea market on the one hand, Nestle, NDDB and
state-owned dairy corporations on the other) would make any headway in the trade extremely
difficult.
Juices? Potato chips? Nothing is being
ruled out yet, but ITC Foods is all set to invest Rs 450 crore in the next three years
(apart from the Rs 150 crore it has already put in) as part of its long-term strategy of
ruling the branded food market in India. Industry analysts are suggesting it has earmarked
a hefty 20 per cent of its sales for advertising and sales promotion, which should grab a
good deal of media space. What's ITC doing that's different from its competitors? Well, it
is working on a different model from them, but Naware says the market is too big for
anyone to worry about competition.
For instance, branded and packaged foods is
only 8 per cent of a total food market worth a staggering Rs 5,00,000 crore. This is
expected to increase to 15-20 per cent in the next six years. Should that happen, there's
more than enough room, and then some more, for everyone to coexist. What is different at
ITC though is its ability to leverage its e-Choupals as a pragmatic rural supply chain
system.
For the uninitiated, ITC's trading arm, the
International Business Division (IBD), has set up over 5,000 e-Choupals covering 31,000
villages across the country where farmers can sell their produce directly sans middlemen
or having to go to a mandi at a fair price, and also get information relevant to farming,
weather and prices at other mandis, all on the net.
The "sanchalaks" (supervisors) in
some areas also sell products manufactured by the company, and in some cases the company
has started hypermarkets (Choupal Sagar) in rural locations to cater to rural needs.
This backward integration is at the heart
of the enterprise. For instance, the entire wheat for Aashirwad atta is procured from
e-Choupals.
The advantage, says Naware is twofold: by
cutting the middlemen out, it saves 2 per cent on cost of wheat, which is significant in a
low-margin commodity business; and the company classifies the quality of wheat and stores
it separately so it does not mix with any inferior varieties, which is common enough if
you were to buy it from a mandi.
The result is an assurance of quality.
Using the same route, ITC acquires spices (chilli powder), again with a similar advantage.
That it has stayed away from branded rice is because the majority of its e-Choupals are
not located in rice farming areas.
The model is simple enough. ITC is looking
at creating food verticals to integrate the foods division with that of IBD and the e-
Choupals. In the case of wheat, Naware explains: "We do the first value addition by
offering branded atta, the second value addition is through biscuits, and the third is
pastas."
And points out that it would look at
similar verticals for sugar (going up to confectioneries and chocolates) once it can be
freely traded.
At the other end the e-Choupal has become
an alternative distribution channel for ITC products. About 10-15 per cent salt volumes
are sold through this chain; so are 5 per cent of the biscuits and confectionery items.
And the numbers will grow once more Choupal Sagars get going.
The other key element ITC is leveraging for
the foods business is its tobacco distribution chain. It has over 1.5 million tobacco
retailers across the country, larger than Unilever's distribution chain of over 1 million,
virtually neutralising the fact that it is a latecomer in the foods game. That's not to
say it hasn't had to create a separate distribution system to sell Aashirwad atta and
other FMCG products through kinara stores (3,50,000 outlets).
But biscuits and confectioneries are
perfect complementary products that can be sold through the tobacco chain. Currently, as
much as half the tobacco retailers carry confectionery and about 3 lakh stock its
biscuits. And as much as 40 per cent of the tobacco retailers are already stacking FMCG
products other than just tobacco. But perhaps the most important factor that has helped
ITC sustain its foods business is its healthy financials backed by attractive tobacco
margins that can absorb the pressure of losses in the FMCG business.
Says Mohan Krishnaswamy of ABN Amro, who
tracks the company: "ITC is leveraging the strength of its cigarette business and
does not face any immediate pressure of returns, which is not the case with the
multinational food companies. So, it can build scale and wait for 2-3 years to build a
viable business."
Analysts point out that operating margins
for ITC are around 35 per cent as compared to 15 per cent for Hindustan Lever and 20 per
cent for Nestle India. This despite the fact that in ITC's non-cigarette FMCG business
(which primarily includes foods) margins are negative (minus 35 per cent), so it resulted
in losses of over Rs 190 crore last year - but ITC has the strength to absorb the losses
without affecting its bottomlines.
Unlike ITC, analysts say companies like
HLL, which are trying to get in line with their international goals, are under pressure
because they are concentrating on power brands and improvements in margins.
HLL's sales of processed foods have
actually come down and ice-cream sales have grown only marginally in the six months ending
June this year over last year.
Clearly, part of the foods strategy is
prompted by ITC's attempt to reduce its dependence on tobacco, which constitutes over 87
per cent of its operating profits and over 71 per cent of its turnover.
But without excise (because excise duty on
cigarettes is high it distorts the turnover in their favour) cigarettes contribute for
only 55 per cent of the turnover.
To that extent, the non-cigarette FMCG
business (at 5 per cent per cent of the company's turnover) might look small, but its
contribution to turnover has already surpassed the company's hospitality business and is
closing the gap with its paper business.
And without taking excise into
consideration (excise on food items is very low) its contribution to turnover is already a
healthy10 per cent.
Also, the FMCG business is growing much
faster than others: FMCG revenues in the first quarter were up 90 per cent compared to
hotel growth of only 36 per cent and paper of 22 per cent. Of course, the agri-business
grew handsomely by 64 per cent and is the second-largest revenue earner after tobacco.
Not everything's hunky-dory though. Losses
in ITC's FMCG business went up in the first quarter this year from Rs 39 crore to Rs 54
crore, even though turnover went up by 90 per cent.
A Merill Lynch report on the company
cautions: "We are a little disappointed by higher losses in the FMCG business on a
y-o-y basis." It earmarks two risks : "Cigarette demand may slow down and FMCG
losses may exceed expectations."
FMCG analyst Kunal Motishaw is monitorial
too: "ITC has the potential to become the number one foods player, but food is not
its core competency, hence it will be a tough task.
Its strategy is totally different from that
of HLL, Nestle and Britannia. ITC offers its distributors higher margins (ITC says it
offers competitive margins) and also its products are more competitively priced as
compared to its competitors, all of which has resulted in it cornering an over 10 per cent
market share in a short span of time."
HLL and Britannia have predictably declined
to comment on their rival's strategy, but another Mumbai analyst says: "ITC has no
existing products so it has to first develop them, which might take them longer. The
company right now is very clear about focussing on market share and not
profitablity."
But that isn't likely to put a brake to
ITC's foodie ambitions. It has identified its immediate task to expand its reach into more
cities and towns, to garner more retailers. The target is to reach 1.2 million retailers
(from 8,00,000) in the next two years and to ensure they stack all ITC products.
More importantly, it is playing up product
differentiation to catch the eye of the consumer. In the overcrowded biscuit category, for
instance, ITC has introduced the popular Marie biscuit in an orange flavour. Customers
used to the salty crackers of Parle's Monaco are being offered an alternative flavoured
with chilli flakes.
In confectionery, ITC again changed the
rules of the game by introducing flavoured mints in orange and lemon for Mint-O, and as
much as 50 per cent of the mint volumes now come from this category.
That apart, it also introduced a format of
six rolls (instead of 12) priced at Rs 2, which fits in well in cigarettes stores across
the country. Buoyed with the brand's success, it has now extended the brand with the
launch of cough lozenges and in a short three months, has already grabbed a 15 per cent
share of the market.
As for the ready-to-eat food market, ITC
has created two distinct segments - the upper end catered through the Kitchens of India
brand (based on recipes from its restaurants in Welcomgroup hotels) and the mid-market
through the Aashirwad series.
ITC executives admit that this is a small
market (total size: Rs 80 crore) but it's growing at 35 per cent per annum. And even
though a large number of players are packing meals into packets, Aashirwad is spreading
the banquet across 15,000 retail stores, while Kitchens of India is available at 7,000
outlets.
Branded foods isn't likely to be a simple
market to crack. But if the record up to now is any indication, it might suggest that ITC
Foods has been able to understand the culinary palate of Indians much better than many of
its competitors.
Tobacco company, did anyone say?
Eh, that too.
Scent of the company
If it's getting into competitive pricing in
its food business, ITC clearly has more niche strategies up its sleeve for its fragrance
and personal care products, launched last Saturday under the Essenza di Wills label.
Priced at Rs 2,350 for a 60 ml bottle of eau de parfum, Rs 875 for 200 ml of shampoo, and
Rs 100 for a 100 gm bar of soap, it's clearly pitching itself for a segment of the
prestige grey market.
For some years now, 17 scientists at ITC's
R&D factory in Bangalore have grappled with potential thrust areas for its New
Business Development Cell, and Sandeep Kaul, general manager, says the Essenza range has
been born in collaboration with a team of French experts and an European design house.
"We found synergies in our exertise in
the lifestyle business and the vacuum in FMCG spaces," Kaul says. For now all
products ( from eau de toilette and after shave lotion to creams, lotions, toners and
shampoos) are being imported from France and only the soaps ("bathing bars") are
being locally manufactured. But just how the business will grow is still tentative given
that Kaul & Co are hiding behind escapist jargon such as "blending
competencies" and "evaluation models". For now, Essenza is to be retailed
only from its Wills Lifestyle stores.
Considering it's into apparel, grooming
products isn't the surprise of the decade, but even so, people would like to know what
else ITC is cooking in its cauldron in Bangalore. "The team," says Kaul primly,
"is working on quite a lot of projects." Expect some surprises.