Bloomberg consensus estimates had pegged Q4 net profit at Rs 1,967.9 crore. A year ago, HUL’s net profit stood at Rs 1,519 crore.
Sequentially, HUL reported a 11.6 per cent growth in net profit, though revenue wasn’t able to hold up that well, growing 2.3 per cent only versus the December quarter. Revenue includes net sales plus other operating income. HUL’s stock closed at Rs 2,409.05 per share on the BSE on Thursday, remaining largely flat compared to the previous day's close.
YoY, revenue jumped 35 per cent to Rs 12,132 crore in Q4, against Rs 9,011 crore reported in the previous year. Bloomberg consensus estimates had pegged Q4 revenue at Rs 11,733.4 crore for the period.
Q4 volume growth came in at 16 per cent. But again, this was on a low base, since volumes had contracted sharply in the year-ago period. Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) for the March quarter stood at Rs 2,957 crore against Rs 2,065 crore posted a year ago, a jump of 43 per cent.
Ebitda margins, on the other hand, grew 150 bps YoY to 24.4 per cent against 24.2 per cent estimated by analysts. A Bloomberg consensus estimate had pegged Ebitda at Rs 2,835 crore for the quarter under review.
Going forward, challenges emerging from the second Covid wave would be a key monitorable, said Sachin Bobade, vice-president, research, at Mumbai-based brokerage Dolat Capital.
HUL has responded to the challenges by enhancing manufacturing capacity by 30 per cent. It allowed 5 lakh small traders and shopkeepers to order directly online via the Shikhar app, a five-fold jump in a year.
HUL, said Sanjiv Mehta, chairman and managing director, had focused on being agile and resilient and enhancing its digital footprint across the value chain.
“We were riding a strong momentum going into the new fiscal (FY22) and the first two weeks of April reflected that sentiment. However, the last two weeks of April have seen some turbulence as coronavirus cases have surged. The focus of all stakeholders should be on taming the virus and ramping up the pace of vaccination,” Mehta said.
HUL would facilitate and pay for the vaccination of almost 300,000 people, including employees, their families and trade partners, Mehta said, as the second wave raged.
Srinivas Phatak, chief financial officer (CFO) at HUL, said in the face of rising inflationary pressures, the company’s focus would remain on volume growth. “Health, hygiene and nutrition, which formed 80 per cent of the business, grew in double digits for the third consecutive quarter, while discretionary and out-of-home categories improved sequentially,” Phatak said.
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