They expect a pick up in sales during the second half of the current fiscal.
"Rural sales have definitely come under stress due to the two successive droughts. We have extreme water scarcity in some states. These two successive droughts have lead to purchasing power of people to crash in the rural areas," GCPL Business Head India and SAARC Sunil Kataria told PTI.
Dabur India Chief Financial Officer Lalit Malik said: "Poor monsoons last year did have an adverse impact on rural demand and we have seen growth slowdown in the hinterland towards the second half of the year."
Kataria said due to the combined effect of drought and lower price for crops, overall rural demand which was growing significantly between 2011 to 2014 has definitely come down.
With companies garnering up to 30 per cent of their overall sales from rural markets, they are keeping their fingers crossed for a good monsoon this year.
The companies are keeping fingers crossed for a good monsoon this year so that sales could be revived in the second half of this fiscal.
"The monsoon is going to be very critical for the rural demand to pick up, and with prospects of a good monsoon, we remain assured that the second half of the year will go well," said Gupta.
He said the measures announced by the government in the Budget to boost rural economy will also have an impact on FMCG sales during the course of the year.
"There has been a pent up demand. People have been postponing purchases because as they do not have money today but aspirations do not die in consumers' mind. They just hold back," Kataria said.
The Met office predicted last month that after two
With the expectation of demand to pick up in the second half, Gupta said Marico lined up "an aggressive pricing strategy, prioritising long-term value and consumer delight over maximising short term margin."
Malik also said Dabur has already put in place distribution footprint to tap the demand growth. It is continuing to enhance distribution coverage in rural India from 14,000 villages to over 45,000 villages now.
"In addition, we are also working towards improving the portfolio coverage in rural outlets," he added.
"We have kept our rural journey intact and not taken shortcuts and taken back investments," Kataria said.
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