Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to the Hindustan Unilever Limited Conference Call for the results of September quarter, ended 30 September 2024 . As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference, please signal an operator by pressing Star and then zero on your touchtone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Ms. Shilpa Kedia, Group Financial Controller and Head Investor Relations. Thank you, and over to you, ma'am.
Thank you, Darwin. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the conference call of Hindustan Unilever Limited. This evening, we will be covering the results for the quarter and half year ended thirtieth September 2024. On the call with me is Rohit Jawa, CEO and Managing Director, and Ritesh Tiwari, CFO. We'll start with the prepared remarks from Ritesh and Rohit. We expect this to take around thirty minutes, leaving us with an hour for the Q&A session. We will look to end the call by 8:00 P.M. Before we get started with the presentation, I would like to draw your attention to the safe harbor statement included in the presentation for good order sake. With that, over to you, Rohit.
Thank you, Shilpa. Good evening, everyone. Welcome to HUL's earnings call for the quarter ended September 2024. Thank you for joining us on the call today. Let me begin with an update on the operating context, followed by an overview of our performance and some of the key highlights of the quarter. I will then hand over to Ritesh to take you through our results and outlook in detail. Market volume growth trajectory remained muted in this quarter. At an MAT level, total FMCG volume growth has slowed down slightly in recent months since MAT June urban growth has moderated. While rural growth has become accretive to total growth, its pace of recovery has been gradual, though. Following a prolonged period of benign commodity prices in this quarter, crude palm oil and tea experienced inflation of 10% and 25% year-on-year, respectively.
Given our assessment that this price increase is here to stay, we are now taking calibrated price increases. While crude oil remained benign during the quarter, there has been recent volatility in prices owing to geopolitical tensions. We remain vigilant and are watchful of any price fluctuations that seem to persist. In this dynamic environment, we continue to remain agile, taking actions to provide a competitive price value equation to our consumers. In this context, we delivered a competitive performance. With a turnover of INR 15,319 crores, our reported underlying sales growth was 2%, driven by an underlying volume growth of 3%. In the base quarter, we received a one-off credit from a favorable resolution of an indirect tax litigation. We reported this in September quarter 2023, stating its impact in the beauty and wellbeing segment on both top line and bottom line.
Hence, in this quarter, numbers after excluding this one-off impact will give you a better understanding of our business performance. Intrinsically, our underlying sales grew by 3%. After three quarters of negative price growth, our underlying price growth is flat this quarter, as anticipated. Moving on to bottom line performance, our EBITDA margin continued to remain healthy at 23.8%. On that reported basis, profit after tax, before exceptional items declined 2%, however, intrinsically it grew 2%. We have a strong track record of consistently delivering competitive and profitable growth, investing behind our brands and long-term strategic capabilities to generate healthy cash flows as we build a strong balance sheet. In lieu of this, I'm very pleased to announce that the Board has approved an interim dividend of INR 90 per share, along with a special dividend of INR 10 per share.
Together, this will mean a total payout of INR 6,814 crores. This demonstrates our unwavering commitment to provide our shareholders with attractive returns. Moving on, let me speak to you on our strengthening competitive position over the quarter. We have kept the charts on the slide consistent over the past few quarters to illustrate our progressive improvement, both in business winning as well as in market shares. I'm very pleased to report that our MAT business winning number has already crossed 60% in September, ahead of our early estimate of December 2024. We are also now gaining market shares in the last three months as per the latest Nielsen numbers.
While we did lose some inconsequential share during the deflation cycle, we held on, held on to most of the 200 basis points share gained since March 2021, and we are now on the path to further strengthen it. This progress in our competitive position is a testament to our commitment towards transforming our portfolio to outperform, underpinned by the strength of our brands and distribution prowess. At present, circa 75% of our brands are either gaining or maintaining brand power, and evaluated distribution continues to be more than 95%. The four priorities listed on the slide continue to be the bedrock against which we measure business transformation. We remain committed to drive them and have made significant progress over last year as we transform at scale. Let me share a few examples on the progress made on each of these pillars during the quarter.
Under the Unmissable Brands Priority Framework, we measure our products against 21 metrics across six drivers of consumer preference. This enables us to assess our competitive right to win and to take the right strategic decisions to further strengthen our brands. We have now assessed more than 70% of our portfolio using this framework. I'm very happy to report that more than 80% of our turnover is unbelievably superior when it's compared to competition. Zooming into one of the six drivers of consumer preference, proposition, and specifically on one measure under it, meaningfulness. Brands become more meaningful when they meet consumer needs and aim to bring about positive changes to issues that are most important to them. Let me talk to you about three brands that have rolled out culture-first, social-first campaigns designed to drive meaningfulness among our consumers.
Vim, for instance, has a legacy spanning over 30 years, revolutionizing dishwashing, championing for it to be a shared responsibility in households. In a refreshing collaboration with pop artist Ritviz, the brand transforms the routine dishwashing task into a fun and easy experience, leveraging the universal appeal of music. To further amplify the campaign, Vim collaborated with 200-plus influencers who shared fun moments from the chore routines to inspire families to join the trend. The campaign videos already amassed 25 million plus views on YouTube and 10 million views on Instagram, with coverage in over 20 media publications in the short span of just one month. With the hashtag The Beauty Test Stops With Me, the Dove campaign set out to transform traditional matrimonial profiles into Mothermonials. That is, narratives crafted by mothers that celebrate their daughters' personalities, achievements, and ambitions, challenging the focus on physical appearance.
To enable society to find matches without beauty biases, a first-ever matrimonial marriage portal was published. This campaign has been very successful, with 100 million plus page views and 33 million plus video views, leading to consumer purchase intent recording an increase of 15%. Dove has been very consistent in this messaging over the past many years. With Stop the Beauty Test campaign in the last four years, it has succeeded in significantly increasing brand association. As a much-loved shampoo across the country, Clinic Plus is uniquely positioned to spark real meaningful change through its efforts. The brand reaches three out of four Indian households, which enables it to strengthen its purpose of raising strong daughters. The brand brought forth a new campaign to this effect.
The ad, which created waves on social media, poignantly captured the resolute voice of a mother rising above all others, wishing for a girl child. This real personal insight has garnered strong active engagement with a reach of over a hundred million. Through these carefully crafted campaigns with brand purpose and authenticity at the core, our brands have been successful in resonating with the consumers. We are leading the way in enabling consumers to upgrade their experiences. Our approach involves consistently broadening our portfolio to fulfill the evolving consumer needs by making the right products and formats available. This is facilitated through our digital capabilities of Agile Innovation Hub that allows us to forecast consumer needs and trends effectively. For example, in this quarter, TRESemmé introduced its Lamellar Gloss range to India, identifying an unfulfilled consumer needs space of salon-like glossy hair at home.
We are the first brand to bring this proposition to the country. The product is backed by patented technology, which includes Amino Gloss Complex, lamellar structure, and 360-degree lamination of hair to deliver eight times higher gloss, lasting up to 72 hours, making it smoother and manageable like never before. Over the past few years, we've been strengthening our adult nutrition drinks portfolio, focusing on driving condition awareness. Within this segment, Diabetes Plus is one of the fastest growing segments, consistently delivering double-digit growth. Doubling down on this portfolio, we have recently introduced zero added sugar, chocolate-flavored Diabetes Plus, solving the dual purpose of blood sugar management without compromising on taste. Our market-winning superior mix is adequately supported by expert team to ensure it scales up with pace. As the biggest beauty company in the country, we continue to shape beauty trends.
We previously spoke to you about Lakmé's Multi Slayer Makeup Stick and Vitamin C Makeup Range that were launched in the last six months. These products, along with the Lakmé Lip Oil and Glaze Range, launched in the quarter, have already raked up a GMV of over INR 180 crores combined. Our intent and ability to scale up new launches with speed positions us well to lead market growth in this high-growth category. In a gradually recovering macroeconomic landscape, we are reshaping our portfolio with agility to pursue high-growth opportunities. Building on a strong innovation pipeline, we've had multiple innovations in these high-growth spaces during the quarter. Let me share a few examples with you. Backed by proprietary technology, we are foraying into the floor cleaner segment for the country's number one dishwashing brand, Vim.
For the first time in India, we have introduced a unique Ultra Pro technology, combining probiotics and surface modification technology that delivers superior cleaning and superior stain removal, leaving behind a long-lasting fragrance. With a distinct proposition and superior product, we are looking to expand our presence in this fast-growing segment. One of the six big bets in beauty and hair care segment is the light moisturizer category. Today, consumers are looking for more than just basic moisturization. They want products that offer superior benefits through pleasant, non-sticky sensorial experiences, and we expect this category to continue picking up pace in times to come. In response, Pond's has launched its Hydra Miracle Body Gel Lotion, an innovation that helps to drive our strategy of de-seasonalizing body care through all year-round benefits and sensories. Enriched with hyaluronic acid and niacinamide, it delivers 100% visibly hydrated skin.
De-seasonalizing body care segment continues to deliver strong double-digit growth for us, led by innovation in condiments and mini meals categories leading growth for the food segment. We are boosting our existing office in the space while also expanding distribution. After the success of Korean noodles, Knorr has expanded its portfolio to the exciting spicy Korean Kimchi Soup, which is sure to satisfy one's Korean cuisine cravings. We are also expanding Hellmann's awareness beyond urban and Tier One cities by leveraging HUL's distribution strength. Our 85-gram access pack is now available in more than 1.5 lakh outlets. This, along with extension of our international sauces range across the country, will enable us to recruit more users into this already fast-growing category. Given the country's underindex spend, FMCG companies have a significant headroom to grow across all channels.
With a wide assortment and ability to curate portfolio of each channel, we are confident to serve different consumer needs across each of the channels, ensuring mutual growth. Shikhar is one of the levers of our kirana-centric approach, ensuring that the benefits and the growth of the retailer are the core of our strategy. We firmly believe that when retailers grow, our business will naturally grow as well. We have over 1.37 million stores onboarded on the platform, with more than 70% transacting monthly. Our strategy includes a Buy Smarter, S ell Smarter approach for kirana stores, where we support retailers in conducting their business more efficiently by offering better propositions from Shikhar. At the same time, we have tried facilitating better off-takes for retailers by enhancing discoverability, by creating customized store-level digital content, and by running customized shopper activations in store via the Shikhar app.
As a result of these actions, stores in Shikhar are growing faster with better assortment when compared to stores not onboarded on Shikhar. With the right portfolio, we continue to be the preferred FMCG partners for both modern trade and e-commerce platforms. We are committed to growing categories in the store with unmissable long-term visibility and asserting leadership during tentpole events and regional festivals. In e-commerce, through customer engagement and joint business planning, we are able to curate product portfolios and pack sizes that best suit the need of consumers using the specific platform. We have stepped up our activations ahead of the festive and the winter season and strengthened our partnerships on e-commerce platforms, specifically in the beauty channels. As a result of our dedicated efforts in e-commerce and beauty. com channels, we continue to gain healthy market shares.
Our focus initiatives in organized trade has led us to continue a double-digit growth trajectory for September quarter 2024 . We remain committed in our efforts as we continue to transform our portfolio speed to share the evolving aspirations of the country. I look forward to share more details on our winning strategy in our capital markets day in November. With this, I now hand over to Ritesh to take you through our details, results in detail.
Thank you, Rohit, and good evening, everyone. As always, it's a pleasure to talk to all of you. Let me take you through our quarter results in little more detail, followed by first half update, and round it up with our outlook in the near term. Rohit discussed the overarching FMCG demand growth trends, which was muted in the quarter. In this backdrop, we have delivered a quarter of competitive performance. Our underlying sales grew at 2%, driven by a 3% growth in our underlying volumes. Gross margin at 50.4% declined 150 basis points year on year, primarily on account of increase in commodity prices. Since we're now certain that this inflation is persistent and here to stay, we are taking calibrated pricing actions while ensuring competitive price value equation. Talking about bottom line performance, EBITDA margins remain healthy at 23.8%.
Profit after tax, before exceptional items, and profit after tax declined by 2% and 4% respectively. Earlier in the presentation, we touched upon the one-off indirect tax impact in the base quarter. For greater clarity, let me walk you through our performance, excluding this one-off in the base. Underlying sales growth was 3%, with underlying price growth being flat. EBITDA margin was maintained over last year. PAT BEI grew 2%, while net profit remained stable year on year. The difference between PAT BEI and net profit growth is primarily on account of tax PPA in the base. Now, coming to performance across our four segments. Home care is our largest segment, contributing 37% to total revenue. Beauty and wellbeing at 21%, while personal care is at 16% of our total business. Foods and refreshment is a quarter of our total business.
Margins in all four segments remain healthy, with home care at 19%, beauty and wellbeing at 34%, personal care at 17%, and foods and refreshment at 18%. If you were to double-click on our performance, two of our segments, home care and beauty and wellbeing, delivered high single-digit growth. These two segments put together constitute circa 60% of our total business. While personal care is seeing a sequential increase in turnover, it will take a couple of quarters for the actions put in place to reflect in numbers. Performance in foods and refreshment has been subdued due to continued degradation in tea and muted consumption in nutrition drinks. I will cover more details on segment performance in subsequent slides. Starting with home care performance, this segment has seen another strong quarter of growth, with our high single-digit volume growth momentum continuing.
Underlying sales grew at 8%, driven by strong performance in both fabric wash and household care. While the volume growth is broad-based across formats, our liquids portfolio is growing in strong double digits. Notably, the liquids portfolio has grown double sequentially compared to the growth we had in the previous quarter. Embarking on journey of category creation on fragrance booster, we have recently launched Comfort Beads. It's an exciting format innovation catering to premium consumer that provides long-lasting fragrance for up to 100 days. Sustained market development actions, expansion of Rin liquid, and new launches underpinned by superior brand is bolstering growth for this category. Talking about beauty and well-being, the category saw a 7% intrinsic sales growth in the quarter, driven by volumes.
Given the entire one-off tax benefit in the base is impacting this category, I will take you through the intrinsic performance in the quarter. Hair care delivered a volume-led high single-digit growth. This was driven by outperformance in Sunsilk, Dove and TRESemmé, which grew in double digits. Post-wash hair treatment formats continue to deliver strong growth as consumer traction and format for the future increases. Our consistent performance in hair care has led us to attain the highest ever market share over the last three years in September quarter 2024. Skincare and color cosmetics delivered a mid-single-digit growth. Premium skincare continued its strong growth trajectory, growing in double digits. Focus on channels and formats of the future continues to yield results with our six big bets growing at circa 30% GSV growth across modern trade and e-commerce. We have continued to step up innovation intensity in this segment.
Few examples of which have been already discussed earlier in the presentation. Simple's new cleansing jelly oil is another innovation that landed in the quarter. This innovative cleanser features a unique jelly texture that transforms into oil, effectively wiping away waterproof makeup and impurities without compromising on skin's natural barrier. As we continue to scale up Simple in general trade, this brand, along with Love Beauty and Planet, now moves out of PBBU, our incubation unit, and into our skincare business. Coming to personal care performance for the quarter, the segment declined by 5%, with low single-digit decline in volumes. Skin cleansing declined due to negative pricing and muted volumes. Body wash has maintained its strong double-digit competitive growth momentum.
Our Winning in Many Indias insight revealed that consumer demand for natural and skin glow is particularly high in South and West, which aligns well with the preference for sandalwood-based products in this region. Given this need for natural glow, the Lux brand found an opportunity to introduce a sandalwood variant, leveraging its established glow credentials. Backed by Stratos technology, this is an unmissable superior product launch in an otherwise white space for us. The Lux Sandalwood bar combines 100% pure sandalwood oil with vitamin C to help reduce dullness and fade blemishes caused by exposure to external aggressor, with the primary benefit being visibly clear, glowing skin. As mentioned in our last earnings call, we continue to take concrete action to step up performance in this segment in the form of continued investment behind technology, innovation, and channels of the future.
We are seeing early, early green shoots. However, we need to stay on course for a couple of more quarters to experience the full impact of these actions. Oral care delivered high single-digit competitive growth, driven by performance in Closeup. Moving on to foods and refreshment. We continue to strengthen our competitive position in this segment. However, revenue declined marginally. USG declined by 2%, with low single-digit decline in UVG. Tea further strengthened market leadership in this quarter, with continued gains in both value and volume. Premium segment, led by green and functional tea, continued to maintain its growth momentum, while the category UVG remained muted as consumer downgradation to loose tea persisted. With tea commodity witnessing unprecedented inflation in recent months, we expect this trend of downgradation to gradually reverse. Coffee delivered double-digit growth, led by strong performance in organized trade.
While our market development actions in nutrition drinks segment has resulted in continued market share and penetration gains, there's still work to be done to drive consumption. We are mobilizing our efforts in this direction. For instance, recognizing the preference for sachet format, we are now offering an elevated experience for all Horlicks sachet consumers with much higher milk solids in the product. We've also launched new INR 10 pack across both Horlicks and Boost brands, which will offer 20% extra product for a richer consumer experience. Foods delivered low single-digit volume growth. Food Solutions, mayonnaise, international sauces, and cuisines maintained the strong double-digit volume growth trajectory. We have now expanded our international sauces range across the country, while also launching new variants in our ready-to-eat format as we continue to scale up our presence in this high-growth space. Ice Cream volumes remained flat.
The performance was impacted by prolonged rainfall in some parts of the country. Moving on, let me quickly summarize our performance for the first half of financial year 2025. We have disclosed both reported and underlying numbers for better clarity on our performance. Talking about underlying numbers, underlying sales growth was 2%, with an underlying volume growth of 3%. Gross margin at 50.7% was up 40 basis points, while EBITDA margin at 23.8% was up 10 basis points year on year. PAT BEI and PAT grew 3% and 2% respectively. Effective tax rate after PPA for the first half was 26.1%, and we expect our full-year ETR to be marginally above 26%. Coming to our near-term outlook, we expect demand trends to be stable with no further acceleration in FMCG growth.
We continue to be watchful of various macroeconomic indicators that could impact the pace of recovery, such as real rural wage growth, food inflation, and employment levels. In this context, our focus remains on driving competitive volume-led growth across our business by transforming our portfolio in high-growth spaces while maintaining investments behind our brands and strategic priorities. If commodity prices remain where they are, we expect a low single-digit price growth in near term. We will continue to manage our business dynamically to drive savings through our productivity program and provide the right price value equation to our consumers while maintaining EBITDA at its current healthy levels. With this, we conclude our prepared remarks and will now let me hand it back to Shilpa to commence the Q&A session.
Thank you, Rohit and Ritesh. With this, we will now move to the Q&A session. We request you to kindly restrict the number of questions to a max of two at a time. In case you have any further questions, please join the queue again. In addition to the audio, our participants have an option to pose their questions through the web option on your screen. We will take those questions just before we end. With that, I would like to hand the call back to you, Darwin, to manage the next session for us.
Thank you, ma'am. We will now begin the Q&A session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touchtone telephone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to please use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Abneesh Roy from Nuvama. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks. My first question is on the separation of the ice cream business. So similar exercise was done for tea a few years back, and in that instance, HUL decided to retain that. Now, if I see tea versus ice cream, ice cream is a much stronger growth, and tea, if you see, in fact, past few quarters has been especially challenging. So I wanted to understand, why not retain the ice cream business also? If I see, the logic which has been put, for example, investment into the cold chain. Now, cold chain investment has been done for the past few decades, so from here on, you have been incremental investment. Similarly, if I see in terms of R&D, again, HUL's local R&D is extremely strong.
So how how it is so difficult to do R&D from the local unit? Plus, 3% of the business goes away. And the synergy benefits, for example, ice cream sells in a lot of differentiated outlets also. So now, if this goes away, how does this impact your existing business? So if you could answer these questions. Thanks.
Yeah, yeah. No, thanks, Abneesh. No, as you rightly has captured, ice cream is roughly 3% of HUL's turnover. It's a high growth, but equally high investment and low margin business for us. And you did call out the distinct nature of ice cream with a separate go-to-market, be it supply chain or point of sale. And which is because of that, we have always seen limited synergies with the rest of the business. Even for a typical kirana store, our grocery business that we have is always distinct compared to the footprint of what we have in terms of ice cream cabinet. For ice cream, Abneesh, overall, both the brand and tech is owned by Unilever. Of course, we have a royalty contract, because of which we have access to the brand and technology in the country.
Globally, Unilever has announced separation of the business, and with that, and because of that, if at all, we have to continue running the business locally, we will have to develop local capabilities, to run the business. When you mention about we have strong R&D, Answer is yes, but we have strong R&D as Unilever. As you know, all our R&D resources are essentially from Unilever, across categories, which is why we have a contract of, R&D, with Unilever, and that's how, why we end up paying royalty on tech as well, IPR to Unilever.
So which is why the board, then, after detailed evaluation, came to a conclusion that, supported, of course, by the independent committee, which looked at it very detailed, because really they conducted and went through all these parameters, the board came to conclusion that we need to separate the business. Now, this portfolio restructuring, it will enable ice cream business to operate with greater flexibility and for HUL to sharpen focus on core business, and then, of course, further strengthen our play in trending demand spaces such as beauty, foods, and health and wellbeing. So that was, Abneesh, in summary, the rationale, why this time the decision for ice cream was different compared to what we did, when it pertained to tea.
So one or two follow-up. In the outlets where, say, Ice Cream adds, synergy to distribution, once Ice Cream goes away, then what happens to those existing portfolio? And second, does separation means that, eventually HUL will have a, a zero stake in the Ice Cream? Is that a right, understanding?
Yeah. So for a typical kirana store and the scale of HUL will not get impacted just because 3% of the business will get separated. And since the kind of growth that we have, that's the amount of efficiency much more than that, we typically end up adding to overall scale of Hindustan Unilever. So for a typical kirana store, it does not change anywhere materially the scale at which we operate in a kirana store, so it does not impact to start with. So that's where it is. And in terms of the mode of separation, Abneesh, to your question, there are typically two standard ways of separating the business. Either we could sell the business or we could demerge and list the business.
Now, of course, the key objective that the independent committee, and hence board, going forward, will end up making a decision on what's the best route in which we can maximize shareholder value and minimize business disruption. That's the mode of separation we'll end up doing. Our idea is, by end of the year, we will come to conclusion what route we want to take, and the way we have done, last quarter, we communicated where we were in the process after we-- Unilever globally announced its decision to separate, and this quarter, we further gave an update, and we will keep doing that as and when we end up making progress by independent committee, which will then inform the board, and then we'll end up sharing with all of you as to where our mind is this point in time, and way forward.
So thanks. My second and last question will be on personal wash and tea. So in both the segments, there is currently sharp inflation, which I think provides good opportunity to gain market share. In the past, you have also said that you are looking at as a strategy, profitable volume growth. So if you could tell us currently the way things are, how do you look at market share gain and also containing the margin pressure? How do you see both of those? Second, some update on the personal wash, the disruption which you are doing.
Initial days, we know that, but if you could share some anecdotal evidence, how it's working, because you have been saying it will take two quarters, but now, two, three months have gone. So how are the initial signs of the disruption?
Yeah. So, so three different questions, let me just pick, Abneesh, one by one, all three of them. In terms of commodity impact, I called out crude is the main three commodities impact in this timeframe, by and large, crude oil, crude palm oil, and tea. In this instance, crude palm oil by roughly 10%, tea by almost 25% have inflated. Now, what we will do is net off the savings that we generate in the business, which is what we always have done. Of course, the total amount of commodity inflation, we don't pass on to consumers. We always drive savings very hard across all lines of the P&L. Net of that savings, net inflation, is what will end up pricing, going forward, and this is what you'll end up seeing in the December quarter.
We already recalibrated the way we take price increases to ensure that the focus always remains on driving competitive volume growth and maintaining competitive price equation. This is exactly what we'll end up doing for both tea and skin cleansing. But you will see some pricing action, and which is why we also called out that against declining UPG for the last few quarters, if I exclude the one-off impact of flat UPG current quarter, we will end up seeing low single digit increase in underlying price growth in next quarter. So that's on pricing and our decision in terms of what we'll end up doing for personal wash and tea. In terms of overall personal wash and tea, of course, the business model is very important. There were four things we had to do for personal wash.
Number one, the job was to ensure that we are upgrading our products with PIP across the board, and which is why the Stratos technology leverage we have deployed across Lux and Lifebuoy in the marketplace. It's a few months, a couple of months, we have product in the market, good early sign of consumer traction, but very important that we should stay course and see for a few quarters before we end up concluding. Sequencing in September quarter, our business is higher compared to what we did in June quarter, but we would want to watch the signal for a couple of quarters before we conclude on that front.
Second job that we had to do in skin cleansing was correct, as you remember, the price point at March end, which we had corrected and is already in play, which is why also the year-on-year price in the quarter has been negative. The third big job that we had to do was innovation, and you heard across narrative between Rohit and me, be it the Dove Sensitive range in the last quarter or Lux Sandalwood range in the current quarter. As we speak, we've just launched in the market, Dove Serum new range, Serum Body Wash and Serum Soap range, Serum Shower range in the market. So there is a continuous step-up of innovation that we're doing in the space of personal wash.
And last, but not least, the fourth action we mentioned we'll end up doing for personal wash was upping our game in organized trade. That's exactly what we have done in the last few months' time. We will see how these four actions pan out in terms of impact. Now, as far as tea is concerned, we continue to strengthen our market leadership across value and volume. I remember seven years ago, we took leadership, and then we maintained that leadership through. It's strong business. Overall market growth has been muted because of downgrading. Now that overall the climate of business is very different, with 25% inflation, we got to see how the market overall will pan out in times to come.
But we will exactly do what we have done, which is we keep investing in the category and then keep growing our business as much as we can, in spite of the degradation which is happening in the business. Now, coming to margin, all puts and takes put together, the bottom line conversation that we did as part of the outlook, we want to maintain our EBITDA margin at the current healthy levels. As you know, we're at 26.8% margin, and those are the levels at which we want to maintain the margin, some basis points up and down, but this is where our mind is, this point in time, to maintain margins.
Within that, you will see continued focus on driving gross margin, and you will see continued focus on stepping up on A&P investments in the business to ensure that we're able to drive competitive volume growth home.
So thanks. That's all from my side. Thank you.
Thanks, Abneesh.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vivek M from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening, team. First question is on the overall FMCG market, and you have covered some part in your outlook. But has the pace of, you know, moderation in urban surprised you, and what are the key reasons and any outlook, when do you think, you know, it, let's say, flat, the curve flattens, from where we are?
Hi, Vivek. If I may take this one. I think, we've now looked at consistently from all angles, and, the pattern is quite clear that, urban growth has, tended down in the recent quarters and/or recent quarter, and while rural has continued to grow, gradually and has now, and for the past quarter, has been ahead of urban, is, also continues to be ahead of urban this time. We see the growth in, big cities trending down, although in, smaller cities and in rural, the growth continues to be, good. So this is a trend that we observe.
Now, as far as we are concerned, while we can try and explain this, and there's of course, we must not forget that in the recent quarters, urban was doing the heavy lifting, and now it's rural that's coming back slowly. There could be a certain degree of base effect, there could be macro factors-
... that are impacting the near-term trend rate of the urban markets. But as far as we're concerned, we are focused on what we can control, which is, we are focused on going where the growth is. Because even in this large market, while overall growth may be a couple of percentages down, it is a big market with lots of pockets of growth. So we are focused on allocating resources to where we have investable assets, chasing growth segments. Number two, we want to look beyond just the near quarter and make sure that we are investing behind our brands, strengthening their brand power, which we have, in fact, happy to report we see a very strong trend in our brand power growth, which is reflecting in our market shares.
And make sure that we consistently invest behind the market development bets, because those are multi-year and they compound. We don't want to take our eyes off that and build capacity, and number three is to be really focused on volume net competitive growth, and we have increased our distance from our competitors this quarter. We want to basically get stronger in all market conditions, so really, we are focused on what we can control, and then longer term, we do expect the market to trend to mean with a few percentage points of price. As you know, we flattened price this quarter, we likely price growth will come back in the quarters to follow.
As you know, the inflation in some of our categories takes shape, and the volumes will trend in the low natural organic levels of 3-4% that we've observed over the longer term as well, so we do expect over some time the growth to revert to mean, but the larger point is that in a more longer-term view the market remains exciting. It's a place where per capita consumptions are low. As we've spoken many times in our calls, it's actually to focus... stay focused on the medium-term and long-term opportunity in the market, and not get swayed by a one-quarter low.
Got it. Got it. And in the context of, you know, how urban is shaping up and how rural is, do you think at the portfolio level, for you as a company, is there a possibility that, you know, the premiumization has been a secular trend long term? All that I totally appreciate. But do you think in the interim, urban, you know, slows and rural picks up, there is a possibility that the portfolio premiumization actually may not play out, or there may actually be a bit of a mix deterioration? Do you think that's that's a possibility?
We actually looked under the bonnet, and even when you peel the surface, you find that the premium segments, popular segments, mass segments, the rank order of hierarchy of growth is the same as observed in other quarters, although the numbers are slightly lower. Premium continues to grow 30-odd% or thereabout, faster than the other segments. And we see the trend of upgradation remaining consistent and secular, because you know, even rural areas, for instance, you know, if somebody moves from a one rupee sachet Clinic Plus to a two rupee Dove. That is, that's an upgradation as far as we're concerned, because it's doubling the cost of wash, we're doubling quality of wash.
So the upgradation trend, including our new categories, finding penetration opportunities in rural, the Surf Excel INR 10 sachet, which is a premium product used for select occasions. That story of making aspirations accessible, of good quality experiences at scale, is still live and deep, and we do not see that trend changing. So the upgradation premiumization trend, even in this quarter, has sustained, and we don't think that that that would change. And our job is to continue to drive our portfolio more and more towards where the growth is.
Got it. Got it. Thank you, and wishing you all the best.
Thanks, Vivek.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Manoj Menon from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi, team. I have only a couple of questions. The one, you know, is on the soaps formulation change, which you implemented in June. It's been almost five months now. You know, just want to hear from you on the region-specific feedback, which you may have picked up on the ground, on what's the consumer feedback in terms of the formulation change affecting their lives. Actually, that's one. Second, you know, in soaps, as I understand, you know, this change, while you may have done for multiple reasons, one of the benefits is also far better gross margins. You know, so when I look at the overall performance, I'm unsure whether probably it was an up elevator, probably there are down elevators which kind of neutralized it. Thank you.
Yeah.
So let me pick up, and you can add to it.
Sure.
So, on overall, soap, yeah, it's been a few months now, Manoj, that we've had the revised formulation products fully distributed in the market. Our early read is encouraging, as we see purchases, as we see repeats, as we see consumer feedback and all over our listening channels that we get feedback from. So it is encouraging feedback that we have. But we would wait for a couple of quarters before fully, let me say, coming to conclusion how this has landed, but we are encouraged by what we hear already in first couple of months' time. And this feedback is across the geographies where we have changed. And as you know, Lux and Lifebuoy both are national brands.
So across geographies, we have across unique cluster segments, we have similar amount of feedback that we have built up, which is positive. So as of now, no concerns, but only good news as far as early signals are concerned. But we will watch for a couple of quarters before we come to any conclusion on that. And we will share as, as we get more, and hopefully by end of next quarter, we'll have more detailed statistics, let me say, information and data to share. Now, coming to gross margin, remember I had mentioned earlier as well, that the formulation change overall, we have invested more. Everything else being equal, we've invested more in the formulation, which is superior than landed in the market.
So there is no, let me say, increase in gross margin, which has happened because we went to Stratos technology, because we invested more in the market, to start with. And of course, now we have also invested more to land the innovation, including the innovation intensity, which has gone in the market. Now, going forward, with commodity price, crude palm oil changing, with pluses and minuses happening, other ingredients which go and make a soap, we have taken, and we will end up taking calibrated price increases over the course of the quarter, to negate to some extent, the net impact. Net of savings of the inflation will then pass on to consumers in a calibrated manner, being mindful of the competitive price equation.
So this is where we are in terms of overall impact, which is more investment, and hence not increase in gross margin, but more investment. But we are very mindful of the overall play across P&L that we want to do to drive a financial growth model, which is volume growth driven at this point in time for skin cleansing and hence personal care.
Very clear, Ritesh. Just a quick two follow-ups, if I may. You know, given that around 40% of the bathing segment, the soap, soaps is actually you know, is price pointed packs, let's say, INR 10. You know, I would presume that the frequency, let's say, for example, an INR 10 consumer would be you know, replenishing every week, right? I mean, so which means you have enough data till now. So why is that, let's say... Is it just that you're kind of playing safe, saying that, oh, I, we need a couple of quarters, or it's just that you have enough data already?
Look, we are because it's, you know, the context of this, we took a long time, tested it thoroughly before we went to the market. We had a very rigorous change management because we're talking of a very big business. Two brands impacted, Lux and Lifebuoy. We put tracking studies, post-launch as well, across the regions, we picking up data with consumers and channel, both first-time feedback and what consumers and shoppers are saying. What we see and, you know, because it's a long, it's a pipeline with old and new stocks as, the brands start to take, a full place. We will have more information as we go more in in this quarter.
But early signals take, for instance, the product does improve the feel, the skin feel, the fragrance delivery, the color, and our ability to make claims because we can now incorporate much more since we have more formulation space. All of that, for instance, seems to be helping. To take an example concretely is Lux. It's a very big brand, and we can see that that is finding good reception. Our early entrance into the sandal segment, which is a very, very big segment in South and West, where we didn't have a strong play, is anecdotally receiving very good feedback because we're able to offer both skincare benefits and sandal superior perfume on the chassis that we couldn't do on other chassis in the past. We are hopeful for that to work as well.
So at this point, we feel that move is good, but of course it's a big change, so we want to have more concrete data before we come back and confirm, you know, what are the opportunities for us to take it further, what we need to strengthen, what need to improve. But we feel positive at this point. Not to forget, we do have very strong play in deodorants and liquids. That's really where the growth in the market is. Liquids, we are gaining share. We're growing handsomely across our brands, and deodorants both are strong, and they, of course, are not affected by this technology one way or the other. And they are, of course, remaining very healthy for us as well.
So we are committed to a multi-year improvement in our personal care personal wash business. This is a home business, and we intend to make sure we have structurally a very, very sound business going forwards.
Loud and clear, Rohit, and Ritesh. You know, and, and in fact, the sandal variant launch was very, very, very pleasing to note, you know, and very super good luck for that. Just, just one statement, if I may, you know, as a, let's say, statement of, assertion or hypothesis, is that, I mean, I mean, am I to... Are, are we to think, are we to assume that, let's say the change in soap formulation was-- because you, you mentioned that it's actually, you know, higher cost for you, let's say, versus the previous, let's say, bill of material. Is it to assume that, let's say, from a super long-term point of view, you just want to reduce the dependence on palm?
See, two things I want to note here, and let me spend a little bit time on saying this. Overall, when you look at the soap formulation, we mentioned last time as well, the non-soluble component of palm is what we have reduced. That typically only is used as a structuring and gets washed down the drain in the bathing process and adds to environmental load. The moment you do that, you then increase the space in the formulation to add ingredients which will lead to more benefit delivery. That is the central reasons why we have done what we have done. Now, be it Lux Sandalwood, be it serum, be it other ingredients, we are able to now create space for adding all of that to the formulation.
So the central reason of doing that is our ability to upgrade and deliver more functional benefits going forward. That's the reason we have gone and done. And we are mindful that when we are changing, creating space, where, of course, the overall commodity volatility is linked, of course, the cost reduces, but of course, since as we add more goodies and more functional ingredients, benefit-leading ingredients, the formulation cost will go up. So it was a very calculated call by us to step up the quality of formulation. And in summary, the bottom line is, will consumers see, perceive this as a product which is superior compared to what our existing superior products were or compared to competition? We saw that in our previous studies, that this is a superior formulation.
Of course, now we are in the market, early good signs, so we are encouraged, and we will in times to come come to conclusion as to how overall it has gone. So that's the space, and that's the reason why we have gone and done it, let me say.
Thank you, Ritesh. I have one follow-up, but I'll come back in the queue. But just, one question on this soap-specific thing. Is there an IPR involved in this change which you have done?
Sorry, come again?
Is there an intellectual property right sort of situation where you do have a genuine competitive advantage for a very long period of time?
Yeah, we have applied for more than twenty patents, and these are all kind of patents: design patents, material patents, of course, formulation. And we do believe that with that we will have basically a formulation which will be very tight in terms of its development and in terms of proprietary nature of that. And we mentioned Manoj last time that it's taken for us five years to develop and get this formulation, and we protected it very strongly with multiple patents. So yeah, so we feel very confident about it. And on as far as margins are concerned, the probably the question behind your question, and ultimately, if the products are superior, our ability to command a right price point is gets more enhanced.
We are also exposed a little lesser to commodity variation, which happens. So ultimately it all comes together. In a high commodity, volatile atmosphere for palm, we'll be better insulated. So it will all play out in times to come. But the single biggest factor, if I just again re-speak what I spoke earlier, is the increasing possibility of adding more innovative materials in the product.
Loud and clear, Ritesh, Rohit. Thank you so much. Good luck.
Thanks so much.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Avi Mehta from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi, team. Thanks for the opportunity. Just, you know, picking up on where, you know, the earlier participant left, with the superior formulation in soap, a much competitive pricing and early signs of healthy consumer traction, could you give us a sense on by when do you see these, you know, Stratis essentially translating into volume market share gains in soaps? Is that, is that the right way to, like, look at this? And would love to hear your thoughts on by when do you see it translating into these actual, the outcomes.
Yeah. See, we had mentioned, Avi, that we would want to watch a couple of quarters. So this is a large-scale change across multiple consumer segments, and we want to have a good read before we come to conclusion, and we don't want to jump to conclusion. Initial signs are good. Sequentially, we sold more in September quarter compared to what we sold in June quarter. There is initial early signs of volume market share improving, but as I mentioned, we would want to watch a couple of quarter before we start concluding on it, because there's a lot of detailing that goes behind assessment before you conclude on some headline numbers. So we wouldn't want to jump to conclusion. Are we worried? Answer, absolutely not.
No. We are encouraged, and we are positive about the change which has landed, and early signs are good.
I just want to give a corollary to this, which is that, we must not forget that the market is trending towards more premium in personal wash. Liquids, Dove bars, we have very strong equities there, and they have very, very big headspace, so our focus is to sustain, middle of the market with Lifebuoy, Lux, Hamam, but at the same time, also premiumize and grow our consumers to adopt Dove bars and liquids as a format.
Clear. Fair, perfectly clear on that. Just on that, Rohit, if I may just, you know, the second bit on the industry. I heard your comments about, you know, the fact that we are ensuring that our performance is less linked to the industry. But what, in your view, is the reasons why urban has weakened, and, you know, by when do you see this turnaround? I wasn't able to kind of get a clear understanding of that. If you had any thoughts on that, that would be great.
In full transparency, it'd be very difficult to forecast, you know, very far out in the future. I can give you a historical trend rate, and we can judge this collectively and give you more a near-term view. Historically, the market's grown, you know, roughly half price, half volume. At this point, the price was negative to zero. That's coming back. That's a few percentage points of growth that was missing in the market, certainly in the markets we play in. So I would say that that is going to gradually come back. We've been missing that for the last five, six quarters, and you know, we enjoyed it when there was inflation, but it's not been there in the last four or five quarters. That is a missing part of the growth equation.
Second, on premiumization, that adds growth as well through the element of mix. I think the premiumization trend is secular. That's why we will try and bend more and more of our portfolio towards investing in consumption value increase, and that is also there in as one of the second parts of the growth equation. Third is that the volume tends to grow between 3-4% give or take a year and give or take a quarter on the average. It dipped down this quarter on account of not that much growth in the big cities, although the smaller cities are growing on the composite. But it could well come back when the macro conditions or the stimulus is more positive.
But I would not be able to make great forecast on, you know, specifically what this will be. What we can say with some degree of certainty is near term, that the demand trends. We feel are stable going into the quarter we are in, what we can do is to stay focused on what we can control, which is the three things: going where the growth is, focusing on the long term, investing in our capacity and our brands, and finally, making sure that we are gaining in competitiveness by executing.
If you're ready across all of our six P elements, which will give us a position of strength as market conditions change, for the better.
Perfect, yeah. No, thanks a lot for this. That's all from my side. I'll come back in the queue for the other questions. Thank you.
Sure, A vi.
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Latika Chopra from JP Morgan. Please go ahead.
Hi, thanks for the opportunity. I think a lot has been discussed. I have some follow-ups. I'll start with personal care. You know, in June quarter, you talked about a positive, low single-digit volume growth. This quarter, it seems it's in the negative territory. You've said, you know, soaps have increased sequentially for you. You know, and it seems, you know, oral care has also probably done better, so just trying to understand, you know, what has led to this, you know, moderation in volume growth in this category. Is there some base effect or something very specific to call out?
Yeah. So, Latika, hi. Latika, nothing very, let me say, let me put it into two different perspective. First of all, we have grown, well in oral care. You saw in our prepared remarks as well. The growth is, competitive. Closeup is doing very well, so oral care is doing good. Coming to personal care, within that skin cleansing, in particular, as part of personal care, this quarter, the decline is both on account of pricing and volume. The price changes that we have done early in the year, we are having that price decrease in our September quarter, and we're lapping the price, which, was very different in the base. So year on year, there's a price decline, which is part of the reason why the revenue has declined. Number one.
Number two, it's also the base and the phasing of sales across quarters. The point I was making earlier, sequentially, though year on year, we have declined on a low single digit in volumes in skin cleansing, but sequentially, September quarter over June quarter, for example, we have sold more amount of turnover. So that's how I would want you to see, and as I mentioned that, we would see how the pace of recovery improves from here into the quarters ahead.
Okay, this is clear because it's good actually, because I think June is a better season for personal wash. So, we've done better in September. The second bit was on food and refreshment. You know, again, there's a shift, you know, an adverse shift in volume narrative. And is it all linked to ice creams or, you know, tea also has kind of deteriorated a bit more due to, you know, the whole down trading pressure?
Yeah, so,
Or is it all mix? Yeah.
Sorry, yeah. So the Foods and Refreshment, Latika, two-thirds of our business sits between tea and HFD. Ice cream overall is 3% of the business, and of course, it's a little larger than the proportion for Foods and Refreshment. Ice cream as overall, you've seen the comments, has been basically, we've been holding on to the scale of the business, and we were not as the season sales that we did, it got impacted to some extent by rains, et cetera. But the larger conversation comes from both tea and HFD, which is two-thirds of the business. Now, overall for foods, at foods and beverage level, we have increased competitiveness, so we have gained shares. In tea, our we have gained shares and our market leadership, both volume and value, remains strong.
F&R, we further improved our competitiveness and we gained share. So from a competitive perspective, our entire foods and refreshment business has gained share and is stronger. Now, what has happened within that, absolute amount of sales turnover growth for tea, we have seen marginal decline there. And the reason we called out that the downgrading which has happened for tea in the deflationary period had continued to happen. Now, the signals are changing as we speak now. We now have a deterministic signal that this season is an inflationary season. Same quarter, a quarter before, we were not very sure, early data was coming in, but now that we are well into the season of commodity tea, we know it's inflationary season because of the lower production. 25% is the scale of tea commodity inflation, which has happened.
Going forward, of course, we'll end up taking price increases, which we have done, started taking price increases in December quarter, and you will see how it pans out. There's no concern in terms of tea and HFD, and as far as competitiveness is concerned, but of course, tea volumes have got impacted because of downgrading. For HFD, we have more job to be done on consumption. Where is our focus on HFD in terms of driving growth? Plus range, doing good. Idea is to ensure that we're able to more premiumize and more specialize our portfolio. Our job is to ensure that we are able to drive more amount of penetration gain. Since we acquired the business, 250 basis points improvement in core market share of nutrition drink. Since we acquired the business, 700 basis points improvement in penetration levels.
So those all consumer metrics are looking strong. But what now we got to do is to convert those strong consumer metrics into headline growth, and hence consumption becomes the single biggest focus for us. This is where we are putting our head down and we are working hard to ensure we're able to turn that around as far as consumption is concerned. Long term, we all know that India are micronutrient deficient in terms of the food plate, carbohydrate heavy. This is the right demand space to be in, but we just have to ensure that we keep focusing on and keep driving consumption. So this is where we are. But we are also mindful there are six demand spaces within foods and refreshment that we want to continue ensuring we're working on: tea, coffee, nutrition drink, mini meals and cooking aid, condiments, and UFS.
These are the six different demand spaces where we want to double down, on our foods portfolio. And we will share more about what we want to do in terms of new demand spaces when we speak at the Capital Markets Day. But we are, very encouraged to know that, there's a good amount of, benefit of foods in the country. Packaged food overall should only end up seeing driving growth for FMCG, and we want to participate in these six segments, and through that, we want to grow our own, proportion of the food business in the country.
Thank you, Ritesh, and just one last bit. You know, I heard your comment on urban growth. I just wanted to check, is there any geographical disparity and also larger cities, is there anything to read from channel distribution, you know, channel shift more towards online, which could have in any way, any impact on growth trajectory? Anything to call out, you know, on both these aspects? Thank you. That is the last question.
Thanks, Latika. Latika, overall, in terms of urban, it's across the country. It's not that there's dramatic difference in one part of the country as compared to other part of the country. We track our WiMI clusters very closely, so I would say this trend is across the country. It's not one portion and part of the country only. Coming to channel, the secular trend of increasing e-commerce proportion of the business, increasing modern trade component of the business, that secular trend has continued. We still are GT-dominant business. 70% of our business comes from general trade. Roughly 20% comes from modern trade, 6-7% from e-commerce, and three odd percent from other channels. And this secular trend of moving more towards organized trade has continued to happen this quarter as well.
No dramatic move in last couple of quarters, but same secular trend continues, and the point we mentioned that, our portfolio is distinct in organized trade. We continue to do good work in terms of bringing very distinctive and channel-specific portfolio, and we are gaining share in organized trade as well, so that's very important in terms of competitiveness.
Thank you so much, Ritesh.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Aditya Soman from CLSA. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening, so just following up on Latika's question, actually, on e-commerce and the impact, particularly of quick commerce. I find it a bit disingenuous that both, I mean, you and one another large multinational called this out, that large cities are growing slower when we are seeing a growth in some of these channels being well over 100%. If I look at even growth for businesses like Nykaa in the beauty segment, and even if I compare your sort of adjusted beauty growth, the absolute increase in turnover for Nykaa was actually larger. I understand they are a retailer and also sell your products, but than what it seems to be for beauty and well-being for HUL.
So I just wanted to get a sense, I mean, is it that when we are saying we are gaining market share, are we looking at, different set of data or, or am I just missing something?
I didn't fully understand the disingenuous comment and what's the motive behind that before I respond? Hi. You said disingenuous. What, what does it exactly mean?
Yeah. No, no, I'm just saying that on one hand we've got these companies growing, I mean, whether it's quick commerce or businesses like Nykaa, which obviously are beauty focused, and their beauty business growing very fast. And on the other hand, obviously, HUL's growth in beauty has or remains relatively normal-
So we are.
Understand.
So I don't know what the other players are saying. I'm just responding to the business we are in, the categories we play, and we're looking at the trend from, say, Kantar or Nielsen. That Kantar, for instance, is a consumption data, right? It doesn't matter which channel consumers buy from. That, and Nielsen, which is more of a retail audit, that may not include e-commerce. We look at it separately.
So when you look at all data points, what you do see in this quarter is the comment is based on a composite number, not on a number that's excluded this, including that, that there is a trending down on the urban growth, and that's more marked in the one to ten lakhs in bigger cities remaining flattish and not so much in the lower tier cities. Just a nuance of trying to deconstruct this growth, and there's nothing more to that. So I don't understand how that would not be anything less than transparent, and the data is visible and accessible to all market participants, including yourself, so you can look at that yourself as well. That's really where this comment's coming from.
No, I understand very clear. No, no, I'm not dis-- I mean, I'm not questioning the data that you're seeing. Obviously, you're seeing the right data. I'm just trying to understand, are these panels missing something, in a sense that, as you mentioned, I mean, Nielsen probably just tracks retail, and with Kantar, could they be missing smaller competitors or something of that sort? Is that even a possibility, is what I'm trying to understand.
And like I said, for us, so what? So for a minute, assume that there is noise in this information. That's why I said that our internal focus is not to. We can try and explain or understand the macro as we do to be transparent. You know, we don't. We are also asking these questions in our market visits or when we speak to external participants. But at the end of the day, our organizational focus is to control what we can control, and the greatest measure of that is, are we competitively growing in the market we find ourselves in? And we look at channels across modern trade. We measure the shares there discretely by banners and also by segments. We look at e-commerce. We measure our shares by pods, so we call them pods.
These are beauty.com players or marketplace.com players and so on and so forth. We look at general trade by, by tiers of the cities in urban and rural. We are increasing the shares in aggregate, led by volume in, MAT, and increasingly led by the last three months data movement. That is what we have to stay focused on. If we do that, as market tends to come back to shape or comes back in a certain way, we'll also tend to gain. We allocate the resources to where the growth is highest, modern trade, for instance, or premium areas, premium segments across, different geographical segments or e-commerce, where of course, as you said, the growth is in, you know, in, multiples of high, very, very high single digit, double digits. Yeah, that's, so that's what I'm saying.
The real focus therefore we have is to go where the growth is-
... and so consistently invest behind the longer term, both brands and market development efforts, and focus on improving our competitive strength so that we gain share in all market conditions.
Understand. Very clear, and thanks for that. And then would it also be possible to explain the profitability differences in the channels? Maybe I understand, obviously, for you, e-commerce is growing faster than modern trade and faster than traditional, but would there be a difference in profitability across channels or not, nothing to call out?
No, definitely, different channels offer different profitability. The portfolio that we sell is different. So typically, organized trade, you end up making better margins compared to general trade, and that emanates from the fact that the portfolio that you sell in modern organized trade is different than what you sell in general trade. The price point packs, essentially sachets or the mass segment of the business, is not present, as you know, in a big way in organized trade. So because of that, when you look at even sales investment, you end up making better margins in organized trade. But more than that, I wouldn't want to share at this point in time.
Very clear, and thanks for answering my question. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Jitendra Arora from ICICI Prudential Life Insurance Company Limited. Please go ahead.
Yeah, no, thank you. Actually, Aditya just asked my question. I just wanted to understand the profitability across channels.
Thank you. We will move to the next question, which is from the line of Vishal Punmia from Yes Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you. Firstly, just a clarification in terms of, you mentioned about the key price hike. Is that already into the market, or do you expect that to come in in the next couple of months?
We've started taking it, Vishal, so this is the first signals of already, getting into the market as we speak. But, you end up taking across multiple price points in multiple geographies, so the overall change in price will land over the course of the quarter, December quarter. But the first set of packs have started to get invoiced already.
And that won't be able to offset the entire inflation, right? Because then it would be a very sharp price, right.
Correct. What we always do is, Vishal, that when we look at the price increase, especially when it happens seasonally in tea, such as Lipton, it's a season that ends up telling you where the price momentum is, unlike, let me say, palm or crude. So I would say what we always do is we look at the gross inflation, we see what kind of savings we can net off, and then the net impact of inflation that we have is what then we end up taking calibrated price increase. Our learning always has been when you take price increases, take in smaller bite-sized chunks, and when you drop prices, drop in larger chunks, so that you don't end up getting saddled with trade pipeline inventory.
That's exactly what we'll end up doing now as well, both with tea or for that matter, skin cleansing as well.
Understood. And secondly, on your A&P spends for the quarter, so there seems to be a sharp cut. Any particular category that we have decided to cut spends, or is it some postponement of spends that we see in this quarter?
Yeah. So a couple of perspectives there, Vishal. First of all, of course, the same period last year was our highest amount of A&P spends in the last three years. So you're then also lapping that and look at year-on-year percentages. But if I just talk about absolute percentage, we are roughly a little over 9.5% A&P spends in the quarter, and if you look at our average for last year, typically 10.5% what we do. So we have, let me say, 100 basis points lower compared to our typical trend of spend in this quarter. Now, there are three different things which end up driving the absolute level of expenditure. Of course, the first and foremost is competitive spends.
Looking at the competitive media heat, our first objective always is share of voice ahead of share of market. This quarter as well, our share of voice is ahead of share of market, so we have spent competitively, number one. Number two, of course, is the reach objective. Every brand has different communication campaigns we end up running, and those reach objectives tell us as to what's the quantum of expenditure we want to do. And of course, third is then the innovation phasing. These three elements end up determining the absolute levels of media expenditure that we have to do in the quarter. Along with that, there's also a dramatic shift happening in terms of the components of media. We have now roughly 45% of our working media being spent in digital.
So that also then ends up determining the level of expenditure in the quarter. So it is more of a phasing. There is no dramatic pull up or a pull down, if I ignore what happened in the base. And, we typically operate at 10.5%-ish in terms of, A&P expenditure, and you should expect that levels for us, unless media dramatically changes or if innovation phasing and some... we can just do something very different in the quarter.
Right. Understood. Just lastly, a data point, if you can share, what would be the mix of ice cream business from the Q-commerce channel, Q-commerce channel?
So in Q-commerce, ice cream is roughly more than 10%.
Okay. Okay. Thank you. That's all from my side.
Thank you, Vishal.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Percy Panthaki from IIFL. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening, team. A couple of questions from my side. So firstly, on tea business, just wanted to understand the volume sort of weakness here, and you're not alone. Even Tata Consumer reported a negative for volume. See, generally, when there is a tea cost inflation, and this time it was quite steep, like close to 20-25% kind of YOY inflation, what happens is that the small and unorganized players pass it on immediately because they operate on very thin margins, so they cannot afford to hold the price line.
And the larger guys, like you and Tata, have not taken much of a price increase, and your premium to these guys would have shrunk materially. So therefore, I would expect that both you and Tata should have reported very strong volume growth. We see similar kind of phenomenon happening in, for example, coconut oil, also Parachute gains when there is a big price inflation because unorganized cannot keep up. So this has not happened in tea. So any reason why this has not happened? That's my first question.
Yeah. So, Percy, if I just go a quarter back, when we started seeing the first early signals of an inflationary year for tea, it was too early for us to make a judgment and decision as to where the whole season will pan out, and for that matter, the level of inflation the season will end up offering. So typically, what you do is you just wait first to ensure that you have very strong signals, both A, the direction of inflation, and B, the quantity of inflation. As we speak, in last few months' time, that is much clearer now that this is indeed a season where we end up seeing inflation, and a material inflation, the number I was quoting earlier, 25%.
Second thing which you also check before you end up responding in terms of action is: What is happening to inflation between plain tea and premium tea? And here I'm referring to commodity. As you know, that we have spoken about last couple of years, that was a decoupling, where premium tea saw more inflation and plain tea did not see inflation. And when the deflation happened, the deflation happened more in plain tea as compared to premium, and which is why the price gap between premium tea to an extent became broader and larger compared to plain tea. That's what played out, and hence overall value growth in the category came down. Now, typically, with inflation, this time the inflation signals are very similar, both for premium tea and for plain tea. There are a couple of % differences, but not material.
Now that we have that, let me say, rather over the last few months' time, is when we have decided to act on the price. The change which you are expecting should start kicking in, as far as Hindustan Unilever is concerned, from December quarter onwards. That's exactly what we have done. We have seen in the past, when the price level starts to stabilize, the downgrading we are hoping will stop happening. But I would want to wait for December quarter to play out. We have done all the action that we have to do, and we are very clear what plan we end up executing in the quarter. I'm hoping that the market price level stabilizes in terms of downgrading, and there's a different outcome in terms of growth we'll end up expecting in December quarter.
But we will report, of course, how that all goes through when we speak in January.
Okay, I'm still a little confused. I'm talking about September quarter. September quarter, you have not taken any price increase or very little price increase. The inflation is huge, and therefore, the small and unorganized would have already taken a very big price increase, and therefore, your premium to them would have shrunk. So why is it that there is no sort of market share gain? Let's say you were at, for example, just hypothetically, 30% premium to the small and unorganized. Now, your premium would have come down to, let's say, 15-20%. Shouldn't that have benefited your volume in September quarter itself, and why has that not happened?
See, first of all, before I answer specific, we have further gained market share. Yeah, so our market share gain, both volume and value, is very competitive. So that goes without saying that we have grown ahead of the market, number one. Number two, I don't believe the data that we have seen. There is no dramatic price level change, which has already happened in terms of price of the product in the market in September quarter. The point I was making that, at least in our case, we have waited before we end up deciding what we have to do in December quarter, but we have not seen material change the price levels in the market in September quarter. So I would wait for a quarter more before starting to conclude which way the markets are stabilizing.
We have seen continued downgrading, where A, there is player, B, there's commodity, and C, there is consumer. All three have to come together to determine the fate of the category or, for that matter, growth of the players in the market. All three put together, we have seen the sign of downgrading continue to happen in September quarter. So as I mentioned, but now with these signals being very different, very clearly, we know what we need to do. We have taken our actions. We hopefully will have a different outcome for December quarter.
Okay, okay, got it. My second question is on soap. So I know this has been asked multiple times, but still just wanted to understand. See, you have changed the pricing, and you are happy with the pricing you are operating at right now. Earlier, you were at a premium, which you felt was a little higher than what you could justify. So that has happened three or four months ago, and you have changed the formulation and made it superior. And still, the volume growth on a YOY basis is negative. So although sequentially it has improved, YOY, it is negative. So what else we need for the YOY growth to turn positive? Is it just a base effect which will catch up, or is it something else?
And I mean, is there a confidence that in Q3, with the momentum that you are seeing, the YOY volume growth in soaps will turn positive?
So, Percy, I captured a little while ago, but yeah, I'm happy to repeat. There are four different actions we said we have to do. A, on pricing, exactly as you mentioned a few months ago, we did that early in the year. We had already executed. B, on product superiority, you heard on Stratis. C, on innovation intensity, I quoted examples, Rohit quoted examples, what we have done. And D, in terms of play in channels of the future organized trade. All those four set of actions we have already deployed, and we did mention both in our prepared remarks and also when I answered earlier, that we do believe it will take couple of quarters before we see the full impact of what we have done. Typically, when you end up doing such large-scale changes, it takes some time before you end up seeing change.
Early signs I mentioned, we have seen both in terms of sequential business being higher in September quarter compared to June quarter. We have seen, as I mentioned, early signs of volume growth in the latest quarter. When I say volume, market share growth. But I would wait for a couple of quarters before we end up giving a view as to how this, all the four actions put together, have panned out. But early signs are encouraging is the point I mentioned earlier as well.
Got it. Just one quick question, if you can give me even a one-line answer, it will be okay. So in beauty, you have done quite well. It's a 7% growth. And the segment which was really lagging is the mass skincare till now. I mean, so has that problem been sort of solved, and is that back on track in terms of growth this quarter?
Yeah. So I think I'll take this one. So on beauty business, as you saw intrinsically, we're in, like, seven odd %. We are happy with the progress we see on the premium end. Pond's is a great example of where we are seeing high, very high double-digit growth. I also wanted to comment before I go to the mass and and specifically give you an update on that, that just purely for what you'd call digital-first type mass tige, more premium formats and segments, you'd call out the six segments we are focused on, more premium and more long-term market development nature, you know, sunscreens, de-seasonalizing, body care, for instance, and some more brands like Simple and Love Beauty and Planet.
This entire portfolio is already about the scale of almost 2,000 crores, and is growing in very high double digits, has a very high e-commerce and modern trade contribution, almost 26-odd%, and is seeing very high growth in e-commerce as well. It mirrors a typical, you know, premium digital-first type of portfolio, and we now have a very strong capacity, whether it's through innovation, tracking, through trend matching, through formulating, producing, marketing with the whole influencer ecosystem, dedicated teams to sell beauty in e-commerce and modern trade, and a dedicated channel for premium beauty outlets. We feel confident to be able to incubate, build, and scale premium beauty portfolio. This is where the exciting growth is.
Insofar as mass is concerned, we still have work to do. We are focused on improving. Our big brand is Glow and Lovely. That needs to come back to momentum. We are focused on modernizing the core. We are focused on making its proposition stronger, improving its presence in more value-added segments, close to the core to core plus, with new benefits and sensorial formats, and participating in high growth segments, some of which we already have launched. We have clear set of activities, they're in motion. We will see them going into the market in this quarter and the next quarter, and we are all very much laser-focused to basically get Glow and Lovely back on track. And with that done, I think that would then give us a complete portfolio.
And of course, you know, the growth will always be more high in, in the premium segments, in e-commerce channels, et cetera, which I first started with, but we need the entire portfolio to basically be robust. But we're happy with the progress so far. A good quarter, but again, this is one of the many quarters that we have to stay focused in growing this business.
Got it. Got it. Thank you for all your responses. Thank you very much.
Thanks, Percy.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Jay Doshi from Kotak. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, thanks for the opportunity. Just a quick follow-up on tea. Usually when, you know, this time you have delayed price increases and, you know, overall demand for the industry has been weak for the past two, three quarters, so usually ahead of price increases, channel tends to stock up. This time around, you know, why have we not seen that trend at all? And, do you see a risk that going forward, demand could weaken further, once price increases are taken?
Typically, Jay, there are a couple of categories which are more sensitive to price in FMCG. Tea and soaps, skin cleansing, are those categories which are very sensitive to price change. So there is always a higher elasticity of demand, consumption vis-a-vis price. But we got to see how it all pans out in times to come. The change in price, as I mentioned, at least as, as we are concerned, we are leaning in with the price now. In the market, there's a large consumer franchise as a market leader we have, and that's, that consumer franchise will end up experiencing the price change. And we're very mindful of the amount of price change we'll end up doing, net of inflation. We will net it off against the savings that we end up doing.
So we'll have to see as to how that overall pans out. There's never a pantry loading which happens. We have not seen that. Overall, not only HUL, but looking at the category STRs, the stock levels in the industry, we have not seen a big uptick. In fact, overall, there's a little bit of pluses and minuses across categories, but there's no material change we have seen.
If I may just, sort of comment, because, you know, if you disaggregate our tea business, so there are certain parts of our business, the Lipton brand, the Taj brand, that are somewhat less price sensitive. They. I'm including functional teas like the supplement tea we have on the Brooke Bond. They are continuing to grow in volume in the current markets, and we're quite pleased with that trend, and we would like to keep investing in growing that premium functional value-added segment of our tea business. The part that is sensitive to price, that operates more in the middle of the market, the 3 Roses, the Taaza, the Red Label, the more larger part of our business, indeed, reacts to commodity, which is the nature of this beast.
We have been, we are in this business for a long time, so we know how these cycles turn. Generally speaking, an inflationary market has been historically favorable to brands like Taaza and Brooke Bond and 3 Roses. When, for the reasons mentioned by one of our colleagues, there is pressure on the loose tea and the commodity, and people tend to then upgrade to brands like ours because they become more, their premium sort of starts to shrink. We should basically expect to see the trend come back to this natural order. We should therefore be very mindful of not getting caught with in-quarter noises, pipeline and effects as such, and therefore we should allow this quarter or two to sort of settle down. The price increase has been quite steep.
Bulk of the commodity is bought in June onwards, so I think until June, people may have not even established the real price trend. Now that it's established that it's increasing, I guess the real market impact of pricing would be felt as we speak. At this point, for instance, we are increasing prices as we speak as well. So I think we need to give it some time to settle down, to go back to what we've observed historically in this category.
Thank you. Thank you so much. Very clear.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Mihir Shah from Nomura. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. Thank you for taking my question. Can you talk a bit on the quick commerce channel? How is your market share in quick commerce versus general trade, and modern trade that you have? You know, do you see this channel giving opportunity to new niche brands, which are targeting the affluent consumer, and can pressure premiumization trend for us, and maybe lead to lower market, lower than market growth? And a part B to that is, given the strong growth in quick commerce that you're seeing in the market, does this trigger any recalibration in the GT channel inventory? Have you already lowered it versus the past orders or past trends? So that's question one.
Can I just go one by one? So I'll take your first question first. I just want to use the opportunity to clarify, give you a bit of context so that we don't overread what we read, et cetera, in the press, and apply that uniformly to our market conditions. So first of all, channel structure. Two-thirds of our business is in general trade. Therefore, heart of Hindustan Unilever business is with our kirana merchants, distributor inclusive, is our priority number one. We invest behind this because we want our shoppers to be able to shop through kirana and them to be digitally capable. And our Shikhar app is an example of a long-term investment in making this particular segment of our channel strong and robust.
We continue to be focused on the general trade kirana distributor-served segment, which is a majority of our business. Modern trade is increasing as e-commerce, which is the nature of order of all countries as they evolve and develop, and it's about under 20% of our business. We are growing consistently double digits. We're gaining share in modern trade. We have an advantaged share position in modern trade, and we intend to keep it like that and investing to make sure we grow the categories with our modern trade customers, because they're interested in partners who grow the category value. You know, liquid in laundry or the higher added bathing liquids in personal wash, for example, and so on, so forth. E-commerce is about seven-odd%, six-odd% of our business.
It's clearly growing faster, and that is to be expected. We are gaining share on the whole, of course, led by beauty, where we are leaning in more specifically. Quick commerce is only a very small part of our e-commerce business. It is important to the extent that we have to serve all shopper missions. The reason why quick commerce is doing well is because it serves a certain consumer and shopper need, convenience. Sometimes they want very bulky item to be brought home, and we have a very, by design, segregated portfolio without any significant overlap in modern trade or general trade, particularly, that we sell in quick commerce, and it's by design meant to not overlap. The duplication is quite limited.
It's to serve basically the occasions of convenience or of instant need, and we see that basically serving that need. So it's higher in ice cream, which you already mentioned, or for some kitchen items that people need, or very, very bulky packs that basically people may not want to buy on their own, and they may require it last minute. So I think for us, quick commerce is one small part of e-commerce and an important part nevertheless, and as part of the whole, where we are trying to serve this omni-channel consumer for all of their shopping needs with such a broad range of portfolio of business we have. So therefore, I would say that that's just explained to you the role of quick commerce in our business.
Our market shares in quick commerce mirror roughly a grocery market share, so they're roughly in line with the general trade market shares. And our intention, of course, is that in every segment of the market where there's growth, we increase the market shares, and we have basically designed our portfolio and our promotional incentives to ensure that we stay competitive in in quick commerce as well. Even though it's a small part of our total e-commerce business, we want to win in every corner of the market.
Understood. Got that, sir. So the other question that I'd asked on the... Do you see this channel giving opportunity to niche new brands which can ideally, you know, target the affluent consumer and push the premiumization trend? Given, you know, the Nielsen numbers, and all the aggregators are not capturing the slowness, but there is some growth out there in the market. Do you see this can be a possibility?
For us, yeah. Firstly, the notion of quick commerce or e-commerce of infinite shelf, low barriers of entry, et cetera, is all well, but at the end of the day, you know, people scroll through, and we know that we have to drive online availability, we have to drive share of search, we have to pop up in the first few pages. We have to be, we have to have the right promotional, we have to participate in festivals. So we have a playbook for, you know, winning in different channels and within e-commerce, in different what you call pods. And, for us, the way to, you know, not worry about what Nielsen picks up or not, is essentially to stay focused on market shares.
Within each channel, we are measuring all of these channels through a fairly robust method. So we are tracking our market shares in these channels, and as long as we can keep growing them, and if, you know, they go down, we then look at what reasons there are and keep optimizing, is how we sustain. It's no different from playing in e-commerce in other parts or in modern trade, which arguably also, you know, has a similar opportunity for brands to enter, get listed. At the end of the day, may the best brand and mix win, and consumers will prefer what's more superior, has better value. For us, therefore, competitiveness driven through unmissable superiority across all our six Ps is really the mantra. And we measure all of our brands, especially the big ones, across those six Ps, and keep correcting and optimizing.
And that is a discipline we are embedding deeply in the business, and it's something that is going to stand us in good stead, doesn't matter which channel or which shopper mission.
Great. Great to hear that. So my second question is quickly on the Oziva and Wellbeing Nutrition. I know that, you know, you're... You've not taken majority stake yet. Maybe, an update, if you can share on the business. Have you validated or, or has Unilever validated the efficacy claims that those brands make? And any plans you can share on how to scale those businesses up? They seem to be very interesting, you know, products, you know, which the US consumer may want to have. You know, and any plans on higher A&P distribution backing that Unilever brand equity, that you can bring? A quick update on that maybe will be helpful, sir.
Yeah, I'm conscious of time, so sorry, I'll have to be a little brief, but I will answer your question in summary. So both the businesses and we have, as you know, we have a majority stake in Oziva, we have a minority stake in Wellbeing. Both businesses are doing very well. And we are seeing more growth, we are seeing more traction. And these categories, as you know, are at a very budding stage of getting embedded in the consumer ecosystem. There are good signals of that continue to happen. The entire focus on health and wellbeing, which has got elevated, is helping these categories and businesses to do better. With Oziva, we already have our very clear contract in place such that at the end of three-year period, with an agreed pre-agreed formula, we'll end up acquiring the balance of business.
That will happen by end of next year, end of next calendar year. And, with Wellbeing Nutrition, we'll end up having, again, conversation at appropriate time to do what we need to do next. So good news is both the businesses are doing good. Strong brands, gaining very well, share, and we are investing more importantly in this, format and this category demand spaces, where they will keep offering more value in times to come. In the health and wellbeing space, the last point I wanted to make, this is the beginning. This space will only get more traction and more sub-formatted and sub-segmented demand spaces. So as relevant, we have strong set of global brands and, positions, globally and in Unilever, as relevant, will bring more brands, in India, in health and wellbeing space.
Thank you, and wishing you all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will take that as our last question for today. I would now like to hand the conference over to Miss Shilpa Kedia for any closing comments. Over to you, ma'am.
Thank you, Darwin. With that, we now come to the end of the Q&A session. Before we end, let me remind you that the playback of this event will be available on the investor website, investor relation website in a short while. Thank you everyone for your participation. Have a great evening.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. On behalf of Hindustan Unilever Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you all for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.