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India's Marico expects income uptick in core categories for FY25; focus on foods sector

India's Marico , which owns the Saffola and Parachute brand names of packaged oils, expects earnings growth to exceed its volume development in financial 2025, it stated on Monday, adding that it would strongly scale up food and personal care portfolios.

The consumer goods major stated it expects a progressive income uptick in its core categories on account of stabilising macro-indicators and a regular monsoon projection this year.

It intends to scale up the foods and premium individual care portfolios to enhance profitability specifications, and expects its share of domestic income from these sections to broaden to about 25% by FY27 from about 20% presently. We intend to grow Foods at 20% substance annual growth rate, it stated.

Marico included that it aims to preserve its double-digit percentage development momentum, on a consistent currency basis, in FY25 and beyond in its global service.

The business posted a 5.3% rise in combined net profit to 3.18 billion rupees ($ 38.1 million) for the 4th quarter.

Nevertheless, it missed analysts' typical price quote of 3.23 billion rupees, as per LSEG information, as neither cost cuts in essential domestic portfolios nor new product ranges might sway consumer demand.

For the quarter, earnings from operations rose 2% to 22.78 billion rupees, snapping a three-quarter run of falling income, but it missed out on experts' average price quotes of 22.87 billion rupees.

The company added that it intends to back its outlook with significant financial investments and demand-generation initiatives throughout the year.

Marico's shares turned volatile at the close of trade as outcomes can be found in 15 minutes before the closing bell, previously ending 2.6% higher. They are down 2.8% up until now this year.

Amongst peers, Hindustan Unilever missed out on quarterly incomes estimates but stated a recovery in demand in backwoods is underway, while Nestle India reported a. bigger-than-expected increase owing to greater product prices.