M&A deals in FMCG space to accelerate in coming years, Rothschild & Co’s MD says

India’s market for packaged consumer goods is expected to reach $220 billion in 2025, up from the $167 billion in 2023. The size is expected to grow further to $192 billion by the end of 2024, according to a report by TeamLease Services released earlier this year.
Suneera Tandon
Published10 Jul 2024, 08:08 PM IST
Post-covid, consumer goods makers have lapped up assets spanning spice makers, wellness brands as well as organic food companies.
Mumbai: Deal-making activity in India's packaged consumer goods space is expected to accelerate over the next four-to-five years, but fewer potential targets will likely drive up valuations for such deals, Subhakanta Bal, managing director at financial advisory group Rothschild & Co, said.
He said that both domestic and multinational FMCG companies will look to buy out strong regional and national brands to build scale and diversify their offerings.
Deal activity is expected to be higher in the packaged foods space as more companies build a wider portfolio and gain ground in a market that remains under-penetrated, Bal told Mint, adding that domestic companies are likely to be more aggressive in snapping up regional local players as they try to build scale and size of business.
Play
Unmute
Loaded: 2.62%
Fullscreen
Read more: A half-hearted recipe to fix India’s consumption woes
“We do expect very strong outcomes on the strategic side (compared to private equity). That’s because if there is a corporate deal—private equity will obviously be a very formidable competitor. But if it is a brand deal, companies are better positioned to buy the asset compared to private equity.  Because they already have the distribution—all they are doing is plucking the brand out of this company and putting it into their distribution infrastructure,” he said.
Globally, Rothschild & Co works with consumer companies such as Nestlé and Diageo. Bal has been associated with Rothschild & Co since 2007 and is responsible for advising businesses on M&A, strategy, and financing, as well as investment in healthcare, pharma, life sciences, chemicals and consumer sectors.

Post-covid, consumer goods makers such as ITC Ltd, Dabur India, Hindustan Unilever Ltd and Tata Consumer Products have lapped up assets spanning spice makers, wellness brands as well as organic food companies.
In 2022, Dabur acquired a majority stake in spice maker Badshah Masala. Earlier this year, Tata Consumer Products Ltd spent ₹5,100 crore acquiring condiment and ready-to-cook food maker maker Capital Foods while separately paying ₹1,900 crore for wellness food company Organic India.
Read more: ‘India to see next set of IPO-bound firms in niche sectors from tier-II markets’
Mint earlier reported that private equity firms Blackstone, Temasek Holdings and Bain Capital are evaluating a controlling stake in Haldiram Snacks Food Pvt. Ltd. In the past three years alone, the consumer sector saw $2.61 billion being poured into deals—including private equity funding as well as acquisitions, according to data sourced from investment bank Avendus. Mint had earlier reported that several large FMCG companies, including Dabur India and Tata Consumer, continue to have strong appetite for acquisitions.