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Indian Company Investor Calls

HUL Exits March Quarter at 7% USG, Confident FY27 Improves

May 7, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Hindustan Unilever Limited (HUL) — March Quarter & Financial Year 2026 Earnings Call (FY26; quarter ended 31 Mar 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly highlights acceleration and “step-up” in growth momentum, e.g., “highest quarterly growth in 12 quarters” and “exited March quarter ‘26 with 7% USG, accelerating from the 2% USG in FY’25.”
  • Despite geopolitical/cost volatility, they express confidence: “we expect FY ’27 to be better than FY ’26” and “remain confident” on navigating volatility.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Demand & macro: Demand “remained stable” with relief from lower inflation; however, Middle East crisis caused crude-linked commodity spikes and rupee depreciation.
  • Growth engine = volume-led competitiveness: FY26 growth framed as USG driven by UVG (FY26: 5% USG; 4% UVG). March quarter: 8% consolidated revenue growth with 7% underlying sales growth and volumes as primary driver.
  • Portfolio transformation + “fewer, bigger bets”:
  • Rotation into higher-growth demand spaces (e.g., OZiva, Minimalist, and Ice Cream demerger already improving mix).
  • Specific “big bet” capex: Rs. 2,000 crores committed for premium formats in Beauty & Home Care.
  • Omni-channel execution (including Quick Commerce):
  • Quick Commerce capability scaled via a dedicated organization; e-commerce delivered “over 25% growth” in FY26.
  • General Trade execution strengthened: +2 lakh outlets coverage; Modern Trade focus on category captaincy.
  • Margin management discipline amid volatility:
  • EBITDA margin at 23.7% (higher end of guidance).
  • Cost inflation addressed via calibrated pricing and savings funnel; margin guidance reiterated.
  • Organizational simplification for speed:
  • Unified India organization,” Chief Marketing Officer role, and India R&D structure to speed decisions.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Volume drivers, elasticity, and sustainability of turnaround (esp. Lifestyle Nutrition)

  • Core questions
  • What drove UVG/USG (tonnage vs mix; elasticity effects post GST price cuts)?
  • Is Lifestyle Nutrition turnaround sustainable for double-digit growth?
  • Management response
  • UVG attributed to market development, share gains (turnover-weighted), and channel capability/footprint.
  • For Lifestyle Nutrition: drivers cited as pack-price architecture, Horlicks Superfoods relaunch (South), expansion into RTD/protein and continued Boost momentum; “huge headroom” but new segments still small.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Strong framing but limited quantitative split of core vs new segments; sustainability confidence is qualitative (“early signs,” “huge headroom”).

Theme B: Macro risk—El Niño, rainfall, inflation, and FY27 confidence

  • Core questions
  • Could El Niño / milk inflation derail Horlicks/Boost recovery?
  • How confident is management that FY27 will be better given petrol-diesel hikes, inflation, monsoon/rural risk?
  • Management response
  • Horlicks demand resilience: “Horlicks gets drunk both in milk and in water” and nutrition trend supports category.
  • Rural demand risk assessed via reservoir levels, MSP, grain stocks; they stated: no rural demand impact expected unless rainfall <85%.
  • FY27 confidence anchored in low elasticity everyday staples, portfolio breadth, and financial strength.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Clear conditional threshold on rainfall (<85%) is a strong, specific risk framing.
  • Rural subsidy/state-election question: they declined to comment on subsidy differentiation.

Theme C: Margin guidance under input volatility (pricing vs savings)

  • Core questions
  • How maintain margin band with Brent >$120 and rupee weakness?
  • Is pricing likely to be higher/lower in FY27?
  • Management response
  • Material cost inflation: 8%–10% so far; pricing taken 2%–5% depending on portfolio.
  • Savings funnel acceleration and operating leverage support maintaining 22.5%–23.5% mid-term margin band.
  • Pricing guidance: they refused to give a numeric full-year pricing rate, but reiterated top-line confidence.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Strong: margin band described as a range that can flex with cost scenarios.
  • Evasive: no explicit FY27 pricing %; “difficult to give out a number.”

Theme D: Quick Commerce and capex details / acquisition openness

  • Core questions
  • What exactly will Quick Commerce organization do?
  • What is the purpose/scope of Rs. 2,000 cr capex?
  • Would they do bolt-on acquisitions in Quick Commerce white spaces?
  • Management response
  • Quick Commerce: dedicated org for end-to-end GTM (marketing, availability, supply, tech) and channel-specific capability building.
  • Capex: premium formats across Home Care liquids, Personal Care, Beauty.
  • Acquisition openness reaffirmed: “open to bolt-on acquisitions.”
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Strong operational detail on Quick Commerce capability building (availability/customer availability improvement referenced earlier in call).
  • No detailed ROI/expected payback metrics.

Theme E: Home Care pricing behavior vs prior inflation cycles

  • Core questions
  • Why are price hikes “modest” vs prior inflation cycle (e.g., post-Ukraine FY23)?
  • Will premiumization protect volumes and share?
  • Management response
  • Current crude volatility is short-term/geopolitical, not structural; they take measured pricing and rely on covers and savings.
  • Premium mix and low elasticity help navigate; portfolio spans pyramid.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Strong: explicit distinction between structural vs volatile inflation regime.

Theme F: Segment-specific growth headwinds (Personal Care mass drag; Skin Care mass softness)

  • Core questions
  • Personal Care volume decline—confidence in recovery?
  • Skin Care mass drag—how to reach double-digit overall?
  • Management response
  • Personal Care: premium brands (Dove/Pears) growing double-digit; Bodywash gaining share; mass strategy includes disciplined premiumization and Lux support.
  • Skin Care: market premiumizing via format democratization (sunscreen/light moisturizers etc.); examples include Lakme Sun Gel at Rs. 10 and humid/hot format innovation.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • They provided mechanistic strategy (format democratization) but did not quantify how quickly mass drag will reverse.

Theme G: Restocking effects, tea growth softness, and market share data source

  • Core questions
  • Any restocking effect in March quarter?
  • Why tea growth is low-single digit?
  • Bodywash market share gain—data source?
  • Management response
  • No restocking: “no restocking… underlying sales.”
  • Tea softness attributed to year-on-year pricing deflation, not volumes.
  • Bodywash share gain: Nielsen data.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Clear answers; minimal defensiveness.

Theme H: Food strategy alignment with Unilever global direction

  • Core questions
  • Unilever globally moving away from Foods—why HUL doubling down on Horlicks/Boost/Coffee?
  • Management response
  • HUL Foods is distinctively different (local brands, beverages + lifestyle nutrition + Kissan); Foods outside Unilever transaction perimeter; India opportunity cited.
  • Notable / evasive / strong points
  • Direct alignment explanation; no contradiction.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 top-line:FY ’27 to be better than FY ’26” (no numeric growth rate given).
  • Margin guidance (mid-term band):mid-term margin guidance to remain around… 22.5% to 23.5%.”
  • EBITDA margin in March quarter: 23.7% (higher end of guidance).
  • Capex: Rs. 2,000 crores committed for premium formats (Beauty & Home Care).
  • Quick Commerce / e-commerce: qualitative growth framing; e-commerce stated “over 25% growth during the financial year.”

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Cost volatility handling: pricing will be “judicious” and “depending on how the costs pan out, we will be taking further price increases as may be necessary.”
  • Demand outlook: demand stable; rural/urban increasing; confidence supported by portfolio breadth and financial agility.
  • Competitive stance:Competitive volume-led growth is our number one priority” and margin band is flexible to protect competitiveness.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • Acceleration claim:We exited March quarter ‘26 with 7% USG, accelerating from the 2% USG in FY’25.
  • Growth record:highest quarterly growth in 12 quarters.”
  • Margin confidence under volatility:we do feel at this point in time confident enough that we will be able to guide with that band” (22.5%–23.5%).
  • Risk threshold on rural:unless the rainfall is like below 85%, we don’t expect any impact on the rural demand on the H2 as of now.
  • Pricing stance:we will be taking further price increases as may be necessary” (but no full-year %).
  • Horlicks resilience logic:Horlicks gets drunk both in milk and in water.
  • Quick Commerce capability framing: dedicated org to serve Quick Commerce “very different from how we will serve General Trade.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear operational explanations for growth (market development, share gains, channel capability).
– Specific risk framing (rainfall threshold) and explicit cost inflation range (8%–10%).
– Reaffirmed margin band with a credible mechanism (pricing + savings + operating leverage).

Red flags
Limited quantitative disclosure on elasticity impact, mix/tonnage decomposition in the most asked areas (analysts pressed; answers stayed qualitative).
No numeric FY27 pricing guidance, despite repeated questions—could indicate uncertainty.
– Some confidence statements rely on macro assumptions (“headline inflation 4%–5%,” rainfall/reservoirs) that may shift.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current call (May 2026): more optimistic—explicit acceleration and “step-up” narrative; “highest in 12 quarters.”
  • Prior calls:
  • Dec 2025: optimistic but more cautious—talked about recovery and “step-up,” yet still framed as gradual and macro-dependent.
  • Sep 2025 / Jun 2025: more transitional/defensive around GST, monsoon, and commodity volatility; emphasis on “gradual recovery” and maintaining margin range.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic
  • Language moved from “gradual improvement / conducive environment” to clear momentum and exit acceleration.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Margin guidance consistency: HUL repeatedly guided EBITDA margin around the band and stayed within/near it.
  • Delivered: March quarter EBITDA margin 23.7% at higher end; Dec quarter EBITDA margin 23.3% within range.
  • Quick Commerce investment outcomes:
  • Prior statement (Dec 2025): Quick commerce “growing almost 100% quarter-on-quarter” and availability improvements.
  • Current outcome: Quick commerce capability described as “working well,” and e-commerce growth >25%; Quick Commerce organization scaled (no new numeric growth rate provided in this call).
  • Lifestyle Nutrition turnaround:
  • Prior (Sep 2025 / Jun 2025): Horlicks/Boost described as early green shoots / work ahead.
  • Current: Lifestyle Nutrition delivered double-digit growth and management now discusses sustainability and expansion into RTD/protein.
  • Flag: turnaround appears materially delivered, but sustainability is still framed qualitatively (“huge headroom,” “still small segments”).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From macro-driven recovery → execution-led acceleration: earlier calls leaned heavily on GST/monsoon/inflation dynamics; now management emphasizes portfolio transformation + on-ground execution as the primary reason for acceleration.
  • Foods narrative evolving: earlier calls treated Foods as mixed/gradual; now Foods (Horlicks/Boost/Coffee) is a clear growth contributor with expansion into new formats.
  • Organization narrative strengthened: current call adds more detail on Unified India, CMO role, and India R&D—less prominent in earlier calls.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium-High
  • Consistent margin band adherence and repeated cost/pricing mechanics.
  • However, analyst questions on elasticity, pricing quantum, and mix decomposition often receive non-quantitative answers—reducing transparency.
  • No major contradiction detected in guidance direction (FY27 better than FY26 remains consistent with prior “better H2 / better FY27” framing).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: stable → improving momentum (exit March quarter acceleration).
  • Margins: stable band maintained; volatility acknowledged but managed.
  • Expansion: stronger emphasis on premium formats capex and format democratization (Skin Care).
  • Channel: Quick Commerce moved from “future-critical” to “scaled capability with dedicated org.”

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The call increasingly uses “portfolio spans pyramid” as a hedge against macro shocks—this is a recurring defense, but now paired with specific execution metrics (outlet coverage, e-commerce growth, rainfall threshold).
  • Management’s confidence in FY27 being better than FY26 is now supported by observed acceleration (7% USG exit), not just forward-looking optimism—this is a meaningful credibility upgrade vs earlier “gradual recovery” language.