
Indian winemaker Sula's profit slumps as urban consumers cut back
City dwellers, stretched thin by slow wage growth, have been tightening their belts for several quarters, pressuring sales at consumer-facing corporations, from Dove soapmaker Hindustan Unilever (HLL.NS), opens new tab to Yippee noodles manufacturer ITC (ITC.NS), opens new tab.
Consolidated net profit at Sula, which draws the bulk of its revenue from urban areas, sank to 19.4 million rupees ($221,272) in the first quarter ended June 30, from 146.3 million rupees a year earlier.
Sula's own brands business -- including Dindori, The Source and eponymous wines and makes up nearly 90% of revenue -- clocked an 11% decline in revenue in the quarter.
"Own brands growth was muted due to continued urban demand softness," CEO Rajeev Samant said in a statement.
Sula's wine tourism division posted a 22% growth and record occupancy, benefiting from affluent consumers splurging at its resorts and tasting rooms as they seek new experiences.
Still, that was not enough to cancel out the decline in the company's mainstay wine business.
Total revenue fell 8% to 1.18 billion rupees.
Expenses, on the other hand, increased 6%.
But Sula may be looking at better quarters ahead as consumer goods makers, including ITC and Hindustan Unilever, say they expect easing inflation, lower interest rates, and income tax cuts to reverse a monthslong slowdown.
($1 = 87.6750 Indian rupees)
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
39 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Death of Prince William's businessman pal who 'collapsed after swallowing a bee' sparks a £3billion inheritance row
The death of an Indian billionaire and friend of Prince William who swallowed a bee has triggered a feud over a £3 billion inheritance. Sunjay Kapur, 53, collapsed in front of horrified teammates during the game at Guards Polo Club in Windsor. Indian-born Mr Kapur was thought to have suffered a fatal heart attack after being stung in the mouth, potentially triggering anaphylactic shock. Kapur was the heir too the global car parts giant Sona Comstar, a £2.7 billion business founded by his father. Now the company has been plunged into a bitter succession battle, between the businessman's mother Rani Kapur and the firm's board of directors, The Telegraph reported. Rani Kapur reportedly wrote to the board on July 24 saying her son had died in 'suspicious and unexplained circumstances'. It came just a month after the board unanimously appointed a new chairman on June 23. In the letter, she reportedly accused people in the company of exploiting the family's grief to 'wrestle control' of the company. She said she had been forced to sign documents behind locked doors while under emotional distress. Mrs Kapur claimed she had been blocked from accessing her bank accounts and did not authorise appointments to represent her family. In her letter, which was also sent to India's market regulator, she claimed her late husband, who died in 2015, made her the sole beneficiary of his estate as well as majority shareholder of the Sona Group. The company said Mrs Kapur had not been a shareholder for six years and said she was not majority shareholder of the group. Sunjay Kapur's widow Priya Sachdeva also appears to have sided with Sona Comstar. Ms Sachdeva was appointed as a non-executive director at the company's annual meeting on July 25, despite Ms Kapur's objections and request to delay the meeting. Her office last week shared the coroner's report which confirmed that her husband had died of natural causes. The report said he died from ventricular hypertrophy and ischaemic heart disease and the investigation was closed. Ms Kapur wrote to the UK authorities calling for an investigation into his death, which was rejected. Mr Kapur's sister Mandhire Kapur has also been dragged into the dispute. In an Instagram post, she shared a photograph with her brother and mother saying she would 'protect what you would have wanted, and what Dad dreamed' Mrs Kapur claimed there was a conspiracy to take control of the company away from her family. Vaibhav Gaggar the senior advocate who represents Ms Kapur, told The Telegraph: 'It quite clearly reinforces what she's been saying, that her entire legacy is being usurped and no one is willing to look into the cause of death.' 'It may all be very well interlinked and she has quite unequivocally said there is a conspiracy behind her son's death.'


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Oil gains as US-China tariff pause extension boosts trade hopes
Aug 12 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose on Tuesday as the United States and China extended a pause on higher tariffs, easing concerns an escalation of their trade war would disrupt their economies and crimp fuel demand in the world's two largest oil consumers. Brent crude futures gained 26 cents, or 0.39%, to $66.89 a barrel by 0015 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 22 cents, or 0.34%, to $64.18. U.S. President Donald Trump extended a tariff truce with China by another 90 days, a White House official said on Monday, staving off triple-digit duties on Chinese goods as U.S. retailers prepared for the critical end-of-year holiday season. This raised hopes that an agreement could be attained between the world's two largest economies, and could help sidestep a virtual trade embargo between them. Tariffs risk slowing down economic growth, which could sap global fuel demand and drag oil prices lower. Investors are also looking ahead to a meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin on August 15 in Alaska to negotiate an end to the war in Ukraine. The meeting is set amid heightened U.S. pressure on Russia, with the threat of harsher penalties on Russian oil buyers such as China and India if no peace deal is reached that could upset oil trade flows. "Any peace deal between Russia and Ukraine would end the risk of disruption to Russian oil that has been hovering over the market," ANZ senior commodity strategist Daniel Hynes wrote in a note. Trump set a deadline of last Friday for Russia to agree to peace in Ukraine or have its oil buyers face secondary sanctions, while pressing India to reduce purchases of Russian oil. Washington has also been pressing Beijing to stop buying Russian oil, with Trump threatening to impose secondary tariffs on China. The risk of those sanctions being enacted has receded ahead of the August 15 Trump-Putin meeting. Also on the radar is U.S. inflation data later in the day, that could hint at the Federal Reserve's interest rate path. Any sign that the central bank may cut rates soon would support crude prices.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Trump backs down again with tariff extension for China
President Donald Trump extended a tariff deadline on Chinese goods by another 90 days less than 24 hours until the new trade 'doomsday' hit. He reportedly signed an executive order to pause a scheduled hike as talks between China and the United States continue. The president signed an executive order to postpone the tariff deadline, according to a report from CNBC citing a White House official, one day before it was scheduled to snap into place. Currently, Chinese imports are subject to the president's 10 percent baseline tariffs with an additional 20 percent tariff. The president threatened a massive 245 percent tariff on Chinese goods in April, but has extended it as long as talks and negotiations continue. United States and Chinese officials spent two days in Stockholm in late July emerging in a settlement to extend the ongoing trade 'truce' between both countries. President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping are also in talks to meet to wrap up trade talks and set a deal as negotiations continue. The two leaders last spoke on the phone in June. Both sides are optimistic that they can wrap up talks in late October, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent in an interview with Nikkei Asia. Trump continues using tariffs to force foreign countries into negotiations, even as some of the deadlines keep getting extensions depending on whether progress is made. Tariffs on over 60 countries went into effect at midnight on August 7th, following 18 weeks of tough negotiations. Trump allowed tariffs on Canada to jump to 35 percent, even as the president granted Mexico a 90-day extension. India now faces an additional 25 percent tariff scheduled for August 27 on top of a 25 percent tariff set on August 1. Brazil also has a 50 percent tariff on many of its products.