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December 2, 2015
By: Amin Alkhatib
Euromonitor International
A few months ago, the Russian Federal Service for Surveillance on Consumer Rights Protection and Human Wellbeing (Rospotrebnadzor) ordered Russian retailers to remove 12 home and personal care SKUs from their shelves, including Henkel’s Persil and Procter & Gamble’s Tide/Ariel as well as products from five other home or personal care manufacturers. This move by Russia’s consumer market regulator would, on the face of it, appear to represent another round of bans echoing similar moves that have affected other industries since March 2014. Much of the international media furor suggested this was indeed the case—a continuation of the “sanction wars” that ensued following 2014’s economic embargo. Russia’s initial bans were exclusively targeted at imports of perishable foodstuffs from the EU and the US as a reaction to the economic embargo imposed on the country. While the media cried out “sanctions,” this was a misrepresentation of the underlying issue. The regulator had, in fact, only obliged retailers to remove a narrow range of products (12 SKUs) due to safety concerns over toxicity levels. The reaction by the market following the regulator’s removal order set in motion a chain of events unfavorable to the industry. According to the APCoHM (Russian Association of Perfumery, Cosmetics, Household Chemistry and Hygienic Goods Manufacturers), the vagueness in the regulator’s statement behind the removal of the 12 SKUs caused concern among retailers. Russian retailers were concerned that the ban could be extended to a wider portfolio, so they took the cautionary step of halting the purchase and stocking of brands manufactured by the seven cited companies. That was the case with Henkel’s Vernel, which took a hit as retailers independently decided to remove it from their shelves, despite it not being a brand listed by Rospotrebnadzor among the three Henkel SKUs that were included. Why a Ban Is Unlikely Conditions in the Russian home care market are vastly different to those in the food import market for a number of reasons. The Russian government’s imposition of a ban on home care goods does not make sense; firstly, because the two biggest companies that are affected by the product ban, although multinational, mostly manufacture their products domestically. In fact, Henkel Russia announced earlier this year that it had opened its ninth production facility in Russia, thus a ban in this market would be a greatly felt disruptive action, and one that would be blamed on the government. Secondly, if the restrictions on the respective home care SKUs were due to safety concerns over toxicity, the issue should be quickly resolved following any consultation with the regulator and product adjustment by the manufacturers. Otherwise, if the restriction is a political one, then intensifying bans on domestically produced multinational home care products will further feed inflationary pressures. Henkel and Procter & Gamble accounted for around 45% of market value sales in 2014, according to Euromonitor International, making an outright ban problematic (and likely downright unpopular) for the government. Russian home care manufacturers have a relatively small production capacity and will struggle to meet any sudden excess demand, resulting in a jump in the average price of the consumer’s shopping basket. The sudden limiting of supply of home care products will not only impact the market, but it will also echo across the wider consumer pool. So this will not only raise the average prices paid by Russian consumers, but will also cause concerns about the disappearance of well-known brands from the shelves. Thirdly, the aforementioned multinational home care companies have dominant positions in Russia, driven by the strength of their brands. Russian consumers prefer European and US brands due to their reliance on the quality that they are perceived to have, as well as the support the brands get from innovative product line extensions and wide promotional campaigns. In the hypothetical case of an outright ban on key home care brands, Russian consumers will likely obtain their favorite home care brands via the informal market. There is no strong evidence to support the idea that imports from emerging manufacturing markets, such as Turkey, Brazil or China, could potentially replace a supply vacuum left by European or US home care brands. Russian consumers might also be unwilling to downgrade their home care basket to less preferred Russian brands or less well-known imported ones. Added to that is the fact that local home care manufacturers or newly imported ones do not necessarily have the same level of brand equity as that of the multinational brands, and will therefore struggle to convince Russian consumers to opt for their products. All in all, a ban is highly unlikely to be expanded toward a wider range of home care portfolios. APCoHM, the industry representative, is already in dialogue with Rospotrebnadzor to try and disclose the details behind the SKU restrictions. The industry and retailers in Russia will just have to keep their ear to ground and wait for the regulators to respond with further instructions.
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