Consumer
August 11, 2021

Why we like Consumer Brands

India is at a unique cross roads in its history. We have a fast-growing economy, a young, large, educated, and aspiring population.

Our GDP per capita stands at $1700, similar to where China was in 2005. In terms of disposable income we have hit the ₹ 1 lakh mark for the first time. Given an individual’s fixed costs grow no faster than the rate of inflation, disposable incomes tend to see far higher growth rates than the overall economic growth, thereby creating non-linear growth in spending power and fueling domestic consumption.

Simultaneously, we have achieved rapid internet penetration. Today, we have an active internet base of over 350 million people and an effective internet penetration that has tripled in the last 5 years alone. The rapid rise of the internet has created a much more level playing field for all income strata in terms of our awareness and aspirations. Today’s consumers, whether in metros or rural areas, across social strata, are all converging on trends demanding the latest and coolest products.

As a result, today’s relatively low spending power yet high levels of awareness create a unique access-aspiration gap. However, therein lies one of India’s largest opportunities – that of home-grown consumer brands. Consumer brands are born out of a consumer’s need for standardized, high quality and affordable consumption of goods. There has never been a better time than now, for that need to be more applicable in India.

India’s consumer spending is dominated by basic items like fresh foods and groceries. As any economy matures, that mix is bound to change. Looking ahead, we are most excited about Indians wanting to eat better, look better and dress better! Specifically, the sectors of fashion, packaged foods and personal care seem most attractive for churning out home-grown consumer brands. Each is grossly underpenetrated in branded consumption today e.g., Fashion is at 15% vs. China at 60% and packaged foods at 22% vs. China at 52%. Numerically, this translates into over $150 billion in addressable market opportunity.

Now, what does it take to build a great consumer brand? The best consumer brands are built on a great product. Great products are themselves born out of a deep understanding of consumer psyche, one that often enables the best founders to see around corners and predict the needs of people before they even know it. Such products allow for the most robust, sustainable and monetizable businesses. The world over, the best brands have been built around hero products that drive revenues and profit. For example, the iPhone is the majority of Apple’s sales while commanding a 60%+ gross margin. Louis Vuitton took something as mundane as a bag and turned it into a 65%+ GM business. Even affordable goods like Zara and Coca Cola both command 60% odd gross margin levels. All these enabled by truly unique, high quality, aspirational products.

Although the product is core to a brand, there are both supply side and demand side pillars that are necessary to build and carry the brand. The three most important of these pillars are supply chain, distribution and marketing.

The beauty in brands being built today, is the unique ability to leverage technology. Technology across all three pillars can today enable much more capital efficiency as well as a non-linear growth curve. Traditionally considered capital intensive and slow businesses, some of the best brands today have returns of capital as high as 50-60% and growth rates of in excess of 100% year on year.

In supply chain, companies are using the power of data to optimize just-in-time models to reduce working capital needs, thereby enabling much higher returns on capital and quicker feedback loops to enable better products.

Distribution in India has traditionally been among the most complex and friction-full experiences. It is among the prime reasons that behemoths like HUL participate in businesses as vastly diverse as chocolates and shampoos. Online distribution, however, has given a distinct advantage for upstarts to build new products and introduce them to the consumer directly. While the answer to scale still remains a mix of both offline and online i.e. omni-channel distribution, online retail provides significant velocity to the growth of new brands. It also allows for swaths of consumer data to be captured that again allows for yet better products.

Finally, the marketing. Story telling or creating the narrative around a product is as core as it gets to building a new brand. It includes not just effectively communicating the core value proposition, but also being able to establish an emotional connect with the consumer. Again, technology and the internet, today, allows the story telling to be personal, and targeted. Not only that it allows you to acquire customers cheaply and re-target, thereby making it easy to sell ten items to one individual as opposed to one each to ten different customers. This in turn, makes the long term value vis a vis the acquisition costs a lot more viable.

The need of the hour is for us to build businesses that create true value for the Indian consumer and can withstand the might of international behemoths dumping capital into India. Consumer brands allow for both. They not only create true value, but, if done right, can create highly differentiated businesses, with hard to replicate products, supply chains and consumer connects. All moats that are very hard to scale for new entrants.

As Warren Buffet puts it – a good business is like a large castle, with wide moats, led by a knight one can trust. Deep markets, defensible business models and the best entrepreneurs allow for all three in consumer brands.

For more information, write to us: namaste@Z47.com.
Stay connected with Z47.

Watch more such podcasts

Consumer
November 10, 2025

The Chinese Internet Empire

Consumer
May 9, 2025

Where to play: Strategic Revenue Choices for Consumer Brands

Consumer
February 25, 2025

Deconstructing P&L: What Most Founders Misunderstand

Consumer
August 11, 2021

Why we like Consumer Brands

Article
Listen to article

India is at a unique cross roads in its history. We have a fast-growing economy, a young, large, educated, and aspiring population.

Our GDP per capita stands at $1700, similar to where China was in 2005. In terms of disposable income we have hit the ₹ 1 lakh mark for the first time. Given an individual’s fixed costs grow no faster than the rate of inflation, disposable incomes tend to see far higher growth rates than the overall economic growth, thereby creating non-linear growth in spending power and fueling domestic consumption.

Simultaneously, we have achieved rapid internet penetration. Today, we have an active internet base of over 350 million people and an effective internet penetration that has tripled in the last 5 years alone. The rapid rise of the internet has created a much more level playing field for all income strata in terms of our awareness and aspirations. Today’s consumers, whether in metros or rural areas, across social strata, are all converging on trends demanding the latest and coolest products.

As a result, today’s relatively low spending power yet high levels of awareness create a unique access-aspiration gap. However, therein lies one of India’s largest opportunities – that of home-grown consumer brands. Consumer brands are born out of a consumer’s need for standardized, high quality and affordable consumption of goods. There has never been a better time than now, for that need to be more applicable in India.

India’s consumer spending is dominated by basic items like fresh foods and groceries. As any economy matures, that mix is bound to change. Looking ahead, we are most excited about Indians wanting to eat better, look better and dress better! Specifically, the sectors of fashion, packaged foods and personal care seem most attractive for churning out home-grown consumer brands. Each is grossly underpenetrated in branded consumption today e.g., Fashion is at 15% vs. China at 60% and packaged foods at 22% vs. China at 52%. Numerically, this translates into over $150 billion in addressable market opportunity.

Now, what does it take to build a great consumer brand? The best consumer brands are built on a great product. Great products are themselves born out of a deep understanding of consumer psyche, one that often enables the best founders to see around corners and predict the needs of people before they even know it. Such products allow for the most robust, sustainable and monetizable businesses. The world over, the best brands have been built around hero products that drive revenues and profit. For example, the iPhone is the majority of Apple’s sales while commanding a 60%+ gross margin. Louis Vuitton took something as mundane as a bag and turned it into a 65%+ GM business. Even affordable goods like Zara and Coca Cola both command 60% odd gross margin levels. All these enabled by truly unique, high quality, aspirational products.

Although the product is core to a brand, there are both supply side and demand side pillars that are necessary to build and carry the brand. The three most important of these pillars are supply chain, distribution and marketing.

The beauty in brands being built today, is the unique ability to leverage technology. Technology across all three pillars can today enable much more capital efficiency as well as a non-linear growth curve. Traditionally considered capital intensive and slow businesses, some of the best brands today have returns of capital as high as 50-60% and growth rates of in excess of 100% year on year.

In supply chain, companies are using the power of data to optimize just-in-time models to reduce working capital needs, thereby enabling much higher returns on capital and quicker feedback loops to enable better products.

Distribution in India has traditionally been among the most complex and friction-full experiences. It is among the prime reasons that behemoths like HUL participate in businesses as vastly diverse as chocolates and shampoos. Online distribution, however, has given a distinct advantage for upstarts to build new products and introduce them to the consumer directly. While the answer to scale still remains a mix of both offline and online i.e. omni-channel distribution, online retail provides significant velocity to the growth of new brands. It also allows for swaths of consumer data to be captured that again allows for yet better products.

Finally, the marketing. Story telling or creating the narrative around a product is as core as it gets to building a new brand. It includes not just effectively communicating the core value proposition, but also being able to establish an emotional connect with the consumer. Again, technology and the internet, today, allows the story telling to be personal, and targeted. Not only that it allows you to acquire customers cheaply and re-target, thereby making it easy to sell ten items to one individual as opposed to one each to ten different customers. This in turn, makes the long term value vis a vis the acquisition costs a lot more viable.

The need of the hour is for us to build businesses that create true value for the Indian consumer and can withstand the might of international behemoths dumping capital into India. Consumer brands allow for both. They not only create true value, but, if done right, can create highly differentiated businesses, with hard to replicate products, supply chains and consumer connects. All moats that are very hard to scale for new entrants.

As Warren Buffet puts it – a good business is like a large castle, with wide moats, led by a knight one can trust. Deep markets, defensible business models and the best entrepreneurs allow for all three in consumer brands.

We are excited about the innovation and growth opportunities in this sector.

If you are considering building in the footwear space, we’d love to chat.
Drop us a line at consumer@matrixpartners.in

Learnt something new? Follow us!

Vs NIFTY 500
+9.1%
Since Jan 2024
USD/INR
₹95.19
▲ +0.6%
Daily change • 1 Ju1 2025
128.1
▲ +28.1%
Since Jan 2024
NIFTY 500
129.1
▲ +19.0%
Since Jan 2024

Index Performance

+28.1%
Since Jan 2024
NIFTY 500
+19.0%
Since Jan 2024

Z47^fortyseven is up +23.9% since its January 2024 base date, versus Nifty 500's +18.4%, ahead by 550 bps.

The cohort moved +4.7% over the month versus Nifty 500's +2.5%, leading by 220 bps.

Anchored in domestic demand and rising digital adoption, the cohort remained resilient amid global headwinds.

Consumer Tech was the best-performing sector at +9.2% last month, driven by sustained growth in consumer demand and strength in consumer-internet platforms.

Largest Constituents  ·  The Names That Anchor The Index

1.
Eternal
Quick-commerce leadership and continued investment
▲ +12.8%
2.
Groww
Broking market-share gains and margin-funding growth.
▲ +10.4%
3.
Lenskart
Store densification and margin expansion.
▲ +2.4%

Top Gainers  ·  Key Drivers

1 MONTH RETURN
1.
CarTrade
Auto-marketplace dominance and a cash-rich balance sheet.
▲ +59.4%
2.
 Amagi Media Labs
Profitability turnaround and AI-led cloud media adoption.
▲ +31.4%

Top Laggards  ·  Key Drivers

1 MONTH RETURN
1.
Fractal Analytics
Enterprise AI spending trends and post-listing share supply.
▼ -10.8%
2.
MedPlus Health
Pharmacy-margin pressure and competitive intensity.
▼ -6.6%

Key Themes  ·  Latest Results

In Q4FY26, Z47^fortyseven's cohort grew top line ~39% YoY, more than 3x the broad market's ~12% growth.

Operating leverage lifted net margins around 500 bps into positive territory, even as broad-market net margins remained roughly flat.

With 40 of 47 companies now profitable, the cohort reflects a broader shift toward profitable growth over growth at any cost.

AI adoption runs deeper across this cohort than in the broader market, with companies using it to drive growth and reshape demand, not just improve efficiency.

Cash generation is increasingly defining the winners, enabling market leaders like Eternal, CarTrade, and PB Fintech to fund acquisitions and expansion from their own balance sheets.

Market & Macro Context

The cohort saw several block deals this month, including sizeable stake sales in Lenskart, Delhivery, Honasa, and Shadowfax.

Ownership continues to shift from foreign investors to domestic institutions, creating a more durable shareholder base.

AI remained the defining technology investment theme, driving capital deployment across both private and public markets.

IPO Takeaway · Kissht

Listed May 2026

A modest listing pop followed by strong post-listing gains reinforced the market's preference for asset quality and disciplined underwriting over pure loan-book growth.

The listing helped reset perceptions around unsecured lending, creating a constructive valuation anchor for the issuers that follow.

The buyer mix was a notable positive — strong participation from long-only domestic institutions supporting a durable post-listing ownership base.

Net Read

Fundamentals continued to strengthen across the cohort, with growth, margins, and cash generation improving in tandem.

Performance dispersion widened, with profitability and earnings quality increasingly distinguishing the strongest performers from the rest.

Disclaimer

Z47^fortyseven is published for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, or any offer, solicitation, or recommendation to buy or sell securities. Index performance is historical and should not be construed as indicative of future results.

Explore the live index
Read Previous Article On Land & Expand
Read Next Article On Land & Expand