Monsoons, Markets & FMCG Returns
This report analyses the relationship between Indian monsoon performance and FMCG equity returns across 2009–2024, using Nifty FMCG Index data against Nifty 50 and IMD rainfall records.
Key Finding
Normal and excess monsoon years have generally been associated with positive FMCG returns, but rainfall alone does not reliably predict market outperformance. Other macro factors frequently dominate.
Monsoon–FMCG Pattern
- Normal monsoon years averaged +15.2% FMCG return over 2009–2024
- Deficient years averaged –14.3% FMCG return
- FMCG outperformed Nifty 50 in 9 of 16 years studied
- 2020 was a significant outlier — normal monsoon, but FMCG underperformed Nifty by 35%
- 2016 showed highest FMCG outperformance (+31.2%) in a normal monsoon year
What Monsoons Actually Drive
- Rural consumption via agricultural income and kharif crop output
- Demand for categories like oral care, hair care, skin care in rural markets
- Reservoir levels and water availability for food & beverage manufacturing
- Packaged goods penetration in semi-urban and rural areas
Gaps & Limitations
- Correlation shown is descriptive — causation not established
- Spatial distribution of rainfall (not just total volume) is critical but not captured here
- Input cost changes (palm oil, packaging) can offset rural demand gains
- FII flows, RBI policy, and global commodity cycles are confounding variables
Conclusion
The monsoon is a meaningful input for FMCG demand forecasting, particularly for rural-dependent categories. However, it is one variable among several and should not be treated as a standalone market signal for FMCG equity positioning.
Sources: IMD, NSE, CMIE, Nifty FMCG Index data, SBSI analysis
Context & Scope
India's southwest monsoon delivers roughly 70–80% of the country's annual rainfall between June and September. Agricultural output, rural incomes, and downstream consumer demand are all materially affected by monsoon performance — making it a foundational variable for any analysis of the FMCG sector, which draws a significant share of its revenues from rural and semi-urban India This year, 2026, with El Nino threatening to play havoc, there is already concern on the monsoon In this context, I thought it an opportune time to analyse the impact that monsoons have on FMCG, and if the overall trend maintains in 2026.
This analysis examines 16 years of data (2009–2024) covering annual Nifty FMCG Index returns, Nifty 50 returns, and India Meteorological Department (IMD) monsoon categorisation based on deviation from Long Period Average (LPA). The dataset classifies years as deficient/drought (<95% LPA), normal (95–105% LPA), and good/excess (>105% LPA).
The intent is to assess whether and how consistently monsoon conditions translate into FMCG equity market performance — and to identify where the relationship holds and where it does not.
Scope NoteThis analysis is confined to monsoon impact on the FMCG sector as reflected in the Nifty FMCG Index. It does not cover individual company-level analysis, sectoral sub-segments in isolation, or medium-term structural FMCG trends beyond the monsoon variable.
Category & Technology Definitions
FMCG Sector
Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) refers to products consumed at high frequency and sold at relatively low per-unit cost. In the Indian context, this includes food & beverages, personal care, home care, and over-the-counter health products. The Nifty FMCG Index tracks the top FMCG companies listed on the NSE and serves as the primary performance benchmark used here.
Monsoon Categories (IMD)
The IMD classifies the southwest monsoon season against the Long Period Average (LPA) — the 50-year average rainfall baseline. A year is categorised as deficient/drought if actual rainfall is below 95% of LPA, normal if it falls between 95% and 105%, and good/excess if it exceeds 105%. The LPA itself is periodically updated.
LPA Deviation (%)
LPA deviation expresses how much actual rainfall differs from the Long Period Average, stated as a percentage. A deviation of +9% (as in 2010) means rainfall was 9% above average. A deviation of –19.2% (as in 2012) indicates a severe shortfall. This metric is used throughout the dataset as the monsoon performance variable.
Analytical CautionLPA deviation is a national aggregate figure. It does not capture spatial distribution of rainfall across states, which has material implications for crop output and regional rural income. Two years may show identical LPA deviations whilst experiencing very different geographic distributions of rainfall — with significantly different effects on agricultural and consumer outcomes.
Annual Data: 2009–2024
| Year | LPA Deviation (%) | Monsoon Category | FMCG Return (%) | Nifty 50 Return (%) | FMCG Outperformance (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | –17.0 | Deficient | –18.5 | –18.2 | –0.3 |
| 2010 | +9.0 | Normal | +32.5 | +16.9 | +15.6 |
| 2011 | –9.1 | Deficient | –11.2 | –22.4 | +11.2 |
| 2012 | –19.2 | Deficient | –22.8 | –25.4 | +2.6 |
| 2013 | +6.0 | Normal | +27.5 | +27.9 | –0.4 |
| 2014 | –12.0 | Deficient | –15.2 | +10.2 | –25.4 |
| 2015 | –18.8 | Deficient | –24.5 | –2.6 | –21.9 |
| 2016 | +8.4 | Normal | +29.5 | –1.7 | +31.2 |
| 2017 | +10.0 | Normal | +38.2 | +49.1 | –10.9 |
| 2018 | +1.3 | Normal | –3.5 | –5.6 | +2.1 |
| 2019 | +7.3 | Normal | +15.8 | +14.2 | +1.6 |
| 2020 | +7.6 | Normal | +22.8 | +57.9 | –35.1 |
| 2021 | +12.2 | Good/Excess | +28.5 | +21.8 | +6.7 |
| 2022 | +6.7 | Normal | –18.4 | –17.1 | –1.3 |
| 2023 | 0.0 | Normal | +8.9 | –2.0 | +10.9 |
| 2024 | +8.0 | Normal | +22.5 | +24.6 | –2.1 |
Visual Analysis
Analysis: Strong Points, Gaps & Contradictions
- All five deficient years (2009, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015) produced negative FMCG returns — a consistent directional relationship.
- The sole good/excess year in the dataset (2021, +12.2% deviation) produced positive FMCG returns (+28.5%) and outperformance over Nifty 50 (+6.7%).
- Normal monsoon years broadly correlate with positive FMCG returns — 8 of 10 normal years showed positive FMCG returns.
- The data span (2009–2024) covers multiple monsoon cycles, lending some reliability to directional patterns.
- 2020: Normal monsoon (+7.6% LPA), yet FMCG underperformed Nifty 50 by –35.1% — the largest gap in the dataset. COVID-19 market dynamics dominated entirely.
- 2017: Normal monsoon (+10%), FMCG returned +38.2% yet underperformed Nifty 50 by –10.9%, owing to broader market rally.
- 2011: Deficient monsoon (–9.1% LPA), yet FMCG outperformed Nifty 50 by +11.2% — suggesting FMCG's defensive nature in down markets can override monsoon weakness.
- 2014: Deficient monsoon, but Nifty 50 returned +10.2% — a divergence explained by the strong BJP election mandate triggering a broad equity rally.
- FMCG outperformance frequency (9/16) is only marginally above coin-flip probability.
- No spatial breakdown of rainfall — national LPA aggregates mask state-level heterogeneity critical to crop output and rural income.
- No kharif crop output data included — the direct channel between monsoon and rural purchasing power is not quantified.
- No input cost data (palm oil, packaging materials, crude-linked logistics) — FMCG margins depend heavily on these, which can neutralise demand-side gains from a good monsoon.
- No FII/DII flow data — foreign institutional flows can dominate equity index movements in any year.
- One good/excess year (2021) in 16 years is insufficient to draw robust conclusions about that category's market behaviour.
- Any causal claim that "monsoon causes FMCG returns" is not supported by this data — direction is correlational only.
- Treating the monsoon as a forward indicator for FMCG equity positioning is not validated — the relationship breaks down in years with dominant macro events (elections, COVID-19, global rate cycles).
- The dataset does not support sub-category claims (e.g., "beverages outperform personal care in good monsoon years") — no segment-level data is present.
Practical Monsoon Impact Mechanisms
Agricultural Income & Rural Consumption
A normal or excess monsoon supports kharif crop output — rice, pulses, oilseeds, cotton. Strong agricultural output translates into improved farm income, which directly sustains demand for FMCG products in rural markets. According to the Census of India 2011 (the most recent available), over 65% of India's population was rural at the time of that census. Rural India contributes approximately 35–40% of total FMCG revenues, with that share trending upward.
Water Availability for Manufacturing
Adequate monsoon rainfall replenishes reservoir levels and groundwater — directly relevant for food and beverage manufacturers who depend on water as a primary input. Deficient monsoons can raise water procurement costs and, in some instances, require operational adjustments at plant level, particularly in water-stressed states such as Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Rajasthan.
Distribution Infrastructure
Heavy or erratic monsoon rainfall — particularly flooding — disrupts road-based distribution networks. India's rural FMCG supply chain is heavily dependent on roads and last-mile distributors. Floods in states like Bihar, Assam, and coastal Andhra Pradesh periodically disrupt stocks at wholesale and retail levels, delaying restocking cycles by several weeks.
Health & Hygiene Category Demand
Monsoon-related disease outbreaks — waterborne illnesses, vector-borne diseases such as dengue and malaria, and gastrointestinal infections — drive short-term upticks in ORS (oral rehydration salts), antiseptic, hand hygiene, and water purification product categories. These are seasonal demand pulses rather than sustained structural shifts.
ObservationThe demand stimulus from a normal monsoon primarily benefits rural and semi-urban markets through the agricultural income channel. Urban FMCG demand is less directly correlated with monsoon performance and is more sensitive to wage growth, inflation, and urban employment trends.
Performance Summary by Monsoon Category
| Monsoon Category | Years in Period | Avg FMCG Return (%) | Avg Nifty 50 Return (%) | Avg Outperformance (%) | FMCG Positive Return (Count) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deficient/Drought | 5 | –18.2 | –11.6 | –6.8 | 0 / 5 |
| Normal | 10 | +17.4 | +16.9 | +1.6 | 8 / 10 |
| Good/Excess | 1 | +28.5 | +21.8 | +6.7 | 1 / 1 |
Statistical CautionWith only one excess year in the 16-year dataset, the "Good/Excess" category average reflects a single observation (2021) and cannot be treated as a representative mean. The deficient and normal category averages are more robust, based on 5 and 10 observations respectively.
Conclusions
The monsoon is a real and quantifiable input into FMCG sector fundamentals — particularly through the agricultural income and rural consumption channel. However, it is one variable among several and does not reliably determine equity market outcomes in any single year.
The data establish a clear directional pattern: every deficient monsoon year in this dataset produced a negative FMCG return, and most normal/excess monsoon years produced positive returns. This is consistent with the economic logic of rural income dependency.
However, FMCG outperformance relative to Nifty 50 — the question of whether the sector is a better bet in good monsoon years — is not reliably established. In 7 of 16 years, FMCG underperformed Nifty 50 irrespective of monsoon conditions. The dominant factors in those years were broader macro events: the post-COVID-19 cyclical rally (2020), the 2014 election-driven broader market surge, and the 2017 broad bull run.
FMCG's defensive characteristic — its tendency to limit downside better than broader indices in weak years — is also evident. In several deficient monsoon years (2011, 2012), FMCG outperformed Nifty 50 not by generating returns but by losing less.
Practical ImplicationFor FMCG companies, the monsoon is a meaningful input for demand-side planning — rural go-to-market strategy, SKU prioritisation, and distributor stock planning. For equity investors, the monsoon is a useful contextual indicator but insufficient as a standalone signal for portfolio positioning. Input costs, volume recovery lag, and macro-market conditions have historically been equally or more decisive.