Coca-Cola expects its juice brand Maaza to be another billion-dollar brand in the next two years and is not worried about the entry of new players in the carbonated beverages market.
The cola major is also enhancing its play in the premium hydration space by brands such as Schweppes and Smartwater and driving penetration in premium channels.
Besides, it is pushing its small-pack strategy to grow household penetration amid inflationary woes.
It expects the rural market to bounce back on the back of favourable factors such as good monsoon, pick-up in the jobs market and government investment on infrastructure generation, Coca-Cola President (India and Southwest Asia) Sanket Ray said in a media roundtable on Tuesday.
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"We would love our juice brand Maaza to become a billion-dollar brand and that is clearly our ambition. But it may take longer and may not happen next year.
"With the surge in mango pulp price, we do not know how next year will shape up. If it happens next year that will be good. But it should happen by 2024," Ray said.
In January this year, Coca-Cola had said its Indian soft drink brand Thums Up had become a billion-dollar brand in 2021.
Maaza is a mango-based drink made from the pulp of the Alphonso variety.
Asked about the current size of Maaza's business, Ray said, "We should end this year around Rs 4,500 crore to Rs 5,000 crore." Maaza was acquired by Coca-Cola from Ramesh Chauhan of Parle Bisleri in 1993, along with brands like Thums Up, Limca, Citra and Gold Spot, when the Atlanta-headquartered company had reentered the Indian market.
When asked about the market dynamics after the entry of big companies in the beverages segment, Ray said it is positive and will only help the category to expand.
According to him, entry of the two home-grown majors is a "great opportunity" albeit with enhanced competition and they would also invest to develop the market further and bring innovations to evolve the category and ultimately benefit the consumers.
Ray, however, also said the entry of big players can result in "some disruptions at the local level" leading to consolidation, but pricing will not be a game changer.
"This category penetration is one of the lowest in FMCG. Coke and Pepsi do not have enough budget to get into that," he said when asked how the market dynamics would be with their entry.
In its latest global results, Coca-Cola had said it had continued to strengthen in the first half of the year with gains in market share of sparkling offerings in India.
Coca-Cola Company Chairman and CEO James Quincey had said: "We drove 2.5 billion transactions in India at affordable price points through the expansion of returnable glass bottles and single-serve PET packages."