Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

After Remittance Slump, Mexican Households Retreat To Essentials And Smaller Packs


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Kimberly-Clark de México is sounding the same alarm many retailers whisper: everyday spending is soft and unlikely to rebound fast.

The company sees a split market-well-off households still picking premium brands while stretched families trade down to cheaper options and smaller packs.

It's redirecting effort to under-served segments and sharpening price-pack strategies, aiming to deliver stronger results in 2026 rather than promising a quick fix.

The story behind the story is a cooling household engine. Consumer confidence slipped in September to 46.5. Formal jobs have grown only modestly this year, up about 1.5 percent versus December.

The remittance tide that buoyed millions of families has ebbed: January–August inflows reached $40.47 billion, down 5.9 percent from a year earlier.

Inflation stayed within the target band at 3.76 percent in September, and the policy rate sits at 7.5 percent-lower than before but still enough to keep credit dear for many households.


Mexico's Consumer Staples Show Resilience Amid Slowdown
At the checkout, the slowdown shows up in lackluster same-store sales for supermarkets and department stores, with specialty chains doing better thanks to targeted niches.

K-C's own numbers capture this reality. Third-quarter net sales nudged up 2 percent to MXN 13.4 billion, supported by consumer products, while exports fell on weaker master-roll sales.

EBITDA margin held at 25 percent; net income was roughly MXN 1.7 billion, down year on year. The company booked about MXN 500 million in cost savings, with diapers, napkins, and kitchen towels leading growth-resilient staples when wallets tighten.

Why this matters beyond Mexico: this is a window into how a middle-income economy slows without collapsing. When remittances soften and confidence dips, families don't stop buying essentials-they rearrange them.

Brands fight for share with value formats, retailers lean on promotions, and growth comes from execution rather than exuberance.

For investors, suppliers, and policymakers, the signals to watch into 2026 are simple and sobering: remittance flows, job creation, the rate path-and whether companies can win the trade-down without losing their margins.

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The Rio Times

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