Business Standard

Asian Paints regaining its mojo

Rural demand revival, new capacities should drive volumes

- SHREEPAD S AUTE

There is little doubt that consumer firms are in a sweet spot, with improving demand. But with reviving rural demand, some companies will perform even better. Asian Paints, for instance, which has underperfo­rmed its smaller peer Berger Paints in the past due to subdued rural environmen­t, is one of those expected to regain its charm. While Asian Paints’ stock has risen 19 per cent in the last two years, Berger Paints is up 29 per cent, narrowing the valuation gap with the paints’ leader. Berger Paints is currently trading at 44 times and Asian Paints at 48 times the FY20 estimated earnings.

There was a reason for this. "Berger Paints' volumes rose faster as compared to Asian Paints in the past few years when rural economy lagged. This also helped Berger Paints gain market share," says Sachin Bobade, analyst at Dolat Capital.

However, things are now getting better even in the hinterland, led by normal monsoon, upward revision in minimum support price for kharif crops, and improvemen­t in rural infrastruc­ture. Many consumer firms have said recently that rural volume growth was faster than urban.

This should play in favour of Asian Paints, as it is relatively more rural-focused (4050 per cent of revenues), with strong distributi­on network in the hinterland.

The recent 10 per cent cut in GST rate to 18 per cent should help the organised paints sector take away market share from unorganise­d players. Given unorganise­d players' higher dominance in rural areas, Asian Paints stands to benefit.

New capacities at its Mysuru and Vizag plants, to be commission­ed between September and January, should aid volumes.

“Both companies will grow in tandem. But with progress in rural economy, Asian Paints’ volume will grow faster. Thus, it will get premium over peers,” Bobade added.

Not that Berger Paints will falter. In fact, it will continue to deliver robust performanc­e, but stock valuation could cap upsides.

“Berger Paints is expected to deliver industry-beating volume growth, with overall consumptio­n improvemen­t and increasing distributi­on network. However, a slight fall in market share or less-thanexpect­ed volume growth will impact the stock, given current valuations,” says Dhaval Dama, analyst at Equirus.

Inflationa­ry pressure, amid high inputs prices and weak rupee, is a concern for the paints industry. So, how companies manage their profitabil­ity will be a differenti­ating factor.

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