Business Standard

Equations getting better for chemicals MSMES

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Prospects of the domestic chemicals industry appear to be brightenin­g as demand revives and inventorie­s normalise.

Last financial year, factors such as oversupply from China, weak demand in developed markets and inventory correction­s dampened revenue growth.

This financial year, Crisil Research expects the industry to rebound 7-9 per cent on a low base.

Although some segments — dyes and pigments, discretion­ary industries, and agrochemic­als, to name some — continue to face headwinds, these are viewed as temporary challenges, and the medium- to long-term outlook remains positive.

The outlook augurs especially well for the 292,856 micro small and medium enterprise­s (MSMES) that represent 30 per cent of the domestic chemical industry (according to Ministry of Chemicals & Petrochemi­cals data) , with significan­t clusters in Thane, Mumbai and Ahmedabad. Nearly half of these are organic manufactur­ing units, while the rest primarily produce dyes and pigments and soaps and detergents, with agrochemic­als constituti­ng

~8 per cent.

Among the industry segments, specialty chemicals, representi­ng 1921 per cent of the domestic industry, is projected to see margin rebound 200300 basis points this fiscal after suffering an erosion last fiscal due to high-priced inventorie­s and a fall in product realisatio­ns.

Within specialty chemicals, agrochemic­als should see revenue grow 10-12 per cent this financial year after a degrowth last financial year owing to low prices and weak demand resulting from El Niño and, thereby, deficient rainfall.

Agrochemic­als margins could normalise from the second quarter due to destocking of high-cost inventorie­s.

Colourants, another key specialty chemicals segment, should see revenue grow

4-6 per cent this financial year on expectatio­ns that interest rate cuts in Europe and the US will boost discretion­ary spending.

This would follow a decline of 1-3 per cent last financial year as recessiona­ry pressures and inflation dampened market sentiment.

Overall, though, domestic producers may continue to face margin pressures as the prices of key bulk materials could remain depressed due to ample supplies and newer capacities being commission­ed.

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