At a Glance
Berger Paints’ Q1 FY26 looked like a Picasso painting: pretty on the surface, but with a few dark strokes underneath. Revenue grew 3.6% YoY to ₹3,200.8 crore, while PAT came in at ₹315 crore (down 3.3% YoY) thanks to a ₹36.8 crore loss from a warehouse fire. Operating margins stayed steady at 17%, but the stock trades at a sky-high P/E of 57, leaving investors wondering if they’re paying for luxury paint or just expensive air.
Introduction
Berger Paints – India’s No. 2 paint giant – continues to coat walls (and investors’ expectations) with bright colors, but cracks are showing. The company’s Q1 FY26 results reflect tepid growth, with fire-related losses dampening profits. Add to that a global slowdown, rising raw material prices, and a P/E that looks like it belongs to a tech startup, and you’ve got a stock that’s both premium and precarious.
Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
- Core: Manufacturing & selling decorative and industrial paints.
- Market Position: 2nd in India, 4th in Asia, 7th globally.
- Segments: Decorative (70%), Industrial (20%), Others (10%).
- Moat: Brand power + wide dealer network = strong pricing.
Essentially, Berger sells “color confidence” in a can, backed by high ROE (20%) and margins that hold up despite economic storms.
Financials Overview
Q1 FY26 Key Numbers:
- Revenue: ₹3,201 crore (+3.6% YoY)
- EBITDA: ₹528 crore (margin ~17%)
- PAT: ₹315 crore (-3.3% YoY)
- EPS (Q1): ₹2.70
- TTM EPS: ₹9.79 → P/E: 57.1x
TTM Revenue: ₹11,654 crore | TTM PAT: ₹1,144 crore
Commentary: Growth slowed, and that fire loss didn’t help. Margins are stable, but valuation is