Asian Granito India Ltd (AGL) is that kid in the ceramic classroom who brings every fancy stationery item, but still scores just passing marks. With 14 units, 54.5 million sqm capacity, Ranbir Kapoor ads, and showrooms bigger than malls, AGL looks like a powerhouse. But financials say otherwise: ROE at 2.1%, ROCE 2.17%, and PAT margins flatter than their tiles.
2. Introduction
Founded in 1995, Asian Granito wanted to become India’s Kajaria or Somany. Instead, it has become the “Premium ka Pappa” of ad campaigns but the “Report Card ka Chacha” of profitability.
The company boasts 18,000+ touchpoints, 2,700+ dealers, and exports to 100+ countries. Their portfolio is massive: ceramic tiles, vitrified slabs, quartz countertops, sanitaryware, bath fittings. They even tried to get fancy with tech-driven products like Grestek, Slimgres, and solar-reflective tiles.
But here’s the problem: scale without profitability. Despite revenues of ₹1,625 Cr in FY25, net profits are barely ₹22 Cr. That’s a net margin of 1.3%, which is what most companies spend on office chai. Yet, the stock trades at a P/E of 61x — because Indian investors love stories, not spreadsheets.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
AGL’s model is simple: make every tile under the sun, and hope people buy them.
Ceramic & Vitrified Tiles: From basic bathroom tiles to luxury slabs (1200×2400 mm).
Sanitaryware & Bathware: Basins, closets, faucets (new since FY24).
Chemicals & Accessories: Construction adhesives, countertops.
Manufacturing: 14 units across Gujarat. Outsourcing still accounts for ~18% of volumes, which they’re trying to reduce with new Morbi mega plants.
Distribution: 18,000+ retail points, 277+ franchise showrooms, and a global presence with warehouses in Dubai, UK, and US. Basically, if you step on a tile in India, there’s a 1/10 chance it came from AGL.
4. Financials Overview
Metric
Latest Qtr (Jun’25)
YoY Qtr (Jun’24)
Prev Qtr (Mar’25)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)
388
360
493
+7.8%
-21.4%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)
24.9
15.7
22.1
+58%
+12.7%
PAT (₹ Cr)
7.5
-1.7
7.5
497%
0%
EPS (₹)
0.51
-0.15
0.53
N/A
-3.8%
Commentary: Profits swing harder than Ranbir Kapoor’s dance moves. One quarter loss, next quarter profit — investors need tiles to stabilise their heads.
5. Valuation – Fair Value Range Only
Method 1: P/E
EPS = ₹1.57 (TTM)
Assign fair P/E of 15–25 (sector median ~30–40, but AGL is weaker).
Fair Value = ₹24 – ₹39
Method 2: EV/EBITDA
EV = ₹1,559 Cr, EBITDA = ₹91 Cr (TTM).
EV/EBITDA = 17 vs Kajaria at ~30.
Fair range = 10–12x → EV = ₹910 – ₹1,090 Cr → Share ₹34 – ₹41