Century Plyboards (India) Ltd Q1 FY26 + FY25 Wrap – ₹1,169 Cr Sales, ₹52 Cr Profit, but P/E Richer than Malabar Gold Brides
1. At a Glance
Century Plyboards (CPIL) – the name that has quietly turned your modular kitchen, office desk, and the plywood board your landlord used to patch your ceiling – into a ₹17,771 Cr listed empire. CMP ₹799, down ~10% YoY, but still valued at a P/E of 87.7. For context: you’re paying Titan-level valuation for plywood, laminate, and MDF sheets. Market share? 29% in the organized plywood market (which itself is only 30% of total plywood; the rest is “Sharma Plywood Mart” near your gali).
Q1 FY26 saw sales ₹1,169 Cr (+16.3% YoY) and PAT ₹52 Cr (+27% YoY). ROE dipped to 8.5% and ROCE at 10.4% – weak compared to their historic 20%+. Debt ballooned to ₹1,586 Cr as ₹2,000 Cr capex is under execution. Promoters hold 72.6%. Dividend yield is a stingy 0.13% – enough to buy you one cutting chai in Kolkata.
2. Introduction
Century Plyboards is a story of ambition. Starting in 1982, they took plywood – the ultimate jugaad product in Indian homes – and made it aspirational. Today, CPIL makes everything from plywood and laminates to MDF, particle board, veneers, and doors. Their marketing is premium, their distribution vast (18,000+ retailers, 3,900+ dealers, 43 warehouses), and their plants spread across India.
But let’s address the elephant in the room – profitability. Despite a wide portfolio and brand strength, CPIL’s FY25 PAT was just ₹203 Cr on ₹4,692 Cr revenue – a net margin of 4.3%. That’s thinner than the veneer they sell. Compare that with Titan (6–7% NPM) or even Greenpanel (despite being half their size, more focused on MDF).
Investors meanwhile have bid the stock up to 7.5x P/B and 38x EV/EBITDA – valuations that scream “luxury fashion house” not “plywood board maker.” Clearly, Mr. Market is in love with Manish Malhotra’s tie-up more than the balance sheet.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
CPIL operates in five major product segments:
Plywood (43% of revenue): Bread-and-butter, market leader with 29% organized share. Competes with Greenply, but enjoys stronger branding.
MDF (35%): Rising demand from furniture, real estate, and retail. They’re aggressively adding capacity.
Laminates (15%): Fancy sheets with names like Lucida and Silk Tuff (sounds more like shampoo brands).
Particle Board (7%): Economical wood panels, often used in IKEA-type DIY furniture.
They run 13 Indian plants and 3 overseas facilities, including one in politically unstable Gabon (Africa), which adds spice to investor anxiety. Their pitch: integrated player, premium branding, wide distribution, and scaling MDF/particle board capacities to ride India’s real estate and furniture boom.