When Bollywood’s most relatable man, Pankaj Tripathi, tells carpenters to “stick with Jyoti,” it seems they actually do. Despite extended monsoons flooding warehouses and soggy demand, Jyoti Resins managed to paste together a 20% volume growth—like Fevicol on steroids. Management insists it’s not just star power but real stickiness across 14 states. They even plan to double down with expansion to hit ₹500 crore turnover in three years. If you think that’s ambitious, wait till you hear how much they’re spending on ads while keeping margins glued at 27%. Keep reading — things get sticky (in a good way). 😏
2. At a Glance
Revenue up 20%: Monsoon or not, the carpenters kept buying their favourite glue.
EBITDA Margin 27.5%: Stronger than most relationships in this economy.
CapEx ₹5–7 Cr: To make space for more glue, literally.
Capacity Utilization 60–70%: Still plenty of room before the machines cry.
Ad Spend 4.5% of Revenue (H1): Pankaj Tripathi’s charm doesn’t come cheap.
Stock sentiment: Traders love anything that sticks above 25% margins.
3. Management’s Key Commentary
“Despite heavy monsoon and soft demand, we achieved 20% volume growth.” (Translation: Even rain couldn’t wash away our market share. The carpenters stayed loyal.) 🌧️
“EBITDA margins at 27.5% remain consistent with Q1.” (Translation: We spent a bomb on ads but somehow didn’t bleed cash. Magic glue economics.)
“We’re expanding brownfield capacity from 2,000 to 3,500 tons per month.” (Translation: The factory’s about to get busier than a wedding season carpenter.)
“We’ll invest 7–8% of revenue in branding and trade marketing.” (Translation: If you don’t see Pankaj Tripathi’s face yet, just wait — it’s coming to your hoarding soon.) 📺
“Targeting ₹500 crore turnover in 3 years with 25%+ margins.” (Translation: Let’s stick to big numbers — they sound great in investor decks.)
“We’re adding talent across regions and implementing CRM systems.” (Translation: We’re finally hiring professionals so Utkarsh bhai can breathe.)
“No export plans — India has enough carpenters for now.” (Translation: Why leave a ₹7,000 crore playground when everyone here still needs glue?)