1. At a Glance – Plastic King or Sofa Salesman Gone Confused?
Nilkamal — the brand your school plastic chair came from — is currently sitting at a market cap of ₹1,700 crore with a stock price of ₹1,139, after giving investors a brutal -16.8% return in just 3 months. Yes, the same chair you sat on in school has aged better than this stock.
Latest numbers?
- Quarterly revenue: ₹962 crore
- PAT: ₹35.2 crore (up 63.7% YoY, finally woke up?)
- P/E: 14.4 (cheap… or suspiciously cheap?)
- ROE: 7.32% (basically savings account vibes)
- Debt: ₹539 crore
- Dividend yield: 1.76%
So what’s the story here? A company that is:
- The world’s largest moulded furniture manufacturer
- Has 20,000+ dealers
- Still somehow struggles to generate decent returns
It’s like being the biggest chaiwala in India but still earning Maggi margins.
The question is — is this a temporary slump… or structural “plastic fatigue”?
2. Introduction – The OG Plastic Chair Empire Trying to Reinvent Itself
Nilkamal is not just a company. It’s a cultural symbol.
If you’ve:
- Sat in a tuition class
- Attended a wedding
- Or waited at a railway station
You’ve probably sat on Nilkamal furniture.
But here’s the twist — this company is desperately trying to move from:
“Plastic chair supplier” → “Premium furniture lifestyle brand”
And honestly… that’s like:
Trying to turn a roadside vada pav stall into Starbucks overnight.
They now want to sell:
- Mattresses 🛏️
- Modular furniture 🏠
- Lifestyle home décor 🛋️
And even:
- Industrial storage systems
- Packaging solutions (BubbleGUARD)
Sounds fancy, right?
But here’s the reality check:
👉 94% revenue still comes from plastics division (FY22)
👉 Retail furniture is still struggling
👉 Margins are under pressure
Even CARE Ratings pointed out:
- Retail segment degrowth of 7% in FY25
- Operating margins dropped to 8.86% due to marketing + employee costs
So basically: