India’s largest carbon black maker and the world’s 7th biggest, PCBL Chemical is like that overachieving school kid who not only tops in maths (carbon black), but also wins debates (specialty chemicals), and now suddenly wants to be a cricketer too (battery chemicals). With ₹8,404 Cr in revenue and 37% exports, the company is expanding like your waistline during Diwali. But underneath the gloss lies ₹5,571 Cr debt, and margins that need a little gym time.
2. Introduction
Founded in 1960 and owned by the RP-Sanjiv Goenka (RPSG) group, PCBL Chemical is basically the black ink that runs in the veins of India’s tyre industry. From tyres to plastics to inks, their carbon black quietly hides inside almost every product you touch. Recently, they acquired Aquapharm Chemicals for ₹3,800 Cr, suddenly claiming they’re water-treatment specialists too—like your cousin who suddenly becomes a crypto trader after watching one YouTube video.
But expansion is costly, and the debt pile suggests management is betting on “future growth” the way Bollywood producers bet on remakes. Investors now wonder: will PCBL’s black empire shine like glossy tyre polish, or burn like Delhi air in November?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s decode the ingredients of this industrial black hole:
Carbon Black (678 KTPA rubber black, 112 KTPA specialty black) – Reinforces tyres, conveyor belts, hoses, even your chappals. Tyre makers like MRF, Apollo, and Ceat depend on them like South films depend on slow-motion entries.
Specialty Chemicals (Phosphonates + Performance Black) – Used in plastics, coatings, adhesives, batteries. Aquapharm makes PCBL a top 3 global phosphonate player. Who knew washing powder had such expensive friends?
Battery Chemicals (Nanovace subsidiary) – Developing nano-silicon materials to make EV batteries faster-charging and longer-lasting. Basically, a bet that Ola Electric scooters won’t be firecrackers forever.
Power Generation – Captive power + sale of surplus. Think of it as them running their own DG set, then selling the extra electricity to neighbours.
Question is: can one company master tyres, soaps, batteries, and power all at once—or is this the recipe for a business khichdi?
Commentary: EPS is looking like Sensex during budget speech—jumping and dropping with no stability. PAT margin ~4.4% makes it thinner than hostel chai.
5. Valuation – Fair Value Range Only
P/E Method: Industry PE ~35. PCBL EPS (annualised) ~₹10 → FV band ₹300–₹420.