1. At a Glance – When the Pipe Starts Leaking
Prince Pipes is currently trading at ₹271, with a market cap of ₹2,988 Cr. Over the last 3 months, the stock is down 13.3%, and over 1 year, it has slipped 7.47%.
Now the spicy part:
- Q3 FY26 Revenue: ₹573 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT: ₹(2.38) Cr
- Operating Margin: 4.87%
- ROCE: 3.85%
- ROE: 2.73%
- Stock P/E: 69
Yes, you read that right. A company that just reported a quarterly loss is trading at 69 times earnings.
This is not a typo. This is either a brave market… or a very hopeful one.
Prince Pipes holds ~5% PVC market share, has 8 plants, 7,200+ SKUs, 1,500+ channel partners, and recently commissioned the Begusarai facility. Yet profitability is gasping for oxygen.
The real question is — is this a temporary margin dip due to capex and industry slowdown… or is the pipe business entering a more competitive, margin-compressed era?
Let’s put on the detective hat.
2. Introduction – The Rise and the Slip
Prince Pipes started in 1987 making PVC products. Today it manufactures CPVC, UPVC, HDPE, and PPR piping systems. Sounds diversified, right?
Over the years, it built:
- 8 manufacturing facilities
- Capacity of ~3,70,171 MTPA
- Presence across Tier 2 & 3 India
- Entry into bathware
In FY22, it looked like a star. Revenue touched ₹2,657 Cr. Net profit was ₹249 Cr. ROCE was 28%.
Fast forward to FY25:
- Revenue: ₹2,524 Cr
- Net Profit: ₹43 Cr
- ROCE: 4%
From 28% ROCE to 4%.
That’s not cooling down. That’s ice water.
And now Q3 FY26 has reported a loss.
So what happened? Commodity pricing? Volume pressure? Competition? Expansion drag?
Or is this a classic case of high operating leverage gone wrong?
Let’s break it down piece by piece.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Prince Pipes makes polymer piping solutions.
Translation: They manufacture plastic pipes and fittings used in:
- Plumbing
- Sewerage
- Drainage
- Agriculture
- Borewell
- Industrial
- Water storage
- Cable ducting
- Bathware
They operate under two brands:
They also have brand tie-ups and collaborations:
- Lubrizol (CPVC compounds)
- Hauraton (Drainage)
- Skolan Safe (German drainage systems)
Recently:
- Acquired Aquel bathware brand for ₹55 Cr
- Commissioned Begusarai plant (24,000 MT capacity)
- FY26 Capex expected ₹80–90 Cr
They sell via 1,500+ channel partners and 10 warehouses.
This is a volume-driven, raw-material-sensitive, distribution-heavy business.
In good times:
- PVC prices stable
- Real estate demand strong
- Government infra push
Margins expand.
In bad times?
- Price wars
- Raw material volatility
- Working capital stress
And we are clearly in the “hmm something’s off” phase.
4. Financials Overview
Since it is Q3:
Annualised EPS = Average of Q1, Q2, Q3 EPS × 4
Q1 FY26 EPS = 0.44
Q2 FY26 EPS = 1.32
Q3 FY26 EPS = -0.22
Average EPS = (0.44 + 1.32 – 0.22) / 3 = 0.51
Annualised EPS = 0.51