Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Q4 FY 2026 earnings conference call of Grasim Industries. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchtone phone. I now hand the conference call to Mr. Ankit Panchmatia, Head, Investor Relations of Grasim Industries. Thank you, and over to you, Mr. Ankit.
Yeah. Thanks. Good evening, and thank you for joining Grasim fourth quarter and financial year end 2026 earnings call. The financial statements, press release, and presentation are already uploaded on the websites of stock exchanges and our website for your reference. For Safe Harbor, kindly refer to cautionary statement highlighted in the last slide of our presentation. Our management team is present on this call to discuss our results and business performance. We have with us Mr. Himanshu Kapania, Managing Director, Grasim Industries, and Business Head, Birla Opus Paints. Mr. Hemant Kadel, Chief Financial Officer, Grasim Industries. We also have with us Mr. Jayant Dhobley, Business Head of Chemicals, Cellulosic Fashion Yarn, and Insulators Business. Mr. Vadiraj Kulkarni, Business Head of Cellulosic Fibres Business. Mr. Sachin Sahay, CEO, Birla Opus, and Mr. Sandeep Komaravelly, CEO, Birla Pivot.
Let me now hand over the call to Mr. Himanshu for his opening remarks. Over to you, sir.
Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining Grasim quarter four earnings call. Happy to share that FY 2026 has been another landmark year in Grasim's journey of transformation, a journey that has steadily evolved the company from being a leader in select manufacturing businesses into a diversified platform of high-growth, future-oriented enterprises. Over the last several years, we have consciously built capabilities across manufacturing, consumer-facing businesses, digital platforms, financial services, and next-generation building materials ecosystem. The outcome of these investments are in our results. Consolidated revenue stood highest at INR 1,75,431 crores or exceeding $18 billion in US dollar terms, registering compounded annual growth rate, CAGR, of 18% over period FY 2021 to FY 2026.
It's truly remarkable to note that Grasim's stand-alone revenue have also reached an all-time high of INR 41,139 crores, showcasing an impressive compounded annual growth rate of 27% during the same period. What we are witnessing today is the emergence of a structurally stronger Grasim with multiple engines of growth, sharper strategic clarity, and enhanced resilience across cycles. The key pillar of our transformation has been our unwavering commitment towards building leadership positions across every business in which we operate. Historically, Grasim has built category leading business through scale, operational excellence, and disciplined execution. Today, that philosophy continues to guide our expansion into new age opportunities like paints and B2B e-commerce business as well. Starting with paints first, I want to take you back to a moment not too long ago, when we announced entering the decorative paints business in 2021.
The market had questions, plenty of them. Could a newcomer truly challenge an industry dominated by deeply entrenched incumbents with decades of brand loyalty, distribution network, and sizing power? Was this ambition too tall? Today, I'm here to give you the answer. In quarter four FY 2026, Birla Opus delivered revenue growth of 52% year-on-year on a like-to-like basis. Further, excluding CEIPIP, on a like-to-like basis, the growth trajectory rises to 71%. In an industry where single-digit growth is celebrated, we have doubled our top line in one year. That is a growth of 100% revenue in FY 2026 versus FY 2025. The FY 2026 performance is heartening despite the business was still not under its full-scale operations as Kharagpur plant was commissioned in October 2025. Revenue alone does not tell the full story.
What truly matters is market share, because market share in paints is trust made visible. As per internal estimates, the decorative paints industry revenue stood approximately at INR 15,500 crores in quarter four of FY 2026, including listed and unlisted paint majors, putty, wood finish, and waterproofing companies and others. However, this excludes the industrial paints and other non-decorative revenues. Our revenue market share expanded by approximately 90 basis points quarter-on-quarter, strengthening our position as the number three player in the organized decorative paint sector. The FY 2026 revenue market share expanded by 370 basis point over FY 2025. When you combine Birla Opus with our Birla White putty business only, we are now nearing the number two position in Indian decorative paints. That is not a distant aspiration anymore. It is within striking distance. Let me take you through key enablers of our paints performance.
Firstly, on the distribution front, Birla Opus expanded its presence across 11,500 towns, crossing 50,000 dealers benchmark. With 146 depots, Birla Opus ensured serviceability at industry benchmarks. The institution sales channel has built a sizable foundation and grew 43% quarter-on-quarter and 212% year-on-year, with over 10,000 sites built in quarter four FY 2026 alone. Birla Opus products now have 70+ specification approvals from multiple governments and other departments across cities, with a similar number under various stages of approval. The institution sales channel is working on a robust pipeline of 45,000 sites in various stages of work across 650+ towns. Secondly, the team continued its focus to drive secondary sales from dealer counters to contractors and consumers. The strong quarterly revenues have been possible on back of strong secondary by over 4.5 lakh active contractors who applied superior Birla Opus products.
The 10% free paint promotion continued on 10 and 20-liter packs across all emulsion top coats and waterproofing range, excluding sub-economy top coats and undercoat primers. The strong relationship with paint contractors, the key influencers, continued to scale strongly on back of digital-first foundation platform through our contractor app, Birla Opus ID, helping the teams to engage on scale level. In conjunction with the centrally controlled tinting machine analytics show strong colorant and shade consumption across geographies pan-India. With nearly 37,000 active tinting machines in operation, the tinting data continues to guide decision-making and understanding of consumer consumption trends. Birla Opus continues to uplift the contractors' and painters' workforce with industry-best schemes and loyalty benefits, which remain unmatched even today. Besides working on programs to build painters' skill sets and non-monetary benefits, including wellbeing and education support for his family.
The repeat purchase by contractors is driven on back of superior quality, which helps their reputation in the market and with the customers. Birla Opus continues to grow steadily also amongst the architect and interior designer. In short, AID influencer segment, where partner network has now crossed 3,000 active firms across 60 cities, estimated to reach the second-largest AID network in the industry. Thirdly, on the product front, Birla Opus added 42 new products in FY 2026, majorly in, A, in-house wallpaper, B, launch of painting tools under sub-brand Artist, C, waterproofing products under sub-category Alldry, and many more in the emulsion and enamel range. With this, the product portfolio expanded to 218 products and 1,850+ SKUs, serving a wide spectrum of customer preferences and market segments. Birla Opus saw robust demand for its emulsion and waterproofing products, where revenue market share has crossed double-digit mark.
The premium and luxury products contribution steady at 65% by value across all categories. Birla Opus continues to benchmark its product offering with the competition in real field environment, and even now, 75% of Birla Opus product ranked number one in product superiority versus like-to-like competition, basis blind product test by specialist applicators across emulsions, waterproofing, enamel, wood finish, distemper, et cetera. Fourthly, on the brand front, one out of every two consumers spontaneously recall Birla Opus brands. This is no mean feat. Birla Opus brand continues to build on its already number two position in unaided top-of-mind recall and increasing its gap with earliest number two and number three legacy players. The brand has a strong 90% plus awareness, which is built on back of continuous innovative campaigns.
The recent high decibel campaign in IPL 2026, featuring 10 cricket celebrities to champion a new era of paints from individual endorsement to a collective validation, voice echoing, "Birla Opus," supporting company's product superiority, has garnered major traction. Look out for our latest Birla Opus campaign with existing and new celebrities endorsing uniqueness of Birla Opus products. On its mission of enhancing customer experience in organized retailing of paints, Birla Opus exclusive branded franchise retail outlets hit a major milestone, crossing 1,200+ stores across 700+ towns. As per our estimates, this is the largest organized retailing network in India, now elevating paints purchase experience not just in metros, but in mid and small towns, including rural areas. Our premiumization efforts continue with expansion of our full stack, GST compliant and attractive, transparent, affordable, professional painting services, Paintkraft.
Now available in over 6,000 PIN codes through paint galleries across 400 towns. To our understanding, this is amongst the only professional painting services offering attractive financial options with six and 12-month EMIs at nearly no additional cost, an important tool in this inflationary environment. In conjunction with our industry-first service warranty through Birla Opus Assurance campaign, Birla Opus Paintkraft continues to build brand trust and brings in lakhs of leads and thousands of project registrations and contractor enrollments, where Birla Opus products and services were eventually delivered with Birla Opus Assurance. The fifth strong pillar is the installed capacity of 1,332 million liters per annum, which is 24% of the industry capacity, and the brand remains focused to drive its revenue market share in line with the capacity share in the midterm.
The utilization steadily increasing across plants, and with the rising output scale-up of our sixth plant, Kharagpur, which was commercialized in quarter three FY 2026, the average distance traveled by a product has come down by over 30%, helping in optimizing of logistic costs while improving serviceability to the market. Now, let me share updates on price hikes and raw material situation. As you will recall, in the last investor call, Birla Opus proactively shared announcement to raise dealer prices by 2% to 6% in January and February 2026 across range of products. This increase was to test the channel and consumer reaction by bridging the gap with industry peers in this 1st phase of price change. I'm happy to share that the initial response to the price gap reduction is encouraging, with primary and secondary sales continuing to be strong during this fourth quarter.
We are therefore delighted to share that in March 2026, Birla Opus, on its own, crossed the coveted 10% revenue market share mark based on nationwide retail study commissioned by us. I'll give you a moment to absorb this. In April 2026, Birla Opus announced its second and third phase of price increase to offset the raised input costs. These multiple price increases have been staggered for implementation within quarter one of FY 2027. A large percentage of decorative paints' raw materials and entire packaging material is linked to crude derivatives. The volatile geopolitical environment and steep depreciation of our currency against dollar have resulted in spiraling of cost of goods to as high as 20%-25% of COGS, and we are still counting the impact. This level of increase is unprecedented, and even now, the raw material prices are unstable and unpredictable.
Through these increases, Birla Opus have tried to cover the input cost escalation. However, if such global unrest persists, raw material prices could further escalate and may remain elevated for foreseeable future. We understand the industry has never seen such high inflation that has forced the entire industry to take multiple price hikes back to back. This VUCA situation makes demand forecasting difficult, and we need to closely monitor the situation as impact of price rise will slowly be felt by consumers and contractors in second half of quarter one and entire quarter two FY 2027. April 2026 primary sales performance remained in line with March, and Birla Opus continues to monitor the secondary sales trend closely on a weekly basis, along with price elasticity of demand.
With the inflation impact on input costs expected to continue until much after the war comes to an end, its impact on medium-term consumer demand remains uncertain, as demand elasticity curve will be fully tested in this period. Despite these cost pressures, the company will continue to offer 10% free paint consumer proposition. In spite of post-price increase, what I can confidently say, that Birla Opus remains committed to driving market share gains and focused on our ambition to become number two player at the earliest, while we steer business towards guided INR 10,000 crore profitable revenue in the third year of full-scale operations. Shifting focus to second new business, Birla Pivot, which represents Grasim's commitment towards digitally enabled B2B e-commerce ecosystem. I want to take you to a world that most people never see, but one that powers everything around us.
Every building you walk into, every road you drive on, every factory that produces the goods on your shelf, behind all of this sprawling, fragmented, and deeply insufficient supply chain for raw materials: Steel, cement, chemicals, polymers, bitumen, and other building materials. These are the building blocks of India's growth story, and for decades, procuring them has looked the same: Phone calls, handshake, opaque pricing, delayed deliveries, and limited access to credit. It's a market measured in hundreds of billions of dollars, and yet, until very recently, it operated almost entirely offline. That is the opportunity we saw. That is why we built Birla Pivot. One of the primary challenges is the highly fragmented supplier ecosystem, which makes it difficult for buyers to identify and engage with reliable vendors. Additionally, the absence of transparent pricing often leads to mistrust and suboptimal purchasing decisions.
Many businesses, especially MSMEs, also grapple with working capital constraints, which hammer their ability to procure goods efficiently and on scale. Further complicating the procurement process is the inconsistency of suppliers, as well as inefficiencies in logistics that can result in delays and increased costs. Product discovery remains limited, restricting access to a wider range of goods and innovative solutions. Finally, there is significant gaps in technology adoption among MSMEs, limiting their ability to streamline procurement operations and benefit from digital advancement. By focusing on these critical pain points, Birla Pivot aims to create a more integrated, transparent, and efficient B2B procurement ecosystem. Coming to financial performance of Birla Pivot, the pace of scale-up has been extremely encouraging ahead of our revenue guidance. Let me start with a number that I think captures the momentum better than anything else.
Our revenue for Q4 FY 2026 more than doubled on YoY basis. This business is within striking distance away from our annual revenue guidance of INR 8,500 crores. Now, in a business that is barely a few years old, doubling revenue is not just growth, it is validation. It tells us that the market was waiting for someone to solve this problem at scale, and we are doing exactly that. What is driving this? It's not one thing. It is all cylinders firing together. New buyers are joining the platform at an accelerating pace. Existing buyers are coming back with larger, more frequent orders. We are adding new product categories, expanding new geographies. Every lever we track, active buyers, average transaction value, transaction volumes are steadily moving up. This was also a seasonally strong quarter, and we captured the demand beautifully.
Now, let me paint the picture of how wide our B2B commerce reach has become. Birla Pivot is now delivering to over 5,000 PIN codes across more than 400 cities. We've crossed 5,000 retail touchpoints. Think about that for a moment. From metro construction sites to tier 3 towns where contractors are building a school or a small factory, we're reaching them. We're giving them access to the same quality products, the same transparent pricing, the same reliable logistics that were previously reserved for the largest players in the main market. This is not just commerce, that is democratization. Our product portfolio keeps expanding. We are now scaling categories like steel, bitumen, copper, and aluminum ingots, and polymers, partnering with leading Indian and international brands to offer a breadth of SKUs that no single distributor could ever match.
We are becoming the one-stop destination for building material procurement in India. Here is what truly sets Birla Pivot apart. This is not marketplace with catalog and checkout button. We have built an integrated operating system, four purpose-built modules working in concert. What gives us unique edge is that we are not a startup parachuting into this space. We are Grasim Industries, part of the Aditya Birla Group, with deep relationships across the building materials value chain, from cement to chemicals to metals. Our supply side credibility, brand trust, and on-ground presence are moats that no pure play digital platform can replicate overnight. We are still in the early innings. Revenue has more than doubled, but the runway ahead is enormous. Our focus going forward is clear.
Deeper buyer engagement with smarter AI-driven insights, expand our product categories and geographical footprint, scale our embedded finance capabilities so more MSMEs can participate in India's growth, and relentlessly improve the platform experience, so that once a buyer comes to Birla Pivot, they never want to go back to the old ways of doing things. Before I hand over the call to Hemant for financial performance and covering other businesses, let me spend some time on macro scenarios. We're living in a period where the world is simultaneously witnessing extraordinary opportunities and unprecedented uncertainties. Across continents, businesses and governments are navigating a rapidly changing global order shaped by geopolitical tensions, inflationary pressures, supply chain realignments, technological disruptions, climate concerns, and changing consumer aspirations. Crude oil prices and volatility in raw material costs continues to impact manufacturing and global trade.
Logistics networks that once prioritized efficiency are now being redesigned for reliability and strategic security. Across sectors from chemicals and metals to technology and consumer goods, organizations are balancing growth ambitions with cost discipline and operational agility. At the same time, the world is undergoing one of the biggest technological transformations in history. Artificial intelligence, automation, digital platforms, data-led decision-making are reshaping industries at an unprecedented pace. The competitive advantage today is not merely scale, but the ability to innovate faster, adapt quicker, and stay closer to the customer niche. Amidst these global challenges, there's also optimism. Emerging economies, especially India, continue to demonstrate resilience and long-term growth potential. India today stands out as one of the fastest growing major economies, supported by strong domestic consumption, infrastructure investments, digital transformation, manufacturing expansion, and a young entrepreneurial population.
However, in the backdrop of a recent caution expressed on mindful spending and responsible consumption, the message for businesses and households alike is clear. This is time for calibrated optimism and disciplined decision making. While India continues to remain one of the world's fastest growing major economies, global uncertainties including geopolitical tensions, commodity price volatility, and inflationary pressure requires a balanced approach towards expenditure and investment. The emphasis today is not on slowing aspirations, but on prioritizing efficiency, value creation, and long-term sustainability. For businesses, this translates into sharper capital allocation, cost leadership, and productivity enhancement. Such periods often strengthen economic resilience as disciplined spending, combined with strategic investments, creates a stronger foundation for sustainable growth in the years ahead. Let me now hand over the call to Hemant for his remarks. Over to you, Hemant.
Thank you, sir, for your remarks. One thing before I start. History has shown that moments of disruption often create the foundation for the next era of growth. The global environment may be complex, but it is also opening new avenues for collaboration, transformation, and value creation. Those who can adapt with agility, invest with foresight, and execute with discipline will define the future of industry and enterprise. With this note, I would start with our biggest business, building materials, which includes cement, paints, and B2B e-commerce. Himanshu Sir has already covered paints and B2B e-commerce. Let me give you key highlights of our cement business. UltraTech continues to strengthen its leadership in one of the most important sector driving India's infrastructure and housing growth story. In April 2026, UltraTech crossed a historical milestone of 200 million tons per annum of total gray capacity.
This makes UltraTech the world's largest cement company outside of China. To put that in perspective, we have nearly doubled our capacity over the past six years, and we remain firmly on track to reach 240+ million tons per annum by March 2028. On profitability, total operating EBITDA per ton stood at the highest mark of INR 1,253. Over the past two fiscal years, FY 2025 and FY 2026 combined, we have delivered cumulative efficiency gains of INR 185 per ton.
This is not a one-off. It is the result of sustained focus on fuel mix optimization, logistics efficiency, and operational excellence across our plants. These structural cost levers give us confidence that margin will continue to improve even in a competitive pricing environment. The Board of Directors of UltraTech Cement has announced a strong dividend payout of INR 240 per equity share, subject to the shareholders' approval at the AGM.
The dividend declaration underscores UltraTech's resilient business model backed by a long-term commitment towards scale, operational efficiency, sustainability, and nation building. For Grasim, the total cash inflow from this dividend would be nearly INR 4,000 crores, excluding taxes. Coming to Cellulosic Fibre , we stand before you with tremendous confidence in the trajectory of this business. That is not just keeping pace with the global trends, but actively shaping the future of sustainable textile. Let me set the stage with a powerful fact. Cellulosic fibers are the fastest growing segment in the Indian fiber basket, expanding at a CAGR nearly 2x that of other fibers. This is not a temporary blip. This is a structural shift driven by sustainability, cotton constraints, and rising consumer demand for eco-friendly fabrics.
Our phase one lyocell capacity at Harihar of 55,000 tons per annum, part of the total proposed 110,000 tons per annum expansion, is progressing well. The macro environment is firmly in our favor. China's operating rates have climbed to 92% in Q4, up from 87% a year ago, signaling robust global demand. At the same time, China's inventory level have dropped to just 11 days, a clear sign that supply is tight and demand is accelerating. Our Cellulosic Fibre segment delivered revenue of INR 4,614 crore in Q4 FY 2026, a commanding 14% increase year-on-year. Full-year revenue surged to INR 17,104 crore from INR 15,897 crore, up 8% year-on-year.
This growth was powered by dual engine of volume expansion and a deliberate pivot towards higher value specialty fiber. EBITDA stood at INR 588 crore in Q4, up two times, and full year EBITDA was up 15% to INR 1,751 crore from INR 1,524 crore. This was not just about volume, it was about operating efficiencies, a favorable product mix, and the tailwind of benign pulp prices. Now let me walk you through the strategic positioning of our chemical division, which continues to be a cornerstone of Grasim's diversified growth story. Our chlor-alkali business maintains undisputed market leadership with an installed capacity of 1.5 million MTPA. We are expanding from 1,505 KTPA to 1,530 KTPA while evaluating additional capacities driven by growing demand from diverse end user industries like alumina, organic and inorganic chemicals, textiles and FMCG industries, et cetera.
Caustic soda sales volume stood highest ever at 321,000 tons in Q4 and 1,232 KT for full year FY 2026. Specialty chemicals revenue grew 5% year-on-year. Higher input prices, mainly ECH, partially impacted profitability in that segment. Our revenue mix is evolving well. Specialty chemicals now contributes 27% and chlorine derivatives 22%, reflecting our deliberate shift towards higher value downstream products. Our financial services subsidiary, Aditya Birla Capital, represents a compelling play on India's long-term financialization story, backed by a diversified and scalable financial services platform spanning lending, asset management, insurance, and wealth solutions. India witnesses rising household savings, shifting from physical to financial assets, increasing insurance penetration, and rapid credit formalization, the company is strategically positioned across multiple high growth segments rather than relying on a single business cycle.
Its ability to consistently grow revenue and expand the lending book and assets under management demonstrates strong execution capability even amid a volatile macro environment. With rising incomes, formalization of the economy and expanding digital infrastructure, and increasing investor participation through SIPs and mutual funds, we believe that Aditya Birla Capital is well-placed to participate in multiple structural growth trends simultaneously, making it a diversified proxy for India's evolving financial ecosystem. Aditya Birla Capital board has approved capital raise of INR 4,000 crore by way of equity shares through preferential allotment. Given the growth prospects, Grasim's board has approved an investment of INR 2,880 crore, maintaining our stake at 52.3% on a fully diluted basis. Coming to the other segment, both renewable and textile business has delivered robust performance.
For the quarter, revenue for the renewable business grew by 60% year-on-year, and textile business was higher by 14% year-on-year. Renewable EBITDA grew by 55%, and textiles business EBITDA stood at INR 35 crore compared to a loss of INR 8 crore. I am pleased to share that the board of Grasim has announced a final dividend of 500%, amounting to INR 10 per equity share, underscoring our longstanding commitment to create value for the shareholders. This marks the 63rd consecutive year of uninterrupted dividend payments, reflecting our financial strength, resilience, and consistent focus on rewarding shareholders across business cycles. With this remark, I will now open the floor for Q&A.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Hemish Shah from Nomura. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. Congrats on a good set of numbers. First question is on paints. Wanted to just understand your view on how should one think about the growth from here on, as you've already attained scale with respect to dealer reach and tinting machines, similar more to quite a few of the legacy players. How much more growth do you foresee will be coming from further penetration of dealer reach and increasing tinting machine reach? Will the growth largely come from improving throughput? That's my first question.
Thank you, Himesh. We are very confident of growth. The first and foremost, industry is likely to move from a single-digit growth to a double-digit growth in FY 2027. While we observe the impact of raised prices and elasticity of demand. All trend shows that this is going to be a double-digit growth year. With this, as far as Opus is concerned, there is a lot of growth.
That is possible for us, and we see growth both in numerical distribution expansion and improved throughput. Let me cover the numerical distribution expansion. We are currently at presence on large and small towns to 11,500. We are anticipating to cross this to beyond 15,000 by the end of this financial year. The second is, even the existing towns, there is a lot of scope for us on overall basis because the total number of dealers in the industry is excess of 100,000. The largest component of growth obviously come through throughput, with the existing dealers having tasted success with the one range of our category of products. For example, some of them have done emulsions and others have done enamel. With the confidence, with the first range of product, they're likely to be able to expand to the entire range.
I repeat, we have emulsions, enamels, waterproofing, wood finish, distemper, and for our franchise partners, wallpapers and exclusive products. We also see expansion through expanding the retail networks. We remain very confident that we achieved a triple-digit growth last year, and we remain confident of a high double-digit growth. Sorry, Sachin, I'm going to pass on to you incrementally on that.
Yeah. like Himanshu said, just to reinforce the fact that numeric expansion across the market for dealers will continue to play an extremely important role, but like Himanshu said, expanding the product range will be critical to build the throughput per dealer.
Back to you, Himesh.
My second question is, if you can talk a bit on the profitability front on the paint sector. You highlighted in the PPT that there is improvement in performance of paints when you speak about the building material segment, which was also led by paint on the EBITDA level. Is this largely due to getting scale, or given that now you've got some scale, there is some reduction in rebates to dealers, or there is a reduction in the discounting? How should one think about that? One clarification, you had highlighted that three years after your full operation, you would want to reach INR 10,000 crore. Should we consider FY 2026 as first full year of operation? Because it's only been two quarters since your sixth plant has commissioned. FY 2028 would be the third year or FY 2029 you would be considering as a third year?
That was my second question.
FY 2026 is what internally we're taking as the first full year of operation, even though the Birla Opus Paints started, or the sixth plant started in the third quarter of last financial year. We want to take stiffer targets for ourselves, and we will take first full year operations of FY 2026. In the sequence of profitability, we want to again repeat in the order of our priority. Our order of priority is, number one, we want to become the number two decorative paints operator in India. Second sequence of priority for us is INR 10,000 crore. Third sequence of priority is profitable. We've already used all the three words together, but we're not splitting them in the sequence that we would like to achieve. Having said that, where does the one profitability come from? Profitability for us, we have invested ahead of time on fixed costs.
You can see that both in terms of largest number of sales and service force, and second is ahead of time investment in branch. These are both under fixed cost nature, and as sales goes up, they will cover and give us the EBITDA benefit. The second profitability angle is to get better returns because of our variable costs. The variable costs will again come by us being able to, A, get better rates as our buying ability increases, so we can negotiate better prices. With the six plants coming in, optimization of our plants on power, optimization of our logistics cost, all of this will result in bringing down our variable costs. There is also some optimization on products as we introduced most our products with a single supplier.
We are in the process of bringing in the second and the third supplier, which gives us, as we bring in competition among raw material suppliers, we'll also get not only scale benefits, but other level of cost benefits. These are the routes for profitability. As I mentioned, the sequence for us remains number two position, then getting a revenue, and finally achieving profitability.
Got it. Very clear, and thank you for your clear answers. Wishing you all the very best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Pathanjali Srinivasan from Sundaram Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Hello, sir. Congrats on a good set of numbers. I have a couple of questions. Firstly, in your early remarks, you mentioned that we are within striking distance of becoming the number two player. I think last year, the number two player in India did approximately INR 10,000 crore of sales. How close are we when we say we are within striking distance? What is our range that you're mentioning here?
I'll clarify this. I'll read from the notes, the presentation we made. Combined revenue of Birla Opus plus Birla White Putty business, which is what is measured by all the paint makers, brings us nearly to the level of the existing number two, excluding the industrial revenue. Okay. When you quote a number, that number is annual number, and that number includes industrial plus decorative. When we quote a number, we quote only the decorative part of the business. We include the putty side of the business. That is the statement that I made as a starting point, which is the current situation as far as quarter four of FY 2026. Going forward, our ambition and stated ambition is on its own, Birla Opus, in the decorative paints business, only in the decorative paint business, not including the industrial paints business, we would like to be number two.
I hope it's clear. The numbers that are quoted, we have internal estimates, we do market research, and we get firm confirmations of multiple sources, and we are very confident that the numbers that we have are trending toward what we have quoted.
Thank you, sir.
I hope that's clear.
Comforting. Yes, sir. That provides a lot of clarity. My second question is related to something one of the previous participants asked. With respect to throughput per dealer, where would we stand versus our industry benchmarking, and what is the leeway that is there for growth there?
Hi, this is Sachin here. When you look at dealers operate typically in a various scale of operation, whether it's an A-class, B-class, C-class, D-class dealer, depending upon what kind of business they are doing. In each of these subset, we have a fair market presence, and our throughput is in line with our fair market presence. Consequently, that gives us a fair bit of comfort that we are aligned to the industry throughputs in each of these dealer sets.
Just to add, obviously, we are not the market leader, the throughput is best for the market leader. They have, in our assessment, about between 20%-25% additional dealers. It is the reason why they are such a strong market leader is the throughput that they get from the dealers. As Sachin mentioned, the proportion of A category dealers in the business, A and B, is significantly higher than our proportion there. In the case of number two, we have to focus on number one and number two, as ourselves the number three. They have a different mix. They have a reverse pyramid, that they have a larger proportion of A category, which constitutes their business, and disproportion. Our business is far more democratized because we are more national presence, as well as evenly distributed.
That's why our effort is more to be able to, through the route of distribution, to expand throughput in each of the categories of business, whether it is A, B, C, and D, far more than what we currently have. This is what I can give you at this point of time.
I get the strategic part of what you're saying, sir, but I just wanted to know a rough indexing in terms of Because we have started some time back, I would not expect a recently started dealer to have a high throughput. Some of our earlier dealers, have they reached fairly comparable throughput to some of the established players, or are we still further away from that? I'm just trying to understand if we'll get more growth from the existing distribution, because we are still relatively new in the market in terms of the number of dealers that we have over a two, three-year period.
So—
If you could give me some color on this, that'll be very helpful, sir.
Right. Like I was mentioning about the four different classes of dealers, A, B, C, D, just to give you a rough index, while each subsegment has been growing robustly in line with our overall growth. Just to give you a perspective, from a range lens, the top dealer would be stocking almost two to two and a half times the bottom dealers. As well as if I want to look at throughput per dealer, it ranges between four to five times the bottom dealer. Obviously our strategy of focusing on the top dealers, driving business from the top industry contributing dealers is also paying rich dividend basis our go-to-market strategy of expanding the range availability in the large dealer sets. Incidentally, I just add for your benefit so that you can be absolutely clear.
Our older dealers who spent more than 18 months with us, our counter share is significantly high, as high as 25%-50% in these outlets, and their throughput matches with legacy paint operators. The throughput, as the dealer becomes older and his comfort is with entire range of products is there, he's tending to achieve the similar throughput as a legacy dealer is, if that's the answer that you're looking for.
Sorry to interrupt. May we request Mr. Srinivasan to please rejoin the queue. We have other participants waiting for the turn. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to address questions from all participants, we will request you to please limit your question to two per participant. If you have a follow-up question, you may rejoin the queue. The next question is from the line of Amit Gupta from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Good evening, sir. This is Navin Sahadeo. Am I audible?
Yes.
Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, my first question was on the capital allocation. Of course, our subsidiary has announced a significant dividend. Just today also, there is an update in terms of INR 2,800 crore to be invested in AB Capital. How should one look at it? Does the paint business-
I'm sorry to interrupt, Mr. Gupta, but we are unable to hear you, sir.
Okay, I'll just repeat again. Hello, am I audible?
Yes, please, go ahead.
Yeah. My first question was on capital allocation, that apart from, let's say, investment which we are making now, it's already announced in AB Capital. The balance-
I'm sorry to interrupt, Mr. Gupta. We are unable to hear you. May we request you to please check your connection and rejoin the queue? Thank you. The next question is from the line of Siddharth Mehrotra from Kotak Securities. Please go ahead.
Congratulations on the good set of numbers. Thank you for the opportunity. Continuing on the previous participant's query, we noticed that out of the shareholder dividend of around INR 4,000 odd crores, we are going to invest roughly INR 2,900 odd crores in our NBFC business. Just wanted to understand, given the fact that previously we used to distribute it to our shareholders, what will be the capital allocation strategy going ahead?
I don't know what the term of capital allocation. Just from a cash flow perspective, you can do your math. It's straightforward. Net of tax that we're receiving from our subsidiary in the cement, we would prefer to allocate that fund to, one, dividend to our existing shareholders, as well as maintaining our stake in Aditya Birla Capital. The entire revenues and EBITDA generated from Grasim will be reinvested in growth of Grasim businesses. I hope that's clear.
Just to clarify, sir, on this, whenever we need to maintain our stake, that is the only time when we will be using the dividends. Otherwise, they will be passed on to our shareholders.
No, we are not talking of a long-term policy. I'm giving you the current allocation of fund.
Yes.
At this point of time, we have maintained for the last three years, Grasim has maintained that we are in a growth business. We have introduced two new growth businesses, we have to stabilize these two new growth businesses, Grasim needs its support around there. We are supporting the new businesses by reinvesting the surplus that is getting generated from the core businesses. As well as now, as for this year is concerned, we have allocated the cash that we received to be able to maintain our stakes in Aditya Birla Capital.
Got it, sir. Basically, for other sort of growth businesses, we'll be sort of using internal accruals. This is a one-off measure. Is that understanding correct?
Yeah.
It's a one-off measure.
Yes. Absolutely.
Got it, sir. May I just ask a follow-up? Since we are past our peak CapEx phase, what is sort of CapEx guidance should we sort of build in for the respective divisions now?
CapEx guidance for 2027, we will be able to share you next quarter. We are just working on it. Give us some time.
Okay, sir. Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Prateek Kumar from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good evening, sir. Congrats for good results. My first question is on the new businesses. While you have talked about it, but can you just add again on profitability path for Paints and Pivot business as company starts moving towards revenue target individually for these segments in terms of profitability? When can we look forward to get separate disclosures for these segments?
We will start with B2B.
Okay. Hi, Prateek. This is Sandeep here. I'll give you a little bit of background on the profitability path that Birla Pivot is on. We had mentioned this as part of our results in Q3 as well. Of course, our growth momentum has already been shared in the opening comments. You can see that our growth momentum was far ahead of the guidance that we have given. On the profitability front, even our margin and the EBITDA direction has also been very positive. Our goal for this financial year, FY 2027, is to exit with EBITDA breakeven. We are well on that path. It might actually happen a little sooner as well. Fairly confident that we will exit this financial year with EBITDA breakeven. The priorities remain very clear that we will continue to drive the revenue growth trajectory. We'll deepen our presence in the categories.
At the same time, we will exit this financial year with EBITDA breakeven. On the paints profitability, there are 2 parts to the profitability. One is contribution, and second is EBITDA. We had a significant improvement in both gross and net contribution in quarter four, and we expect to maintain that momentum going forward. As regards investment that we're doing, we have a fixed cost, which is now currently in a position for a much higher market share, because we are investing in manpower on a pan-India basis, both sales and service, as well investing in brand so that we are ready for tomorrow. As the contribution improves and scale improves, the EBITDA losses has a glide path on a quarter-on-quarter and a year-on-year basis till we reach the INR 10,000 crore, and the glide path has already started. As regard final reporting, we should start that shortly.
Sure. Thank you. Another question on capital allocation again. I know you talked about investing in AB Capital. How about within your organic business? You obviously incubated two new businesses a few years earlier. Do you also evaluate investing in new businesses which can further add to your organic businesses in next few years?
We have already announced expansion of our Cellulosic Fibre business, where at Harihar, we are adding capacity of lyocell of 110,000 ton per annum. First phase is already on progress, and second phase we will announce. That is the CapEx plan right now we are implementing, and further CapEx plan as we get approval in terms of capacity expansion, we will share with you.
Just for a one-line answer on this is, as of now, we have enough on our plate. We want to stabilize our cash flows before we look at any further. There is no further business to be disclosed at this stage.
Sorry to interrupt. May we request Mr. Kumar to please rejoin the queue? Thank you. The next question is from the line of Amit Purohit from Elara. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, good evening. Thank you for this opportunity. Am I audible?
Yes.
Yeah. Sure. Just two things. One, I wanted to understand, you talked about two drivers for growth. One was distribution expansion, second is throughput increase. Within that, you highlighted that new product launches will also become a very important part. Just wanted to understand, are we under-indexed in terms of product offerings when you compare it with the number one, number two? That was first question. Second, you indicated the targets remain same despite raw material prices increase and all. Is there any plans of some of the schemes and all? Are we looking that while you clearly highlighted that 10% scheme still continues, just wanted to check if there is any business plan change that probably could be there, or you may look at it maybe after the quarter or so. How do I think about it?
Amit, Sachin here. Thank you very much for your question. As far as product range is concerned, like Himanshu mentioned earlier, we have a full stack of products which have already gone into the market. In fact, in our franchisee stores, we have a large set of exclusive products also, which has been launched in the market. Today, we can confidently say that a dealer can be extremely satisfied and continue to run and scale up his business with the Birla Opus range of products.
Like for like, we are at even Stevens with respect to competition. While we will continue to identify white spaces and continue to add more products in the future, but as things stand right now, we are full stack up. With respect to your second question on pricing and strategy in the market, while Himanshu very categorically laid down the glide path of first priority being the number two player in the decorative paints industry, second, achieving the INR 10,000 crore turnover, and the third being profitability, our entire endeavor will continue to ensure that we are competitively poised in the market to ensure the priorities are achieved. If there is a need for being so, then we will continue to act accordingly in the market.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Rahul Gupta from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thank you for taking my question. Two questions. First, now as you scale up both Pivot and Opus, you will see benefits of operating leverage kicking in over the next two years. Now, if I see your implied profitability numbers, you have been clocking INR 3 billion pre-tax losses every quarter for the last few quarters. Is it fair to say that this will come down materially through the year, or is there a case that it may remain sticky for longer? That's my first question.
Yes. It'll come down.
Got it. My second question is now that, sorry for harping it again, you have not guided on the longer-term capital allocation strategy, but given UltraTech and Aditya Birla Capital are the two subsidiaries where your shareholding is more than 50%, is it fair to say even on the longer-term perspective, you'd want to maintain your 50% plus shareholding in both these businesses?
At this point of time, the answer is yes.
Got it. Thank you and wish you all the best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Naman Parmar from Niveshaay Investments. Please go ahead.
Yeah, good afternoon, sir. Thank you so much for the opportunity, congratulations on great set of numbers. My question is specifically towards your other business segment, specifically mentioning towards the Insulator division. Currently, if we see on that division, there's been a very big shortages on the transmission lines and all. How are we planning towards adding the capacity on the Insulator division? If you can break us, how was the overall sales in the Insulator division in the current year and the capacity utilized?
Okay, thanks for the question. You're absolutely right that the electrical segment is growing very well. There is a big order backlog versus what the market is demanding. While we post this through others, you can imagine underlying our set of growth and numbers on insulators has been good and will continue to remain good for some time. Our insulator business is divided in three parts. We have a porcelain business. We are actually one of the world's largest insulator player, and we are probably the world's only insulator player that operates in porcelain, polymer long rods, and polymer hollow composites. As far as the porcelain business goes, we will only do productivity initiatives. We have no plans to increase our base capacity. As far as polymer long rod goes, we have recently done some capacity expansion.
Those are sold out. We are looking at further increasing the capacity in our hollow composites business. We are quite bullish on the segment, but it's not like we are planning to suddenly double or triple our capacity. Our aim is mostly to gain operational efficiencies out of our existing assets and do incremental investments in polymer long rods and polymer hollow composites.
Currently, we have a capacity of 50,000 tons, right, in insulator, and you are expecting to remain at similar level, but you will be thinking more adding on the composite or the polymer. Given the market has been shifting from porcelain to composite end.
I'm sorry, you can't think of these capacities in tons. Depending upon the size of the insulator
Right
the number can change. If you have studied this process, if you make a larger insulator, it takes a larger cycle time, right?
Right.
If you make a smaller insulator, it makes a smaller cycle time. We supply this to EPC contractors. We supply against orders. It is not like our caustic business or our epoxy business where we are producing tons. We do it by number of insulators, and we do it make to order for very specific projects for very specific customers.
Understood. Lastly, if you can provide the sales number for the Insulator for the FY 2026, it will be very helpful. Also the EBITDA.
I think we have stopped disclosing this couple of years ago. It's part of our others. I don't think it's our intent to disclose it right now.
Okay. Thank you so much for answering the question.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Rahul Singh, an individual investor. Please go ahead. Mr. Rahul Singh, please go ahead with your question. Your line is unmuted. Mr. Rahul Singh, may be requested to please unmute yourself and proceed ahead with your question. As there is no response from the participants, and even that was the last question for today. We would now like to conclude the conference. On behalf of Grasim Industries, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.
Thank you.