Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipes and fittings manufacturers are set to sustain their momentum with a 13-15% on-year volume growth next fiscal, driven by higher budgetary allocation for government schemes in water supply, irrigation, housing, and infrastructure, rating agency Crisil stated.
In the current fiscal, pipe makers will see a decadal-high growth of 22-24%, driven by strong pent-up demand, after a subdued compound annual growth rate of around 2% over the past three years.
A Crisil Ratings analysis of 18 PVC pipes and fittings manufacturers, representing 45-50% of the sector, indicates as much.
For players in the sector, more than 70% of the demand comes from agriculture, water supply, irrigation, and sewerage, and depends, directly or indirectly, on government funding. The remaining demand is from residential plumbing and industrial applications.
“The volume growth next fiscal will be sparked by two key demand drivers. One, higher capital allocation in the Union Budget for irrigation and housing schemes such as Jal Jeevan Mission ( ₹69,684 crore, up 27% on-year) and Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojna ( ₹79,000 crore, up 62%). And two, continued healthy demand from the residential real estate sector,” said Anand Kulkarni, director, Crisil Ratings.
Revenue, however, may grow by a modest 5-8% next fiscal, after 8-10% growth this fiscal, due to softer realisations, precipitated by moderation in input prices.
Interestingly, the drivers have reversed since fiscal 2022, when revenue growth of around 30% was driven by higher realisations even as volume growth was subdued, due to deferment of purchase by industries such as agriculture and irrigation.
According to the report, the average landed PVC resin prices corrected by around 20% on-year in the first nine months of this fiscal, as covid restrictions in China led to dumping of PVC resin into India. This resulted in significant inventory losses for players, with PVC resin forming almost three-fourths of the total cost.