Arvind Ltd
NSE:ARVIND
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Arvind Ltd
NSE:ARVIND
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Arvind Ltd
Arvind Ltd is a textile company that turns cotton and other fibers into finished fabric, denim, and apparel. It sells fabric to clothing makers, works with global fashion brands, and also sells branded clothing and retail products to consumers through its own labels and channels. In simple terms, it sits in the middle of the apparel supply chain: it makes the cloth and, in some cases, the finished garments that people wear. The company earns money in a few ways. It sells fabric and garments to other businesses, and it also earns retail sales from its own brands and clothing lines. Its customer base includes fashion brands, garment makers, distributors, and end shoppers. Because it serves both industrial buyers and consumers, Arvind can benefit from demand for denim and casual wear as well as from orders tied to large apparel supply chains. What makes Arvind different is that it combines manufacturing with brand-building. Many textile companies only make fabric, and many apparel companies only sell finished clothes. Arvind does both, which gives it a wider role in the clothing market. That mix of upstream textile production and downstream branded apparel helps the company stay tied to the core business of what people wear, while giving it multiple ways to make money.
Arvind Ltd is a textile company that turns cotton and other fibers into finished fabric, denim, and apparel. It sells fabric to clothing makers, works with global fashion brands, and also sells branded clothing and retail products to consumers through its own labels and channels. In simple terms, it sits in the middle of the apparel supply chain: it makes the cloth and, in some cases, the finished garments that people wear.
The company earns money in a few ways. It sells fabric and garments to other businesses, and it also earns retail sales from its own brands and clothing lines. Its customer base includes fashion brands, garment makers, distributors, and end shoppers. Because it serves both industrial buyers and consumers, Arvind can benefit from demand for denim and casual wear as well as from orders tied to large apparel supply chains.
What makes Arvind different is that it combines manufacturing with brand-building. Many textile companies only make fabric, and many apparel companies only sell finished clothes. Arvind does both, which gives it a wider role in the clothing market. That mix of upstream textile production and downstream branded apparel helps the company stay tied to the core business of what people wear, while giving it multiple ways to make money.
Strong year: Arvind said FY26 revenue rose 12% to INR 9,303 crores and EBITDA rose 19% to INR 1,061 crores, with EBITDA crossing INR 1,000 crores for the first time.
Volume momentum: Denim, woven fabric, garments and Advanced Materials all grew strongly, with management saying quarter and full-year volume growth was in line with guidance.
Margin outlook: Management expects input-cost inflation to pressure margins in the first half of FY27, with some recovery possible in the second half if demand holds and geopolitical tensions ease.
Garments push: The company said garmenting remains capacity-constrained in India, but it expects high-teens growth as new capacity comes online and partner factories are added.
Advanced Materials: The business is guiding for 18% to 20% growth and about 15% to 16% EBITDA margins, while the new Dalco acquisition is expected to be margin and EPS accretive.
Balance sheet: Net debt fell by INR 112 crores to INR 1,172 crores in FY26, while the board recommended a dividend of INR 4.5 per share.
FY27 capex: Arvind plans INR 450 crores to INR 500 crores of capex in FY27, excluding Dalco-related investment.