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Page Industries Limited Strategy & Business Analysis
Founded 1994• Bengaluru
Page Industries Limited Revenue Breakdown & Fiscal Growth
A detailed chronological record of Page Industries Limited's revenue performance.
Key Takeaways
- Latest Performance: Page Industries Limited reported strong revenue growth in their latest filings, driven by core product expansion.
- Margin Analysis: The company maintains healthy profitability ratios despite increasing operational costs in the sector.
- Long-term Trend: Chronological data confirms a consistent upward trajectory in annual income over the last decade.
Historical Revenue Timeline
Financial Narrative
Page Industries' financial history is a masterclass in consistent execution of a high-quality business model — revenue and profit compounding at rates that have made early shareholders extraordinarily wealthy while the underlying business metrics (margins, returns on capital, cash conversion) have remained remarkably stable across multiple economic cycles.
Revenue has grown at an approximately 18–20% compound annual growth rate over the twenty years since listing, driven by a combination of volume growth (more units sold as distribution deepens and consumer penetration increases) and value growth (higher average selling prices as the product mix shifts toward athleisure and as periodic price increases are taken to offset input cost inflation). From approximately Rs 100 crore in FY2003, revenues reached approximately Rs 1,500 crore in FY2015, Rs 2,800 crore in FY2019, and approximately Rs 4,500 crore in FY2023. The consistency of growth — rare in Indian consumer goods, where company-specific execution issues and macro headwinds have periodically derailed competitors' trajectories — reflects the combination of a growing category (India's organized innerwear market growing at 12–15% annually), a strengthening brand, and distribution that consistently outpaces overall retail industry growth.
EBITDA margins have been in the 17–22% range for most of the company's listed history — high for a manufacturing business and reflecting the premium pricing power of the Jockey brand. The gross margin (revenue minus material and manufacturing cost) is approximately 40–45%, with the EBITDA margin reduction to 17–22% reflecting distribution costs (maintaining the EBO network and wholesale trade operations), marketing investment (advertising, retail activation, brand ambassador costs), and corporate overhead. The stability of these margins across commodity cotton price cycles demonstrates the brand's pricing power: when raw material costs rise, Page Industries has consistently been able to pass increases through to consumers without significant volume loss — a test of brand strength that many consumer goods companies fail.
Return on equity has regularly exceeded 30–40% — exceptional for a manufacturing business and reflecting the asset-light aspects of the model (the Jockey brand's manufacturing and marketing infrastructure is funded by the brand premium rather than capital-intensive proprietary brand development). Capital expenditure is moderate relative to revenue — primarily for garment manufacturing capacity expansion and EBO network investment — and the business generates sufficient free cash flow to fund both growth capex and substantial dividend payments.
The stock market valuation has reflected franchise quality: Page Industries has traded at 50–80x trailing earnings at various points in its history, a multiple more typical of high-quality technology or financial businesses than manufacturing companies. The premium reflects the market's assessment of the Jockey license's durability, management's execution consistency, and the structural growth of India's premium innerwear market.
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