Reliance Industries offloads 3.5 crore shares in Asian Paints worth over ₹7,700 crore
Reliance Industries Limited (RIL) has pared its holding in Asian Paints by offloading 3.5 crore shares, marking a significant exit from one of India's leading blue-chip companies. The sale, conducted through its wholly owned subsidiary Siddhant Commercials Limited, fetched ₹ 2,201 per share—translating into a total deal size of ₹ 7,703.5 crore.
The transaction, carried out via block deals in the pre-market session on Thursday, saw approximately 3.64 percent of Asian Paints' equity change hands. RIL still retains a minority stake of 87 lakh shares in the paint maker after this sale, which falls under Regulation 30 of SEBI's Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements (LODR).
Reliance had acquired its stake in Asian Paints back in January 2008, investing ₹ 500 crore during the global financial crisis. That strategic bet paid off handsomely, as the shareholding appreciated significantly over the years, although the stock has underperformed in recent times.
Asian Paints' shares have declined by 17 percent over the past three years, making it one of the weakest performers among Nifty blue chips. Analysts attribute the erosion to intensified competition, particularly from Aditya Birla Group's new entrant, Birla Opus Paints. According to Elara Securities, Asian Paints' market share has fallen from 59 percent to 52 percent in FY25—a significant loss in a highly competitive market.
This underperformance is compounded by revenue stagnation, with the company reporting subdued growth over four consecutive quarters. Despite falling raw material costs, gross margins have compressed due to rising rebates and aggressive pricing by competitors. In a recent investor call, CEO Amit Syngle acknowledged the pressure, stating that the company would need to take 'calibrated action' to defend its leadership.
The block trade has reshuffled the shareholding dynamics of Asian Paints. As of March 2025, Siddhant Commercials held a 4.9 percent stake, much of which has now been liquidated. Domestic mutual funds continue to maintain a significant presence, collectively holding a 5.67 percent stake. ICICI Prudential and SBI Mutual Fund hold 1.24 percent and 1.51 percent, respectively.
Meanwhile, the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC) remains the largest public shareholder in Asian Paints with an 8.29 percent stake. Retail investors too hold a meaningful share—11.84 percent—spread across 11.73 crore small shareholders with holdings under ₹ 2 lakh.
Brokerages have turned cautious. Nuvama Institutional Equities recently downgraded Asian Paints, cutting its FY26–FY27 earnings estimates by 6–8 percent. The brokerage sees only a 7.2 percent compound annual growth rate in earnings per share through FY28. It has trimmed the stock's target price to ₹ 2,200—just around the price at which Reliance exited—and assigned a valuation of 45x forward earnings, nearly 20 percent lower than the 10-year average.
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Time of India
a day ago
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Reliance Industries sells 3.64% stake in Asian Paints for ₹7,703 crore
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a day ago
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The Ambani formula for making money: 17 years + 1 Nifty stock = 2,200% profit
The Perfect Exit Strategy Live Events Timing the Market Perfectly (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel Buy right, sit tight and sell right! Asia's richest billionaire Mukesh Ambani has just taught stock market investors how making smart bets at cheap valuations can create long-term wealth. In a masterstroke that exemplifies contrarian investing, Reliance Industries (RIL) has booked a staggering 23-fold return by selling its Asian Paints stake for Rs 7,704 crore—nearly 17 years after buying it during the depths of the 2008 global financial in January 2008, when markets were reeling from the financial meltdown, RIL had quietly accumulated a 4.9% stake in Asian Paints for just Rs 500 crore. Now, the conglomerate has sold 3.6% of that holding to SBI Mutual Fund, pocketing a handsome Rs 7,704 crore in what ranks among the most spectacular long-term bets in Indian corporate informed exchanges that 3.5 crore shares held by the company via Siddhant Commercials Ltd were sold at Rs 2,201 per share on Thursday. The company's stock closed at Rs 2,218.05 a piece on Thursday. Inclusive of dividends, at current market value, Reliance would make a near 23-fold return on its the stake sale, RIL arm Siddhant Commercials' shareholding in Asian Paints dipped to 1.26 per cent from 4.90 per cent. With the acquisition of shares, SBI Mutual Fund's shareholding in Asian Paints rose to 5.15 per cent from 1.51 per timing of Ambani's exit appears prescient. Asian Paints' shares have declined by 32% over the past 2 years, making it one of the weakest performers among Nifty blue chips. India's $9 billion paints industry is facing acute margin pressure amidst heightened competition that has seen Asian Paints come under severe pressure from new entrants like Aditya Birla Opus who are striving to topple the number one player from its to Elara Securities, Asian Paints' market share has fallen from 59 percent to 52 percent in FY25—a significant loss in a highly competitive market. Combined with revenue stagnation, Asian Paints has lost much of its Asian Paints, FY25 was a weak year. Decorative business (87% of consolidated sales) declined by 5% YoY, with volume growth of 2.5% (weakest in over the last two decades). Industrial business grew by 6% while International business sales were flat performance for the year. The management attributed underperformance in the decorative segment to weakness in industry growth and emphasised that the competitive intensity of the business will continue over the near term."Near term demand trends remain subdued, FY26 outlook remains bleak," said Mehul Desai of JM Financial . "Competitive intensity in the paints segment remains unabated (Grasim's entry, increased activity from existing incumbents and a likely recovery in Dulux brand once the acquisition goes through)." JSW Paints is in the final stages of buying Dulux from Akzo the challenges, Asian Paints still has a market share of 44% in decorative paints, and is also the second largest in Asia and eighth globally. The company has an annual domestic decorative paint capacity of 1.85 million kilo litres, serving consumers in over 60 countries. It has the country's largest distribution network, with 74,129 dealers, supported by over 50,500 Colour World shade-mixing machines and over 430 Colour Ideas had explored divesting its stake five years ago, ahead of launching India's largest rights issue. It was also in the process of deleveraging its balance sheet following a mega capex plan led by telecom. However, it did not go through with the plan and instead raised a combined $25 billion for the digital, telecom, and retail ventures of the conglomerate through a series of investments from marquee global strategic and financial decision to hold on proved golden, allowing Ambani to maximize returns from what was already a phenomenal bet.