The brokerage said India’s textile and apparel industry, which contributes around 2% to GDP and 10% to exports, is poised for recovery once the impact of higher U.S. tariffs eases.
Antique said government initiatives such as the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme, PM MITRA parks and the acceleration of free trade talks with the U.K. and EFTA bloc are set to improve competitiveness and scale. It added that optimism remains for the rollback of the 25% penal portion of the 50% U.S. tariff by fiscal year-end.
Nitin Spinners
Antique called Nitin Spinners “a structurally strong textile player with a proven track record of execution and growth,” highlighting its 19% revenue CAGR over FY14–25. The company’s Rs 1,120 crore capacity expansion, focused on value-added fabric, is expected to lift margins and drive 13% CAGR in EBITDA through FY28.With just 2–3% of its revenue directly exposed to the U.S., Nitin Spinners is minimally affected by tariffs, the brokerage said, assigning a buy rating and a target price of Rs 420, valuing it at 10 times estimated first-half FY28 earnings.
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Sanathan Textiles
Sanathan Textiles is “strategically positioned to benefit from structural growth in man-made fibre consumption and rising domestic demand,” Antique said. With 96% of its revenue derived from India, it remains insulated from U.S. trade headwinds.The brokerage expects revenue and earnings to grow at 34% and 40% CAGR, respectively, between FY25 and FY28, and set a buy rating with a target price of Rs 584, based on 12 times 1HFY28 earnings.
Vardhman Textiles
For Vardhman Textiles, one of India’s largest integrated spinners, Antique initiated with a hold rating and a target price of Rs 399. The brokerage said while the company’s long-term fundamentals remain strong, “current valuations largely factor in the positives,” limiting near-term upside.
Sector view
Antique said structural tailwinds are likely to outweigh near-term headwinds, with domestic demand and policy support driving the next growth phase. “We remain structurally positive on the MMF ecosystem and expect healthy growth in the coming years,” it said, adding that easing cotton prices and ongoing trade negotiations could further strengthen India’s textile outlook.
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(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of the Economic Times)