Arvind (company) explained

Arvind Limited
Former Name:Arvind Mills Limited (1931–2008)
Type:Public
Key People:Sanjay Lalbhai (Chairman and Managing Director), Punit Lalbhai (Executive Director), Kulin Lalbhai (Executive Director),
Industry:Conglomerate
Products:Denim, knits, woven, engineering, retail, telecom, advanced material, agribusiness, real estate, the Arvind Store
Revenue: (2016)[1]
Net Income: (2016)
Num Employees:25,620[2]
Parent:Lalbhai Group
Location:Ahmedabad, India

Arvind Limited (formerly Arvind Mills) is an Indian textile manufacturer and the flagship company of the Lalbhai Group. Its headquarters are in Naroda, Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India, and it has units at Santej (near Kalol). The company manufactures cotton shirting, denim, knits and bottomweight (khaki) fabrics. It had also recently ventured into technical textiles with its Advanced Materials Division in 2011.[3] The company is India's largest denim manufacturer.[4]

Sanjaybhai Lalbhai is the current Chairman and managing director of Arvind and Lalbhai Group. In the early 1980s, he led the 'Reno-vision' whereby the company brought denim into the domestic market, thus starting the jeans revolution in India.[5] Today it retails its own brands like Flying Machine, Newport and Excalibur and licensed international brands like Arrow, Tommy Hilfiger, and Calvin Klein through its nationwide retail network. Arvind also runs three clothing and accessories retail chains, the Arvind Store, Unlimited and Megamart, which stocks company brands.[6] [7]

History and operations

September: Arvind's subsidiary Arvind Lifestyle Brands acquired the business operations of British fashion retailers Debenhams and Next and American Lifestyle brand Nautica in India from Planet Retail marking the entry of Arvind into the Bridge to Luxury Department Store Segment and also entering into the fast growing segment of apparel specialty retail through Next stores. The licensing agreement with Nautica consolidates company's already strong position in high potential sportswear segment.

Businesses

Financial restructuring

In the mid-1990s, the company undertook a massive expansion of its denim capacity even though other cotton fabrics were slowly replacing the demand for denim. The expansion plan was funded by loans from both Indian and overseas financial institutions. With the demand for denim slowing, the company found it difficult to repay the loans, resulting in an increased interest burden on the loans. In the late 1990s, the company encountered financial problems due to its debt burden, resulting in incurring significant losses.[14]

The company came up with a debt-restructuring plan for the long-term debts being taken up in February 2001. This complex financial restructuring exercise, which involved several domestic and international lenders, is considered to be the benchmark and a case study in India. The restructuring was overseen by Jayesh Shah, CFO, and advised on by a JP Morgan Hong Kong team, led by Ahmad Ayaz.

In 2018, Arvind Ltd. demerged its branded apparel and engineering business into separate entities for enhanced focus and value addition for the shareholders of the Company. It got the nod from NCLT Ahmedabad bench for demerger in Oct 2018.[15] Arvind Fashions, the branded apparel entity, will be scaling up existing brand portfolio and improve profitability across brands.[16] Anveshan Heavy Engineering, earlier known as Anup Engineering, has laid down capex plans of ₹80 crore to double existing fabrication capacity of 15,000 tonnes per annum by implementing product mix. Out of the planned investment, ₹40 crore has already been invested.[17]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Arvind Ltd. . 30 July 2016 . BSE.
  2. Web site: Arvind Limited. arvind.com. 20 May 2015.
  3. Web site: industrial-visits Oakbrook Business School. en-US. 2019-07-16. 16 July 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190716023954/https://oakbrook.ac.in/industrial-visits/. dead.
  4. News: Arvind Mills to issue warrants to promoters. 28 September 2007. Reuters. Mumbai.
  5. Web site: Working Lives India: Denim king. BBC News. 20 May 2015. 7 February 2014.
  6. News: 26 October 2010 . Arvind Mills lines up Rs 850 cr expansion plan over 5 years . 27 December 2010 . Business Line. https://www.worldfashionexchange.com/textile-erp-software/
  7. News: RIL eyes Arvind Mills' manufacturing facilities. 27 October 2007. The Economic Times. 27 December 2010. New Delhi. Sharma, Sanjeev . Jha, Mayur Shekhar.
  8. News: Arvind Ltd. . 9 May 2021 . Business Standard India.
  9. News: Arvind Forays Into E-Commerce. . 19 August 2014 . Hegde, Prabha.
  10. Web site: Fundamentally Right Arvind Sustainability Report 2013-14 . 30 March 2019 . Arvind.
  11. Web site: Arvind to digitise its textile stores. Pani. Priyanka. 26 May 2016. The Hindu Business Line. 13 June 2016.
  12. News: GAP joins hands with Arvind to sell apparels through NNNow.com. 11 October 2016. The Hindu Business Line . 10 May 2018 .
  13. https://www.arvindenvisol.com/ Environmental Solutions
  14. News: Arvind Mills: From near bankruptcy to reinvention . The Economic Times . 14 December 2012 . 10 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131110191656/http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2012-12-14/news/35820140_1_sanjay-lalbhai-kulin-lalbhai-punit . 10 November 2013 . dead.
  15. News: Arvind gets NCLT's approval for demerger of branded apparel, engineering biz . 31 January 2019 . The Economic Times . Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. . 26 October 2018.
  16. News: Arvind Fashions aims to double revenues to 10,000 crore by 2025 . 31 January 2019 . CNBC TV18 . TV18 Broadcast Limited . 8 January 2019.
  17. News: Vora . Rutam . Arvind's engineering arm aims to be a full solutions provider for oil sector . 31 January 2019 . The Hindu Business Line . 14 May 2018 . en.