The June quarter turned out to be a muted one for India’s main paint makers, because the early arrival of the monsoon and aggressive pricing by new entrants ate into their development. Asian Paints, Berger Paints, Kansai Nerolac Paints and Akzo Nobel India all reported subdued numbers, although sequential enchancment was seen in city markets and realisations improved resulting from price hikes.Early monsoon dampens demandAsian Paints Managing Director and CEO Amit Syngle stated the enterprise noticed a pointy impression from the sudden onset of rains.“In April and May, the demand was better, but it was strongly impacted by the early monsoon. However, I think the silver lining was that we saw some shoots of demand coming up in urban areas, which were down, and we hope that it continues as we go ahead,” Syngle stated, quoted PTI.The firm reported a 1.19 per cent dip in standalone gross sales income to Rs 7,848.83 crore. Its quantity development stood at 3.9 per cent year-on-year, however worth fell 1.2 per cent.Berger Paints CEO Abhijit Roy too pointed to the “heavier than expected monsoon towards the end of May and June,” which he stated moderated development. The firm posted an 11 per cent fall in consolidated internet revenue at Rs 315 crore, whereas income from operations rose 3.55 per cent to Rs 3,200.76 crore.Competition squeezes marginsAlongside the climate, intensifying market rivalry weighed closely. “The overall competition in the market is intense, with a lot of new competition coming in,” stated Syngle, pointing to aggressive new gamers difficult incumbents within the ornamental paints section.Kansai Nerolac’s Managing Director Pravin Chaudhari additionally highlighted the stress. “Overall, monsoon in many places has caused some disturbances that have led to temporary stoppages, especially in projects as well as some part of retail,” he stated. The firm reported a 4.12 per cent drop in consolidated internet revenue to Rs 215.6 crore, whereas income rose 1.35 per cent to Rs 2,162.03 crore.Akzo Nobel India, which reported a 20.6 per cent decline in internet revenue to Rs 91 crore, described the quarter as “stressed” resulting from muted client sentiment and aggressive depth. CMD Rajiv Rajgopal stated income development throughout high gamers remained “pretty flattish.”Paint makers are betting on the festive season to drive a turnaround. With Diwali coming sooner than final yr, companies count on demand in August and September to enhance. “Construction activity based on whatever we saw in the month of June, we believe that Q2 should be better as far as decorative is concerned,” Chaudhari added.The Rs 75,000-crore Indian paint trade stays dominated by Asian Paints, with Berger, Kansai Nerolac, Akzo Nobel, Indigo Paints, Shalimar Paints and Nippon Paints additionally vying for market share.