Financials and Estimates

Financials and Estimates

Figures converted from IDR at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.

Avian's five-year record reads as a slow-growing but unusually cash-generative franchise. Revenue compounded at about 4.6% a year to $487 million in 2025 and net profit reached $105 million, while operating cash flow has matched reported earnings almost one-for-one. With effectively no debt and a $250 million liquid cushion, the balance-sheet risk that causes permanent loss is remote. Consensus models a flat 2026; the first quarter is already running ahead of it.

The five-year profit and loss

FY2025 Revenue ($m)

487

8.7% vs FY2024

FY2025 Net Profit ($m)

105

4.8% vs FY2024

Gross Margin

44.0%

-0.7% vs FY2024

EPS ($)

$0.0017

7.2% vs FY2024

Sources: FY2025 Annual Report, consolidated statement of profit or loss [1] and EPS note [2].

The top line is steady rather than fast. Net revenue rose from $475 million in 2021 to $487 million in 2025 [3] [4] — a gain in rupiah terms of roughly 20% over four years, or about 4.6% compounded (the dollar figures are flatter because the rupiah weakened over the period). Gross profit and net profit both grew faster than revenue in local currency because margins recovered from a cost-inflation trough, not because volume accelerated.

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Sources: FY2021 [5], FY2023 [6] and FY2025 [7] Annual Reports.

Margins: a cost-driven recovery, then a modest drift down

The margin path is the more revealing line. Gross margin fell to 40.6% in 2022 as the global raw-material spike — titanium dioxide and other inputs — worked through the cost of goods, then rebounded to 45.4% in 2023 as those costs normalised [8]. Since that 2023 peak, gross margin has eased for two straight years to 44.0% in 2025 [9].

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Sources: derived from reported revenue and profit, FY2021–FY2025 Annual Reports [10] [11] [12].

Net margin tells the same story with an added twist. It peaked at 23.4% in 2023 and slipped to 21.5% in 2025 [13]. Two forces drive that: the gross-margin drift above, and a falling contribution from finance income, which declined from $19 million in 2023 to $14 million in 2025 as the company paid its cash out to shareholders [14] [15]. The first is competitive; the second is self-inflicted and reverses if the cash is redeployed. Operating profit, insulated from finance income, actually rose to $115 million in 2025 and its margin held near 23.7% [16]. Gross margin has eased to 44.0% and net margin to 21.5%, both a little below their 2023 peaks, while operating margin held near 23.7%.

The earnings are backed by cash

For a reader who weighs downside first, the relevant test is whether reported profit becomes cash. Here Avian is clean. Operating cash flow has tracked net profit almost exactly for four years running — $104 million of operating cash against $105 million of net profit in 2025 [17] [18].

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Sources: cash flow statements FY2021 [19], FY2023 [20], FY2025 [21]; profit as cited above.

Across 2022–2025, cumulative operating cash flow slightly exceeded cumulative net profit — cash conversion of about 102% [22] [23]. There is no widening gap between accrual earnings and cash, no receivables build outrunning sales, no reliance on adjusted metrics. Capital spending is light — $25 million in 2025, roughly 5% of revenue — so free cash flow ran near $79 million even after four years of rising capex [24]. A paint maker that turns essentially all of its profit into cash and reinvests only a twentieth of sales is, on these numbers, a low-risk cash engine.

Capital returns and a cushion being spent down

The counter-observation sits in the same statements. In 2025 Avian paid $79 million of dividends and bought back $39 million of stock — $118 million returned against $105 million earned, a payout of about 113% [25]. Returning more than it earns is only possible by drawing on the cash pile, and the pile shrank accordingly: cash plus short-term investments fell from about $327 million at end-2024 to $253 million at end-2025, down about 20% in a year [26].

Whether this is prudence or slow liquidation depends on the reinvestment runway, which the industry and moat chapters take up. What the cash flow proves is narrower and firmer: shareholders have been paid in full, in cash, every year, and the equity base of $572 million still dwarfs any liability [27]. Return on that equity was 18.3% in 2025 [28] [29].

What consensus expects — and what the first quarter already shows

Five analysts cover the stock, all rating it Buy, with a mean 12-month target of $0.028 against the $0.0175 price on 10 July 2026. Their earnings model is the puzzle. Consensus FY2026 EPS sits about 2% below what the company actually earned in 2025 in rupiah terms, even as they pencil revenue up roughly 7% — implying net margin compresses toward 20%. Growth is expected to resume in 2027.

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Source: FY2024–FY2025 as reported [30]; FY2026E–FY2027E are consensus analyst estimates, as reported. Dollar EPS uses each year's FX rate, so the reported-vs-consensus step is smaller in rupiah terms than it appears here.

That modest forecast looks stale against the actual first quarter. In Q1 2026 revenue rose 16.8% to $130 million, gross profit rose 14.6%, and net profit rose 12.6% to $28 million; earnings per share rose 15.2% as buybacks shrank the share count [31] [32]. Q1 has historically been about a quarter of the full year, so holding that seasonal mix would put 2026 net profit above 2025, not below. Management's own guidance is for 6–10% value growth and 4–8% volume growth for the year [33].

Two caveats keep this from being a clean beat signal. One quarter is not a year, and paint demand softens in the wet second half; and the same Q1 showed gross margin slipping again, to 44.9% from 45.8%, alongside a further drop in finance income [34] [35]. The read: consensus earnings look conservative, but the analyst target rests on a re-rating — its level implies about 18x forward earnings — rather than on the earnings line itself.

Valuation, in brief

At $0.0175 the stock trades at about 10.9x trailing earnings and 11.2x the (low) FY2026 consensus, falling to 10.0x on 2027 [36]. Adjusted for the $250 million of net cash — roughly 22% of market value — the operating business changes hands at closer to 9x earnings and about 12x free cash flow [37] [38].

Trailing P/E (x)

10.9

FY2026E P/E (x)

11.2

FCF Yield

6.7%

Dividend Yield

6.7%

Source: derived from FY2025 free cash flow and dividends paid [39] [40], the $0.0175 close, and consensus EPS.

Both the free-cash-flow yield and the cash dividend yield sit near 6.7% [41] [42]. Whether ~11x is cheap or fair for a business growing mid-single digits is a question these chapters take up; the point here is narrower. The numbers underneath the price are clean — real cash, negligible debt, a shrinking but still substantial cushion, and near-term results running ahead of a cautious consensus.

The five-year record and the forward view

No Results

Sources: FY2021–FY2025 Annual Reports [43] [44] [45]; cash flow statements [46] [47] [48]; FY2026E–FY2027E consensus estimates, as reported (net profit implied from consensus EPS and shares outstanding).