Bumpy ride: India’s chemical billionaires are navigating choppy waters, but there's hope

/4 min read
But strategic shifts and domestic demand will help tide over short-term headwinds, say analysts.
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SRF Ltd Fortune 500 India 2020
Solar Industries India Ltd Fortune 500 India 2024
Pidilite Industries Ltd Fortune 500 India 2024
Bumpy ride: India’s chemical billionaires are navigating choppy waters, but there's hope
As the world’s sixth-largest manufacturer and 14th-largest exporter, India ranks third in chemical manufacturing among Asian nations. Credits: Getty Images
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INDIA’S $220-BILLION chemicals industry, producing over 80,000 commercial products, is a key driver of economic growth. As the world’s sixth-largest manufacturer and 14th-largest exporter, India ranks third in chemical manufacturing among Asian nations. With a century-old robust and cost-effective ecosystem, it has fostered several global players across bulk chemicals, agrochemicals, petrochemicals, polymers, and more, making it a breeding ground for billionaires.

However, the 2025 Fortune India-Waterfield Advisors study of India’s Top 100 Billionaires paints a different picture. There are only four pure-play chemical billionaires in the Top 100 — Satyanarayan Nuwal & Kailashchandra Nuwal of Solar Industries India , Madhukar Parekh & family of Pidilite Industries , Arun Bharat Ram of SRF , and Salil Singhal of PI Industries — against six in 2024 and five in 2023. The 2022 list had seven pure-play chemical billionaires among the Top 100, the highest in the past four years.