Five‑Year ₹800cr Supply Pact
Arisinfra signed a five‑year memorandum with Capacit’e Infraprojects for building‑materials supply worth at least ₹800 crore, aiming to stabilise procurement over multiple projects. The deal is presented as a long‑term supply arrangement to secure materials and predictability. (cnbctv18.com)
Arisinfra Solutions said on April 13 it signed a five-year materials procurement memorandum with Capacit’e Infraprojects worth at least ₹800 crore. (cnbctv18.com) The company disclosed the pact to stock exchanges under Regulation 30 of the Securities and Exchange Board of India listing rules, saying Capacit’e will source construction and building materials through the ARIS platform for current and future projects. (nseindia.com) Economic Times reported the agreement builds on an existing ₹600 crore relationship across more than 15 sites, with procurement spanning more than 100 material categories through a supplier network of more than 500 vendors. (economictimes.indiatimes.com) Construction contractors in India often buy cement, steel, pipes and other inputs project by project, which can leave prices, delivery schedules and vendor terms shifting from site to site. Economic Times described this pact as a move away from fragmented spot buying toward a consolidated procurement model. (economictimes.indiatimes.com) Arisinfra said the arrangement covers infrastructure, commercial and real estate work undertaken by Capacit’e Infraprojects, its subsidiaries and associates. That gives the supplier a multi-year order pipeline and gives the contractor one procurement channel across multiple jobs. (nseindia.com) The company told exchanges that, to its knowledge, the deal is among the first long-term, formally structured procurement commitments of this kind in Indian construction. Business Standard separately reported Arisinfra shares closed at ₹113.01 on April 13, before the April 14 market reaction to the announcement. (nseindia.com) (business-standard.com) Capacit’e is a listed construction company known for residential, commercial and institutional building projects, while Arisinfra pitches itself as a technology-led business-to-business materials platform. The structure of this deal ties those two models together: one side aggregates suppliers, the other locks in demand over five years. (economictimes.indiatimes.com) (cnbctv18.com) The next test is execution: whether the companies can convert a memorandum into steady deliveries across sites, categories and project timelines over 60 months. For now, the filing gives Arisinfra a disclosed minimum value of ₹800 crore and gives Capacit’e a named long-term sourcing partner. (nseindia.com)