At a Glance
Swiss Military Consumer Goods Ltd, the Indian licensee for the global Swiss Military brand, is selling 1,500 lifestyle products via 900+ outlets and 15 e-commerce portals. Great sales growth? Sure. Great profits? Not really. The company has grown revenue 56% in 3 years, yet runs with thin margins (~5-6%), ROE 9.4%, and a P/E of 64 that’s steeper than a Swiss Alp. Promoter stake slipped slightly to 63.2%, and the stock trades at 4.7x book value—because why not?
1. Introduction
Imagine a company selling premium-branded backpacks, watches, and travel accessories but earning margins like a roadside stall. That’s Swiss Military India. Sales have boomed post-COVID, riding on online channels and aggressive distribution. However, profits are still crawling behind revenue like a luggage trolley with a broken wheel.
Investors love the growth story, but at P/E 64, you’re paying Louis Vuitton prices for Bata performance.
2. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
- Core Activity: Trading and marketing of Swiss Military-branded lifestyle products.
- Distribution: 900+ retail outlets, 1000+ dealers, and strong online presence (Amazon, Flipkart, etc.).
- Revenue Source: Sale of consumer goods across categories – travel gear, eyewear, fashion accessories, etc.
- Key Risk: Licensed brand → limited control over brand equity, high dependence on global Swiss Military agreements.
The company is essentially a high-volume, low-margin trading business with some brand premium sprinkled in.
3. Financials Overview
FY25 Highlights:
- Revenue: ₹213 Cr (↑18% YoY)
- EBITDA: ₹11 Cr (OPM 5%)
- PAT: ₹9 Cr (↑14% YoY)
- EPS: ₹0.39
Q4 FY25:
- Revenue: ₹57.8 Cr (↑10% YoY)
- PAT: ₹2.6 Cr (↑19% YoY)
Commentary: Growth is solid, margins stable but thin. Profit growth slower than sales growth.
4. Valuation
- P/E: 63.8 (sky-high for a trading company)
- EV/EBITDA: Approx. 45x (ouch)
- DCF: Cash flows too small to justify current