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Sigachi Industries: 46 Deaths, ₹60 Cr Loss & -₹101 Cr Q1 – Can This Cellulose Giant Survive?


At a Glance

Sigachi Industries, once the pride of microcrystalline cellulose (MCC) production, just went through hell – a fire at its Hyderabad plant claimed 46 lives, slashed ₹60 Cr in revenue, and left a six-month production gap. Q1 FY26 was a bloodbath: Net loss of ₹101 Cr and EPS at -₹2.63. The stock is down 45% in a year, promoters have pledged 45% of holdings, and investors are biting their nails harder than ever. Yet, this ₹1,389 Cr company still clings to a 15.8% ROCE (TTM) and hopes to rise from the ashes – literally.


Introduction

Sigachi Industries Ltd (SIL) used to be the quiet achiever of the pharma excipients world, churning out MCC – the white powder every tablet loves. With facilities in Telangana and Gujarat, the company steadily grew revenue at 25–30% CAGR over the last five years.

Then came July 2025 – the fire at the Pashamylaram plant was a tragedy that shook the entire industry. Beyond human loss, the operational and financial impact was immediate: revenue fell, profits collapsed, and insurance claims are still pending.

Add to this a promoter share pledge, declining FII interest, and the biggest quarterly loss in its history – Sigachi is in survival mode. But is this the storm before a turnaround, or the first sign of a sinking ship?


Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)

Sigachi is a global leader in microcrystalline cellulose (MCC), a critical excipient used in tablets, food, and cosmetics. The company exports to over 40 countries, serving big pharma and nutraceutical brands.

Its model revolves around:

  • Manufacturing MCC at three plants (now two operational, one shut due to fire).
  • Diversified applications: pharma, food, and industrial uses.
  • Focus on expansion: had been increasing capacity aggressively in FY24-25.

However, with one plant down and insurance claims pending, production is bottlenecked. Also, the company is exploring backward integration to reduce costs – but execution risks just shot up post-crisis.


Financials Overview

FY25 Numbers

  • Revenue: ₹488 Cr
  • PAT: ₹70 Cr
  • EPS: ₹1.82
  • ROE: 14%
  • Debt: ₹121 Cr (reduced from ₹151 Cr)

Q1 FY26 Disaster

  • Revenue: ₹128 Cr (flat YoY, but expected to drop in coming quarters)
  • Net Profit: -₹101 Cr (loss due to plant fire, exceptional expenses, and other income -₹117 Cr)
  • EPS: -₹2.63

Comment: One-off losses hurt, but investors hate uncertainty. Recovery

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