At a Glance
Britannia – the 100-year-old biscuit czar – served a Q1 that was more Parle-G than Good Day. Sales rose 9.8% YoY to ₹4,535 crore, while Net Profit grew a modest 3% to ₹520 crore. At ₹5,636, the stock commands a P/E of 62, which means investors are paying luxury prices for everyday biscuits.
Introduction
Britannia Industries, under the Wadia Group, continues to dominate Indian kitchens with brands like Good Day and Marie Gold. Yet, the latest quarter shows slow volume growth, margin compression, and an overheated valuation. Investors seem to believe Britannia is the FMCG Tesla – premium at any cost.
Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
- Segments: Biscuits (~75% revenue), Bread, Cakes, Rusk, Dairy.
- Revenue Streams: Domestic FMCG + Export footprint.
- Moat: Strong brand recall, distribution network across 5 million+ outlets.
- Premiumization: Launch of value-added products (cheese, yoghurts) to improve margins.
Reality Check: Still heavily reliant on biscuits – a low-growth segment unless premiumized.
Financials Overview
Q1 FY26 (YoY):
- Revenue: ₹4,535 Cr (+9.8%)
- EBITDA: ₹752 Cr (-6%)
- PAT: ₹520 Cr (+3%)
- EPS: ₹21.6
FY25:
- Revenue: ₹17,943 Cr (+7%)
- PAT: ₹2,178 Cr (+2%)
- EPS FY25: ₹90.4
Fresh P/E: 5636 / 90.4 ≈ 62. Premium is the middle name here.
Valuation
- P/E Method: Sector avg ~50. Fair value ≈ 50 × 90.4 =