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Dharmaj Crop Guard Ltd: ₹3,674 Mn Qtr Sales – Spraying Growth Like It’s Monsoon


1. At a Glance

In a world where farmers pray for rain and investors pray for returns, Dharmaj Crop Guard just delivered both — figuratively. Q1 FY26 revenue up 44% YoY, PAT up 116% (try getting that in an FD), and EBITDA margins fattened from lean cow to well-fed buffalo. With a product list longer than your grocery bill, a Dahej plant churning like a chemical pressure cooker, and a newly-commissioned Saykha facility itching to scale, this agrochemical rookie is playing in the big leagues — and spraying profits like pesticides in peak season.


2. Introduction

If Bollywood had a biopic on agrochemicals, Dharmaj’s story would be the underdog script: born in 2015, survived pesticide price wars, and now throwing shade at the incumbents like PI Industries and Sumitomo.

They’ve built a portfolio of 190+ products — insecticides, herbicides, fungicides, micro-fertilizers, and plant growth regulators — catering to both the khet-wale farmer and the export-wale dealer.

The growth story isn’t just in the fields; their stock price has already given a 69% return in the last 6 months, which ironically is the only “high” you can legally get from a chemical company without the Narcotics Bureau asking questions.

And unlike most mid-cap agrochemicals that survive on “one killer molecule”, Dharmaj’s diversity means they can withstand a bad monsoon, a pesticide ban, or even that one uncle who only buys “Desi Organic”.


3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)

Think of Dharmaj as the Amazon of Agrochemicals — but instead of same-day delivery, they’re focused on same-season spraying.

Segments:

  • Branded Formulations (B2C) – ~26% of FY24 revenue. Your everyday insecticides/fungicides with fancy names like Oleppo and Overdo (no, not a Netflix show, just a weed killer).
  • Institutional Formulations (B2B) – 65% domestic bulk sales, for large agri-input distributors and state tenders.
  • Active Ingredients (B2B) – Supply to other agrochemical makers, including exports to 29 countries.

Moats (if you can call them that):

  • Network muscle: 24 states, 20 depots, 5,000+ dealers, 15,000+ retail touchpoints.
  • Export pipeline: 85 registered products, 202 more pending (bureaucracy moves slower than pesticide decomposition).
  • Manufacturing firepower: Dahej plant (8,000 MT technicals + intermediates, 25,500 MT formulations) at only 50% utilisation — meaning there’s spare room to grow without capex migraines.

In short — they make it, they brand it, they sell it, and they export it. Rinse and repeat.


4. Financials Overview

Latest Quarter = Q1 FY26 (Jun 2025)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (₹ Cr)YoY QtrPrev QtrYoY %QoQ %
Revenue367.4255.2210.4+44.0%+74.6%
EBITDA50.727.04.0+87.8%+1,167% (not a typo)
PAT32.615.1-2.0+116.0%From loss to profit
EPS (₹)9.644.46-0.72+116.0%N/A

Commentary:
From a ₹2 Cr quarterly loss to ₹33 Cr profit in 3 months — that’s not a turnaround, that’s an IPL-style comeback. Margins exploded

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