1. At a Glance
TechNVision Ventures Ltd (TNVVL) is that rare IT company which has managed to climb from ₹30 odd crores in revenue a decade ago to ₹232 crores now — only to end up reporting negative profits in FY25. With a market cap of ₹3,100 Cr and an EPS that looks like a power cut (–₹3.22), the stock trades at 191 times its book value. NASSCOM once called them one of India’s top 100 innovators, but looking at the financials, even NASSCOM must be wondering — “Innovating in what, exactly? Burning cash?”
2. Introduction
Picture this: You walk into a swanky tech office in 1980s Hyderabad, expecting them to be India’s answer to Infosys. Fast forward 45 years — TechNVision is still trying to explain to investors that “profit” is a state of mind.
The company owns promising subsidiaries — Solix (data management), Emagia (AI-driven cash flow automation), and SITI (recruitment outsourcing). On paper, it’s like holding Messi, Ronaldo, and Neymar in your football squad. But in reality, they’re still drawing games against Goa Under-16s.
What’s hilarious is the mismatch between valuation and numbers. CMP ₹4,953, market cap ₹3,110 Cr, but net profit FY25 is –₹2 Cr. Basically, investors are paying premium lounge rates for a railway platform bench.
And yet, the stock has rewarded long-term holders: 10-year CAGR of 63% and 5-year CAGR of 92%. Why? Because hope is the strongest drug in Dalal Street.
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
The company isn’t just “one more IT outsourcer.” It has three specialist domains:
- Enterprise Data Management (Solix Technologies): Think Marie Kondo for corporate data — cleaning, storing, and keeping regulators happy.
- Enterprise Cash Flow Management (Emagia Corp): AI tools that automate receivables and collections. Fancy software that tells your CFO, “Bro, client abhi bhi paisa nahi diya.”
- Enterprise Talent Management (SITI Corp, AccelForce): On-demand recruitment outsourcing, because HR managers would rather outsource than make 50 cold calls.
Clients include Flextronics, Oracle, Exide, Textron, Zebra Technologies. Big names, but contribution to actual net profit looks like a guest appearance.
So yes, they do things. Useful things. But the issue is monetization discipline. Imagine running a gym full of equipment