Jeyyam Global Foods Ltd: 13% Market Share in Fried Gram, 72% in Confusion
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1. At a Glance
Jeyyam Global Foods (JGFL) is basically the “Chana Mama” of India—turning chickpeas into fried gram and besan at industrial scale. They own a fat 13% share in India’s fried gram market, but their IPO (Sep 2024, ₹82 Cr) turned out to be more of a thali meal than a fine-dine listing. Stock listed at ₹69.9, now at ₹36.6—roughly half-price. Chana is still hot in your samosa, but Jeyyam’s stock has cooled down faster than chai left unattended.
2. Introduction
Imagine a company that literally feeds India’s snacking habits. Incorporated in 2008, JGFL has grown to become a fried gram powerhouse with Asia’s largest automated gram plant (capacity 1.7 lakh MT). In Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, they are everywhere—from wholesalers to hotel kitchens to namkeen factories.
And yet, the stock is trading at P/E of 7.8 (industry median ~21). Why? Because the market doesn’t trust SME food IPOs after watching too many “quick-fry” scams. The irony: Jeyyam is actually profitable, growing at 40%+ CAGR, and has an ROE of 18%. So it’s less of a scam and more of a “guilty by SME association.”
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Chana comes in, Jeyyam cleans, fries, grinds, and packs it. That’s the core story.
Products:
Cleaned Chana → sorted, graded.
Fried Gram → puffed, roasted, processed.
Besan Flour → three-stage grinding, fine quality.
Product Mix FY24:
Chana: 57%
Fried Gram: 32%
Besan: 7%
Others: 4%
Channel Mix:
Wholesalers: 82%
Distributors: 6%
Others (retail/B2B): 13%
Geography:
Tamil Nadu 82%, Karnataka 12%, Andhra 6%. Basically, Jeyyam is the Rajinikanth of chana—massive in TN, but less known elsewhere.