Rain ruined your ice cream binge this summer? Turns out, it also messed with Hindustan Foods’ Q1. But don’t worry—your disappointment was their “record profitability” quarter. Yes, even when monsoon clouds blocked ice cream demand, Nashik factories and shoe lines kept minting money like HFL was running its own RBI. It’s like watching an IPL team win despite half its star players being injured. The twist? Global tariff wars may decide how many sneakers your feet get. Grab popcorn (or an Exo bar), because this call had more drama than Bigg Boss weekend episodes.
2. At a Glance
Revenue up 15% – ₹998 Cr; FMCG slowdown? Not in their kitchen.
EBITDA up 10% – ₹84 Cr; enough buffer for more Kaizen consultants.
PAT up 17% – ₹32 Cr; finally, ice creams didn’t just melt profits.
Net D/E 0.65x – Warrants conversion gave balance sheet a protein shake.
Capex target ₹2,000 Cr by FY27 – Because factories are their idea of flex.
Ice Cream & Shoes – The new “power couple” of HFL’s diversification saga.
3. Management’s Key Commentary
“Highest ever quarterly profit despite rains hurting ice cream & beverage demand.” (Translation: Nature tried, but Excel still won.)
“Nashik plant ramped up to 15,000 KL capacity.” (Translation: Built faster than your housing society lift repair.)
“We’ll be India’s largest ice cream contract manufacturer in 2 years.” (Translation: Amul, watch your cone.)
“Footwear hit record monthly sales in June.” (Translation: Indians may skip veggies, but never sneakers.)
“Net D/E ratio down to 0.65 post warrant conversion.” (Translation: Borrowed less, bragged more.)
“Tariffs may affect customer sourcing globally.” (Translation: Even local chappals depend on China’s mood swings.)
“Average dedicated manufacturing contract life is 8–9 years.” (Translation: Longer than most Indian marriages.)
4. Numbers Decoded
Metric
Value Q1 FY26
YoY Change
One-Line Analysis
Revenue – The Hero
₹998 Cr
+15%
Just ₹2 Cr shy of ₹1,000 Cr; cruel irony.
EBITDA – The Cushion
₹84 Cr
+10%
Margins steady, but ice cream rains hurt.
PBT – The Warm-up
₹42 Cr
+16%
Double-digit growth, not bad in FMCG lull.
PAT – The Dessert
₹32 Cr
+17%
Sweetest quarter ever, rains be damned.
Net D/E – The Detox
0.65x
Lower
Debt trimmed, flexed capital discipline.
Capex Gross Block
₹1,500 Cr
Rising
Marching to ₹2,000 Cr by FY27 like Jawan’s climax.
5. Analyst Questions
Q: Depreciation looks high—actual cash burn? A: Replacement capex much lower, depreciation mostly book entry. (Translation: Excel depreciation > actual depreciation.)
Q: Any big cost-cutting drives? A: Kaizen, Six Sigma, automation… the usual corporate yoga. (Translation: Enough buzzwords to fill a B-school thesis.)