GAEL is India’s largest maize processor with 20% share, selling starch, sorbitol, glucose, cattle feed, soya oil, yarn, and even vanaspati ghee (because why not?). Q1FY25 sales jumped 18% YoY to ₹1,291 Cr, but PAT slipped 15% to ₹65 Cr—thanks to maize/soya price volatility chewing margins harder than cattle chewing cud. CMP: ₹111, Market cap: ₹5,063 Cr, P/E: 21x. The stock is down 21% in 1 year, proving that even agro-giants can get indigestion.
2. Introduction
If you thought Ambuja meant only cement, surprise—Gujarat Ambuja Exports (GAEL) has been quietly running a food-to-feed empire since 1991. From corn starch that lands up in your soft drink, to soya DOC feeding poultry, to vanaspati powering halwai laddoos, GAEL’s product basket looks like Big Bazaar’s old aisles.
Unlike FMCG players who flaunt brand ambassadors, GAEL flaunts 1,000 TPD maize expansions and capacity utilizations of 90%. Instead of Bollywood stars, their clientele includes ITC, Dabur, HUL, Colgate, Mondelez—basically the who’s who of food and pharma supply chains.
But here’s the kicker: While maize processing revenue grew 30% between FY22 and FY24, margins slipped from 15% → 12%. Why? Inventory losses as maize/soya prices corrected. In agro, volatility is the only permanent crop.
So, is GAEL a hidden FMCG raw material kingpin, or just another agro-commodity rollercoaster that gives investors heartburn?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
GAEL is a multi-product agro processor with four main dishes on the thali: