Bodal Chemicals, India’s self-proclaimed “largest dye intermediates producer,” is sitting on ₹833 Cr market cap, ₹911 Cr debt, and a P/E of 27.7 that looks more like a Bollywood overhype trailer than real business economics. It sells 200+ products but delivers just ₹30 Cr profit on ₹1,777 Cr revenue. The irony? Promoters hold 57%, but ROE is 2.5%—basically, they own the whole orchestra but are still offbeat.
2. Introduction
Bodal’s story is like that one Gujarati uncle at Navratri—always dressed in colourful kurtas (dyestuff), bragging about global reach, but when you check his accounts, the garba steps don’t match the dhol.
From dominating India’s dye intermediates (20% share) and dyestuff (13%), Bodal has spent the last few years diversifying into caustic soda, chlor alkali, and now benzene derivatives. On paper, this looks like “integration masterstroke.” In reality, it feels like an MBA project where the student copy-pasted “synergies” without checking the P&L.
While they’ve built massive integrated capacity (dyestuffs, intermediates, chlor alkali, TCCA), their five-year sales CAGR is under 5% and PAT CAGR is negative. Add to that, rating downgrades (IND BBB+/Negative), insider trading violations, and repeated fund-raising talks that fizzle faster than Pepsi in the sun.
Question: Should we admire Bodal for scale and guts, or roast it for running a giant dye machine that produces more excuses than profits?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Think of Bodal as the Big Bazaar of chemicals.
Dye Intermediates (40% revenue): The raw material for dyestuffs. Captively consumed + sold.
Dyestuffs (29%): 175 colourful products for textiles, leather, paper.
New Benzene Products (5%+ coming): Targeting pharma and agrochemicals.
Integrated ops mean: 48% of basic chemicals feed into intermediates, and 43% of intermediates feed into dyestuffs. A neat circular economy—except when margins are low, you’re just passing cost inflation around like musical chairs.
Client list is glittery—Lanxess, Deepak Nitrite, Nestlé, Aditya Birla, Arco… but margins remain single-digit. It’s like cooking a buffet for billionaires and getting paid in exposure.
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Jun ’25 (Latest)
Jun ’24 (YoY)
Mar ’25 (QoQ)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)
454.2
421.9
450.9
7.6%
0.7%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)
47.6
34.5
47.3
38.0%
0.6%
PAT (₹ Cr)
9.5
-1.2
14.5
NA
-34.2%
EPS (₹)
0.76
-0.09
1.15
NA
-34.0%
Annualised EPS = ₹0.76 × 4 = ₹3.0 CMP = ₹66 → P/E = 22x–28x depending on which quarter you trust.
Commentary: One good quarter (PAT 14.5 Cr) doesn’t make a turnaround. This is a see-saw: one quarter green, next quarter loss. Bodal is like that friend who promises he’ll quit drinking every weekend but is back at theka on Tuesday.