Five-Star Business Finance Q1 FY26 + FY25 Recap: Charging 26% Interest with a 5-Star Smile
1. At a Glance
Five-Star Business Finance lends money to India’s kirana shop owners, chaiwalas, and small-town entrepreneurs — at interest rates so high (24–26%) they’d make your credit card blush. With ₹11,178 Cr AUM, 729 branches, 98% collection efficiency, and GNPA just 1.6%, this NBFC has cracked the art of lending to risky borrowers while still looking like a saint on the books. But the stock? Down 34% in a year. Investors are asking: How can a company making 18% ROE end up giving negative returns?
2. Introduction
Picture this: A pani puri stall owner in Vijayawada wants to expand into “pav bhaji.” He doesn’t have a CIBIL score, a bank account with fat balances, or an uncle working at HDFC Bank. Enter Five-Star — the NBFC equivalent of a desi moneylender, but with air-conditioned offices, compliance manuals, and CRISIL ratings.
Their customer base? Households earning ₹25–40K per month, willing to mortgage their one prized family asset — usually a small plot or ancestral house — to borrow ₹3–5 lakh at 25% interest. Banks don’t touch these customers. Microfinance players give ₹50K, not ₹5 lakh. Five-Star steps into this gap.
The magic trick? Low GNPA despite lending to such segments. How? They demand collateral, take co-applicants from the family, and size EMIs to income levels. In short: If you default, your cousin, chacha, and mother-in-law all lose the house. Motivates repayment better than any “AI-powered risk model.”
But investors aren’t smiling. Since its IPO in 2022, Five-Star’s stock fell from ~₹944 high to ~₹536 now. Why? Maybe the market is realizing 26% interest rates and 5-year tenures aren’t sustainable forever. Or maybe investors just don’t like Chennai-based NBFCs with falling promoter holdings.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s decode:
Loan Type: Secured business loans (ticket size: ₹3–5 lakh).
Interest Rate: 95% of loans priced at 24–26% p.a. → basically legalized “moneylending.”
Tenure: 5–7 years (long enough to trap, short enough to squeeze).
Branch Network: 729 branches, mostly South India.
Employees: 11,200 — an army bigger than many banks’ retail divisions.
Revenue model? Straightforward. Borrow at ~9.6% from banks and securitizations, lend at 25%, pocket the juicy NIM of 16.5%. Even Bajaj Finance doesn’t make this spread.
Question for you: If Bajaj Finance is considered the “Mercedes” of NBFCs, does that make Five-Star the “Bullet Raja” Enfield of lending?
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Latest Qtr (Jun’25)
YoY Qtr (Jun’24)
Prev Qtr (Mar’25)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)
787
666
752
18.1%
4.6%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)
359
339
373
5.9%
-3.8%
PAT (₹ Cr)
266
252
279
5.6%
-4.7%
EPS (₹)
9.0
8.6
9.5
5.6%
-4.7%
Commentary:
Growth is slowing. Revenue up 18%, but PAT only 5.6%.
EPS annualized = ~₹36 → P/E ~15. Not bad, but market says “meh.”