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DCM Shriram Ltd Q1 FY26 – Revenues at ₹3,455 Cr (+12%), PAT at ₹114 Cr (+13%). A Conglomerate of Sugar, Chemicals & Windows Playing Corporate Tambola.


1. At a Glance

DCM Shriram is that over-achieving-but-underwhelming kid in class. Market cap ₹18,562 crore, CMP ₹1,191, 1-year return just 11% (slightly better than your FD uncle). Sales in FY25 hit ₹12,463 crore, PAT ₹617 crore, EPS ₹39.6. At a P/E of 30.1x, the market thinks it’s fancy, but the ROE of 8.66% makes it about as inspiring as a compulsory school poem recitation.

ROCE at 11.4% is fine if you’re a PSU, not if you’re promising Gujarat mega capex dreams of ₹12,000 crore. Debt is at ₹2,529 crore (D/E 0.36). OPM 11.1% — stable, but nowhere near FMCG-level margins. Dividend yield 0.76% is like giving Eclairs in Diwali instead of Soan Papdi.


2. Introduction

Imagine a buffet where you get rasgulla, idli, momos, butter chicken, and sushi — that’s DCM Shriram’s business model. Sugar, caustic soda, PVC, urea, hybrid seeds, Fenesta windows, even a cement plant for garnish.

The irony? Despite being in multiple high-demand sectors, growth over 5 years is a modest 9% CAGR. PAT growth? Negative over 3 and 5 years. A stock price CAGR of 27% in 5 years looks great, but much of it is multiple expansion, not fundamental compounding.

And yet, every quarter they announce a new project: a chlorine pipeline to Aarti, a ₹375 crore chemical acquisition, a ₹12,000 crore Bharuch MoU. It’s like that relative who always says “Agla saal Dubai trip fix hai” but never books tickets.

So the detective’s job is clear: peel each business segment and see where the real juice is, and where it’s just soda without fizz.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

DCM Shriram is a diversified manufacturing + agri play. Translation: they do everything under the sun except run a chai stall.

  • Sugar (35% of 9M FY25 revenue) – 4 complexes in UP, crushing 42,400 TCD, 3 distilleries. Think ethanol blending and endless government controls. Sugar realisation ~₹3,866/qtl. Ethanol sales steady, but volumes dipped.
  • Chloro Vinyl (26%) – India’s #2 Chlor-Alkali player. Bharuch is the largest single-location plant. ECU realisation ~₹27,929/MT, PVC ~₹79k/MT. Added 300 TPD caustic soda flakes plant. Basically, chemicals that make half of India’s detergent, plastics, and paper.
  • Farm Solutions (14%) – Seeds, agri-inputs, specialty nutrition. 35,000 retailers. 6 new products launched FY25. Like being mini-PI Industries, but with more generic products.
  • Fertiliser (11%) – Old Kota plant, branded as “Shriram Urea.” Capacity 3.8 lakh TPA. Aging like government hostels.
  • Fenesta (7%) – India’s leading windows and doors brand. 824 crore order book, pan-India dealer network. They even launched façades — so yes, from urea to glass façades.
  • Bioseed (6%) – R&D heavy, present in India & Philippines. Crops include corn, paddy, vegetables. Not a blockbuster yet.
  • Others (1%) – Cement, PVC compounding, retail fuel pumps. Because why not.

Question: Do you think a company doing sugar + windows + chemicals + seeds is a strategic genius, or just a kitty party with too many snacks?


4. Financials Overview

Q1 FY26 Snapshot

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Jun’25)YoY Qtr (Jun’24)Prev Qtr (Mar’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue₹3,455 Cr₹3,076 Cr₹2,877 Cr12%20%
EBITDA₹304 Cr₹248 Cr₹405 Cr23%-25%
PAT₹114 Cr₹100 Cr₹179 Cr14%-36%
EPS (₹)7.276.4311.4713%-37%

Annualised EPS ~₹29 → P/E ~41x (not cheap).

Commentary: Revenue looks decent, EBITDA margin 9% is thin, PAT fell QoQ. So while headlines say +13% YoY PAT,

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