DMCC Speciality Chemicals Q1FY26: ₹127 Cr Sales, ₹7.7 Cr PAT, 106-Year-Old Sulfur Veteran Still Learning How to be “Specialty”
1. At a Glance
DMCC Speciality Chemicals Ltd – born in 1919 as India’s first sulphuric acid producer, now trying to rebrand itself as a “specialty chemicals” company. Market cap = ₹774 Cr, CMP = ₹313, Book Value = ₹91.1, which means the stock trades at 3.43x P/B – basically more premium than its actual chemicals.
Quarterly revenue = ₹127 Cr (YoY growth 49%). PAT = ₹7.7 Cr (YoY +458% — someone hand them a thali for finally making profit). Full-year FY25 sales = ₹473 Cr, PAT = ₹28 Cr, EPS = ₹11.2. P/E = 27.7, ROE = 9.97%, ROCE = 14.1%. Not bad, but not exactly Deepak Nitrite-level fireworks either.
This is a company that literally sells sulfur, boron, oleum – chemicals so dangerous your chemistry lab teacher would faint. But in the market? They’re seen as “specialty.”
2. Introduction
Imagine a centenarian (1919 baby) still experimenting with sulphuric acid. That’s DMCC. It started as the pioneer of phosphate fertilizers and sulfur chemistry, survived wars, license raj, liberalisation, and still makes a cocktail of bulk acids + niche sulfonating agents.
Today, half its revenue is from bulk chemicals (sulphuric acid, oleum, etc.) and the other half from specialty stuff (sulfonic acids, boron compounds). And 65–70% of its specialty products get exported – Europe is its biggest buyer (67% of exports). Basically, Germany loves its acids more than Indian investors do.
But DMCC is stuck in an identity crisis:
Bulk acids run at 90–95% utilization.
Specialty runs at 50–60% utilization.
Management says “we are specialty,” but P&L says “we are still bulk.”
So… is DMCC a boring commodity player pretending to be specialty, or a specialty firm hiding in commodity clothes?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Detective hat on 🕵️. DMCC is a two-engine rickshaw:
Engine 1: Bulk Chemicals (56% revenue): Sulphuric acid, oleum, diethyl ether – stuff that powers fertilizers, detergents, dyes. Half sold externally, half used internally. Think of this as their “milk and sugar.”
Engine 2: Specialty Chemicals (44% revenue): Sulfonating agents, benzene sulfonic acid, sodium sulfonates – big words for “value-added acids.” Customers = pharma, agro, dyes, cosmetics. 65–70% exported.
Engine 3 (Hidden Booster): Boron Chemistry: Boric acid, borates – used in ceramics, tiles, steel, even thermal power stations. Half the Dahej land is still empty, waiting for the next boron blockbuster.