Welcome to the curious case of Shoppers Stop Ltd, Indiaβs OG fashion mall-anchor and beauty counter veteran. The company, founded in 1991 when malls were still fantasy novels, reported Q2 FY26 sales of βΉ1,175 crore and EBITDA of βΉ173 crore, but net profit again went missing faster than free parking in Phoenix Mall.
With market cap βΉ5,719 crore, debt βΉ3,324 crore, and a P/E ratio of a Himalayan 350, the stock trades more on nostalgia than net income. ROE: a polite 3.39%, ROCE: 7.96%, OPM: 15.6% β decent, but not D-Mart level.
The company owns 284 stores across 68 cities, with 800+ brands shouting for consumer attention louder than Instagram ads. Itβs pushing new concepts like INTUNE (value fashion) and HomeStop, and even launched its own beauty brand Joyeology β because if customers wonβt buy profit, at least theyβll buy perfume.
Stock price at βΉ519 β down 30% in one year. Clearly, the marketβs not impressed by mirror selfies.
2. π¬ Introduction β The Retail Drama Nobody Asked For
Shoppers Stop is like that senior actor who was once a superstar but now competes with OTT stars born yesterday. Back in 2000s, it was Indiaβs premium fashion temple β air-conditioning, Zara vibes, and a credit card bill that could cause marital disputes.
But then came the invasion β D-Mart for the masses, H&M for the youth, Nykaa for the beauty buffs, and Amazon for literally everyone else. Shoppers Stop suddenly looked like the elder cousin still wearing boot-cut jeans.
Yet, theyβre trying. FY25 saw aggressive expansion, 52 new stores opened, βΉ141 crore capex spent, and 90 crore more planned for Q4. Theyβre rebranding INTUNE as their affordable βyouth magnetβ and giving HomeStop a premium makeover.
The companyβs loyalty program, First Citizen, drives 83% of sales, and the new WhatsApp-based marketing campaigns alone generated βΉ39 crore in sales. Not bad β but profitability remains as elusive as a 50% off tag on Armani.
Will this once-luxury chain finally find its profit runway, or keep circling the runway in brand collaborations and capex slides?
Other Income β Franchise, rentals, distribution of beauty brands.
So, yes β itβs a modern department store. Except itβs in India, where customers either want D-Mart discounts or Zara dopamine.
4. π Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Latest Q2 FY26
YoY Q2 FY25
Previous Q1 FY26
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
βΉ1,175 Cr
βΉ1,064 Cr
βΉ1,161 Cr
+10.4%
+1.2%
EBITDA
βΉ173 Cr
βΉ156 Cr
βΉ172 Cr
+10.9%
Flat
PAT
βΉ9 Cr
βΉ-21 Cr
βΉ-16 Cr
Turnaround
Profit swing
EPS (βΉ)
βΉ0.82
βΉ-1.87
βΉ-1.43
β
β
Commentary: The company finally reported a positive PBT of βΉ9 crore after several loss quarters. Operating margin held near 15β16%. However, interest cost (βΉ73 crore) and depreciation (βΉ134 crore) still eat all the margin β classic retail problem: βEarnings Before Rent, Interest, Taxes, and Excuses.β
5. π° Valuation Discussion β Fair Value Range
Method 1: P/E Approach
Annualised EPS = βΉ0.82 Γ 4 = βΉ3.28
Realistic P/E for mid-cap retailers = 80β120Γ (industry 52Γ) β Fair Range βΉ262 β βΉ394