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Vedant Fashions Ltd Q2 FY26 – ₹56 Cr PAT Down 16%, ₹50K Fines for Pocket Squares, and a Market Cap That Still Looks Dressed to Kill


1. At a Glance

If “Big Fat Indian Wedding” were a stock, it would be Vedant Fashions Ltd (VFL). The company behind Manyavar, Mohey, and your cousin’s ₹45,000 “simple” sherwani just dropped Q2 FY26 results that scream “shaadi season slowdown.” With revenue at ₹263 Cr (down 1.8% YoY) and PAT at ₹56 Cr (down 16%), it seems even Ranveer Singh couldn’t save Q2’s vibe.

The ₹16,325 Cr market cap brand trades at a P/E of 42.4, a ROE of 22.3%, and a debt-to-equity of 0.27 — proving that while the company’s balance sheet is light, the price tag isn’t. Profit growth is now -4.3%, but margins remain royal — an OPM of 44.9% is higher than most luxury retailers can dream of.

The share has been crashing harder than a baraat DJ’s laptop mid-song — down 50% in 1 year. Yet, VFL continues to live rent-free in every wedding album, commanding 634 EBOs across 243 cities, plus 16 global stores for NRIs who can’t let go of their desi roots.

Can Vedant’s designer kurtas make a comeback, or are we watching India’s celebration wear emperor slowly lose his tailor? Let’s lift the embroidered curtain.


2. Introduction

Once upon a time, weddings meant tailors, fabric shops, and chaos. Then Vedant Fashions walked in like a well-dressed savior, saying: “Bro, we got you. Sherwani? Sorted. Jodhpuri? Done. Matching safa? Don’t worry, we color-match your anxiety too.”

Founded in Kolkata by Ravi Modi, this empire stitched together the unorganized ethnic wear market and turned it into a ₹1,400 Cr designer retail machine. The flagship brand Manyavar became synonymous with weddings — the Tanishq of men’s fashion. Add Mohey for brides, Mebaz for South India, Twamev for premium couture, and Manthan for value-seekers, and you’ve got a family business more diversified than a Gujarati thali.

But even the best sherwani needs a fitting — and Vedant’s Q2 numbers suggest it’s time to alter the sleeves. Margins remain royal, but growth has gone missing like your cousin’s RSVP.

Still, the company’s asset-light franchise model ensures profits flow, even when demand dips. And with a current ratio of 3.6, it’s sitting on enough cash to sponsor another IPL team if needed.

Question — when your brand owns the wedding market, what do you do next? Start selling the pheras?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Vedant Fashions doesn’t just sell clothes; it sells cultural confidence with cufflinks. The company thrives in the celebration wear segment — the ₹1 lakh crore emotional economy powered by Big Boss-themed sangeets and overconfident grooms.

Their model is beautifully simple and absurdly profitable:

  • Asset-Light Franchise Model: Franchisees run 90%+ of the 650+ stores. Vedant focuses on branding, design, and supply chain control, ensuring it collects royalties while franchise owners sweat in air-conditioned showrooms.
  • In-House Manufacturing: Despite outsourcing stitching and embroidery, Vedant supervises every bead and border. Their 0.26 million sq. ft. warehouse in Kolkata manages inventory like a military base.
  • Omni-Channel Reach: Online presence? Check. Multi-brand outlets? Check. Wedding hashtags? Probably. Whether it’s a Delhi mall or a Texas NRI boutique, the Manyavar logo beams everywhere.
  • Uniform Pricing, No Discounts: Manyavar doesn’t “go on sale.” If you’re waiting for EOSS, good luck — the groom can get cold feet before prices drop.

This isn’t fashion; it’s a high-margin ritual. The company’s EBITDA margin (45%) would make Zara jealous. Even the “value” brand Manthan probably earns more per metre of fabric than half of India’s apparel startups combined.


4. Financials Overview

MetricLatest Qtr (Q2 FY26)YoY Qtr (Q2 FY25)Prev Qtr (Q1 FY26)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)263268281-1.8%-6.4%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)111122121-9.0%-8.3%
PAT (₹ Cr)566770-16.2%-20.0%
EPS (₹)2.312.752.89-16.0%-20.1%

Annualized EPS = 2.31 × 4 = ₹9.24
At CMP ₹672, P/E = 72.7x (vs reported 42x TTM — because, math).

Commentary:
The company’s Q2 looks like an off-season wedding — dull but still expensive. Sales slipped marginally, profits took a hit, yet the EBITDA margin of 42% is still haute couture for retail. The high inventory days (210) hint that maybe there are too many sherwanis waiting

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