1. At a Glance
SignatureGlobal India Ltd — the self-proclaimed “common man’s developer” — just posted a rollercoaster of a quarter. The company, ruling Gurugram’s skyline of affordable dreams, managed a Q2 FY26 revenue of ₹3.3 billion while… oops… sliding into a ₹0.46 billion loss. Because what’s real estate without a touch of drama?
At ₹1,058 a share and a P/E ratio that can make DLF blush (191x), the ₹14,836 crore market-cap company is in no hurry to build profits, just projects. Over the past three months, the stock slid about 5%, but SignatureGlobal continues to flex with an inventory pipeline worth ₹50,000 crore in gross development value (GDV). It’s like saying, “We’re not rich yet, but our land surely is.”
Despite an ROE of 14.7% and ROCE of 5.42%, investors are clearly betting more on Gurugram’s concrete than quarterly profits. The management insists they’ll halve their ₹2,589 crore debt by FY25, though they also raised ₹875 crore NCDs in October 2025. Debt detox or debt rehab — pick your metaphor.
With collections of ₹18.6 billion in H1 FY26 and pre-sales touching ₹46.6 billion, SignatureGlobal is the rare builder that’s selling homes faster than it’s finishing them. Affordable housing may be their niche, but luxury-style ambition is their energy drink.
2. Introduction
In a world where property prices are more unpredictable than Indian elections, SignatureGlobal India Ltd has found its sweet spot: middle-class aspiration. This company doesn’t build palaces for billionaires — it builds apartments for those who just stopped checking rent prices.
Founded in 2000, SignatureGlobal is now the king of NCR’s affordable and mid-segment housing. With 27% market share in Gurugram and 13% in the entire NCR, it’s practically the DLF of dreams under ₹40 lakh. Yet, like every “affordable” promise in India, there’s always a catch — because nothing is truly affordable when the P/E ratio is 191.
Their story reads like a real-estate Bollywood plot — the humble builder that grew up alongside the Gurgaon skyline. From tiny plots under the Haryana Government’s Affordable Housing Policy to massive 194-acre projects with billion-rupee valuations, they’ve turned government policy into a business model.
And what timing! When other developers cry over unsold inventory, SignatureGlobal has managed to sell 30,000+ units. Maybe Indians can’t afford houses anymore, but they sure can afford hope — and SignatureGlobal sells that by the square foot.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
SignatureGlobal’s business is simple: build affordable and mid-segment homes and make middle-class Indians feel like they own a piece of Gurugram, even if it’s next to a dusty service lane.
They operate under two key verticals:
- Affordable Housing (below ₹40 lakh)– Targeting the segment of buyers who argue with brokers over GST charges.
- Mid-Income Housing (₹25–40 lakh)– For the “Netflix and EMIs” generation who dream of balconies and modular kitchens.
They leverage policies like Haryana’sAffordable Housing Policy (AHP)andDeen Dayal Jan Awas Yojana (DDJAY)to access subsidized land and faster approvals. Translation: government schemes meet capitalist ambition.
Projects are structured through subsidiaries like Signature Global Homes, Signature Infrabuild, and Signature Developers. The company collects customer advances early, books pre-sales aggressively, and then funds construction through these collections plus external borrowings — a cash-flow cycle that would make a CA sweat and a banker smile.
Average realization rose from ₹11,762 per sq. ft in FY24 to ₹13,379 per sq. ft in H1 FY25, which is more than double some competitors’ rates in the “affordable” category. Apparently, “affordable” is a flexible adjective.
Their 25 ongoing projects (15.8 mn sq. ft) have an estimated revenue potential of ₹110 billion, while 25.4 mn sq. ft of forthcoming launches promise another multi-year supply line of dreams.
4. Financials Overview
| Metric (₹ Cr) | Q2 FY26 (Latest) | Q2 FY25 (YoY) | Q1 FY26 (QoQ) | YoY % | QoQ % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 338 | 749 | 866 | -54.8% | -61.0% |
| EBITDA | -74 | -12 | 33 | -516% | -324% |
| PAT | -47 | 4 | 34 | -1,240% | -238% |
| EPS (₹) | -3.33 | 0.29 | 2.45 | -1,248% | -236% |
Annualized EPS = ₹(-3.33 × 4) = -₹13.32 (P/E not meaningful this quarter).
Commentary:SignatureGlobal’s quarterly performance is like a real estate launch party: loud on promise, short on profit. Revenue halved YoY, profit collapsed, and EBITDA fell deep into negative. Yet, this is not panic mode — it’s real estate seasonality. Developers recognize revenue only on completion and OC milestones. So, if construction milestones delay, revenue looks like
a recession even when pre-sales are booming.
5. Valuation Discussion – The Fair Value Range
Let’s decode the numbers like a forensic accountant with a sense of humour.
Method 1: P/E Based (Educational Estimate)EPS (TTM): ₹5.54Industry P/E: 38.1Company P/E: 191
Fair P/E range (25–45× EPS) → ₹138 to ₹250 per share (purely fundamental).But since market euphoria doesn’t obey logic, the CMP ₹1,058 reflects an “aspirational premium” of 4×.
Method 2: EV/EBITDAEV: ₹15,829 CrEBITDA (TTM): ₹167 Cr (approx from EV/EBITDA 94.8)EV/EBITDA industry average ≈ 20× → Fair EV = ₹3,340 Cr → Implied share price range ₹230–₹280
Method 3: DCF (Simplified)Assume operating cash flow growth 20% for 5 years, WACC 10%, terminal growth 4% → Fair range ₹220–₹350 per share
⚠️ Disclaimer:This fair value range is foreducational purposes only. It’s not investment advice. If you buy based on this, at least send the author your apartment’s registry first.
6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama
2025 was SignatureGlobal’s “build, borrow, brag” year.
- October 2025:Raised ₹875 crore via 11% listed NCDs to IFC. Because who doesn’t love high-yield debt with a fancy international lender name attached?
- August 2025:Subsidiary bagged33.47 acres in Gurugram, adding 1.76 million sq. ft of developable area. Gurgaon’s skyline just got more “signatured.”
- June 2025:Completed acquisition of the remaining 15.41% in Indeed Fincap — now a fully owned financing arm. So yes, they can now lend to themselves officially.
- H1 FY26:Revenue ₹12 billion, collections ₹18.6 billion, and pre-sales ₹46.6 billion — that’s 4× their reported sales. If only accounting followed cash flow optimism!
- FY25 full-year recap:Record presales ₹102.9 billion, PAT up 531% to ₹101 Cr, and net debt reduced from ₹1,933 Cr to ₹880 Cr. Someone deserves an award for debt weight loss.
But Q2 FY26 loss shows the hangover of aggressive land buying. SignatureGlobal is playing “Go Big or Go Home” — except their businessisto make homes.
7. Balance Sheet
| Particulars (₹ Cr) | Mar 2024 | Mar 2025 | Sep 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Assets | 8,474 | 12,866 | 14,574 |
| Net Worth (Equity + Reserves) | 627 | 727 | 727 |
| Borrowings | 1,933 | 2,394 | 2,589 |
| Other Liabilities | 5,914 | 9,746 | 11,257 |
| Total Liabilities | 8,474 | 12,866 | 14,574 |
Observations (in sarcastic audit tone):
- Their “assets” are growing faster

















