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Zaggle Prepaid Ocean Services Ltd Q2FY26: ₹4,309.8 Mn Revenue, ₹332.4 Mn Profit & A Fintech Buffet Served With AI, Acquisitions & Audacity

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1. At a Glance

If SaaS and Fintech had a hyperactive child who loved corporate cards and press releases, it would be Zaggle Prepaid Ocean Services Ltd. The Hyderabad-based company, currently valued at a spicy ₹5,033 crore, is that flamboyant cousin in the IT family who shows up at weddings flaunting prepaid cards instead of cash. With a Q2FY26 revenue of ₹4,309.8 million (₹431 crore) and PAT of ₹332.4 million (₹33.2 crore), Zaggle just delivered a quarter with 42.4% YoY sales growth and a 79.1% profit explosion.

The stock trades around ₹375, down 13% in a year, but before you dismiss it as another tech fancy story — hold that thought. This one’s not just swiping cards; it’s swiping competitors. With EPS at ₹8.29, ROE of 9.6%, and ROCE at 13%, Zaggle sits on a neat pile of ₹1,373 crore assets while owing a laughable ₹15 crore in debt. Basically, their Debt/Equity ratio of 0.01 screams “We’re not broke, just dramatic.”

The Q2 results also came with a confidence bomb — the company raised revenue guidance to 40–45% for FY26 and casually mentioned it had bought 55.56% of Greenedge while issuing ₹60 crore in warrants at ₹567 each. Oh, and yes, their AI bot RazBot is now a thing. Who needs ChatGPT when your expense management software starts replying with sass?


2. Introduction

Zaggle is one of those modern Indian fintech tales that reads like a mashup of a Silicon Valley pitch and a Hyderabadi biryani recipe — overstuffed with everything. Founded to manage corporate expense automation, the company has somehow positioned itself at the confluence of SaaS, cards, analytics, loyalty, and rewards, while making it sound sexy enough for startups, SMEs, and large corporates alike.

In a country where filing reimbursement bills is a national trauma, Zaggle offers digital therapy. From prepaid corporate cards to AI-enabled spend tracking, it promises CFOs “control,” employees “convenience,” and investors “compounded returns” — though sometimes, only two out of those three arrive.

With partners like Visa, Mastercard, RuPay, and banks from SBI to Kotak, Zaggle has built a B2B fintech playground that covers every side of expense management — payments, rewards, credit cards, and analytics. Its corporate clientele reads like a LinkedIn flex board: Tata Steel, Wockhardt, Greenply, Persistent, and Inox.

And yet, despite growing sales from ₹68 crore in FY20 to ₹1,510 crore TTM, the company doesn’t pay a single rupee in dividends. Because why share profits when you can invest in more startups and AI bots, right?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Zaggle’s model can best be described as “B2B Fintech SaaS that likes to party with banks.” It sits between corporates, employees, and financial institutions — providing tech to manage expense workflows, while taking a slice from every transaction or platform usage.

Here’s the anatomy of the beast:

  • Program Fees (42%): That’s the juicy chunk from card issuance, reward programs, and managed spends. Essentially, Zaggle earns when employees swipe.
  • Propel Platform Revenue (54%): From their proprietary platform “Propel,” which handles loyalty, rewards, and incentive management for corporates.
  • Software Fees (4%): Classic SaaS-style subscription from clients using their software stack.

In FY24, Zaggle also launched Zoyer, a vendor management + corporate credit card platform, expanding its control from employee expenses to supplier payments. Think of it as “expense Tinder” — matching businesses with their invoices.

The company doesn’t just stop at cards. Through its strategic tie-ups — Wipro (employee benefits), PNB MetLife (insurance-linked rewards), and Skydo (cross-border payments) — it’s slowly morphing into a fintech octopus with every arm touching

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