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Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizers Ltd Q2 FY26 – When a Navratna Decides to Flex Its Fertilizer Muscles πŸ’ͺπŸ’₯

1. At a Glance

Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizers Ltd (RCF) β€” the PSU that decided fertilizers can be fun and nitric acid can be profitable β€” just dropped its Q2 FY26 report, and oh boy, it smells like a bag of Ujjwala and Suphala with a dash of government subsidy seasoning. The company, with a market cap of β‚Ή8,077 crore and current price β‚Ή146, is 75% owned by the Government of India (because who else can afford to fund ammonia dreams).

In Q2 FY26, Revenue stood at β‚Ή5,293 crore, up a healthy 23.4% YoY, while PAT jumped 33.4% YoY to β‚Ή105 crore. EPS came in at β‚Ή1.91 for the quarter. The ROE is crawling at 5.03%, and the ROCE at 7.49%, but hey, it’s a PSU β€” not a fintech startup. Debt remains at β‚Ή2,778 crore, and the Debt-to-Equity ratio is 0.56, which means the government’s fertilizer baby isn’t over-leveraged… yet.

Dividend yield? 0.9%, because what’s more Indian than expecting some bonus cash while the company invests β‚Ή2,170 crore in a coal gasification project. RCF’s latest projects at Thal and Trombay, plus its Navratna crown, make it the fertilizer world’s version of Virat Kohli β€” all-rounder, consistent, and slightly volatile.

So, should investors pay attention? Absolutely β€” because this PSU isn’t just growing crops; it’s cultivating a new era of industrial chemistry.


2. Introduction

If you think fertilizers are boring, think again. Rashtriya Chemicals & Fertilizers (RCF) is like that silent topper in your class who suddenly becomes a Navratna and makes everyone else look underachieving. Founded way back in 1978, RCF has been manufacturing Urea, NPK, industrial chemicals, and enough nitric acid to fuel an entire chemistry department’s dream experiments.

The government owns 75% of this chemical garden, ensuring that no matter what happens, subsidies and projects will keep flowing like ammonia through a chilled pipeline. Its brand β€œUjjwala” isn’t just for LPG cylinders β€” RCF’s Ujjwala Urea has been feeding half of Maharashtra’s crops. With over 5,800 dealers across India, the company has a supply chain that rivals FMCG majors.

But don’t let the PSU tag fool you β€” RCF’s recent elevation to Navratna status (August 2023) has given it superpowers. It can now invest up to β‚Ή1,000 crore in new projects without begging the government every time. Think of it as a PSU teenager finally getting a driver’s license.

And just when you thought it couldn’t get busier, RCF is building new plants: Nano Urea (β‚Ή238 Cr), AN Melt Plant (β‚Ή187 Cr), and even a coal-based fertilizer project at Talcher (β‚Ή17,080 Cr) with Coal India, GAIL, and FCIL. Yes, you read that right β€” a fertilizer project bigger than some states’ budgets.

With Q2 FY26 showing double-digit growth, one thing’s clear β€” this is not your usual lazy PSU. RCF is cooking more chemistry than your 11th-grade lab ever did.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

So what exactly does RCF do besides turning natural gas into smelly profits?

RCF has two main business divisions:

πŸ§ͺ Industrial Division

This is the β€œmad scientist” side of RCF β€” making industrial chemicals at Thal and Trombay. They manufacture everything from Ammonium Nitrate Melt, Ammonia, Nitric Acid (58–98%), Methyl Amines, Dimethyl Acetamide, to exotic-sounding chemicals like Phosphoric Acid 27% and Refrigerant Ammonia. If chemistry had a buffet, RCF would own the kitchen.

🌾 Fertilizer Division

Under its popular brands Ujjwala, Suphala, Biola, and Microla, RCF produces Urea, NPK, Biofertilizers, and Micronutrients. Farmers in Maharashtra and Karnataka swear by these brands, and with fertilizer subsidies making up a large part of its revenue, the company practically operates as the government’s agricultural wing.

πŸ’° Trading Arm

When it’s not busy manufacturing, RCF moonlights as a fertilizer trader β€” importing and selling DAP, MOP, and other fancy imported nutrients.

Between these divisions, RCF is India’s one-stop fertilizer and chemical bazaar. The company’s mix ensures that even if urea prices fluctuate, its industrial division provides chemical cushioning.

And because India’s farmers can’t

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