Sreeleathers Ltd Q2 FY26 – The Rs. 8.6 Cr Profit March of India’s Largest Shoe Bazaar (With Zero Debt Swagger and Zero Dividend Drama)
1. At a Glance
If Bata is your dad’s shoe rack and Metro is your wife’s guilty retail indulgence, Sreeleathers Ltd is that quietly flexing cousin who runs a 27-dealer empire out of Kolkata — debt-free, cash-loaded, and still refuses to give you a dividend. At a current market cap of ₹532 crore and trading around ₹230, this footwear trader just dropped a spicy Q2 FY26 performance: Revenue up 19.2% YoY to ₹74.7 crore, PAT up 33.5% to ₹8.61 crore, and EPS leaping to ₹3.72 per share.
But before you start humming “Yeh jo desh hai tera,” remember this: Sreeleathers has an ROE of just 5.14% and hasn’t paid a single paisa in dividends since forever. The company is debt-free, yes — but apparently, also ambition-free in the payout department. Still, with its Lindsay Street showroom holding the record for being the world’s largest single-brand footwear store, this isn’t your average cobbler’s tale.
2. Introduction
Once upon a time, when every Indian wedding gift was either a Milton flask or a pair of Sreeleathers slippers, few imagined this homegrown brand would one day list on the bourses. Fast forward to 2025: Sreeleathers has turned nostalgia into a ₹233 crore annual sales machine. It doesn’t just sell shoes — it sells Bengali resilience stitched in synthetic soles.
Sreeleathers today represents that rare blend of old-school thrift and modern retail stoicism. While its peers like Metro Brands and Relaxo are busy hiring influencers and launching “AirFlex” collections, Sreeleathers is chilling in its Lindsay Street megastore — which, fun fact, could probably house half of Bata’s outlets in one go.
The irony? For a brand that once prided itself on affordability, its stock now trades at a P/E of 23. That’s still cheaper than Bata (69x) or Relaxo (58x), but investors might ask: Can a company that sells ₹299 chappals really justify a ₹230 stock price?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Sreeleathers isn’t a manufacturer like Relaxo. It’s primarily in trading — selling leather and non-leather footwear, bags, belts, wallets, and accessories through both retail and wholesale. Think of it as the Big Bazaar of Footwear, minus the chaos and D-Mart-like aggression.
Its revenue comes 99% from the sale of goods and just 1% from “other income.” There are no fancy exports or new-age sneaker collaborations — just pure desi retail hustle.
The business operates through:
Exclusive stores & 27 dealers across India.
Three main operational units — two in Kolkata (the mothership) and one in Jaipur.
A flagship showroom at Lindsay Street, Kolkata, officially crowned the world’s largest single-brand footwear store. Yes, you read that right — not Delhi, not Dubai, but Kolkata.
The product range could put Decathlon to shame — from formal shoes to Kolhapuri chappals, school shoes, handbags, belts, leather jackets, and even washable footwear for the detergent-obsessed Indian customer.
In short, Sreeleathers has something for every foot and every festival — but still runs like a cautious accountant: debt-free, slow-moving, and allergic to risk.
4. Financials Overview
Here’s how Q2 FY26 played out — and oh boy, these numbers look like a good Diwali sale.
Metric
Sep 2025 (Latest Qtr)
Sep 2024 (YoY Qtr)
Jun 2025 (Prev Qtr)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)
74.71
62.66
50.10
+19.2%
+49.1%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)
11.68
9.94
4.26
+17.5%
+174%
PAT (₹ Cr)
8.61
6.45
2.93
+33.5%
+193.7%
EPS (₹)
3.72
2.79
1.27
+33.3%
+193.0%
Annualised EPS = 3.72 × 4 = ₹14.88
At CMP ₹230, that’s a forward P/E of roughly 15.5x, cheaper than Bata, Relaxo,