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Kalahridhaan Trendz Ltd H1 FY25 Results: ₹199 Cr Revenue, 0.17x Book Value, 10% Dividend Yield — Deep Value or Deep Trouble?


1. At a Glance – Yeh Value Trap Hai Ya Value Jackpot?

Market cap ₹8.34 crore. Sales ₹199 crore. Let that sink in.
This company sells almost ₹200 crore worth of fabric, dye, print, embroidery and textile jugaad, and the market says: “Boss, tu ₹9 crore ka hi hai.”

Kalahridhaan Trendz Ltd (KTL) is trading at ₹4.85, down nearly 80% in one year, with a P/E of 1.99, Price-to-Book of 0.17, ROE 24%, ROCE 19%, and a 10.3% dividend yield. On paper, this looks like a Benjamin Graham wet dream. In reality, it smells like a classic Indian SME thriller.

Latest quarter sales are ₹89 crore with PAT of ₹0.98 crore. Profit fell sharply QoQ, promoters reduced stake earlier, auditors resigned, CFO resigned, working capital exploded — and yet, dividend was declared and a ₹115.5 crore export order landed from Bangladesh.

So what is this?
A fallen textile phoenix?
Or a balance-sheet magician running a very tight rope?

Grab chai. This one is masaledaar.


2. Introduction – When Numbers Look Cheap But Sleep Is Expensive

Kalahridhaan Trendz Ltd was incorporated in 2016 — not exactly a textile dinosaur, but not a startup either. In less than a decade, the company scaled revenue to nearly ₹200 crore annually. That alone deserves a slow clap in an industry where margins are thinner than chiffon.

But markets don’t reward revenue alone. Markets reward clarity, consistency, and credibility — three things SMEs regularly struggle with.

KTL’s stock chart looks like it fell off a cliff. From ₹23 highs to sub-₹5 levels, retail investors were clearly taught a lesson they didn’t sign up for. And yet, fundamentals still show profitability, dividends, and expansion plans.

This contradiction is the core of the KTL story.

On one hand:

  • Profitable operations
  • Expanding dyeing & printing capacity
  • Large export order
  • Decent ROCE

On the other:

  • Rising debt
  • Negative operating cash flows
  • Working capital days ballooning to 116
  • Auditor & CFO resignations
  • Promoter stake volatility

This is not a simple “cheap stock” story. This is a complex SME case study — the kind where valuation looks absurdly low because risk is absurdly high.

So let’s open the factory gates.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do? (Textile Edition)

Kalahridhaan Trendz is not a brand like Raymond or Vardhman. They don’t sell aspiration. They sell processed fabric.

Their business spans:

  • Purchase of grey cloth
  • Dyeing & printing
  • Embroidery (in-house + outsourced)
  • Trading of suiting, shirting & dress materials

Basically, they sit in the middle of the textile value chain, where volumes are high, margins are low, and cash cycles are long.

Their dyeing & printing facility spans 1.5 lakh sq. ft., with weaving capacity of 1 lakh+ meters per day, and plans to expand to 7 lakh meters per month.

They handle:

  • Cotton
  • Polyester
  • Wool
  • Viscose
  • Silk
  • Woven & knitted fabrics

This is classic B2B textile processing. No glamour. No Instagram reels. Just machines, chemicals, water, power, and receivables.

If this company stops working for 7 days, cash stops. If customers delay payments, debt rises. This is not a forgiving business model.

And yet, execution-wise, KTL has scaled fast.

The question is — at what cost?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Make You Squint

Quarterly Comparison Table (₹ Crore)

MetricLatest QtrYoY QtrPrev QtrYoY %QoQ %
Revenue88.9784.2584.285.6%5.6%
EBITDA~6.17~5.80~7.50

Eduinvesting Team

https://eduinvesting.in/

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