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Kapil Raj Finance Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹0.30 Cr Revenue, 59× P/E, 100% Public Holding: Revival Story or Accounting Yoga?


1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss It

If Indian microcap NBFCs were Netflix shows, Kapil Raj Finance Ltd would be that low-budget thriller you randomly click at 2 a.m.—confusing, slow, but occasionally shocking.

Market cap sits at ₹32.7 crore, the stock price is ₹2.99, and the share has already punished impatient traders with -64% returns in 6 months. Yet suddenly, out of nowhere, the company posts Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹0.28 crore on ₹0.30 crore revenue. That’s not a typo. That’s a 93% operating margin. Even luxury brands are jealous.

The company is debt-free, promoter holding is 0%, and 100% of shares are with the public—which is either radical transparency or “bhaiyya koi sambhal lo isko.”

Stock trades at 59× P/E versus industry median ~21×, despite a history of losses, eroded net worth, and business activity that resembles a retired NBFC doing yoga on interest income.

Latest quarter numbers look spicy, but zoom out and the long-term chart still looks like an ECG machine having a panic attack. So the big question: Is this a genuine turnaround—or just a lucky quarter doing heavy lifting for a tired balance sheet?


2. Introduction – A Veteran NBFC with Midlife Crisis

Incorporated in 1985, Kapil Raj Finance Ltd has seen everything—Harshad Mehta, Ketan Parekh, dot-com boom, global financial crisis, demonetisation, COVID, and still somehow survived. That alone deserves a slow clap.

The company is registered as a non-systemically important, non-deposit taking NBFC. Translation: small, regulated, and not important enough for RBI to lose sleep over.

For years, KRFL generated operational losses, negligible revenue, and slowly eroded its net worth. FY24 revenue? Almost zero—only interest on long-term loans and advances kept the lights on. No lending scale, no meaningful AUM, no roaring NBFC engine.

Then came corporate actions:

  • Preferential allotments & warrant conversions (2023)
  • Change in Managing Director (2024)
  • Voluntary delisting from MSEIL (Oct 2024)
  • 10:1 stock split approved (Feb 2025)

And suddenly—boom—Q3 FY26 shows profits.

Now tell me honestly: Is this a phoenix rising from ashes, or just accounting firecrackers before Diwali?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Officially, KRFL offers:

  • Financing to industrial & commercial enterprises
  • Hire purchase of machinery, vehicles, equipment
  • Management & financial consultancy
  • Real estate-related financial activities

Unofficially? The actual operating activity is minimal.

There’s no disclosed loan book growth, no granular AUM data, no segment-wise revenue breakup, and no evidence of large-scale financing operations. Most income historically comes from:

  • Interest on long-term loans
  • Occasional other income

This is less “full-stack NBFC” and more “financial holding company in hibernation.”

Think of KRFL like that uncle who says “business chal raha hai” but never explains what business, how much, or with whom.

The business model exists on paper, but execution is still in beta mode. The recent profits look more like a micro-revival attempt, not a full-blown NBFC comeback.


4. Financials Overview – The Quarter That Changed the Mood

Result Type Lock

The latest announcement clearly states “Quarterly Results” for the quarter ended 31 December 2025.
👉 Locked as QUARTERLY RESULTS for EPS purposes.

Quarterly Comparison Table (₹ Crore)

MetricLatest Qtr (Q3 FY26)Same Qtr LYPrev QtrYoY %QoQ %
Revenue0.300.000.30NA0%
EBITDA0.28-0.010.22NA27%
PAT0.28-0.010.32NA-12%
EPS (₹)0.03-0.000.03NA0%

Annualised EPS (Quarterly Rule):
Q3 FY26 EPS = 0.03

Eduinvesting Team

https://eduinvesting.in/

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