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Dhampur Bio Organics Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹486 Cr Quarterly Revenue, PAT Jumps 431% QoQ, Yet ROCE Still Below 4% – Sweet Sugar, Bitter Ratios


1. At a Glance – Sugarcane With an MBA

Dhampur Bio Organics Ltd (DBOL) is that kid in class who brought every notebook—sugar, ethanol, power, liquor—and still forgot to score well in return ratios. As of January 21, 2026, the stock trades around ₹80.6, packing a market cap of ~₹535 Cr, a P/E of ~22.6, and a Price-to-Book of just 0.56. On paper, that screams “cheap”. On ratios, it whispers “confused”.

Latest Q3 FY26 consolidated numbers show ₹486 Cr revenue with PAT of ₹16.9 Cr, translating into a headline-friendly 431% QoQ profit jump. Sounds blockbuster? Hold that excitement like sugar stock inventory in a godown. ROCE is still stuck around 3.97%, ROE limps at 1.56%, and interest coverage is a modest 1.45x—barely enough to keep bankers smiling politely.

Three-month return is flat, six-month return is negative, and one-year performance looks like a sugarcane tractor stuck in muddy UP soil. Yet DBOL throws dividends (yield ~1.55%), runs ethanol, sells IMIL liquor, exports power, and even bottles pharma-grade sugar. The question is simple: Is DBOL a misunderstood bio-energy play… or just too many businesses chasing too little return?


2. Introduction – Born Young, Acting Old

Incorporated in 2022, DBOL is technically a toddler, but operationally it behaves like a seasoned sugar mill uncle who has seen quota regimes, ethanol policies, cane arrears, and every possible government notification since Independence. The company emerged from the Dhampur sugar ecosystem and inherited fully functional plants, distilleries, and power units across Uttar Pradesh.

Sugar companies usually have one mood: cyclical. DBOL decided that was too boring. So it added ethanol, bio-fuels, renewable power, IMIL country liquor, CO₂, and pharma-grade sugar. Basically, if sugarcane can be squeezed into something sellable, DBOL is already doing it.

But diversification without profitability is like adding extra toppings to a pizza with a burnt base. Revenue is there. Volumes are there. Capacities are impressive. Yet returns refuse to behave. Investors are staring at a balance sheet that says “asset-heavy”, a P&L that says “volatile”, and ratios that say “thoda sabar rakhiye”.

So is this a transition phase? Or is DBOL just stuck in the sugar sector’s eternal middle child syndrome? Let’s open the mill gates and walk in.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Imagine sugarcane walking into DBOL’s factory. It doesn’t leave

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