1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Cash Machine
₹66,772 crore market cap. ₹7,674 stock price. ROCE at 40.6%, ROE flirting at 29.3%, operating margins chilling at ~42–45% like it owns the IT sector’s penthouse. Q3 FY26 came in with ₹1,966 crore revenue (+14.6% YoY) and ₹610 crore PAT (+12.6% YoY), while most IT companies are still busy explaining why clients “paused discretionary spending”.
Oracle Financial Services Software is that boring topper in class who never participates in debates, never posts on LinkedIn, but somehow tops every exam and still goes home early. Zero debt (₹34 crore is basically chai-paani for this balance sheet), dividend yield of 3.45%, and a 5-year stock CAGR of 18% despite being older than half the fintech founders on Twitter.
But here’s the real masala: 49% of revenue comes from one customer. Yes, one. If concentration risk had a face, it would be smiling confidently here. Curious already?
2. Introduction – Legacy IT, But Make It Ruthlessly Profitable
Oracle Financial Services Software (OFSS) is not a startup, not a SaaS darling chasing ARR slides, and definitely not your “AI-first, cloud-native, GenAI-enabled” marketing deck champion. It is the OG banker’s banker.
Incorporated in 1989 and backed by Oracle Global (Mauritius), this company has spent decades embedding itself deep inside the plumbing of global banks. We’re talking core banking systems, transaction engines, treasury platforms, payments, lending, limits, collateral – the stuff banks cannot switch off even during Diwali holidays.
While the rest of IT services sells hours, OFSS sells mission-critical dependence. Once a bank runs on FLEXCUBE, switching costs are so high that CFOs would rather change CEOs than vendors.
Q3 FY26 results show steady growth, fat margins, and zero drama operationally. Governance drama? That’s a separate Netflix episode (we’ll get there). Financially, this company behaves like a PSU monopoly with private-sector efficiency.
Question for you: would you rather own a fast-growing IT stock with 18% margins or a slow-growing one with 45% operating margins and obscene dividends?
3. Business