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Sterlite Technologies Limited Q3 FY26 — ₹1,257 Cr Revenue, EBITDA ₹129 Cr, Debt ₹1,921 Cr: Optical Fibre Giant or Capital-Hungry Cable Soap Opera?

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

Sterlite Technologies Limited (STL) is currently priced at ₹88, flexing a market cap of ₹4,301 Cr, and trading like a confused teenager — sometimes optimistic, sometimes crying in the bathroom. In the last 3 months, the stock is down ~26%, while the 1-year return is still +13.8%, proving once again that time horizons matter more than Twitter threads.

Q3 FY26 just landed with revenue of ₹1,257 Cr, EBITDA of ₹129 Cr, and PAT of –₹17 Cr. Yes, losses again. But sales grew ~26% YoY, so at least the top line is alive and breathing. The company trades at a P/E of 358, which is hilarious given EPS is negative. ROCE at 2.86% and ROE at –6.28% politely inform you that capital efficiency is currently on vacation.

Debt stands at ₹1,921 Cr, debt-to-equity at 0.94, and interest coverage is a nervous 1.07x — one bad quarter away from sweating bankers. Promoters hold 44.4%, down sharply from ~54% two years ago thanks to dilution.

So what is STL today?
A global optical fibre heavyweight with factories across continents…
or
a leveraged turnaround story praying for telco capex cycles to revive?

Let’s open the fibre ducts and see what’s actually inside.


2. Introduction – From Telecom Darling to Balance Sheet Drama

Once upon a time, STL was the undisputed king of optical fibre in India. Established in 2001 after the demerger from Sterlite Industries, it rode the telecom boom, laid cables across continents, and became one of the largest optical fibre and OFC manufacturers globally (ex-China).

Then came the reality check.

Global telco capex slowed. 5G rollouts got delayed. Prices crashed. Margins evaporated. STL responded the only way manufacturers know — add more capacity, expand globally, borrow money, and hope demand catches up.

Fast forward to FY24–FY26:

  • Market share fell from 12% to 8% globally (ex-China)
  • Debt ballooned above ₹3,000 Cr before being brought down
  • Profits turned volatile, sometimes missing, sometimes negative
  • Promoter stake diluted via ₹1,000 Cr QIP

Yet, STL refuses to die quietly. It keeps announcing:

  • New US factories
  • Global partnerships
  • BharatNet orders
  • AI-ready fibre trials
  • Quantum-secure networks

The question is simple:
Is this a painful investment phase… or a structural profitability problem?

Let’s break the business first.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Think of STL as a full-stack optical connectivity company

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