1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss It
Cyber Media (India) Ltd is a ₹24.8 crore market-cap nano-cap pretending to be a legacy media giant from the 1980s, currently trading at ₹15.8, down 11.3% in 3 months, and a brutal -31.5% over 1 year.
Yet—plot twist—it just reported Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹0.20 Cr, up 264% YoY, with quarterly revenue at ₹25.01 Cr, the highest in the last 5 quarters. Stock P/E sits at 9.9, EV/EBITDA at 6.36, and Price-to-Sales at a comical 0.26.
But before you start imagining a digital media multibagger, here’s the reality check: book value is negative ₹5.43, reserves are -₹30.14 Cr, and debtor days have ballooned to 126 days. This is a company that survives on hope, rights issues, and quarterly optics.
So the question is simple:
👉 Is Cyber Media finally crawling out of the grave, or just applying better makeup to the corpse?
2. Introduction – From Magazine King to Digital Middle-Age Crisis
Cyber Media was incorporated in 1982, when floppy disks were cool and tech magazines ruled the world. Back then, brands like Dataquest, PCQuest, and Voice & Data actually mattered. Fast forward to 2026, and the company is now competing with Twitter threads, LinkedIn influencers, YouTube finance bros, and AI-generated newsletters.
The company calls itself South Asia’s largest speciality media house, but the numbers scream something else: low margins, volatile profits, and chronic balance sheet stress.
The pivot to digital is real—86% of FY25 revenue comes from digital services—but profitability remains allergic. Over the last decade, the company has posted more loss years than profit years, with FY25 net loss of
₹9.73 Cr, followed by a sudden TTM PAT of ₹1.73 Cr.
Classic microcap behavior:
- Lose money for years 😵
- Do a rights issue 💉
- Show one good quarter 🎉
- Market starts whispering “turnaround” 👀
But is it actually happening?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s decode this without marketing fluff.
Cyber Media is not a consumer media company anymore. It’s a B2B tech content + lead generation shop.
What actually brings money?
- Digital Advertising & Content (86%)
- Sponsored articles
- Lead generation for IT vendors
- Influencer-style campaigns for CIOs (yes, that’s a thing)
- Media Services (14%)
- Print magazines (legacy, declining)
- Events & conferences
- Research reports
- Events & Bespoke Solutions
- Tech conferences
- Vendor showcases
- Custom campaigns for Fortune 500 IT firms
In simple words:
👉 Cyber Media sells eyeballs of CIOs, CTOs, and enterprise decision-makers to IT vendors.
The company is also pushing:
- Video content
- AI-assisted content creation
- In-house CMS + analytics
- Subscription automation via its product Mudra
Sounds fancy—but margins tell the truth.
4. Financials Overview – The Quarter That Sparked Hope
Result Type Detection
Latest announcement clearly states “Unaudited Financial Results for the quarter and nine months ended December

