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Oasis Securities Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹0.42 Cr PAT, 147% QoQ Profit Spike, ₹49 Cr Rights Issue Drama & a Micro-Cap NBFC Identity Crisis


1. At a Glance – Small NBFC, Big Mood Swings

Oasis Securities Ltd is a ₹22.2 crore micro-cap NBFC that behaves like a finance professor who suddenly discovered crypto Twitter — erratic, experimental, and occasionally profitable. At ₹12 per share, the stock is down ~56% in three months and ~50% over one year, reminding shareholders that “wealth creation” is optional in microcaps.

Despite the carnage on the price chart, Q3 FY26 numbers showed PAT of ₹0.42 crore, up 147% QoQ, with quarterly sales of ₹0.56 crore growing 36.6% QoQ. ROCE stands at 9.46%, ROE at 7.35%, and the company remains debt-free, which in NBFC land is either admirable discipline or lack of ambition — jury’s still out.

Promoters hold ~70.8%, no pledging, and recently executed a complete management change, followed by a 10:1 stock split and a ₹49 crore rights issue approval. For a company whose annual PAT is under ₹1 crore, that fund-raise size deserves its own Netflix documentary.

So the question is simple:
Is Oasis Securities quietly reinventing itself, or just rearranging deck chairs on a very small financial ship?


2. Introduction – From Sleepy Investment Company to Corporate Action Factory

For years, Oasis Securities was the kind of company you’d accidentally discover while scrolling screener filters at 2 a.m. — tiny balance sheet, inconsistent revenues, and a business model politely described as “investments.”

Then FY25 happened.

New promoters walked in via a Share Purchase Agreement covering 70.65% stake, followed by an open offer, a management overhaul, stock split, rights issue approval, and even related-party fintech investments. That’s more corporate action than the company had seen in the previous decade combined.

Operationally, Oasis is a non-systematically important, non-deposit taking NBFC, meaning it doesn’t take public deposits and doesn’t scare RBI enough to get daily phone calls. It operates in fund-based activities — lending and investments — with income coming from interest, fair value gains, and processing charges.

But here’s

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