1. At a Glance – Blink and Your Money’s Gone
Praxis Home Retail Ltd is trading at ₹7.19, down 57% in one year, 42% in three months, and spiritually down since inception. Market cap stands at ₹134 Cr, while enterprise value is ₹257 Cr, which politely means: debt is doing most of the talking.
Latest Q3 FY26 revenue is ₹26.2 Cr, while PAT is –₹15.9 Cr. That’s not a typo — the company loses ₹60+ Cr annually while running 33 stores across 24 cities. ROCE is –9.63%, operating margins are –27%, and interest coverage is –2.26, meaning interest is eating the company faster than customers buy sofas.
Promoter holding has collapsed from 55% to 7%. Public holding is 91%, which means retail investors are now running HomeTown emotionally and financially.
This is not a turnaround story yet. This is a survival documentary.
2. Introduction – When HomeTown Became No-Man’s-Land
Praxis Home Retail was supposed to be the organised furniture retail play — a clean, aspirational, IKEA-lite Indian story. Instead, it became a case study in how retail burns cash faster than Diwali fireworks.
Founded in 2011 and closely linked to the Biyani ecosystem, Praxis carried forward the DNA of big stores, big leases, and even bigger optimism. Unfortunately, demand cycles, high rentals, low margins, and online competition showed zero mercy.
The company has been loss-making for most of its life, its entire net worth has been eroded, and current liabilities routinely exceed current assets. This is not a one-year COVID accident — this is chronic retail asthma.
Ask yourself: if home retail is booming in India, why is this one gasping?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Praxis operates HomeTown, a large-format home retail chain offering:
- Furniture (living, bedroom, office)
- Modular kitchens
- Modular wardrobes
- Home décor & furnishings
- Interior design services
Sounds sexy, right?
Now comes the reality check.
This business model has:
- High inventory days (200+ days)
- Heavy working capital
- Lease-driven fixed costs
- Low repeat purchase frequency
You don’t buy a sofa every month. But you pay rent every month. That mismatch has murdered margins.
Online competition (Pepperfry, Amazon, Urban Ladder) eats price. Offline stores eat cash. Praxis gets squeezed from both ends — like a samosa in a hydraulic press.
4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Cry for Help
Quarterly Comparison (Figures in ₹ Crores)
| Metric | Latest Qtr (Dec’25) | YoY Qtr (Dec’24) | Prev Qtr (Sep’25) | YoY % | QoQ % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 26.2 | 34.0 | 21.0 | –22.9% | +24.8% |
| EBITDA | –9 | +1 | –6 | Imploded | Slightly Worse |
| PAT | –15.9 | –8.0 | –16.0 | –98% | Flat Pain |
| EPS (₹) | –0.86 | –0.45 | –0.89 | –91% | Marginal |
Witty summary:
Sales are falling, costs don’t care, and profits are a distant relative nobody has seen.
5. Valuation Discussion – Cheap or Just Broken?
Let’s be honest.
- P/E: Not applicable (loss-making)
- EV/EBITDA: –13.4 (because EBITDA is negative)
- DCF: Only works if cash flows exist. They don’t.
Fair Value Range (Educational Only):
₹5 – ₹9
This assumes:
- No further dilution disasters
- Debt doesn’t spiral
- Business doesn’t shrink further
Disclaimer:
This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice.
6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama
Plenty of drama, zero glamour:
- Store closures in FY25 due to “operational viability”
- Rights issue of ~₹50 Cr and later ₹495 Cr shares at ₹10
- Related-party loan waivers of ₹95 Cr
- NCLT litigation over lease disputes (~₹19.55 Cr claim)
- Repeated penalties from NSE/BSE for compliance delays
- CEO musical chairs (new CEO again in Feb 2026)
This is not execution noise. This is structural distress with background music.
7. Balance Sheet – ICU Report (Latest: Sep 2025)
| Item | Sep’25 |
|---|---|
| Total Assets | ₹312 Cr |
| Net Worth | –₹41 Cr |
| Borrowings | ₹160 Cr |
| Other Liabilities | ₹100 Cr |
| Total Liabilities | ₹312 Cr |
Observations:
- Net worth is negative
- Debt > Market Cap
- Equity dilution is the only oxygen mask left
8. Cash Flow – Sab Number Game Hai
| Year | Operating | Investing | Financing |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY23 | +24 | –10 | –69 |
| FY24 | +74 | –7 | +36 |
| FY25 | –27 | –1 | +29 |
Operating cash flow is erratic, financing cash flow is life support, and investing is mostly survival maintenance.
9. Ratios – Sexy or Stressy?
- ROCE: –9.63%
- Debt/Equity: 3.1
- PAT Margin: –27%
- Interest Coverage: –2.26
- Price/Book: 2.58 (yes, negative book, still premium)
This is stressy, not sexy.
10. P&L Breakdown – Shrinking Like Wool in Hot Water
| Year | Revenue | EBITDA | PAT |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY23 | 386 | –4 | –21 |
| FY24 | 220 | –25 | –86 |
| FY25 | 119 | –28 | –35 |
Revenue has collapsed 70% in two years. That’s not a slowdown — that’s a controlled demolition.
11. Peer Comparison – Wrong Party, Wrong Outfit
Compared with:
- Trent
- V-Mart
- Aditya Vision
Praxis is:
- Lowest scale
- Worst margins
- Highest leverage
- Zero pricing power
It’s competing in the same marathon with a broken leg and unpaid coach.
12. Shareholding – Promoters Packed Their Bags
- Promoters: 7.23%
- Public: 91.13%
- FIIs + DIIs: ~1.6%
Promoters didn’t pledge.
They left.
That tells you everything.
13. Corporate Governance – Angels or Devils?
- Frequent KMP changes
- Delayed compliances
- Loan waivers from related parties
- Multiple regulatory fines
No fraud accusation here — but discipline is clearly missing.
14. Industry Roast – Indian Home Retail Is Brutal
Home retail in India is:
- Capital intensive
- Low margin
- High competition
- Slow churn
Only players with:
- Strong balance sheets
- Private labels
- Asset-light models
survive.
Praxis has none of those right now.
15. EduInvesting Verdict – Documentary, Not a Dream
Strengths
- Known brand
- Physical footprint
- Asset base exists
Weaknesses
- Negative net worth
- High debt
- Falling revenues
- Promoter exit
Opportunities
- Drastic restructuring
- Asset monetisation
- New management discipline
Threats
- Further dilution
- Insolvency risk
- Irrelevance
This is not an investment story.
This is a case study — on leverage, retail risk, and why balance sheets matter more than showrooms.
Written by EduInvesting Team | Date
