Search for Stocks /

Associated Alcohols & Breweries Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹1,023 Cr Sales, ₹87 Cr PAT, 18.5x P/E: Booze, Biofuel & Balance Sheet Gym Gains

Spotted a factual error — a wrong number, date, or fact? Tell us and we will check the source.

1. At a Glance

Associated Alcohols & Breweries Ltd (AABL) is having one of those “I look boring on the outside but quietly lifting heavy weights inside” phases. Market cap sitting at ₹1,616 Cr, stock price bruised at ₹852 (down ~24% in 3 months, because markets love drama), yet operationally the company is doing a tightrope walk between liquor dominance, ethanol ambitions, and balance sheet discipline.

Q3 FY26 headline numbers?
Quarterly sales ₹260 Cr, PAT ₹27.3 Cr, with profits still growing ~4.6% YoY even as topline slipped ~20% YoY. ROCE at a respectable 20%, debt-to-equity a gym-bro 0.13, and interest coverage so high (24x) that lenders probably send thank-you cards.

This is a company that sells country liquor, premium whisky, ethanol, ENA, and now wants to flirt with tequila. Yes, tequila. From Madhya Pradesh. Welcome to Indian capital markets.

But is this a cyclical hangover or a structural party? Let’s pour a large peg and find out.


2. Introduction – From Desi Tharra to Ethanol Fuel

Associated Alcohols & Breweries is not your shiny United Spirits poster boy. This is a hardcore central India operator, built brick by brick in regulated markets, state tenders, excise drama, and volume games.

Historically, AABL’s bread and butter was IMIL + IMFL—basically the stuff that sells even when GDP growth is missing and elections are coming. Over time, management realised one thing:
👉 Liquor margins fluctuate, but ethanol cheques come on time.

So they did what any sensible distiller with land, grain access, and ENA experience would do—they built a 40 MLPA ethanol plant and entered the government-backed Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) program.

Result?
Ethanol went from zero in FY22 to 24% of revenue in 9M FY25. That’s not diversification—that’s reincarnation.

Meanwhile, the company is also premiumising its liquor portfolio: gin, blended malt whisky, upcoming RTDs, premium brandy, and tequila. Basically, AABL woke up one day and said, “Why should Radico and Piccadilly have all the fun?”

But behind the glamour is a very old-school operator mindset: control debt, sweat assets, don’t overpromise.

So… is this still a boring MP liquor company? Or a stealth FMCG + ethanol hybrid?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s break this down like a bar menu.

A. IMFL & IMIL – The OG Cash Machine (54% of 9M FY25 revenue)

This is where AABL learned its survival skills.

Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →
Members get full access to every article.
Become a member
Already a member? Log in
Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →