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Kaira Can Company Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹53 Cr Quarterly Revenue, -₹0.14 Cr PAT Shock, 42× P/E: Legacy Packaging Meets Reality Check


1. At a Glance – Old School Company, New Age Valuation Hangover

Kaira Can Company Ltd (KCCL) is what you’d call a vintage Gujarati family business with a modern stock price and an ancient growth engine. Founded in 1962, still alive, still kicking, still supplying tin cans to the same customer it has supplied since forever. Market cap sits around ₹134 Cr, share price around ₹1,448, while ROE is a sleepy 4.3% and ROCE barely 5.9%. The stock has underperformed across timelines: -5% in 3 months, -16% in 6 months, -20% over one year.

Latest quarter (Q3 FY26) delivered ₹52.95 Cr revenue, down 4% QoQ, and a PAT of -₹0.14 Cr — yes, a loss. And the market is valuing this at ~42× P/E on trailing numbers. That’s not optimism; that’s nostalgia pricing.

So what’s happening here? A dominant niche supplier with near-monopoly to one customer, wafer-thin margins, and a stock price behaving like it’s a specialty chemicals unicorn. Curious already?


2. Introduction – The Tin Can That Time Forgot

Kaira Can is not a growth story. It’s a survival story.
For over six decades, the company has quietly manufactured open top sanitary cans, general line metal containers, and ice cream sugar cones, largely for India’s dairy and processed food ecosystem. It doesn’t chase flashy exports. It doesn’t pivot every year. It doesn’t announce grand capex plans.

Instead, it does one thing extremely well:
Serve Gujarat Cooperative Milk Marketing Federation (GCMMF) — aka the Amul universe — and serve it consistently.

But here’s the catch:
When 85–90% of your revenue comes from one client, you’re not a business — you’re a department. And departments don’t get premium valuations.

Over the years, margins have compressed, growth has plateaued, and returns on capital have steadily declined. Yet, the stock trades above book value and well above sector-average P/E. That contradiction is the core of this story.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

KCCL is a metal packaging manufacturer, with two operating divisions:

1) Tin Containers (~94% of revenue FY23)
This includes:

  • Open Top Sanitary (OTS) cans
  • General line metal containers
  • Components & printed tin sheets

Used mainly for:

  • Dairy products
  • Processed foods
  • Ready-to-eat meals
  • Sweets, pickles, fruit pulp

2) Ice Cream Sugar Cones (~6% of revenue FY23)
Rolled sugar cones supplied to ice cream manufacturers. Decent diversification, but financially irrelevant.

Manufacturing setup:

  • Tin cans plant: Kanjari, Gujarat – 18,000 MT capacity
  • Cone division: Vithal Udyog Nagar – 15 crore cones capacity

This is a classic volume-heavy, margin-light business. Raw material (tinplate/steel) prices move faster than pricing power. And pricing power is weak because when your main customer is Amul, negotiations are not exactly friendly.

Simple question for you:
Can a supplier with 3% operating margin ever compound meaningfully?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Don’t Lie (But They Do Yawn)

Quarterly Performance Table (₹ Cr)

MetricLatest Qtr (Q3 FY26)YoY Qtr (Q3 FY25)Prev Qtr (Q2 FY26)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue52.9555.1555.74-4.0%-5.0%
EBITDA1.311.641.47-20%-11%
PAT-0.140.640.40-122%-135%
EPS (₹)-1.526.944.34NANA

Commentary:
This is not a one-off. Margins have been structurally declining for years. Operating margin is hovering around 2–3%, leaving zero buffer for cost inflation or demand slowdown. One bad quarter, and profits vanish.

Would you trust a business where ₹53 Cr revenue produces a loss?


5. Valuation Discussion – When Multiples Lose the Plot

Trailing EPS (TTM): ₹34.49
Current Price: ₹1,448

P/E Method

  • Current P/E: ~42×
  • Industry average: ~19×
  • Historical ROE: 6–8%

A low-growth, low-ROE packaging company trading at double industry P/E is… ambitious.

EV/EBITDA

  • EV: ~₹139 Cr
  • EBITDA (TTM): ~₹8 Cr
  • EV/EBITDA ~16× — rich for a commodity manufacturer.

DCF (Simplified)

  • Revenue growth assumption: 4–5%
  • Margin stability: optimistic
  • Discount rate: high (low ROE business)

Fair Value Range: Meaningfully below current market price.

Disclaimer:
This fair value range is for educational

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