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Amanta Healthcare Q3 FY26: ₹74.5 Cr Revenue, ₹4.63 Cr PAT, 20.6% OPM – IPO-Funded Sterile Ambitions vs 26.6 P/E Reality Check


1. At a Glance – Sterile Liquids, Not So Sterile Margins

Amanta Healthcare Ltd is currently quoting at ₹109, with a market cap of ₹425 Cr. In the last 3 months, the stock has corrected ~8%, probably reminding investors that pharma is not always paracetamol for portfolios.

Q3 FY26 revenue came in at ₹74.5 Cr, up 9.8% YoY, while PAT stood at ₹4.63 Cr, up 8.18% YoY. Operating margins are holding at 20.6%, which is decent for a small-cap injectable player.

The stock trades at a P/E of 26.6, slightly below the industry median of ~29.8. ROCE is 14.8%, ROE is 13%, and debt-to-equity sits at 0.88.

This is a sterile injectables manufacturer with IPO cash in hand, expansion plans worth ₹100 Cr, and 72% capacity utilization in 9MFY25.

Question is — are we looking at a steady compounding pharma story… or a capital-intensive margin treadmill?

Let’s scrub in and operate.


2. Introduction – From Gujarat to 120 Jurisdictions

Incorporated in 1994, Amanta Healthcare isn’t making tablets you pop after overeating biryani. They manufacture sterile liquid products — mostly injectables.

This is serious stuff. If their product fails, patients don’t write bad reviews. They call lawyers.

The company operates in:

  • Fluid therapy
  • Ophthalmics
  • Respiratory care
  • Irrigation solutions
  • Medical devices

They sell domestically under the “SteriPort” brand and export to over 120 jurisdictions across 19 countries.

IPO in September 2025 raised ₹126 Cr, primarily for capex — new manufacturing lines at Kheda, Gujarat.

Now here’s the interesting part:

Revenue growth over 5 years = 8% CAGR
Profit growth over 5 years = 21% CAGR

So margins have improved, but sales growth is not exactly racing ahead.

Is this a hidden turnaround? Or just post-pandemic pharma normalization?

Let’s dissect the business model.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Imagine a hospital ICU. IV drips everywhere. Saline bottles hanging like festival lights. That’s Amanta’s playground.

They manufacture:

  • Large Volume Parenterals (LVPs) – think saline and fluid therapy bottles
  • Small Volume Parenterals (SVPs) – injectable medications
  • Eye lubricants
  • Irrigation and first aid solutions
  • Container closure systems

Their technology includes:

  • Aseptic Blow-Fill-Seal (ABFS)
  • Injection Stretch Blow Moulding (ISBM)

Translation: They manufacture plastic bottles and fill them with sterile solutions in one seamless process. Efficiency + lower contamination risk.

Capacity = 33.2 Cr units annually
Utilization in 9MFY25 = 72%

So they still have room to grow before hitting full capacity.

Domestic revenue: 60.5%
Exports: 30%
Product partnering: 9.5%

This isn’t a high-margin specialty pharma innovator. It’s more like the plumbing of healthcare — essential, stable, volume-driven.

Now ask yourself: In a price-sensitive hospital ecosystem, how much pricing power does a saline manufacturer really have?


4. Financials Overview – The Real Injection

Q1 FY26 EPS = 1.22
Q2 FY26 EPS = 0.31
Q3 FY26 EPS = 1.19

Average EPS = (1.22 + 0.31 + 1.19) / 3 = 0.91
Annualised EPS = 0.91 × 4 = ₹3.64

Now let’s compare Q3:

MetricLatest Q3 FY26Q3 FY25Q2 FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue74.4967.8170.899.85%5.08%
EBITDA15.3615.0614.651.99%4.85%
PAT4.634.281.218.18%282%
EPS (₹)1.191.480.31-19.6%284%

Now

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