Landmark Cars Q3 FY26: ₹1,345 Cr Sales, 35% PAT Jump — But 71x P/E For 3% ROE?
1. At a Glance – The Premium Showroom With Budget Returns
₹427 stock price. ₹1,767 Cr market cap. 24% revenue growth (TTM). 35.5% quarterly profit growth. And yet… ROE at 3.09%.
Ladies and gentlemen, meet Landmark Cars Ltd — India’s premium car dealer that sells Mercedes and Jeep, but delivers returns that look like a Maruti 800 from 1998.
Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025 quarter) numbers show:
Revenue: ₹1,345 Cr
PAT: ₹14 Cr
EPS: ₹3.42
Stock P/E: 71.2
ROCE: 7.99%
Debt: ₹831 Cr
The stock has corrected 24% in the last 3 months and 16.5% over one year.
So the big question is simple:
Are investors paying luxury-car valuation for a dealership that runs on wafer-thin margins? Or is this a scale game just warming up its engine?
Landmark Cars started in 1998. Today, it operates 135+ outlets across 13 states and 32 cities. It sells:
Mercedes-Benz
Honda
Jeep
Volkswagen
Renault
BYD
MG
Kia
Mahindra
Ashok Leyland (commercial vehicles)
This is not your neighborhood car dealer. This is a full-stack automotive retail machine.
They raised ₹552 Cr in IPO and listed in December 2022. Since then, they’ve been expanding aggressively — 23 new outlets in 9M FY25.
But here’s the twist.
Auto retail is a volume business with thin margins. You sell ₹1,000 worth of cars and keep maybe ₹50. After paying rent, staff, finance cost, and depreciation — what remains? Peanuts.
And yet the market is valuing this at 71 times earnings.
So is Landmark a growth story? Or a leverage story? Or a “we hope margins improve someday” story?
Let’s investigate like forensic accountants with a sense of humour.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine you walk into a Mercedes showroom.
You:
Buy a car.
Finance it.
Insure it.
Service it.
Buy accessories.
Sell it back after 5 years.
Landmark wants a cut at every step.
Revenue split:
80% New vehicle sales
17% After-sales & service (high margin)
2% Pre-owned
1% Finance & insurance
The real money? After-sales.
Selling cars is glamorous. Servicing them is profitable.
They operate mostly asset-light — only 2 company-owned outlets. Others are leased. New outlets break even in 3–4 quarters.
They’re also digitising via Sheerdrive SaaS platform (19.97% stake earlier) for pre-owned business.
So the strategy is clear: Expand network → Increase volumes → Improve service revenue → Expand margins.
Simple.
But does the math agree?
4. Financials Overview – Let’s Read The Engine Report
Result Type Detected: Quarterly Results (Q3 FY26) So EPS annualisation rule applies carefully.
We do NOT blindly multiply Q3 by 4.
Annualised EPS (as per rule): Average of Q1, Q2, Q3 EPS × 4