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Mangalam Seeds Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹28.88 Cr Revenue, ₹1.28 Cr PAT, 14.9 P/E – Hybrid Dreams or Seasonal Reality?


1. At a Glance – Seeds, Seasons & Smallcap Swings

₹154 crore market cap. ₹140 share price. Down 22.8% in one year. Down 5% in three months. Yet trading at a modest 14.9 P/E with ROE of 13.8% and ROCE of 12.2%.

Welcome to Mangalam Seeds Ltd, a smallcap agri play that promises drought-resistant, pest-resistant, and maybe even stock-price-resistant seeds.

Latest Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025) numbers?
Revenue: ₹28.88 crore
PAT: ₹1.28 crore
EPS: ₹1.17

QoQ profit down. Margins down. But still profitable.

Debt? ₹57.6 crore.
Debt-to-equity? 0.67.
Promoter holding? A solid 74.36%.

This is a business that has delivered 22% profit CAGR over 5 years, yet hasn’t paid a dividend.

Is this a compounding agri gem quietly planting future returns?
Or is it just another seasonal crop that depends on monsoon moods?

Let’s dig into the soil.


2. Introduction – Farming for Farmers… and Investors?

Founded in 2011, Mangalam Seeds is not some 100-year-old seed dynasty. It’s relatively young in corporate age but operates in one of the oldest businesses known to humanity: agriculture.

Hybrid seeds. GM seeds. Forage crops. Fodder. Cumin. Okra. Sorghum. Mustard. Cotton.

Basically, if a farmer can plant it, Mangalam probably sells a version of it.

The company operates mainly in Gujarat and Rajasthan through:

  • 500+ distributors
  • 1,200+ dealers
  • 40+ crop brands

That’s a serious rural footprint for a ₹154 crore company.

But here’s the catch.

Agri businesses are seasonal. Revenues fluctuate wildly between quarters. Margins swing like IPL form. Inventory builds up like unsold wedding sweets.

And then there’s working capital.

Inventory days in FY25? 291 days.
Cash conversion cycle? 357 days.

That’s almost a full agricultural cycle before money comes back.

So the real question:

Is this a disciplined seed company… or a seasonal cash-flow acrobat?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Okay, imagine you’re a farmer in Gujarat.

You need:

  • High-yield maize
  • Drought-resistant pearl millet
  • Hybrid castor
  • Fodder sorghum
  • Cumin
  • Hybrid vegetables

Mangalam Seeds produces and markets these hybrid seeds. They focus heavily on forage crops — basically food for animals.

They also recently developed:

  • Mustard hybrid Mangalam-1881
  • Okra variety MOK-389
  • Fenugreek Rujvi
  • Cotton hybrid Abhay-551
  • Psyllium variety Chetak Plus

This tells us one thing: they’re trying to expand the product pipeline.

Hybrid seeds are high-margin compared to traditional seeds because farmers buy them every season for better yields.

But here’s the real game:

Seed companies don’t just sell seeds.
They sell hope.

Higher yield.
Better disease resistance.
More income per acre.

If the product works, repeat orders come.
If not? The farmer switches brands next season.

Brand loyalty in agri is earned, not advertised.

So ask yourself:

Is Mangalam building a moat… or just participating in a crowded mandi?


4. Financials Overview – The Numbers Don’t Lie

Q1 FY26 EPS: ₹3.53
Q2 FY26 EPS: ₹1.62
Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹1.17

Average = (3.53 + 1.62 + 1.17) / 3 = ₹2.11 approx
Annualised EPS = ₹2.11 × 4 = ₹8.44

Quarterly Comparison (₹ Crores)

MetricLatest Q3 FY26Q3 FY25Q2 FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue28.8827.3718.305.5%57.8%
EBITDA3.232.794.0815.8%-20.8%
PAT1.281.351.79-5.2%-28.5%
EPS (₹)1.171.231.62-4.9%-27.8%

Revenue grew modestly YoY.
Operating profit up YoY.
But net profit down both YoY

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