Search for stocks /

AVT Natural Products Q3 FY26: ₹194 Cr Sales, 12% OPM, Inventory Days at 431 – Is the Marigold Empire Wilting or Brewing a Comeback?


1. At a Glance – The Extract King With a Working Capital Hangover

AVT Natural Products Ltd is sitting at a market cap of ₹1,002 Cr, trading at ₹65.8 per share, with a P/E of 17.5 and dividend yield of 1.06%. Sounds decent, right? Now zoom in.

Q3 FY26 revenue came in at ₹194 Cr, up 12.2% YoY. PAT stood at ₹17.4 Cr. OPM is hovering around 12%. ROCE is 12.8%. ROE is 9.89%.

But here’s the masala: inventory days have ballooned to 431 days. Debtor days are 103. Debt is ₹100 Cr. Cash conversion cycle? A royal 388 days.

Three-month return: -7.76%. Six-month return: -8.14%.

So the stock is not exactly in a Diwali rally.

This is a company exporting natural extracts to the world, supplying long-term global clients, investing in R&D, launching new verticals… and yet the balance sheet is screaming, “Bhai, capital ka kya kar rahe ho?”

Is this a patient long-term compounding story or a plant-based working capital experiment?

Let’s dig.


2. Introduction – From Kerala Fields to Global Formulations

AVT Natural is part of the A.V. Thomas Group – an old-school South Indian business house with tea estates, plantations, and agriculture roots.

They manufacture plant-based extracts used in:

  • Food colouring
  • Eye-care supplements
  • Poultry pigmentation
  • Nutraceuticals
  • Tea extracts
  • Spice oils

Basically, if your capsule, seasoning, or instant tea has something “natural” written on it, there’s a chance AVT had a hand in it.

But the last few years haven’t been a smooth herbal infusion.

Between FY22 and FY24, total revenue declined 8%. The culprit? Marigold oleoresin segment faced El Niño weather disruption and Chinese competition backed by government subsidies.

Yes. Climate + China. The deadly combo.

And here’s the concentration twist: Top 5 customers contribute 70–80% of revenue.

That’s not diversification. That’s dependency with a handshake.

Still confident? Or slightly nervous?

Let’s understand what they actually sell.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

AVT operates in the “Food & Feed Ingredients from Natural Raw Materials” segment.

Here’s the breakup:

1. Marigold Oleoresin (34% of FY24 revenue)

Used for:

  • Eye care (lutein)
  • Food colouring
  • Poultry pigmentation

This segment fell from 42% in FY22 to 34% in FY24 due to weather issues and Chinese price war.

Basically, nature didn’t cooperate and China didn’t negotiate.

2. Spice Extracts (32%)

Spice oleoresins and oils used in flavouring and colouring. Stable contribution.

3. Tea (31%)

Value-added teas including decaffeinated and instant tea. This segment has grown from 22% in FY22 to 31% in FY24.

Tea is quietly becoming the new hero.

4. Others (3%)

Animal health, crop inputs.

They process 70,000 tons of plant material and 5,000 tons of extracts annually across facilities in Kerala and Karnataka.

They also operate a windmill generating 8,49,811 units of electricity in FY24, 95% used internally.

Plant extracts + wind energy. Very ESG-friendly vibes.

But vibes don’t pay interest costs.

Let’s see the numbers.


4. Financials Overview – The Quarter That Matters

Q1 FY26 EPS = ₹0.80
Q2 FY26 EPS = ₹0.87
Q3 FY26 EPS = ₹1.14

Average = (0.80 + 0.87 +

Join 10,000+ investors who read this every week.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!