1. At a Glance – The German Giant in Indian Kheti Mode
Bayer CropScience Ltd is currently priced at ₹4,791 with a market cap of ₹21,533 Cr. In the last 3 months, the stock is up 7.04%, despite agri cycles behaving like moody monsoons.
Q3 FY26 numbers (Quarterly Results – locked) show revenue of ₹11,062 million (₹1,106 Cr) and profit of ₹957 million (₹95.7 Cr). That’s a 180% QoQ jump in PAT.
ROCE stands at a spicy 24.8%, ROE at 20%, debt-to-equity is a microscopic 0.03, dividend yield is 2.61%, and stock P/E is 32.1 — slightly above industry PE of 28.
Sounds like a disciplined German engineer managing Indian crops.
But wait.
Five-year sales growth? 8.68%.
Five-year profit growth? Basically flat.
Inventory days? 319 last year.
So what are we looking at — a steady agri compounder or a cyclical agrochemical rollercoaster wearing a lab coat?
Let’s dig in.
2. Introduction – Seeds, Sprays & Corporate Surprises
Bayer entered India in 1958. That’s older than half the investors reading this.
The company operates in:
- Crop Protection (66% revenue mix FY25)
- Corn Seeds (17%)
- Others (17%)
In 2019, after the global acquisition of Monsanto, Indian operations saw the merger approved by NCLT. That integration brought scale, technology, and probably some boardroom drama.
Now fast forward to FY26:
- Q2 FY26 revenue ₹15,534 million
- Q3 FY26 revenue ₹11,062 million
- Interim dividend ₹90 per share in Q2
That’s not small change.
But here’s the thing about agri companies — they are seasonal creatures. One quarter you’re a hero. Next quarter you’re praying for rain.
And Bayer is no exception.
The company is working with 1,500+ FPOs and 75+ food value chain partnerships impacting nearly 5 lakh smallholders. That’s scale.
But investors don’t get emotional about smallholders.
They care about margins, cash flows, and whether GST authorities are sending love letters.
Speaking of which… penalties worth ₹1 million and ₹103 million were imposed for earlier financial years. Later, some were set aside by CESAT.
Regulatory drama is part of the package.
Now the real question — are we paying 32x earnings for stability or brand