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Dhunseri Investments Ltd Q3 FY26: Revenue ₹69.58 Cr, PAT -₹1.18 Cr, EPS -₹5.38 — 0.22x Book Value But Profits Missing in Action


1. At a Glance – Cheap or Just Confused?4

₹595 crore market cap.
Current price ₹976.
Book value ₹4,446 per share.
Price-to-book: 0.22x.
ROE: 3.46%.
ROCE: 5.96%.
3-month return: -23.1%.
1-year return: -45.2%.
Latest Q3 FY26 PAT: -₹1.18 crore.

This is what happens when a stock screams “I am cheap!” but quietly whispers “I also lost money.”

Dhunseri Investments Ltd looks like a textbook value stock — trading at just 22% of its book value. But the latest quarter says something else: revenue down 44% YoY, profit in the negative zone, financing margins looking like they need therapy.

Is this a hidden treasure? Or is this one of those companies where book value looks muscular but earnings are on a crash diet?

Let’s open the cupboard and see if this is vintage wine… or expired milk.


2. Introduction – The Investment Company That Also Makes Cupcakes?

Dhunseri Investments Ltd is officially a Non-Banking Financial Company. Translation? They invest in shares and securities.

Simple, right?

Wrong.

Because this “investment company” also:

  • Trades PET resin.
  • Manufactures BOPET films.
  • Runs a bakery business (Twelve Cupcakes in Singapore).
  • Holds treasury assets.
  • Owns stakes in tea companies.
  • Acquires tea factories.

This is not diversification.
This is a corporate buffet.

And in Q3 FY26, the buffet didn’t taste great:

  • Revenue: ₹69.58 crore
  • PAT: -₹1.18 crore
  • EPS: -₹5.38

Meanwhile, other NBFCs in the peer group are printing profits in thousands of crores.

So what exactly is going on here? Is this a deep value holding company? Or a complex maze where even management needs Google Maps?

Let’s decode it.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

Dhunseri has four main areas:

1. Trading (42% of FY23 revenue)

PET resin trading. Industrial plastics business. Cyclical, commodity-driven, margin-sensitive.

2. Treasury Operations (13%)

Holding financial investments for capital appreciation.

Basically: buy shares, wait, hope market behaves.

3. Flexible Packaging Films

Manufacturing BOPET films. These are used in packaging. Industrial, capital intensive.

4. Food & Beverages (25%)

Twelve Cupcakes bakery in Singapore.

Yes. A holding company that invests in equity shares and also sells

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