Search for Stocks /

Lincoln Pharmaceuticals Q3 FY26: ₹166 Cr Revenue, ₹28.6 Cr Profit, 14% EPS Jump – Is This the Most Boringly Underrated Pharma Stock?

1. At a Glance – The Silent Pharma Machine

₹1,228 crore market cap. ₹613 stock price. 22.5% return in 3 months. P/E of just 14. ROCE 17.3%. Debt almost zero.

And yet… nobody is screaming about it.

Lincoln Pharmaceuticals Ltd just delivered Q3 FY26 revenue of ₹166.32 crore and PAT of ₹28.60 crore, with quarterly profit up 37.7% YoY and sales up 13.5% YoY.

Exports contribute 62.6% of revenue. Domestic? 37.4%. This isn’t your local chemist shop story. This is a Gujarat-based pharma exporter quietly shipping formulations to 60+ countries while the market debates the next hot IPO.

Stock P/E: 14
Industry P/E: 28.3
Debt to equity: 0.00
Interest coverage: 105
Current ratio: 4.71

This is what financial discipline looks like when it doesn’t do Instagram reels.

But here’s the real question:

Is this a steady compounding pharma story… or just another mid-sized exporter riding currency winds?

Let’s open the strip pack and inspect.


2. Introduction – The Pharma Company That Doesn’t Shout

Founded in 1979. Survived the License Raj. Survived price controls. Survived global competition.

That alone deserves a medal.

Lincoln isn’t a flashy innovator like some biotech startups promising miracle molecules. It’s a formulation manufacturer. Meaning — it manufactures and sells finished pharmaceutical products across multiple therapeutic categories.

No dramatic R&D hype.
No billion-dollar molecule patents.
Just execution.

Over the years:

  • 600+ formulations developed
  • 1700 registered products
  • 700 more in pipeline
  • 7 patented products
  • 25+ patent applications filed

And yet the market treats it like the middle child at a wedding — present, decent, unnoticed.

Exports at 62.6% means global exposure.
Domestic at 37.4% means India play intact.

But here’s what makes it interesting: It recently expanded its Cephalosporin plant at Mehsana, got WHO-GMP approvals, and entered Canada.

Small pharma companies don’t casually walk into regulated markets. That requires compliance muscles.

So now the real question:

Is Lincoln becoming a mini global formulation player… or will margins get squeezed like toothpaste?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

Imagine pharma as three layers:

  1. Research new molecule (high risk, high reward)
  2. Manufacture bulk drug (API)
  3. Manufacture finished formulations (tablets, capsules, injections)

Lincoln plays in finished formulations.

It manufactures:

  • Tablets
  • Capsules
  • Dry powder injections
  • Oral liquids
  • Ointments
  • Ampoules
  • Vials

Therapeutic spread? Huge.

From cough & cold to anti-diabetic to cardiac to anti-malarial to dermatology to CNS drugs.

Revenue mix Q3 FY25:

  • Anti-infectives: 30.3%
  • Musculoskeletal: 11.9%
  • Respiratory: 8%
  • Parasitology: 7.2%
  • Cardiovascular: 5.7%
  • Others: 29.2%

Translation: Diversified.

Now production capacity:

Khatraj and Mehsana

You're reading a premium analysis. Continue reading →
You've used all 2 free articles in this window. Join 10,000+ members for unlimited access.
Become a member
Already a member? Log in
You're reading a premium analysis. Continue reading →