1. At a Glance – Small Cap, Big Margins, Zero Debt Drama
Coral India Finance & Housing Ltd is currently trading at ₹34.5 with a market cap of ₹139 Cr. In the last 3 months, the stock is down 11%, and over 6 months, down 22.4%. The street seems bored. The company? Not exactly.
Latest quarterly numbers (Dec 2025) show:
- Sales: ₹3.93 Cr
- PAT: ₹3.75 Cr
- OPM: 80.15%
- EPS (Q3): ₹0.93
- TTM EPS: ₹3.58
- P/E: 9.64
- Price to Book: 0.64
- Debt: ₹0 Cr
Let that sink in. An 80% operating margin company in real estate + finance. Either this is a beautifully structured capital-light model… or the income statement has some “other income masala.”
Oh wait — earnings include ₹5.14 Cr other income in TTM.
Now it gets interesting.
The stock trades below book value. It has zero debt. It throws cash. Yet revenue growth TTM is -39% and profit growth is -34%.
So what exactly is this? A sleepy asset allocator? A hidden compounding machine? Or a “bhai chill karo” business that moves once every few years?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – The Most Unexcited Company on Dalal Street?
Coral India Finance & Housing Ltd was incorporated in 1995. That means this company has survived:
- Harshad Mehta scam
- Dotcom bubble
- 2008 financial crisis
- Demonetisation
- COVID
- And probably several promoter family dinners
And through all that, it has remained… calm.
The business is split into two segments:
- Construction & real estate development
- Financial services & investments
Translation: They build houses… and when bored, they invest in stocks and mutual funds.
In FY23, revenue breakup was:
- Sale of flats: 55%
- Rent & compensation: 26%
- Interest income: 7%
- Dividend income: 4%
- Others: 4%
Segment revenue:
- Construction: 55%
- Investments: 45%
So almost half the business is basically “capital allocation.”
Is this a developer… or a mini family office with a building hobby?
And here’s the best part — Debt = Zero.
In Indian real estate, that’s like finding a politician without pending cases.
But don’t get too excited yet. Sales growth over last 3 years: -2%. Profit growth 3 years: 0%.
Stable? Yes. Explosive?