1. At a Glance – The Rural Credit Comeback Kid?
Market Cap: ₹395 Cr
Current Price: ₹61.1
Book Value: ₹40.1
Price to Book: 1.52x
Debt: ₹639 Cr
ROE: 0.58%
ROCE: 8.65%
Q3 FY26 Revenue: ₹54.62 Cr
Q3 FY26 PAT: ₹0.35 Cr
AUM (Dec 2025): ₹878 Cr
GNPA: 1.43%
Moneyboxx Finance is that small-town lender who survived COVID, credit stress, and NCD covenant breaches — and is now saying, “Boss, secured lending hi future hai.”
From reporting losses till FY23 to printing a modest ₹0.35 Cr profit in Q3 FY26, this NBFC is attempting a balance sheet detox. GNPA has dropped to 1.43%, secured loans are now 60% of AUM, and management wants 80% by FY27.
But here’s the masala: interest coverage is 0.97, debt-to-equity is 2.44, and promoters have diluted from 54% to 44%.
So is this a turnaround story… or just rural credit with better PR?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – Lending in India’s Tier-3 Reality Show
Moneyboxx Finance operates where most large NBFCs don’t go — rural MSME borrowers needing ₹1–10 lakh loans.
Think dairy owners, small traders, agri-linked micro businesses. Not unicorn founders. Not startup bros. Actual Bharat.
Founded in 1994, this is a Non-Systemically Important, Non-Deposit Taking NBFC. Which basically means:
“Small enough to hustle. Big enough to borrow.”
They operate 100 branches across 8 states and claim an AUM of ₹878 Cr as of Dec 2025. That’s meaningful scale for a micro-lender.
But rural credit isn’t a Netflix series. It’s hard field work. Collection agents on bikes. Legal notices under Section 138. Doorstep recovery.
COVID hit them hard. Losses from FY20–FY23. Under-recovery of fixed costs. Classic NBFC stress cycle.
Now management says:
- Demand is high (₹200 Cr monthly logins)
- They’re approving only ₹40 Cr
- Underwriting norms tightened
- Portfolio shifting secured
Translation: “We’ve learned our lesson. Hopefully.”
But can they grow without blowing up again?
Let’s see what they actually do.
3. Business Model –