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Mac Charles (India) Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹32.7 Cr Sales, ₹-63 Cr Loss, Debt ₹1,054 Cr — And 51% Promoter Stake Pledged. Real Estate Royalty or Financial Gymnastics?


1. At a Glance – The Windmill That’s Blowing Cash Away

Mac Charles (India) Ltd is currently sitting at a market cap of ₹837 Cr with a stock price of ₹639. Sounds fancy? Wait till you see the numbers.

Latest quarterly sales came in at ₹32.73 Cr with a reported net loss of ₹63.45 Cr. Yes, you read that right — more loss than revenue. The stock has fallen about 10.8% in the last 3 months, while still showing 14.8% return over 1 year. Classic rollercoaster.

Return on Equity? -80.5%.
ROCE? -1.47%.
Debt? ₹1,054 Cr.
Debt to Equity? 16.2 times.
Interest coverage? 0.36.

And the cherry on top? 51% promoter stake pledged in December 2025 to secure ₹540 Cr debentures.

Yet the stock trades at 12.9x book value.

So what exactly are we paying 12.9x book for? Wind turbines? Half-built office towers? Or financial optimism?

Let’s investigate.


2. Introduction – Embassy Group’s Complicated Cousin

Mac Charles is promoted by Embassy Group, holding 73.78%. Yes, the same Embassy known for large office parks. So automatically, you expect prime real estate, premium tenants, and steady rental income.

But here’s the twist: 97% of FY23 revenue came from sale of electricity. Rental income? Just 3%.

This is like owning a five-star hotel but earning most of your income from selling bottled water in the lobby.

The company operates:

  • Wind power generation (5 wind turbines in Bellary)
  • Commercial real estate development in Bangalore & Kerala
  • Ongoing projects: Embassy Zenith & Embassy Hub

Embassy Zenith is redeveloping the old Le Meridien Hotel site in Bangalore CBD into a commercial office tower. Construction ongoing. The Hub is still in design stage.

So effectively, we have:

  • Windmills generating electricity.
  • A massive real estate project under construction.
  • Heavy borrowing.
  • And losses piling up.

What could possibly go wrong?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify this for the smart but lazy investor.

Step 1: Generate electricity using wind turbines.
Step 2: Sell electricity.
Step 3: Build commercial real estate.
Step 4: Lease it out.
Step 5: Borrow aggressively to finance everything.
Step 6: Pray interest rates behave.

In FY23:

  • 97% revenue from electricity.
  • 3% from rentals.

So currently, this is more of a power generation company pretending to be a real estate developer.

Clients include:

  • Vikas Telecom (windmill customer)
  • LG and Inmobi (leasing clients)

But here’s where drama enters:

  • NCDs issued: ₹320 Cr in FY23.
  • SBI term loan approved: ₹1,080 Cr (Nov 2025).
  • Corporate guarantee for ₹540 Cr subsidiary NCDs.
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