01 — At a Glance
The Cement Story That Should Be Boring (But Isn’t)
- 52-Week High / Low₹309 / ₹197
- TTM Revenue₹3,655 Cr
- TTM PAT₹373 Cr
- TTM EPS₹9.12
- Q3 EPS₹1.85
- Book Value₹74.4
- Price to Book2.75x
- Dividend Yield0.98%
- Debt / Equity0.21x
- 6-Month Return-25.6%
The Setup: Star Cement just printed Q3 FY26 numbers that should make investors sit up, choke on their coffee, and ask why the stock is down 25%. Revenue ₹880 Cr (+22% YoY). PAT ₹74 Cr (from ₹9 Cr — that’s 773% growth, yes, really). EBITDA ₹207 Cr (+93% YoY). And now they’re announcing ₹4,800 crore capex to build cement plants in places nobody thought they’d go. The North-East is no longer their only home. North India just got invited to dinner.
02 — Introduction
Meet the Company Everyone Misread
Star Cement doesn’t make headlines. It makes cement. Boring. Unglamorous. Essential. For 20+ years, it’s been the quiet king of the North-East, commanding ~26% market share in a region where infrastructure was built by throwing money at it and calling it “development.” And it worked.
But here’s the thing: Star Cement got bored. Dominance in the North-East, 26% market share, production capacity of 7.67 MTPA — all of it stopped feeling like enough. So in Feb 2026, management walked into a concall and casually announced: “We’re building a 3 MTPA clinker plant in Rajasthan. Plus 5 MTPA grinding capacity across North and East India. Plus a limestone block in Assam. Plus expanding Bihar. Also, we just commissioned a 2 MTPA plant in Silchar.” All while Q3 results showed EBITDA per ton hitting ₹1,600/ton — the highest in years.
The stock didn’t celebrate. It fell 25%. Because apparently, ambition is a sell signal in the cement space.
This is the story of Star Cement in Feb 2026: a company executing like clockwork, posting exceptional numbers, and planning an empire that stretches from Rajasthan to Assam. Yet the market is pricing it like a company that’s supposed to deliver single-digit growth forever.
Concall Insight (Feb 2026): Management stated they expect “10–12% volume growth in Q4” and confirmed EBITDA/ton will “broadly be maintained near current levels.” Translation: the bonkers Q3 EBITDA/ton wasn’t a one-time blip. It’s the new normal.
03 — Business Model: Making Rock Into Money
They Crush Limestone. They Sell Powder. They Print Cash.
Star Cement’s business model could be explained to a 10-year-old. Find limestone. Crush it. Burn it. Grind it with additives. Put it in bags. Sell it to builders. Repeat until rich.
In reality, it’s slightly more complex — but not by much. The company owns limestone reserves (now including a freshly-secured 146 million tonne block in Assam). It operates six production units across the North-East. It sells 80% through distributors/dealers and 20% to direct customers (non-trade). Its product mix is 84% PPC (Portland Pozzolana Cement — cheaper, slower-setting, great for big projects) and 16% OPC (quick-setting, premium, more margin).
Geography split: North-East still dominates at ~76% of cement volumes. But in Q3, volumes outside North-East (Bihar/Bengal corridor) jumped 31.7% YoY — growing faster than the home market. That’s the signal. That’s the thesis.
NE Market Share26%Domination Level
PPC Mix84%Of Sales
NE Volumes Q39.36LTons
East Volumes Q32.95LTons (↑31.7%)
Premium Mix Magic: In Q3, premium cement was 17.1% of trade sales (up from 12% YoY). This premiumization is flying under the radar, but it’s doing heavy lifting on realizations. Management acknowledged this explicitly in the concall: premiums “support realizations.” Translation: margins aren’t just coming from volume — they’re coming from selling fancier products.
💬 Here’s the real question: if they’re dominating the North-East and now growing fast in East India, why is the stock down 25%? Is the market pricing in the capex cycle, or just being stupid? Drop your thoughts.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers That Should Matter But Apparently Don’t