Search for stocks /

Sheela Foam:₹1,074 Cr Revenue. 212% PAT Jump. From Mattress Memes to ₹5,400 Cr Bed Empire.

Sheela Foam Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Sep 2025 Quarter

Sheela Foam:
₹1,074 Cr Revenue. 212% PAT Jump.
From Mattress Memes to ₹5,400 Cr Bed Empire.

Every Indian mattress joke has a villain, and the hero is this foam company that just acquired Kurlon, renamed its own CEO twice, and somehow still grew 11% in mattress volumes. Performance on steroids. Management shuffle like a Bollywood remix album.

Market Cap₹5,456 Cr
CMP₹504
P/E Ratio57.7x
ROCE3.52%
Debt/Equity0.41x

The Sleeping Giant That Woke Up With Kurlon

  • 52-Week High / Low₹779 / ₹498
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue (Consolidated)₹1,074 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT (Consolidated)₹52.1 Cr
  • Q3 EPS (₹)₹4.80
  • Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹19.20
  • Book Value₹283
  • Price to Book1.79x
  • Dividend Yield0%
  • Total Debt₹1,257 Cr
  • Mattress Market Share (India)~50%
The Foam Framing: Sheela Foam’s Q3 numbers are what happens when you buy a competitor (Kurlon @ ₹2,035 Cr), integrate it badly, then fix it quietly, then report that PAT jumped 212% YoY. Revenue growth at +11.1% YoY. ROCE at 3.52% (vs industry peers at 15–50%). P/E at 57.7x — meaning the market is either pricing in a miracle or betting that foam inflation is coming. Your bed might be more intelligent than this valuation.

The Company That Sells Dreams, But First Drowns In Debt

Welcome to Sheela Foam. Since 1971, they’ve been making polyurethane foam — you know, the spongy stuff that becomes your mattress, your pillow, your car seat, and possibly your worst financial decision at ₹2+ lakhs per bed.

The company operates under three beloved brands: Sleepwell (the OG), Kurlon (the acquisition they’re still digesting like a heavy meal at 2 AM), and Furlenco (furniture renting — because apparently buying a sofa is too 1990s). They’ve got 40% market share in Australia, 50% in India’s organised mattress market, and a debt of ₹1,257 crore that’s been growing like a fungal infection on a damp mattress.

Here’s the drama: In Oct 2023, they bought Kurlon for ₹2,035 crores, funded via debt. The integration was messier than a child’s bed at 6 AM. Q2 FY26 saw ROCE collapse to 3.52%. Management shuffle? Check — MD Nilesh Mazumdar resigned in March 2025, then again in July 2025. Rahul Gautam got promoted to Chairman & MD in November 2025. If they keep reshuffling, the board might start rotating like an earthmotion-foam mattress.

Now, Q3 FY26 shows the turnaround thesis actually working: Kurlon synergies kicking in, EBITDA margins recovering to 10.9% (from 8.3% a year ago), PAT expanding 212% YoY. But there’s a catch — this PAT still trails the company’s pre-Kurlon profitability profile. Welcome to the world where “recovery” means “no longer total disaster.”

Concall Note (Feb 2026): “Cash PAT for 9 months is ₹209 crore, which is cash EPS of ~₹19/share.” Translation: Reported profits are fake; real earnings are hidden in the depreciation line item. Also, management declined to guide on dividend, which every investor heard as “we’re saving cash to service that ₹1.2K crore debt.”

They Sell Softness in an Increasingly Hard World

At the core: India’s mattress and foam market is ~₹15,000–20,000 crore annually. Sheela Foam controls roughly 50% of the organized modern mattress segment (Sleepwell + Kurlon combined). The remaining 50%? Unorganized, zero-brand, buy-from-your-local-carpenter mattresses.

Their revenue mix (as of 9M FY26): Mattresses = 49% of sales. Foam (technical grades for auto/furniture) = 20–25%. Furniture cushions and other = rest. Geographically: India dominates at ~74% of revenue. Australia (Joyce Foam subsidiary) is ~12%. Spain (acquired 2019) = ~9%. The Middle East (GCC expansion in progress) = ~5%.

The business is capital-intensive. They operate 24 manufacturing plants globally with capacity of ~187,000 MTPA (metric tons per annum). The KEL acquisition added plants, capacity, and a new distribution model (MBO — multi-brand outlets — vs Sleepwell’s pure EBO model). They’re trying to blend them. Like mixing oil and water, but in foam form.

Mattress49%Revenue Mix
Foam21%Revenue Mix
Other30%Revenue Mix
Market Cap₹5,456 CrDebt: ₹1,257 Cr
U2O Play: “Unorganized to Organized” — a low-price, high-volume play targeting tier-2/3 towns and villages. 9M growth: ~100% YoY. 9M revenue: ₹75 Cr. Management target: ₹120 Cr run-rate. This is Sheela Foam trying to become a Jio of mattresses — disrupt the guy selling mattresses from a dhaba. Smart. Risky on margin if demand doesn’t grow fast enough.
💬 How many mattresses have you bought in your life? Did you choose Sleepwell because it was better, or just because your dad’s friend got a commission? Comment honestly.

Q3 FY26: The Numbers That Got Rescued

Result type: Quarterly Results  |  Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹4.80  |  Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹19.20  |  9M FY26 EPS (rolling): ~₹8.27

Metric (₹ Cr) Q3 FY26
Sep 2025
Q3 FY25
Sep 2024
Q2 FY26
Jun 2025
YoY % QoQ %
Revenue1,074966821+11.1%+30.8%
Operating Profit1148875+29.5%+52%
OPM %10.6%9.1%9.1%+150 bps+150 bps
PAT52.1177+212%+643%
EPS (₹)4.801.540.60+212%+700%
The Recovery Story: Q3 PAT at ₹52.1 Cr looks spectacular compared to Q2’s ₹7 Cr (which was borderline catastrophic). The jump is real: lower interest costs (debt paydown), higher operating profitability (Kurlon synergies), and better absorption of Kurlon’s depreciation. But compare to Q3 FY25’s ₹17 Cr and it’s still only 3x growth, not a miracle. OPM at 10.6% is healthy but trails the company’s pre-Kurlon 10–11% profile. The market is pricing in a continuation of margin recovery; any slip will hurt badly at a 57.7x P/E.

What’s This Debt-Laden Foam Maker Actually Worth?

error: Content is protected !!
Verified by MonsterInsights