01 — At a Glance
Defence Chaos: Where Growth Comes With 18-Month Delays
- 52-Week High / Low₹215 / ₹90.3
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹51.72 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹2.74 Cr
- Q3 EPS (₹)₹0.10
- Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹0.40
- FY25 Full Year Revenue₹248 Cr
- FY25 Full Year PAT₹59.92 Cr
- Book Value₹12.2
- Price to Book10.4x
- Recent Order Book₹210+ Cr
The Confusion Menu Explained: Avantel delivered ₹248 crore in full-year FY25 revenue with a fat 24% PAT margin (₹59.92 crore net profit). But Q3 FY26 came out at ₹51.72 crore revenue, down 27% YoY, and PAT crashed 86% to ₹2.74 crore. Sounds like a disaster. Except the company just signed ₹210+ crore in fresh orders. Also, their management said growth will “stabilize” for two years, then “steep growth from FY28.” So this is either the buying opportunity of a lifetime or the biggest value trap dressed up as a moonshot. The market has chosen to price it at 207x P/E and call it a day.
02 — Introduction
Built Satellites You’ve Never Heard Of. But India’s Defence Absolutely Has.
Avantel Limited was founded in 1990 by Dr Abburi Vidyasagar (still MD, still running the show like it’s his personal sandbox). The company designs, develops, and manufactures defence electronics products — satellite communication systems, RF microwave subsystems, digital radios, software-defined radios (SDRs), and increasingly, wind profiler radars.
Its client list reads like a Bollywood ensemble cast of Indian Defence: Indian Navy, Indian Air Force, DRDO, ISRO, L&T, Bharat Electronics, Lockheed Martin, shipyards, ordnance factories. They’re a ~30-year-old private company that went public in 2000, and only got listed on NSE in July 2024. Yes, NSE. Almost 25 years late. They move at their own pace.
The business model is vintage defence contractor: win a tender, develop the product for 2–3 years, deliver over 1–1.5 years, collect payment 2.5–3 months later. The working capital cycle is 213 days — basically, they fund their own growth via promoter loans while government cheques take forever. Margins are chunky (38% PBUILDT in FY25) because once you design a satellite radio, the second unit costs peanuts to build.
This is not a scaling SaaS company. This is not a consumer electronics firm. This is a government contractor with proprietary tech, a 30+ year moat, and a management team that thinks quarterly earnings calls are optional. The June 2025 concall was the most recent, and what they said there will matter for the next 18 months. That’s how long defence deals take.
🛰️
💬 Before we proceed: did you know India’s Coast Guard uses Avantel satellite terminals? Probably not. That’s because their tech is invisible to retail investors until it shows up in concall commentary.
03 — Business Model: We Make Radios. The Government Takes 18 Months To Say Yes.
Satellite Communication. Defence Electronics. Wind Profilers. Pick Your Headache.
Avantel operates across four core segments, each with its own profit margins, order cycles, and headaches:
Satellite Communication (SATCOM)
Mobile satellite services, MSS terminals for ships, satellites, helicopters. Gross margins? 40%+. Delivery cycles? 12–18 months minimum. Client urgency? “When it’s ready, it’s ready, beta.”
Software Defined Radios (SDR)
The shiny new thing. Indian Air Force, Navy, Army all want custom radios. Avantel is developing 1kW HF SDRs, UHF SDRs, airborne variants. Market size? Management claims ₹3,000 crore annually. Avantel’s share? “Top 3 or 4 companies in India.”
HF Systems & Radios: Tried-and-true high-frequency communication tech. Used by Navy, training facilities, fisheries. Stable, boring, profitable. They delivered 6,300 RTIS (Real-Time Training Information System) units to Indian Railways in FY24. That’s not a typo — 6,300 units. One customer. That’s your moat.
Radar Systems: Wind profiler radars (under active development), early-stage air-defence / anti-drone radars (2–3 year horizon). These are six-figure items per unit with 2–3 year development timelines. Not for the impatient.
Adjacencies: Medical devices (iMEDS Global, their subsidiary) — health kiosks, ventilators, surgical tools. Trying to build a ₹100 crore medical device business to diversify away from defence cyclicality. Admirable. Risky. Management’s clear about it: if shareholders get nervous, promoters will take it off the cap table.
From June 2025 Concall (Direct Quote): “Future of Avantel rests on innovation… develop state-of-the-art niche products to address customized requirements of Indian Defence services.” Translation: no mass-market pivot. We’re betting our lungs on the government remembering we exist and approving tenders before inflation hits our cost base.
04 — Financials Overview: The Quarterly Rollercoaster
Q3 FY26: A 27% Revenue Decline That Nobody Wants To Talk About
Result type: Quarterly Results (Unaudited) | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹0.10 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹0.40 | FY25 Full-Year EPS: ₹2.13
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 51.72 | 70.68 | 55.42 | -26.8% | -6.7% |
| Operating Profit | 12.54 | 32.05 | 11.32 | -60.9% | +10.8% |
| OPM % | 24.25% | 45.35% | 20.43% | -2110 bps | +382 bps |
| PAT | 2.74 | 20.08 | 4.27 | -86.4% | -35.8% |
| EPS (₹) | 0.10 | 0.76 | 0.16 | -86.8% | -37.5% |
The Numbers Game Is Rigged (Intentionally): Q3 FY26 saw revenue down 27% YoY, PAT down 86%. This sounds apocalyptic. Except: (a) Q3 FY25 had inflated OPM at 45% because of one-time delivery peaks; (b) the working capital cycle is 213 days, meaning cash comes in lumpy chunks; (c) management’s own words in June 2025: growth “will stabilize now… FY26 and FY27… and from FY28, again, you can expect steep growth.” Translation: they’re in a timing trough while waiting for ₹200+ crore in orders to deliver starting FY27. The Hindenburg-sized valuation assumes they survive this trough without debt stress. Spoiler: they’re doing fine. CARE ratings just confirmed CARE A- in October 2025.
FY25 Context (Full Year, Audited): Revenue ₹248 crore (+11% YoY from ₹223.92 crore FY24). PAT ₹59.92 crore, PAT margin 24%. The full-year EPS of ₹2.13 is the anchor. Q3’s EPS of ₹0.10 annualised to ₹0.40 is clearly a trough quarter. But annualisation of trough quarters when you’re a lumpy government contractor is like annualising January sales of a Christmas ornament company.
05 — Valuation: Fair Value for a Company That Operates on Government Time
207x P/E. Yes, You Read That Correctly.
Method 1: P/E Based Valuation
Using FY25 full-year EPS of ₹2.13. Defence contractors typically trade at 20x–35x because of margin quality and order visibility. Avantel’s margin is 24% PAT, order book is ₹210+ crore (annualizing to ~₹60–80 crore revenue/yr at current run-rate). A reasonable P/E band for quality: 18x–28x. Mid-market peer (Bharat Dynamics, Garden Reach) trade at 38–79x.
Range: ₹38 – ₹60
Method 2: EV/EBITDA Based
FY25 EBITDA = PAT (59.92) + Tax (23.44) + Interest (2.5) + D&A (11.76) ≈ ₹97.6 Cr. Current EV = Market Cap (₹3,380 Cr) + Net Debt (-₹7.66 Cr cash surplus) ≈ ₹3,373 Cr → EV/EBITDA = 34.6x. For defence contractors with uneven order cycles, 18x–28x is normal range.
EBITDA range (18x–28x): ₹1,756 Cr – ₹2,733 Cr → Per share:
Range: ₹41 – ₹64
Method 3: Lumpy DCF (The Honest Attempt)
Base FCF: ~₹50 crore (FY25 OCF). Growth assumption: Near-zero for FY26–27 (order cycle trough); then 20%+ from FY28 as orders convert. Terminal growth: 8% (reflecting steady-state defence contracts market). WACC: 10.5% (low leverage, stable utility-like margins).
→ PV of FY26–27 FCFs (trough): ~₹85 Cr
→ PV of FY28+ ramp (20% growth for 3 years): ~₹180 Cr
→ Terminal Value (8% growth / 2.5% cap): ~₹2,100 Cr
→ Total EV: ~₹2,365 Cr (minus ₹7.66 Cr net debt)
Range: ₹44 – ₹70
Fair Min: ₹40
CMP: ₹127 | 52-Wk High: ₹215
Fair Max: ₹65
CMP ₹127
52-Wk High ₹215
⚠️ EduInvesting Fair Value Range: ₹40 – ₹65. CMP at ₹127 is 95–218% above fair value under base-case DCF. The current price embeds heroic optimism about: (a) orders converting faster than management promised, (b) margins sustaining at 24%+ despite working capital dilution, (c) no capex surprises on facility buildouts. This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. Consult a SEBI-registered advisor before deciding to catch this falling knife.
06 — What’s Cooking: Orders, Delays, And Government Chaos
The Concall Breakdown: Why Management Sounds Relaxed About A 27% Revenue Drop