01 — At a Glance
The Staffing Company That Forgot to Hire Profitability
- 52-Week High / Low₹2,499 / ₹1,063
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹3,013 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹42.2 Cr
- TTM EPS₹77.97
- Latest Qtr EPS₹24.88
- Book Value / Share₹572
- Price to Book2.12x
- Operating Margin1.35%
- ROCE12.7%
- Total Associates3.62 Lakh
Flash Summary: TeamLease just delivered Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹42.2 crore on ₹3,013 crore revenue. The problem? Operating margin of 1.35% is what happens when you’re in the business of moving humans around like FMCG inventory. Profit growth at 34% YoY looks amazing until you realize that’s because last year’s base was microscopic. Stock returned -32% in 6 months and -35% in 1 year. But hey, at least they’re not paying dividends — why return cash when you can burn it on acquisitions?
02 — Introduction
Meet Your Friendly Neighbourhood Staffing Company. They’re Drowning.
TeamLease Services Limited is India’s largest organised staffing company. They hire people, send those people to work at companies, collect salaries in advance from the hiring company, pay the workers their cut, and pocket the difference. It sounds like a beautiful business model. It’s not. It’s a volume game with margins thinner than a chai shop’s profit on a summer day.
The company operates across three segments: General Staffing (93% of revenue — people doing regular jobs), Specialized Staffing (5% — tech/IT roles), and HR Services (2% — payroll, training, compliance). They claim to have hired over 23 lakh people in 23 years. Let that sink in. 23 years. 23 lakh hires. That’s roughly 100,000 people per year. And somehow they’re still struggling to crack profitability at scale.
Q3 FY26 delivered a PAT of ₹42.2 crore on revenue of ₹3,013 crore. That’s a 1.35% operating margin. For context: a small FMCG company selling toilet paper probably has better margins. Yet in their Q3 concall, management spoke with the kind of optimism usually reserved for people who just won the lottery. “Profitability levers are working,” they said. Revenue flat QoQ but PAT up 64% because of one-off tax credits. Dig deeper and what you find is: operational EBITDA only up 22% YoY, hedged entirely by one-off accounting benefits and seasonal EdTech billing.
Management Guidance from Feb 2026 Concall: They lost 27,000 headcount in Q3 due to client insourcing (a large NBFC absorbed 20,000+ associates onto their own payroll). Management’s response? “We have taken the full hit in Q3” and expect “net positive headcount growth” in Q4. They sound confident. They sound delusional. Either way, let’s see what happens.
03 — Business Model: We Move People Around And Keep The Scraps
The Business: Simple Math That Never Actually Works
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