1. At a Glance – “Cheap Stock… But Nobody Excited?”
Filatex India is sitting at ₹39, with a market cap of ₹1,733 Cr and a P/E of just 9.38 — cheaper than most textile peers and even some FMCG soaps. Yet the stock has fallen 17% in 3 months and 21% in 6 months.
Now look at Q3 FY26:
- Revenue: ₹1,049.7 Cr
- PAT: ₹55.34 Cr
- Profit growth: +17% YoY
- OPM improved to ~9%
So profits are rising, margins are improving… but sales are flat.
And here comes the most interesting part — management itself admitted that 1H was weak, but Q3 showed recovery signs.
Translation:
👉 Business struggled → margins got hit → now slowly bouncing back
ROE is still just 10.6%, which means this is not a capital-efficient superstar.
But then:
- ₹300 Cr recycling project
- ₹235 Cr capacity expansion
- ₹85 Cr steam monetisation
So ask yourself:
👉 Is this a turnaround in progress… or just more money being thrown into a low-return business?
2. Introduction – The Polyester Business Nobody Talks About
Filatex India is not flashy. It doesn’t sell brands, it doesn’t sell stories — it sells yarn.
And yet, it quietly controls ~10% market share in India’s polyester yarn industry.
That’s not small.
But here’s the problem — this is a commodity business.
Which means:
- You don’t control pricing
- You depend on raw material costs (PTA & MEG)
- You ride cycles instead of creating them
Management clearly highlighted:
- Demand remained stable domestically
- Exports declined significantly (<10% contribution)
- Capacity utilisation already near peak levels
So growth won’t come from “doing more with existing plants”
👉 It has to come from new capacity + better margins
Now let me ask you:
👉 If capacity is already near full… and revenue is still flat… where will growth come from?
3. Business Model – From Oil to Your T-Shirt
Filatex converts crude oil derivatives into polyester yarn.
Process: