1. At a Glance – The Party Got Interrupted Mid-Shot
Som Distilleries was cruising like that one overconfident wedding dancer who thinks he owns the baraat — beer volumes booming, margins improving, expansion plans worth ₹570 crore, and suddenly… DJ bandh.
Q3 FY26 came in like a strict Indian uncle at a house party:
- Profit crashed ~76% YoY
- Sales dropped
- Beer volumes tanked -24% YoY
- And just when things couldn’t get worse… license suspension hits operations
Yes, this is not just a bad quarter — this is a multi-layered drama involving weather, regulations, alcohol politics, and a court case.
But here’s the twist:
Despite all this chaos, management is confidently talking about:
- ₹1,500 crore FY26 revenue target
- ₹570 crore UP mega project
- Market expansion into Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh
So what is this exactly?
A temporary hangover… or early signs of a long-term liver problem?
And the real question —
Is this company brewing beer… or brewing risk?
2. Introduction – From Strong Beer to Weak Quarter
Som Distilleries is one of those classic Indian midcaps that looks boring… until you actually open the bottle.
It operates in the alcohol industry — which in India is basically:
- Highly regulated
- State-controlled
- Politically sensitive
- And ridiculously profitable (when things go right)
The company primarily sells:
- Beer (93% revenue)
- IMFL (7%)
So essentially, it’s a beer-first business with a side hustle in whisky and rum.
Now here’s where things get interesting.
For years, the company was quietly compounding:
- Sales growth: 58% (3-year CAGR)
- Profit growth: 137% (3-year CAGR)
Not bad for a company most people confuse with a local brewery.
But Q3 FY26?
Complete disaster.
Management blamed:
- Cold weather (yes, seriously)
- Karnataka slowdown
- Lower Hunter beer sales mix
And if that wasn’t enough —
Excise department suspended their Bhopal plant license.
So let’s recap:
- Weather hurt sales
- Regulation hurt operations
- Costs hurt margins
Basically, everything that can go wrong… did.
But here’s the kicker:
Management still sounds confident.
Which makes you wonder…
Are they optimistic… or just used to chaos?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s simplify.
Som Distilleries is basically:
A company that converts barley + water + government permission → alcohol → profits (hopefully)
Revenue Structure:
So yes, this is essentially a beer company pretending to diversify.
Key Brands:
- Hunter (flagship cash cow)
- Black Fort
- Power Cool
- Woodpecker (premium play)
Business Model:
- Manufacture beer/IMFL
- Sell through state-controlled distribution
- Pray excise policies don’t change overnight
Because in India:
You don’t sell alcohol.
You sell alcohol through government mood swings.
Capacity:
- Beer: 30+ million cases
- IMFL: ~3.9 million cases
Expansion:
- ₹570 crore UP project (greenfield)
- Expected capacity: 1 crore cases
So clearly, management is betting big on