Search for stocks /

Dhunseri Ventures Q2 FY26: ₹71 Cr Revenue, -59% OPM, ₹535 Cr Debt – Investment Company or Confused Startup Cosplaying as Conglomerate?


1. At a Glance – The Cupcake That Ate Your Capital

Imagine a company that starts with treasury investments, casually trades commodities, dabbles in plastic films manufacturing, and then suddenly decides… “You know what? Let’s sell cupcakes in Singapore and America.”

Welcome to Dhunseri Ventures.

This is not a business. This is a buffet.

And unfortunately, investors are the ones paying the bill.

On paper, it looks harmless:

  • Market cap: ₹745 Cr
  • Book value: ₹923 (stock trading at 0.23x — looks “cheap”)
  • Debt: ₹535 Cr
  • ROE: 4.69% (basically FD-level returns with more drama)

But then you dig deeper and things get… spicy.

  • Operating margins: -59% in latest quarter
  • Profit: swinging wildly like a Bollywood plot twist
  • Earnings? Boosted by ₹184 Cr “other income”
  • Core business? Losing money
  • Cupcake subsidiary? Being shut down after impairment

And yet… management is building new BOPP plants, expanding packaging capacity, and infusing capital.

So the real question is:

👉 Is this a hidden value play… or a corporate version of “bhaiya sab kuch thoda thoda de do”?

Because right now, Dhunseri looks less like a business… and more like a confused MBA group project.


2. Introduction – The Corporate Identity Crisis

Dhunseri Ventures is over 100 years old.

Let that sink in.

A century-old company… that still hasn’t decided what it wants to be.

  • Investor? Yes
  • Trader? Also yes
  • Manufacturer? Sure
  • Cupcake seller? Why not
  • US expansion startup? Obviously

This is not diversification. This is commitment issues.

And here’s the twist:
Historically, they actually made good money… but not from operations.

Most of their profits came from:

  • Selling investments
  • Fair value gains
  • Other income

Which is basically like saying:
👉 “Our main business is… not our business.”

Now look at FY25:

  • Sales: ₹462 Cr
  • PAT: ₹-23.6 Cr (loss)

So suddenly, when market conditions aren’t favorable…
the whole “investment income model” collapses.

And now they’re trying to reinvent themselves as:
👉 A packaging films manufacturer (BOPET + BOPP)

But wait…

👉 If packaging is the future, why is debt rising?
👉 If treasury was strong, why are profits negative?
👉 If cupcakes were promising… why shut them down?

You see the pattern?

Every new idea comes with a press release.
Every failure comes quietly buried in results.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify this chaos.

1. Treasury Operations

They invest in shares and securities.

Translation:
👉 They play the stock market… with your money.


2. Trading Business

They trade commodities like PET resin.

Translation:
👉 Low-margin, volatile, nothing fancy.


3. Packaging Films (The “Serious” Business Now)

Through subsidiary Dhunseri Poly Films:

  • BOPET line started (Dec 2023)
  • New BOPP plant in Jammu & Kashmir
  • Massive capex ongoing

Translation:
👉 Finally trying to build a real manufacturing business.


4. Food & Beverage (The Comedy Track)

  • Twelve Cupcakes (Singapore)
  • US expansion attempt

And now:
👉 Voluntary winding-up + impairment of ₹26.25 Cr

Translation:
👉 Cupcake experiment = financial diabetes.


5. Investment Income (The Real MVP)

  • Gains on investments
  • Dividend income
  • Fair
Continue reading with a premium membership.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!