State Trading Corporation of India Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹0 Revenue, ₹612 Cr “Other Income” EPS Drama, Negative Net Worth of ₹4,041 Cr… Is This a Company or a Rental Society?
1. At a Glance – The Government’s Zombie Trader
Imagine a company that once traded wheat, sugar, metals, oil, fertilizers — basically everything from your breakfast to your car engine… and today?
It sells nothing. Zero. Nada.
Yet somehow, it reports profits.
Welcome to State Trading Corporation of India Ltd (STC) — India’s very own financial zombie.
A PSU where:
Revenue = ₹0 for multiple quarters
Net worth = deeply negative
Debt = ₹1,177 crore
Contingent liabilities = ₹18,203 crore
Core business = dead since 2020
Income = rent + interest + accounting gymnastics
And still… it has a market cap of ₹624 crore.
Yes, the market is valuing a company that has literally stopped doing business.
Even better:
Quarterly EPS shot to ₹102 (thanks to one-time “other income”)
Lenders have classified it as NPA
Cases are ongoing in Debt Recovery Tribunal
Government owns 90% and… just watching
So the real question is:
Is this a company? A liquidation candidate? Or a real estate landlord accidentally listed on NSE?
And more importantly…
Why is the stock even trading like a normal business?
2. Introduction – From Trading Giant to Office Space Landlord
Back in the day, STC was not a joke.
Founded in 1956, this was India’s official import-export warrior. If India needed wheat, fertilizers, oil, metals — STC handled it.
Think of it as the government’s trading arm before globalization made private players cool.
But then:
Private sector entered
Global trade liberalized
Efficiency became a thing
STC… didn’t evolve
Fast forward to today:
The company has completely stopped undertaking new business since November 2020.
Let that sink in.
Not “slowdown” Not “temporary pause” Not “restructuring”
Stopped. Business. Completely.
So what does it do now?
Collect rent from office buildings
Earn interest income
Deal with legacy liabilities
Negotiate One-Time Settlement (OTS) with banks
This is like: A retired cricketer who now rents out his old stadium seats and still calls himself an active player.
And yet…
The stock trades at a P/E of ~14.
So the real mystery:
Are investors betting on revival… or just ignoring reality?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s simplify this like explaining to your lazy cousin:
Old Model (Pre-2020):
Import/export bulk commodities
Handle government trade mandates
Trade agro products, metals, petroleum
Current Model (Post-2020):
Rent office space
Earn interest
Sit in meetings with banks
Pay penalties for non-compliance
That’s it.
No trading. No supply chain. No execution.
Just… survival mode.
From the data:
Revenue: ₹0 (multiple quarters)
Only income: Other income + rent
So technically, this is now:
A loss-making trading company turned into a reluctant landlord.
Let me ask you:
If tomorrow your local kirana shop shuts down and starts renting shelves… Do you still call it a kirana business?
Exactly.
4. Financials Overview – The Most Confusing Profit Ever