1. At a Glance – Sugar, Spirit… and a Financial Hangover
If sugar companies were Bollywood characters, Ugar Sugar Works would be that veteran actor who once gave blockbuster hits but now shows up in multi-starrer films hoping someone notices. On paper, this company has everything — sugar mills, ethanol plant, power generation, even its own liquor brands (yes, whisky + sugar = diversified happiness). But dig a little deeper and suddenly things start looking like a Gujarati wedding budget gone wrong — high expenses, emotional decisions, and someone definitely over-leveraged.
Let’s talk numbers. Revenue is ticking along nicely, PAT has suddenly jumped in the latest quarter, and EPS has resurrected from negative territory like a seasonal IPL comeback. But then you notice ROE is negative, debt is ₹440 crore, interest coverage is barely breathing at 1.29x, and credit rating has been downgraded to CARE BB+ Negative.
This is not a turnaround story yet. This is a “trying very hard not to become a case study” story.
And the biggest question: Is this a hidden ethanol play waiting to boom… or a sugar factory stuck in a debt treadmill?
2. Introduction – The 85-Year-Old Startup
Founded in 1939, Ugar Sugar Works is older than independent India. That means this company has survived wars, policy changes, monsoon failures, and multiple governments — but ironically, still struggles with profitability consistency.
The business sits inside the Shirgaokar Group ecosystem, operating two sugar plants in Karnataka with a decent capacity footprint. Over the years, like every sugar company trying to sound modern, Ugar also diversified into ethanol and power generation.
Because let’s be honest — no one wants to be “just a sugar company” anymore.
The logic is simple:
Sugar → cyclical, regulated, unpredictable
Ethanol → government-backed, future-facing
Power → steady side income
Sounds like a perfect combo, right?
Except reality is slightly different.
Despite diversification, the company is still battling:
Low margins
High working capital
Debt pressure
Operational inefficiencies
And then comes the classic sugar industry villain: government policy.
You don’t control pricing. You don’t control raw material costs. And you definitely don’t control the monsoon.
So what exactly are we dealing with here?
A legacy business trying to modernize… but carrying old baggage.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s break it down like a lazy investor who refuses to read annual reports.
Step 1: Buy Sugarcane
Farmers supply sugarcane → company crushes it → makes sugar.
Step 2: Extract Everything Possible
Nothing goes to waste:
Sugar → main product
Molasses → used for ethanol
Bagasse → used for power generation
Basically, it’s like Indian households — “kuch bhi waste nahi hona chahiye”.
Step 3: Sell Everything
Revenue mix FY23:
Sugar: ~55%
Biofuel: ~27%
Alcohol: ~9%
Others: minor
So yes, this is increasingly becoming an ethanol + sugar hybrid.
Step 4: Ethanol Play
The company has:
845 KLPD ethanol capacity
Multi-feed capability (cane juice + maize)
And this is where the future lies.
Because ethanol blending is a government-backed story.
But here’s the twist:
The company couldn’t fully utilise its distillery earlier, leading to losses.
Translation: You built a Ferrari engine… but forgot to add fuel.
4. Financials Overview – The Rollercoaster You Didn’t Sign Up For
Result Type Detected: Quarterly Results (Q3 FY26)
Financial Comparison Table (₹ Crore)
Metric
Latest Q3 FY26
Q3 FY25
Q2 FY26
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
321
263
417
+22%
-23%
EBITDA
37
20
-9
+85%
Turnaround
PAT
14
5
-32
+180%
Turnaround
EPS
1.22
0.40
-2.86
Strong recovery
Annualised EPS = 1.22 × 4 = ₹4.88
Now current price = ₹39.9
So recalculated P/E = ~8.2x
Market says P/E = 23.7x, but that includes trailing noise. Real picture? Much lower.