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Fidel Softech Q4 FY26: ₹102 Crore Revenue Crossed, EPS Hits Double Digits — Niche LangTech Compounder or Acquisition-Fuelled Illusion?

1. At a Glance — A small company trying to behave like a global platform

There are SME stocks that shout. Then there are SME stocks that quietly compound while nobody notices.

Fidel Softech looks increasingly like the second category — though not without a few questions that deserve uncomfortable scrutiny.

An 85% revenue jump to ₹102.35 crore, PAT up 50% to ₹14.05 crore, EPS at ₹10.04, ROE above 28%, ROCE near 27%, dividend maintained, and a P/E of roughly 15.

On the surface, this looks almost suspiciously cheap.

And yet — this is where it gets interesting — much of the growth is acquisition-led.

Japan acquisition. U.S. acquisition. IM Corporation integration. JPY borrowings. Hybrid onsite-offshore model transition.

That can create empires.

Or accounting theatre.

Which one is this?

That is the mystery.

Management has been walking around talking about becoming a ₹300 crore revenue company in 3–3.5 years and “5x in 5 years.” Usually when SME management starts speaking in slogans, you hide your wallet.

But here, unlike many serial storytellers, numbers have so far kept up with rhetoric.

Back in Oct 2025 management said H2 would be stronger than H1 despite margin pressure due to acquisitions.

Did they walk the talk?

Yes.

Q2 FY26 revenue: ₹23.15 crore
Q4 FY26 revenue: ₹37.27 crore.

That is not PowerPoint growth. That is actual growth.

Question for readers:

Is this a mini-Persistent Systems in embryo?

Or an SME trying to grow faster than its controls?

Because both can look identical in year one.

And that is where investing gets fun.


2. Introduction

Fidel operates in a peculiar niche many investors ignore.

It is not classic IT services.

Not pure SaaS.

Not plain translation.

It sits in the odd overlap of:

  • Language engineering
  • Localization
  • Managed services
  • Japan consulting
  • Cloud and infra support
  • AI-enabled multilingual services

Which sounds boring.

Boring is often profitable.

Its moat may not look glamorous, but Japan-focused bilingual delivery is not easy to replicate.

That matters.

Japan is a notoriously hard market for Indian IT firms.

High trust barriers.

Long sales cycles.

Sticky clients.

If you enter, you often stay.

That makes Fidel interesting.

But let us not romanticize.

Customer concentration is a red flag.

Top 10 clients contribute ~80% revenue.

That is concentration risk wearing a tuxedo.

Also debt rose from virtually nil to ₹43 crore due to acquisition funding.

That is not trivial for a ₹216 crore market cap business.

So we have:

  • Strong growth
  • Rising leverage
  • Acquisition integration risk
  • Margin pressure
  • High client concentration

Translation:

This is not a sleepy annuity.

This is an execution story.

And execution stories can compound or combust.

Which side wins depends on whether acquisitions produce synergy or indigestion.


3. Business Model — What Do They Actually Do?

Imagine if Infosys married a translation agency and moved to Tokyo.

That is roughly Fidel.

Business buckets:

SegmentMix
IT Consulting71%
Localization29%

Interesting shift.

Earlier localization dominated.

Now consulting dominates.

That often means higher scalability.

Could also mean lower margins initially.

Management admitted exactly that in concall.

Refreshing.

Usually managements say:
“Temporary pressure due to strategic synergies.”

Which roughly translates to:
“We have no idea.”

Here they at least acknowledged onsite mix diluting margins.

That earns points.

Questions investors should ask:

Can AI multilingual services become a serious vertical?

Can Japan

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