1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Margins
ABans Enterprises Ltd is one of those companies where the topline shouts ₹3,457 crore in a single quarter, but the bottom line whispers politely and walks away. With a market cap of just ₹173 crore and annual sales touching ₹9,350 crore, this stock is basically running a Big Bazaar-level revenue operation on a kirana-store valuation. The stock currently trades around ₹24.8, flirting dangerously close to its 52-week low of ₹23.3, and far away from its past bravado of ₹42.7.
The P/E of ~10.7 looks optically cheap until you realise the operating margin is -0.12%, meaning profits are surviving on jugaad, timing, and “other income.” ROCE at 12.4% is decent on paper, ROE at 9.6% is passable, and the price-to-book of 0.8 screams “deep value” to bargain hunters and “deep confusion” to quality investors.
Debt stands at ₹203 crore, debt-to-equity at 0.93, interest coverage at 1.76 (translation: EMI bharne ke baad thoda sa saans). Promoters hold a chunky 74.6%, FIIs around 15%, and public shareholding is shrinking.
So what is ABans? A trading behemoth with microscopic margins, a balance sheet that swings with commodity cycles, and a business model that works only if volatility behaves nicely. Curious already? Good. You should be.
2. Introduction – ₹9,350 Cr Revenue, ₹16 Cr Profit: Make It Make Sense
ABans Enterprises is not new. Incorporated in 1985, it has seen Harshad Mehta, dotcom bubbles, global financial crises, crypto winters, and still decided, “Let’s trade everything that moves.” Agri commodities? Yes. Precious metals? Obviously. Equities, derivatives, currencies? Why not, add that also.
But here’s the catch: this is not a high-margin business, and it never pretended to be one. ABans runs a high-volume, wafer-thin margin trading model, where the goal is turnover, not brand loyalty or pricing power.
In FY25,