Akme Fintrade (India) Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹862 Cr AUM, 64% Growth, but Why Is the Stock Still in the Penalty Box?


1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss It

Akme Fintrade is that quiet NBFC sitting in rural India, minding its own business, growing AUM at 64.6% YoY, reporting Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹10.39 crore, trading at 0.58× book value, and still getting ignored like the last samosa at a wedding buffet.

Market cap is a tiny ₹231 crore, stock price ₹5.42, while book value is ₹9.42. That’s not a typo. That’s the market saying, “Bhai, I don’t trust you yet.”

Return over 3 months: -28%
Return over 1 year: -34%

Meanwhile, the company is posting ROCE of 14.4%, ROA of ~6%, P/E of 6.1, and EPS of ₹0.88 (TTM). On paper, it looks like a value investor’s Tinder profile. In reality, the market is still swiping left.

So what’s going on here? Hidden gem or rural finance ka typical risk story? Let’s dig. 🕵️‍♂️


2. Introduction – Small NBFC, Big Rural Dreams

Akme Fintrade (India) Ltd has been around since 1996, which means it has survived multiple NBFC cycles, demonetisation, IL&FS, COVID, and RBI mood swings. That alone deserves mild respect.

It’s an RBI-registered NBFC, focused on lower- and middle-income borrowers in rural and semi-urban India. No fancy fintech jargon. No BNPL nonsense. Just old-school lending—vehicles, SMEs, LAP, and working capital.

As of the latest update:

  • AUM: ₹862.62 crore
  • Customers: 2+ lakh
  • Branches: 28
  • Sales points: 30+
  • States: Rajasthan-heavy (70%+ exposure), plus MP, Gujarat, Maharashtra

This is not Bajaj Finance. This is “gaadi loan in Sikar district” finance.

And yet, growth is accelerating. Disbursements went from ₹78.3 crore (FY23) to ₹97 crore (FY24), and AUM has exploded in FY26.

Question is: is growth being bought

with risk, or earned with discipline?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Imagine a borrower who:

  • Doesn’t get instant approval from HDFC Bank
  • Needs money for a truck, a solar panel, or working capital
  • Lives in a semi-urban or rural area

That’s Akme’s customer.

Two Core Buckets

  1. SME / LAP Loans
    • ~79% of AUM
    • ~69% of FY24 revenue
    • Higher ticket size, better yield, but higher credit risk
  2. Vehicle Finance
    • ~21% of AUM
    • Two-wheelers, three-wheelers, LCVs, HCVs

This is secured lending-heavy. No unsecured madness. Collateral is king here.

They also offer niche products like:

  • Solar loans
  • Mahila Udhyog loans
  • Farm equipment finance

It’s a very “Bharat-focused” lending book.

Now ask yourself: Is Rajasthan concentration a strength or a landmine?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers Don’t Lie (Mostly)

Quarterly Performance (Q3 FY26)

(Figures in ₹ crore)

MetricLatest Qtr (Dec’25)YoY Qtr (Dec’24)Prev Qtr (Sep’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue39.728.135.041.3%13.4%
Financing Profit15.012.014.025.0%7.1%
PAT10.398.9310.0516.4%3.4%
EPS (₹)0.240.210.2414%Flat

Annualised EPS (Q3 rule):
Average of Q1–Q3 EPS × 4 ≈ ₹0.88

Margins remain chunky because NBFC accounting makes revenue look like magic when credit costs behave.

But remember—NBFC profits are fragile. One bad cycle and these tables

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