01 — At a Glance
The Wealth Distributor With a Money Printer Inside
- 52-Week High / Low₹3,324 / ₹1,586
- FY26 Full Year (Guidance)₹1,175 Cr Revenue
- 9M FY26 Achieved₹897 Cr (76%)
- FY26 PAT Guidance₹375 Cr
- 9M FY26 PAT Achieved₹294 Cr (78%)
- Book Value₹97.4
- Price to Book32.4x
- Dividend Yield0.33%
- Debt / Equity0.10x
- AUM (Dec 2025)₹99,008 Cr
The Story So Far: Anand Rathi Wealth closed Q3 FY26 with ₹306 crore revenue (+25% YoY), ₹100 crore PAT (+30% YoY), and a 32.7% profit margin. For the third consecutive quarter, they’ve crushed the ₹375 crore annual PAT guidance at 78% achievement with just one quarter left. Stock price? Still sitting at 71x P/E. Market: “Priced in, mate. Now prove you can do this for 20 years.”
02 — Introduction
Welcome to the Wealth Distribution Industry, Where Rich People Need Richer People to Tell Them What to Do
Anand Rathi Wealth Ltd is, to put it plainly, a mutual fund distributor that has somehow convinced India’s richest 0.1% to let it manage how they deploy capital across ₹99,000 crores of assets. They are ranked amongst the top three non-bank mutual fund distributors in the country. They do not manage money themselves. They distribute other people’s products — mutual funds, structured products, PMS, AIFs, bonds, insurance — and take a small percentage of each pie.
Except this is not a small percentage story anymore. In nine months of FY26, they’ve already generated ₹294 crore in profit on ₹897 crore revenue — a 32.7% PAT margin. Seventeen consecutive quarters of 20%+ PAT growth. Operating leverage that’d make a PE investor weep. And management’s response? “We haven’t raised guidance because AUM is a point-in-time metric and Mr. Trump might say something on the 31st of March.”
This is not financial advice. This is a financial services company printing money by helping other financial services companies print money. They’re ranked the most profitable non-bank distributor by ROE and ROCE metrics — because discipline in capital allocation is apparently optional in the wealth management space.
Let’s break down what a ₹26,000 crore market-cap wealth distributor looks like when it executes flawlessly, maintains unhinged profitability, and still trades at 71x P/E because everyone is waiting for it to slow down. Spoiler: it probably won’t.
Q3 FY26 Milestone: “For the first time, we have crossed the ₹100 crores mark in a single quarter,” said management. Translation: they’ve hit a new monthly revenue run-rate of ₹35+ crore. That’s from a company that was ₹138 crore in quarterly revenue just four years ago.
03 — Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?
They Help Rich People Not Lose Their Money. Somehow That Prints 45% ROE.
The business model is simple to explain, complex to execute. Anand Rathi Wealth is a Relationship Manager (RM) led distribution platform. They hire talented advisors, give them back-office support (research, compliance, product knowledge), and have them sell financial products to HNI and Ultra-HNI clients. The RMs build client relationships; the company builds processes to keep clients stickier than their competitors.
Product mix: 53% Equity Mutual Funds, 27% Structured Products, 5% Debt MF, 15% Others (PMS, AIF, bonds, insurance, international). They’ve distributed into ₹99,000 crore of AUM across 13,262 client families in the Private Wealth vertical. An additional ₹2,359 crore AUM sits in the Digital Wealth segment (AR Digital Wealth subsidiary) targeting mass affluent. The OFA platform serves 6,850 MFD/IFA subscribers who manage ₹1.62 lakh crore in platform assets.
Revenue streams: Trail commissions from mutual funds (~55–60% of total), one-time issuances from structured products (~25–30%), and emerging streams like PMS/AIF advisory, insurance broking, and OFA SaaS subscriptions. No interest income. No principal capital deployment. Pure distribution economics with margin expansion from operating leverage.
Equity MFs53%AUM Mix
Structured Products27%AUM Mix
Debt + Others20%AUM Mix
Client Families13,262Private Wealth
The Hidden Moat: With 386 RMs managing 13,262 client families, the ratio is 34 clients per RM. Compared to the industry average of 15-20, this is productivity that compounds. Each RM is handling double the wallet share of peers. Why? Training, retention, and client selection. A 0.31% client attrition rate (AUM lost) is superhuman in wealth management.
💬 Quick question: If your RM brings in 2x the AUM per capita, why wouldn’t you pay them better and fire the ones who don’t? That’s literally what happened here — regret attrition of 2 RMs per quarter, and management admitted it’s partly cultural pruning.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers That Make Accountants Blush
Result type: Quarterly Results (Q3 FY26) | Q3 PAT: ₹100.2 Cr | Annualized EPS (Q3×4): ₹48.1 | 9M FY26 PAT: ₹294 Cr
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 306 | 244 | 297 | +25% | +3% |
| Operating Profit | 131 | 107 | 137 | +22% | -4% |
| OPM % | 43% | 44% | 46% | -100 bps | -300 bps |
| PAT | 100 | 77 | 100 | +30% | +0% |
| EPS (₹) | 12.03 | 9.28 | 11.97 | +30% | +0.5% |
The Math Looks Bonkers: Q3 FY26 EPS ₹12.03 × 4 = ₹48.12 annualized. Full-year FY26 guidance targets ₹375 crore PAT, which implies ~₹45 crore average quarterly earn. Q3 delivered ₹100.2 crore — more than double the needed monthly run-rate. With 9M PAT at ₹294 crore (78% of annual target), they’re tracking to overshoot if Q4 delivers anything >₹81 crore. Management chose not to raise guidance because “AUM is a point-in-time metric.” Translation: they’re cozy with the under-commit philosophy.
05 — Valuation: Fair Value Range
Is 71x P/E Justified, or Priced for Perfection?
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