Aryaman Financial Services Ltd Q2FY26 – From Merchant Banking to Meme Banking, The Numbers Are Doing Cartwheels
1. At a Glance
If flamboyance had a balance sheet, it would probably look like Aryaman Financial Services Ltd (AFSL) right now — all dressed up in returns and not a single rupee of debt to spoil the look. This merchant banker has been around since 1994, helping others raise capital while quietly ballooning its own profits. The stock trades at ₹700 with a market cap of ₹857 crore, and let’s just say—what a glow-up! Over the past year, it’s up 73%, leaving even seasoned NBFCs wondering if they should hire Aryaman as their financial therapist.
With a stock P/E of 21.1, ROE of 31.3%, ROCE of 31.9%, and a current ratio of 18.3 (no, that’s not a typo, they actually have that much liquidity), Aryaman looks like the overachieving cousin at a family function who claims, “I’m just doing okay,” after bagging all the awards. The latest Q2FY26 results are just another mic-drop moment: profit after tax of ₹8.05 crore on revenue of ₹19 crore, and operating margins above 50%. And yes, the company is completely debt-free.
So, while the broader market is catching its breath, Aryaman seems to be sprinting uphill in formal shoes — and still not sweating.
2. Introduction
There are companies that dream of advising unicorns. Then there’s Aryaman Financial Services, which creates unicorns, takes them public, and possibly sends them cupcakes after the listing. Established in 1994, Aryaman started as a boutique merchant banker and is now running a full-fledged financial empire that includes portfolio management, stock broking, and advisory services through its subsidiaries.
Its client list reads like a Bollywood cameo roll — Club Mahindra, Wipro, Hexaware, Honeywell, and even Bikaji. These guys don’t just raise funds; they orchestrate financial operas.
But the real plot twist? Around 78% of their revenue doesn’t come from fancy advisory retainers or M&A consulting fees — it comes from stock-in-trade sales. Yes, the very merchant banker advising others on the art of capital allocation has quietly turned into a profit machine by trading its own investments. The joke writes itself.
Aryaman’s rise isn’t accidental. It’s the result of a tight-knit promoter setup (Mahshri Enterprises holds over 62%) that’s playing the long game. No debt, high returns, and a steadily expanding empire — that’s not typical smallcap behaviour; that’s “financial main character energy.”
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
If “money management” were a thali, Aryaman serves the full combo meal. Here’s what they dish out:
Fund Raising (ECM): Helping companies tap IPOs, FPOs, and rights issues faster than you can say “subscription closed.”
M&A Advisory & Open Offer Management: They babysit clients through mergers, buyouts, and takeovers, ensuring SEBI doesn’t spoil the party.
Private Equity Placement: They tell promoters how to sell less of their company while still raising more money.
Structured Finance: Arranging loans and placements with institutional investors — basically, the financial equivalent of setting up blind dates between promoters and private lenders.
Corporate Finance & Certifications: Handling ESOPs, mergers, and other paperwork-heavy stuff that gives most CFOs migraines.
Through subsidiaries like Aryaman Capital Markets Ltd and Escorp Asset Management Ltd, they also handle portfolio management, broking, and commodity trading.
In FY23, Aryaman Capital Markets brought in 51% of revenue, while Escorp chipped in 40%. Aryaman isn’t just managing money—it’s managing every possible way money can make more money. Think of it as India’s more compliant version of the Wolf of Wall Street.
Commentary: Aryaman’s revenue fell sharply QoQ, but margins stayed fat. That’s like eating less but still gaining muscle — pure efficiency. PAT may have dipped from last quarter, but YoY growth remains juicy at 15%. The OPM sits around 52–62%, which is chef’s kiss for a financial services firm.
5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range
Let’s put on our valuation goggles and get nerdy:
(a) P/E Method Industry P/E = 21.1 Annualised EPS = ₹26.28 So, theoretical price range = ₹26.28 × (18–24) = ₹473 – ₹630