01 — At a Glance
The Builder Who Sold Its Highway ATM Machines
- 52-Week High / Low₹231 / ₹111
- 9M FY26 Revenue₹4,039.78 Cr
- 9M FY26 PAT₹272 Cr
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹9.34
- Annualised EPS₹37.34
- Book Value₹150
- Price to Book0.77x
- Order Book₹15,927 Cr
- Debt / Equity0.47x
- Return 6M-42.0%
The Quick Version: Ashoka Buildcon built highways like a chef cooks biryani — with patience, layers, and the occasional explosive result. 9M FY26: ₹4,039.78 crore revenue (down 21% YoY). But PAT up 97% to ₹272 crore, thanks to ₹237 crore in exceptional gains from selling BOT assets. P/E of 3.08x screams “too cheap” like a discounted biryani from a 5-star hotel. Or it screams trouble. Possibly both. Also: the company’s being a debt master class, with ₹2,722 cr consolidated debt (down from ₹4,910 cr), while simultaneously telling investors “revenue will be muted for FY26.” The stock lost 42% in 6 months. Median P/E for construction peers: 16.08x. Ashoka: 3.08x. There’s a reason.
02 — Introduction
The Contractor Nobody Asked for a Timeline, Yet Everyone Blames for Delays
Ashoka Buildcon. Founded 1993. Nickname: “The highway builder who runs on monsoon time.” They build roads, railways, power transmission lines, and civic infrastructure — basically, the stuff that makes other infrastructure projects possible. They’re a Fortune India 500 company. They’ve constructed 14,000+ lane km of highways. Electrified 30,000 villages. Built 10 million sq ft of buildings. To put it in perspective, they’ve contributed more to India’s physical infrastructure than many states have budgets for.
But here’s the thing about infrastructure projects: they’re delayed so often, the Concord Flights decommissioned faster. Q3 FY26, revenue dropped 23% YoY (consolidated). Not because they stopped building. Because projects are stuck in land acquisition limbo. Management, in the Feb 2026 concall, admitted land acquisition is “very difficult.” Translation: “The government took three years to acquire land. The monsoon didn’t help. We’re now 9 months behind schedule.”
Meanwhile, they’ve been aggressively monetizing BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer) assets — basically selling their golden-goose toll roads to infrastructure funds. Dec 2025: sold 5 BOT projects for ₹1,814 crore to Maple Infrastructure Trust. Additionally, bought out Macquarie’s stake in ACL (subsidiary) for ₹667 crore, making it 100% owned. The consolidated debt fell from ₹4,910 cr (Sep’25) to ₹2,722 cr (Dec’25). 44% debt reduction in 3 months. That’s not financial prudence — that’s a fire sale dressed in a tuxedo.
The order book is a “respectable” ₹15,927 crore. But execution? Stuck. Revenue declining. Cash generation strong. Stock down 42% in 6 months. Welcome to Ashoka Buildcon — where balance sheets look great, but the execution spreadsheet looks like your Excel model after a power cut.
Concall Insight (Feb 2026): Management: “Land acquisition is still very difficult in West Bengal.” Appointed date delayed despite financial closure. Translation: “We have money. We have contractors. Government hasn’t given us the land. So we’re selling assets and buying back our own company.”
03 — Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?
They Build Stuff. Then They Monetize It. Repeat.
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