1. At a Glance – From Mumbai With Margins
Small cap. Big drama.
At a current price of ₹441, Autoriders International Ltd commands a market cap of just ₹153 crore — smaller than some influencers’ wedding budgets. Yet it’s reporting Q3 FY26 revenue of ₹24.11 crore, up 18.9% YoY, and PAT of ₹2.35 crore, up a spicy 114% YoY.
Operating margins? A solid 28%.
ROE? 20%.
ROCE? 19.5%.
Debt-to-equity? A manageable 0.34.
Stock P/E? 15.8x, below industry median of 22.2x.
Now here’s the masala: the stock is down 48% in the last 3 months, but up 837% over one year. Yes, you read that correctly. This stock did a Formula 1 lap and then applied sudden brakes.
So what is this company? A glorified Zoomcar? A corporate chauffeur aggregator? Or a quietly compounding transport services business flying under the radar?
Let’s open the bonnet.
2. Introduction – The Corporate Cab Company Nobody Talks About
Autoriders International Ltd (AIL), incorporated in 1994, isn’t your everyday Ola-Uber hustle.
This company operates in premium car rental services, offering:
- Self-drive rentals
- Chauffeur-driven cars
- Airport transfers
- Domestic and international tour management
This is not “Bhai, 4 km ka ride cancel mat karo.”
This is corporate rental economics.
As of June 2023, fleet size was 414 vehicles.
As of March 31, 2025, fleet expanded to 472 vehicles.
Operations span 8 cities:
Ahmedabad, Bangalore, Delhi, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, Gurgaon, and Kolkata.
Top 5 customers contribute 31% of FY23 sales. CARE mentions top 10 contribute 40–50% revenue.
So yes — revenue visibility exists.
But here’s the real twist.
They’ve sustained 25–29% operating margins for four straight years.
In car rental.
In India.
In a market where unorganized players exist and aggregator giants breathe down your neck.
How?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s simplify.
AIL owns a fleet of vehicles. These include:
- Hatchbacks
- Sedans
- SUVs
- Premium vehicles
They rent them out primarily to corporate clients.
Revenue breakup FY23:
- Car rentals ~99%
- Other income ~1%
This is a pure-play rental income model.
No fancy