Bannari Amman Spinning Mills Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹203.9 Cr Sales, 90% QoQ Profit Jump, 0.39x Book Value — Turnaround Thread or Just Another Textile Twist?
1. At a Glance – Cotton, Cash Crunch & Comeback Drama
₹183 crore market cap. ₹875 crore trailing sales. ₹16.68 crore TTM profit. Trading at ₹23, which is just 0.39x book value (₹58.6).
And here’s the masala — Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025 quarter) net profit jumped 90% QoQ, even as sales slipped 4.32% YoY.
Return over 3 months? -23.8%. Return over 1 year? -33.4%. ROE? A polite 1.82%. ROCE? A gym-skipping 4.49%.
Debt stands at ₹449 crore, interest coverage at a not-so-confident 1.54x.
But wait — they’re selling assets, raising money via rights issue, issuing warrants, installing solar, and talking about healthcare diversification.
Textile company or startup pivot machine?
The question is simple: Is this a beaten-down cyclical play preparing for revival… or just a cotton mill surviving on hope and refinancing?
Let’s open the balance sheet trunk and see what’s inside.
2. Introduction – When Cotton Meets Corporate Drama
Founded in 1989, Bannari Amman Spinning Mills Ltd belongs to the well-known Bannari Amman Group from Coimbatore — a group with presence in sugar, distilleries, power, education, and more.
This isn’t some WhatsApp IPO experiment.
This is a 35+ year old textile player that:
Spins cotton yarn
Weaves and knits fabric
Processes it
Converts it into garments and home textiles
Generates power from windmills
Basically, they take cotton from farm to fabric and sometimes to your bedroom sheet.
But here’s the catch.
FY23 and FY24 were rough. Revenue fell from ₹1,095.8 crore (FY23) to ₹924.4 crore (FY24). Margins were squeezed. Interest coverage fell below 1x in FY24.
CARE Ratings slapped a BBB- (Negative) outlook. That’s not panic. But it’s definitely not celebration either.
However…
9M FY25 showed some improvement. And Q3 FY26? Profits are finally positive again.
So is this:
A slow, painful turnaround?
A rights-issue survival story?
Or a cyclical bounce in cotton margins?
Let’s break it down.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
BASML is vertically integrated. That means they don’t just spin yarn — they go deeper.
Divisions:
Spinning – 145,440 spindles
Weaving – 153 looms
Knitting – 7,200 TPA
Processing – 5,400 TPA
Garments & Home Textiles
Windmills – 23.40 MW installed capacity
FY24 production data:
Yarn: 21,503 tonnes
Waste cotton: 7,966 tonnes
Fabric (weaving): 127.40 lakh metres
Knitted fabric: 4,222 tonnes
Windmills generated 372 lakh units (captively consumed)
Revenue breakup FY24:
Yarn: 57.05%
Fabrics: 27.72%
Waste cotton: 7.03%
Made-ups: 3.98%
Others: small but helpful
Exports: 5.6% of total income. Top 10 customers: ~21% of sales. Over 400 domestic customers.
Clients include Arvind, Ragno, Debenhams, Next, Laura Ashley.
So demand exists.
But textile is cyclical. Cotton prices dance. Yarn spreads compress. Margins cry.
And when margins cry, leveraged balance sheets scream.