1. At a Glance – The ₹8,979 Cr Market Value Elephant in a ₹7,241 Cr Room
Let’s begin with the obvious contradiction.
Here’s a Core Investment Company sitting on listed investments worth ₹8,979 crore (as disclosed earlier), trading at a market cap of ₹7,241 crore. Current price? ₹6,350. Book value? ₹8,954 per share. Price-to-book? 0.70. Stock P/E? 8.53. Dividend yield? 0.80%.
Three-month return? -14.7%. One-year return? -18.1%.
Latest Q3 FY26 numbers show revenue of ₹531 crore and PAT of ₹156 crore. Quarterly profit up 29.1% YoY. Sales up 8.6%.
But here’s the masala: This is not a typical NBFC. This is a holding company. A Core Investment Company registered with RBI. It basically sits on investments across JK Group companies like:
- JK Lakshmi Cement Ltd
- JK Tyre & Industries Ltd
- JK Paper Ltd
- JK Agri Genetics Ltd
- Umang Dairies Ltd
So the real question isn’t “How much did they earn?”
It’s “How much are their investments actually worth — and why is Mr. Market giving them a holding company discount like they forgot to attend valuation school?”
Curious? Good. Let’s open the balance sheet treasure chest.
2. Introduction – The Silent Kingmaker of the JK Empire
Bengal & Assam Company Limited (BACL) is that quiet billionaire uncle at a shaadi who doesn’t talk much but owns half the wedding venue.
It is a Core Investment Company (CIC). That means it doesn’t manufacture tyres. It doesn’t produce cement. It doesn’t make paper.
It owns the people who do.
Around 97% of its total assets are investments in equity shares, preference shares, subsidiaries, and group companies as of FY23.
So when you look at BACL’s revenue, you are essentially looking at:
- Dividend income
- Interest income
- Some financing income
- Occasional “other income” fireworks
FY23 dividend income? ₹102 crore. Previous year? ₹51 crore. That’s a 2x jump.
Interest income FY23? ₹6 crore vs ₹8 crore in FY22.
This is not a growth stock in the traditional sense.
This is a capital allocator.
And capital allocators are judged by one thing:
“How well do they compound wealth over time?”
10-year stock price CAGR? 30%.
5-year? 34%.
But revenue growth over 5 years? -27.8%.
Wait. Revenue falling. Stock rising.
Confused?
Exactly.
That’s what happens when you analyze a holding company like a manufacturing business. It doesn’t work.
So now the real detective work begins.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine you start a family business in 1918.
Fast forward a century.
Now you have cement, tyres, paper, dairy, agri-genetics — a full buffet.
Instead of running each kitchen yourself, you create a master holding company.
That’s BACL.
It:
- Holds large stakes in JK Group companies
- Earns dividends
- Earns interest income
- Occasionally does restructuring