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Brainbees Solutions:₹2,424 Cr Revenue. Still Bleeding. But The CEO Says “FY27 Will Be Far Superior.”

Brainbees Solutions Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Financial Year 2025-26 (Apr–Mar)

Brainbees Solutions:
₹2,424 Cr Revenue. Still Bleeding.
But The CEO Says “FY27 Will Be Far Superior.”

FirstCry is building a parenting empire. The GMV is soaring. The stores are multiplying. The problem? The P&L still looks like a start-up burn notice. Growth is accelerating. Losses are improving. And management just launched a 3-hour delivery service for babies’ nappies. What could go wrong?

Market Cap₹11,835 Cr
CMP₹227
P/B Ratio2.48x
6M Return-43.0%
ROE-4.07%

The Baby Business That Keeps Babying Losses

  • 52-Week High / Low₹439 / ₹207
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue₹2,424 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT₹-41.3 Cr
  • FY25 Full-Year PAT₹-265 Cr
  • FY25 EPS₹-3.67
  • Book Value₹91.3
  • Price to Book2.48x
  • Dividend Yield0.00%
  • Debt₹1,661 Cr
  • Return in 6 Months-43.0%
The Uncomfortable Truth: Brainbees just reported ₹2,424 crore in quarterly revenue—up 11.6% YoY. Sounds great until you realize they *lost* ₹41.3 crore in that same quarter. The stock fell 23.2% in three months anyway. Meanwhile, the CFO cheerfully informed investors that “adjusted EBITDA rose 25% YoY” and they are “PAT positive on a consolidated basis for Q3 FY26, adjusted for ESOP cost.” Translation: if we ignore the stuff that doesn’t exist, we’re actually fine. The market said “thanks, but no thanks.”

The Unicorn That Refuses to Be a Horse

Founded in 2010, Brainbees Solutions runs FirstCry, India’s largest multi-channel platform for mothers, babies, and kids. GMV grew from ₹9,121 crore in FY24 to ₹10,585 crore in FY25 — a handsome 16% jump. The company operates 1,156 stores across 533+ cities, manages 1.82 million SKUs from over 8,000 brands, and serves 10.6 million annual unique transacting customers. On paper, every single metric screams “scale.” Every P&L screams “burn.”

Here’s where it gets interesting. The company has four distinct business segments: India multichannel (70.5% of FY25 revenue), Globalbees — the D2C private-label play (21%), International (11%, currently unprofitable), and Intelli Education, the school business that actually prints money (high-margin stabilizer). The CEO, Surojit Chatterjee, is now confident that FY27 “will be far superior” to FY26. Management initiated RocketBees — an in-house logistics network — in 22 cities (now reportedly 28), and just launched FirstCry Qwik, promising 3-hour delivery for the modern mom’s emergency nappy run. Investment bankers call this “innovation.” Parents call it “Tuesday.”

The stock traded at ₹439 in its peak. Today it’s ₹227. The IPO was in August 2023 at ₹486. Investors who bought at IPO are underwater by 53%. Investors who bought at ₹439 are crying. And yet, management convenes analyst calls with confidence that borders on philosophical. Let’s dig into the mess.

Concall Highlight (Feb 2026): “Structurally, our growth rate will remain much superior in FY27, and FY27 will be far superior than FY26 with sequential improvement expected as rollouts scale.” — Brainbees CEO. This is management-speak for “trust us, we’re still building.” The market’s response: -43% in 6 months.

How FirstCry Makes Everyone Money Except Its Shareholders

The business model is deceptively simple. Mom buys baby products on FirstCry’s app or walks into a FirstCry store. FirstCry takes a cut. Money gets distributed to thousands of brand partners and private-label suppliers. Rinse. Repeat. At scale. 10.6 million customers per year. Average order value of ₹2,554. Gross merchandise value soaring through the roof.

But here’s the torture: selling diapers, baby clothes, and toys on a marketplace platform requires ruthless unit economics. You’re competing against Amazon, Flipkart, and direct-to-consumer brands. Margins are razor-thin. Customer acquisition costs are brutal. Inventory is a beast to manage. And if you want to differentiate yourself from the competition, you don’t just build an app — you build 1,156 stores. You deploy your own last-mile logistics. You fund growth in three international markets while your home market bleeds. You build dark stores for 3-hour delivery. All while the P&L screams red.

The secret sauce? Home brands. Brainbees owns BabyHug (India’s #1 multicategory baby brand by GMV), Pine Kids, Cute Walk, and others. These represent 55% of FirstCry’s India GMV in FY25, up from 37% in FY20. Home brands have better margins than third-party merchandise. They create brand moat. They justify the valuation in investor presentations. The problem? Even with 55% home brands, the consolidated P&L is still negative. On adjusted EBITDA, they’re printing 6.3% margins. On reported PAT, they’re printing red ink.

GMV Growth FY24-FY25+16%₹10,585 Cr
Online GMV %78%Offline: 22%
Home Brands %55%Up from 37% FY20
Stores Operational1,156533+ cities
The COCO/FOFO Play: Out of 1,156 stores, 527 are company-owned (COCO) and 629 are franchise (FOFO). Franchises are beautiful for scaling without balance-sheet burn. But franchisees need margins. And in the baby business, margins are not plentiful. So Brainbees subsidizes demand through marketing, store buildout capex, and plain-old cash burn. It’s a profitable idea at scale. Right now, it’s a loss generator.
💬 If your baby brand is available on Amazon, why would you download FirstCry? Drop your honest answer — not the one management wants to hear.

The Quarterly Results (Also Known as “Adjusted Positivity”)

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