CCL Products:
₹100 Cr PAT. 38% Growth. The Coffee Mafia
That Nobody Expected.
Working capital discipline. 65–70% capacity utilisation. Free cash flow of ₹700 crore TTM. And a company that’s quietly deleveraging while selling instant coffee to 90+ countries. The stock is up 84% in one year. You probably missed it.
The Instant Coffee Company That Grew Like a Startup
- 52-Week High / Low₹1,074 / ₹475
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹1,051 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹100 Cr
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹7.51
- Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹30.04
- Book Value₹156
- Price to Book6.80x
- Dividend Yield0.48%
- Debt to Equity0.78x
- ROCE13.1%
Who Is CCL Products, And Why Should You Care About Their Coffee?
Founded in 1961 (back when instant coffee was science fiction), CCL Products started as “The Sahayak Finance and Investment Corporation Limited” — a name that screams “our founders had no marketing budget.” They pivoted to instant coffee in 1994, rebranded to “Continental Coffee Limited,” and finally settled on CCL Products in 2002. Patience is an underrated virtue.
Today, CCL is one of the world’s largest private-label instant coffee manufacturers. “Private label” is investor code for “we make the stuff that goes into someone else’s fancy packaging.” They export to 90+ countries, run 35,000 metric tonnes of blended capacity, and have manufacturing plants in India (Andhra Pradesh — specifically Duggirala and Kuvvakoli), Vietnam (Dak Lak), and Switzerland (agglomeration and packing). They’re the invisible hand in your morning coffee, and the entire global coffee industry seems to have zero idea they even exist.
But here’s the plot twist: in the last 12 months, management executed one of the cleanest operational turnarounds India’s smallcap equity market has seen. Gross debt fell from ₹2,000 crore to ₹1,448 crore. Free cash flow hit ₹700 crore on a TTM basis. Revenue growth accelerated to 38%+. Margins expanded. EBITDA per kg improved to ₹135–140 levels. And the stock — which was trading at ₹475 not long ago — now sits at ₹1,063. That’s a 124% one-year return. Nobody covered it properly. You probably missed it. Let’s fix that.
Instant Coffee Manufacturing For The Entire Planet (Except You Probably)
The business model is elegant: source green coffee beans from Brazil, Vietnam, Indonesia (and lately, wherever commodity prices are cheapest). Roast, grind, extract, evaporate, spray-dry, freeze-dry, agglomerate, and package. Stick a label on it that says “Made for [Big Coffee Brand]” and ship it to 90+ countries. Repeat. That’s 80% of the revenue.
The remaining 20% is B2C — direct-to-consumer under the “Continental” and newer UK brands (Percol, Rocket Fuel, The London Blend, etc., acquired in 2024). This segment is growing 40–50% annually and still represents a tiny sliver of overall revenue. Think of B2C as the “upside play that nobody’s pricing in yet.”
The business model advantage? Cost-plus pricing. CCL doesn’t bet on coffee price direction. When raw beans spike, they pass it through to customers. When prices crash, customers benefit, but CCL’s per-kilogram EBITDA remains structurally intact due to contract renegotiation. Management calls this a “feature, not a bug.” Markets call it “boring.” We call it “how you sleep at night.”
Q3 FY26: The Numbers That Nobody Expected
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹7.51 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹30.04 | YTD (9M FY26) EPS: ~₹20.46
Source table
| Metric (₹ Cr) | Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % | QoQ % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 1,051 | 761 | 1,127 | +38.5% | -6.7% |
| EBITDA | 188 | 128 | 197 | +47.0% | -4.6% |
| EBITDA Margin % | 18% | 17% | 18% | +100 bps | Flat |
| PAT | 100 | 63 | 101 | +59.1% | -1.0% |
| EPS (₹) | 7.51 | 4.72 | 7.55 | +59.1% | -0.5% |
Is ₹1,063 The Price Or The Opening Bid?
Method 1: P/E Based
Using Q3 annualised EPS of ₹30.04. Industry median P/E for FMCG companies: ~19–20x. CCL’s growth (38% revenue, 37% profit) justifies a forward-looking multiple of 22x–28x considering near-term utilisation tailwinds.
Range: ₹660 – ₹841
Method 2: EV/EBITDA Based
TTM EBITDA: ~₹703 crore (annualising Q3 + 9M run rate). Current EV: ~₹15,464 crore. EV/EBITDA: 22x. Peer median for growth-stage FMCG: 15–18x. Adjusting for 35%+ growth visibility in next 12 months, fair EV/EBITDA band: 18x–24x.
EV range (18x–24x EBITDA): ₹12,654 Cr – ₹16,872 Cr → Per share (13.4 Cr shares):
Range: ₹744 – ₹1,190
Method 3: DCF Based
Base FCF: ~₹700 crore (TTM). Expected growth: 25–30% for 2 years, then tapering to 15% for 3 years. Terminal growth: 5%. WACC: 10%.
→ Terminal Value (5% growth / 5% cap rate): ~₹14,000 Cr
→ Total EV: ~₹20,200 Cr (net debt: ~₹1,248 Cr)
Range: ₹880 – ₹1,230
EduInvesting Fair Value Range: ₹740 – ₹1,190. CMP ₹1,063 sits in the upper half — growth priced in, but not yet excessive. At current trajectory, utilisation gains could push valuations higher. Watch for FY27 guidance in May-Jun 2026.
Management Chaos (Or Restructuring? You Decide.)
🔴 Management Carousel: CFO Changes, Exits, And New Hires
January 2025: CFO V. Lakshmi Narayana resigned. New CFO Chaithanya Agasthyaraju appointed. April 2025: CEO of Ngon Coffee (Vietnam subsidiary) Venkataramana Prasad Alam exited. November 2025: New CHRO (Srinivas Atla) appointed with 28 years of HR experience. The company is clearly reshuffling its deck. Watch for announcements post-Tet (Vietnamese Lunar New Year, early Feb) for any further structural changes. Changes aren’t inherently bad — but they’re worth monitoring.
✅ The Growth Drivers
- • Vietnam expansion ramping; freeze-dried utilization improving
- • B2C branded business (Continental + UK brands) growing 40–50%
- • Small-pack capacity (sticks, sachets) running near full; expansion underway
- • Instant cold brew & specialty coffee formats being launched
- • Domestic India reach: ~140,000 direct distribution outlets
⚠️ Watch List Items
- • Green coffee prices remain volatile; Tet holidays critical
- • High inventory days (208 days) — though improving
- • Capex plans shifting toward modular packaging lines (not greenfield capacity)
- • Plant-based meat category exited due to weakness; one diversification bet failed
- • Debt still at ₹1,448 crore; leverage at 0.78x (manageable but non-zero)
Fortress Under Construction (But Getting Stronger)
Source table
| Item (₹ Cr) | Mar 2024 | Mar 2025 | Sep 2025 | Dec 2025 (Latest) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Assets | 3,536 | 4,241 | 4,267 | 4,288 |
| Total Equity & Reserves | 1,649 | 1,968 | 2,087 | 2,060 |
| Borrowings | 1,622 | 1,815 | 1,628 | 1,628 |
| Other Liabilities | 240 | 459 | 552 | 574 |
| Total Liabilities | 3,536 | 4,241 | 4,267 | 4,288 |
Gross debt at ₹1,628 crore (down from ₹1,815 crore in Mar 2025). Management guided to ₹1,250 crore by Mar 2026. At current pace, they’ll hit it. This is hard deleveraging on growing EBITDA — the right way.
Total assets up from ₹3,536 crore (Mar 24) to ₹4,288 crore (Dec 25). This is capex for Vietnam expansion + working capital buildup. Means investments being made, not cash hoarding.
Equity dropped slightly to ₹2,060 crore (from ₹2,087 crore in Sep 25) due to dividend payout. Management paying ₹2.75/share interim dividend for FY26 — shows confidence in FCF generation.
Free Cash Flow — The Metric That Actually Matters
Source table
| Cash Flow (₹ Cr) | FY24 | FY25 | TTM (Latest) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating Cash Flow | +55 | +290 | +Higher (est. ₹800+ on 9M pace) |
| Investing CF | -527 | -415 | -Ongoing (Vietnam capex moderating) |
| Financing CF | +559 | +53 | Negative (debt paydown + dividend) |
| Free Cash Flow (OCF – Capex) | -472 | -125 | ~₹700 Cr (TTM per management) |
The Dashboard That Tells The Real Story
Four Years of Growing Profit, Growing Margin (Not Always), But Still Growing
Source table
| Metric (₹ Cr) | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 | TTM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 1,462 | 2,071 | 2,654 | 3,106 | 4,069 |
| Revenue Growth % | — | +42% | +28% | +17% | +31% |
| EBITDA | 331 | 400 | 445 | 555 | 704 |
| EBITDA Margin % | 23% | 19% | 17% | 18% | 17% |
| PAT | 204 | 284 | 250 | 310 | 375 |
| EPS (₹) | 15.36 | 21.35 | 18.73 | 23.24 | 28.12 |
Quick translation: Revenue is growing steadily at 28–42% CAGR (5-year). Margins got whacked by high green coffee prices (FY22–24), but are now stabilising at 17–18%. PAT is on an inflection: FY25 showed ₹310 crore, TTM is ₹375 crore — real acceleration happening now.
Who Else Is In The Coffee / Tea Game? (Spoiler: Most Are Slower)
Source table
| Company | Revenue (₹ Cr) | PAT (₹ Cr) | P/E | Profit Growth % | Sales Growth % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CCL Products | 4,069 | 375 | 37.8x | +37.2% | +35.8% |
| Tata Consumer | 19,465 | 1,450 | 72.2x | +41.5% | +15.0% |
| Jay Shree Tea | 914 | 1 | 224.1x | -108% | +25.7% |
| United Nilgiri | 86 | 22 | 11.4x | +17.7% | +3.6% |
| Goodricke Group | 829 | 3 | 111.7x | +149.9% | +7.8% |
Tea is having an existential crisis (Jay Shree, Goodricke running on fumes). Tata Consumer is mega but slower-growing. CCL is the growth outlier — scaling revenue at 36% while profit grows 37%. The relative valuation looks fair, not extended.
Who Owns CCL? (Mostly Indians With Desi Surnames)
Promoter Family (46.1%)
Challa Shantha Prasad (24.01%), Challa Srishant (10.57%), Challa Rajendra Prasad (10.02%), Challa Ajitha (0.76%), Mohan Krishna B (0.75%). The Challa family controls it outright. Pledged shares: 0.00%. This is the cleanest capital structure possible.
Institutional Ownership (32.6%)
DIIs at 21.53% (Axis MF, Franklin India, HSBC are top holders). FIIs at 11.01%. Retail public: 21.11%. No single institution has crushing voting power. Shareholding is decently diversified for a ₹14k crore company.
The Challa Family built this from scratch in 1961 (as a finance company), pivoted to coffee in 1994, and has been running a tight, conservative ship ever since. They own 46%, are aligned with minority shareholders (not extractive), and management has skin in the game. No red flags on corporate governance.
Is This A Clean Company Or A Landmine?
✅ The Clean Bits
- ✓ Auditor ratings: India Ratings affirmed IND AA-/Stable in Dec 2022
- ✓ No auditor qualifications on financials
- ✓ Regular concalls (last one: Feb 5, 2026)
- ✓ Zero pledged shares — management skin in game
- ✓ Independent distribution reach (own 140k retail outlets)
- ✓ Transparent about coffee price impact on working capital
⚠️ The Messy Bits
- ⚠ Three CFO changes in 12 months (Jan 25, Feb 25, then new CFO hired) — instability signal
- ⚠ Vietnam subsidiary CEO exited (Apr 25) — watch for cultural issues?
- ⚠ Interest coverage at 4.34x (not terrible, but declining relative to earlier levels)
- ⚠ High inventory days at 208 (though improving; was 262 in FY22)
- ⚠ Debt still material at ₹1,428 crore; not zero-leverage play
The CFO churn is the only real governance oddity. Jan 2025 resignation, then immediate Feb appointment suggests it wasn’t contentious — likely a planned transition. But it’s worth asking management “who’s the CFO long-term” in next concall. Management changes are inevitable in growth companies, but frequency matters.
The Global Coffee Market Is Growing. India Is A Rounding Error. CCL Is Printing Money Anyway.
☕ India’s Coffee Market: The Untapped Opportunity
India consumes ~3–3.5% of the world’s coffee. Per capita consumption? Laughably low — roughly 100 grams/year vs 5+ kg/year in Western markets. This is the TAM expansion story. CCL’s B2C domestic business is growing 40–50% annually into this market. By FY27–28, domestic B2C could represent ₹500–700 crore+ revenue. That’s real profit uplift.
🌍 Global Export Model: The Cash Machine
CCL supplies 90+ countries. Most of their revenue comes from B2B (contract manufacturing for global brands). This business is stable, predictable, and less sensitive to India-specific cycles. A recession in Germany doesn’t kill Chinese coffee drinkers. Diversified customer base across continents = low concentration risk.
🔄 Green Coffee Commodity Cycle: The Volatility
Green coffee went from ₹1,000/tonne (2015–20) to ₹5,000/tonne recently. This whacked margins. But here’s the key: CCL runs cost-plus, so commodity price direction isn’t their earnings lever. Per-kg EBITDA remains intact via contract pass-through. The real metrics are volume and utilisation. Near-term: watch post-Tet (Feb 2026) for any speculative holding by farmers (could push prices up). But this won’t break their model.
⚡ Capacity Utilisation: The Next Pinch Point (In A Good Way)
India operations: ~100% utilisation. Vietnam: 65–70% (ramping up). Management guidance: reaching 85–90% utilisation in 2 years. This means near-term capex approval for greenfield/expansion is likely post-Tet. More capex = near-term debt headwind, but long-term EBITDA tailwind. Watch for Board approvals in Mar-May 2026 for next round of capacity expansion.
Competitive Position: CCL is the global scale leader in private-label manufacturing. Tata Consumer is bigger in India branded business, but operates fundamentally differently (retail-first vs B2B). Gulf Oil competes in lubricants, not instant coffee. In their segment, CCL faces mostly Chinese/Vietnamese manufacturers + smaller Indian players. Moat: 60-year manufacturing history + capex (plants worldwide) + customer relationships. Defensible, not impenetrable.
The Coffee Verdict
CCL Products is not a household name. It doesn’t have a slick app, doesn’t do AI, doesn’t promise to “disrupt” anything. It makes instant coffee powder and sells it to people you’ve never heard of in countries you can’t find on a map. 38% revenue growth. 37% profit growth. ₹700 crore free cash flow. Debt falling. And the stock is up 84% in one year because basically no one covers it.
CY25 Execution: Q3 delivered highest quarterly revenue in company history. 9M FY26 (Apr–Dec) revenue at ₹3,239 crore with PAT growing 31% YoY. Management maintained 15–20% long-term EBITDA CAGR guidance and actually revised FY26 guidance upward to 25% growth. This isn’t aspirational — it’s being delivered.
The Inflection Moment: Vietnam facility ramping. India operations at full utilisation. B2C branded business scaling 40–50% annually. Margins stabilising despite commodity volatility (because of cost-plus model). Working capital discipline tightening DSO and inventory days. Debt paydown accelerating. Every operational lever is moving the right way simultaneously.
Valuation in Context: P/E of 37.8x looks steep until you realise YoY profit growth is 37%. That’s rare. Most growth stories at this valuation either slow down (disappointing you) or accelerate (rewarding you). CCL has capacity headroom (currently 65–70% in Vietnam), demand visibility (90+ countries), and execution track record (consistent 28–30%+ revenue CAGR over 5 years). The price you’re paying is the growth rate, essentially.
Historical Context: This company’s stock traded at ₹240–280 just 3 years ago. Nobody knew it existed. Analyst coverage is practically zero (maybe 1–2 boutique firms). Information asymmetry is massive. For contrarian equity investors, this is the sweet spot.
Three Scenarios:
Bull Case: Capacity utilisation hits 85–90% by FY27. Vietnam comes online at scale. B2C domestic business hits ₹600+ crore revenue scale. Margins expand to 20%. Debt falls to ₹800–900 crore. Forward P/E compresses to 25–28x. Stock target: ₹2,000+.
Base Case: Growth moderates to 20–25% by FY27. Margins hold at 17–19%. Debt inches down to ₹1,100–1,200 crore. P/E holds at 25–30x. Stock ends FY27 at ₹1,500–1,700.
Bear Case: Global coffee demand slowdown. Green coffee supercycle hits and squeezes margins despite cost-plus (lag in repricing). Vietnam ramp disappoints. Domestic B2C growth slows. Stock flatlines at ₹1,000–1,200 range. Returns are 0–15% from here.
✓ Strengths
- 38% revenue growth + 37% profit growth (2024–25)
- Global presence in 90+ countries; customer diversification
- Cost-plus pricing protects from commodity volatility
- ₹700 crore free cash flow on TTM basis
- India B2C domestic business growing 40–50% from low base
- Zero pledged shares; strong promoter alignment
✗ Weaknesses
- P/E of 37.8x — expensive unless growth sustains
- High inventory days at 208 (improving, but still high)
- Debt of ₹1,428 crore — non-zero leverage
- CFO changes 2–3x in 12 months — stability question
- Analyst coverage practically zero — information asymmetry cuts both ways
→ Opportunities
- Vietnam facility utilisation: 25–30% now, could reach 80%+ in 18 months
- B2C domestic (Continental + UK brands): ₹180 cr annual run rate, path to ₹500+ cr
- Specialty instant coffee formats (cold brew, microgrounds) being piloted
- Small-pack capacity (sticks/sachets) running near full — expansion capex underway
- India per-capita coffee consumption: 2–3% of global average; 10x upside theoretically
⚡ Threats
- Green coffee commodity spike could squeeze margins short-term (pass-through has lag)
- Vietnam expansion capex increasing debt temporarily before utilisation payoff
- Global recession could slow contract manufacturing (B2B segment exposed)
- Management churn (CFO exits) — watch for knowledge drain
- Valuation re-rating risk if growth disappoints even slightly
CCL Products is a small-cap growth story masquerading as a commodity play.
Most investors see “instant coffee” and mentally file it under “boring agri-commodity.” They miss the fact that it’s a technology-driven, capital-light (once built), asset-heavy manufacturing play with global scale and structural cost advantages. The company has been quietly executing for 60+ years. In the last 3 years, it went parabolic — 84% in 1 year, 22% in 3 years, 33% in 5 years. The stock price is catching up to the operational reality, not getting ahead of it.
At ₹1,063, growth is priced in. Perfection is not. If the company delivers 20%+ growth in FY27 (down from current 35–37%), the stock can still deliver 30–40% returns. If it disappoints, you’re looking at 0–10% returns for 12 months. Risk-reward is asymmetric to the upside if you believe in India’s coffee consumption trajectory + global B2B stability.