1. At a Glance – The Stock That Forgot Its Business
₹129 crore market cap.
₹320 share price.
Zero quarterly sales.
₹2.30 crore Q3 PAT.
ROE: -104%.
ROCE: -41.2%.
Debt: ₹25.6 crore.
Price to Book: 7.91×.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the financial circus of Ceenik Exports (India) Ltd — a company that officially manufactures garments… except it doesn’t. Sales are ₹0.00 crore. Yet Q3 FY26 shows a net profit of ₹2.30 crore.
Three-month return? -13.3%.
Six-month return? -13.7%.
Five-year return? 118%.
So the stock has delivered multibagger returns while the business has delivered… nothing. Literally nothing.
And if that doesn’t make you curious, I don’t know what will.
2. Introduction – From Denim to Dorm Rooms
Incorporated in 1995, Ceenik Exports once lived in the glamorous world of denim jeans, dyeing machines, and fabric printing. They made narrow-fit jeans, stretch-fit jeans, T-shirts, jackets — basically the entire “Mall of India” starter pack.
Fast forward to FY22. The garment manufacturing business? Suspended.
Processing division? Sold off.
Textile operations? Gone.
What remains?
Property leasing and hostel business.
Yes. A garment exporter that now survives on rent and lodging income.
In April 2025, the company officially announced cessation of garments and textile operations. That’s not my sarcasm. That’s their filing.
So what is this company today?
A real estate play?
A cash-flow experiment?
A listed shell?
Let’s dig.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Originally:
- Knitted fabric
- Denim jeans
- Printing services
- Dyeing services
Currently?
Revenue breakup (FY22):
97% Rent Income
3% Lodging & Boarding Charges
Quarterly sales now: ₹0.00 crore.
So what does Ceenik Exports do?
They own property.
They lease property.
They run a hostel.
That’s it.
Imagine buying a company called “Ceenik Exports” expecting denim exports — and getting hostel rooms instead.
If this were a Bollywood movie, it would be titled:
“From Jeans to Paying