CMX Holdings Ltd Q3 FY26 — ₹56.6 Cr Market Cap, ₹0 Sales, EPS -₹0.16, and a ₹2,500 Cr Capital Dream: Corporate Yoga at Its Finest


1. At a Glance

CMX Holdings Ltd is that one stock which shows up on your 6-month return filter (+240%) and immediately makes you doubt your screener settings. A ₹56.6 crore market cap company, zero operating revenue, negative net worth, and yet trading at nearly ₹50 per share — welcome to the Indian stock market’s version of abstract art.

In Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025), CMX reported zero sales, a net loss of ₹0.18 crore, and an EPS of -₹0.16. ROCE is sitting at a majestic -1,250%, which is not a typo — it’s a cry for help expressed in percentage terms. The balance sheet has negative reserves of ₹17.29 crore, borrowings of ₹6.76 crore, and total assets of just ₹0.91 crore as of Sep 2025.

Yet the stock is up 51% in 3 months and 240% in 6 months. Clearly, fundamentals took a long vacation, while corporate announcements decided to hit the gym daily.

This is not a company you “analyze” — this is a company you observe, like a science experiment where chemicals are mixed without a lab manual.

So what’s going on here? Why is a dormant ex-NBFC suddenly talking about ₹2,500 crore authorised capital and green energy dreams?

Let’s open the files. Slowly. With gloves.


2. Introduction – From SIEL to CMX: The Art of Corporate Reincarnation

CMX Holdings Ltd was earlier known as Siel Financial Services Ltd, incorporated in 1983 with the ambition of becoming a Non-Banking Financial Company. Ambition was present. RBI registration was not.

The company applied for NBFC status. The RBI politely declined — by never issuing a certificate. Since then, CMX has been operationally dormant for years. No lending business. No financial services. No meaningful employees. Just a few Key Managerial Personnel to keep the lights on and the filings signed.

For most of the last decade, CMX’s “business model” has been:

  • Recover old debtors
  • Earn interest on fixed deposits
  • Book occasional fair value gains
  • File annual reports
  • Survive

In FY21, 89% of income was interest on fixed deposits and 11% came from fair value gains. In recent years, even that has dried up.

But Indian markets have a soft corner for turnaround stories — especially those that start with:

  • Change in promoter
  • Board resignations
  • MOA alteration
  • Capital increase
  • Buzzwords like platform, green energy, or technology

CMX has ticked every box. Multiple times.

So while the P&L sleeps, the corporate action section has been doing cardio.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s be honest: as of today, CMX

Holdings does not have an operating business.

Historically:

  • Intended NBFC
  • Never received RBI license
  • Operations restricted to interest income and recovery

In June 2021, management announced plans to enter a new digital platform business involving:

  • Survey reports
  • Ratings
  • Financial products
  • Maintenance workers
  • Business networking for manufacturers, suppliers, partners, and consumers

Total project cost was estimated at ₹90–95 lakh, and CMX paid ₹18 lakh as advance to DAIS World Endeavour Pvt Ltd for software development.

Fast forward to FY26 — there is no visible revenue, no operating traction, and no segment reporting that suggests this project has gone anywhere beyond PowerPoint.

Recently, the company has proposed:

  • Alteration of MOA
  • Increase in authorised capital to ₹2,500 crore
  • Name change proposal to RIWIND GREEN ENERGY

Yes, from zero revenue finance shell to green energy giant — that escalated quickly.

Right now, CMX’s business model can be best described as:

“Corporate optionality with no execution.”

Does that mean something could happen? Possibly.
Does it mean something has happened? Absolutely not.


4. Financials Overview – The Sound of Zero Revenue

Quarterly Comparison (Figures in ₹ Crores)

MetricLatest Qtr (Dec 25)YoY Qtr (Dec 24)Prev Qtr (Sep 25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue0.000.000.000%0%
EBITDA-0.08-0.13-0.15NAImprovement
PAT-0.18-0.14-0.21-28.6%Improvement
EPS (₹)-0.16-0.12-0.19-33%Improvement

Annualised EPS (Q3 rule)
Average of Q1, Q2, Q3 EPS × 4
-₹0.52, which matches TTM reality.

Commentary

  • Revenue has achieved nirvana (absolute zero)
  • Losses fluctuate based on how expensive compliance was that quarter
  • Any “improvement” is mathematical, not operational

If financials were a heartbeat monitor, this would be a flat line with minor electrical noise.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range Only

Let’s be very clear: CMX cannot be valued using traditional metrics

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