Deepak Builders & Engineers India Ltd Q1 FY26 – Government Tender Kingpin or Just Another Contractor Drama?
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1. At a Glance
Market cap: ₹777 Cr, CMP: ₹167, P/E: 13.5 (industry average ~20). FY25 revenue ₹583 Cr, PAT ₹57.5 Cr, ROE nearly 20%. In Q1 FY26, sales were flat at ₹107 Cr, PAT ₹15 Cr, margins ~25% OPM. Debt is manageable at ₹135 Cr (D/E 0.33), order book ₹1,380 Cr. Promoter holding steady at 72.5%. Stock has risen ~18% in 6 months. Sounds like a boring infra play? Well, not exactly — their projects include AIIMS geriatric blocks, railway station upgrades, stadiums, and even a “Unity Mall” in Haryana. Basically, they are the Desi version of L&T’s younger cousin, hustling through government tenders.
2. Introduction
Infra stocks in India are like biryani joints in Hyderabad. Everyone claims “authentic” but only a few deliver on time. Deepak Builders & Engineers (DBEIL) entered in 2017, a baby in infra years, but already flexing with Class-I (Super) contractor certification. That badge means they can bid for fat government contracts — hospitals, flyovers, industrial units, even railway station redevelopments.
The IPO in Oct 2024 raised ₹260 Cr (₹217 Cr fresh issue). Classic infra IPO script: repay debt, beef up working capital, and show off order book. The market lapped it up because infra = Modi-era darling + government capex push.
Question: Would you trust a six-year-old infra firm with ₹1,380 Cr in orders, or is this toddler trying to lift L&T’s dumbbells?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Three tracks on their playlist:
Construction Projects – Hospitals, stadiums, residential blocks, memorials. Basically, anything where ribbon-cutting photos look good in newspapers.
Infrastructure Projects – Flyovers, railway over-bridges, underpasses, railway station upgrades. These fetch long contracts but longer payment cycles.
Sale of Leftover Materials – Yes, even unsold cement and steel get monetized. Think of it as OLX for infra.
Revenue model is mostly EPC (fixed price, contractor eats cost overruns) and item-rate contracts (paid per cubic meter/sq.meter). Clients: mostly government, semi-government, PSUs. Stability yes, but bureaucracy + delays = cash flow headaches.