🔍 At a Glance
NACL Industries Ltd (CMP: ₹189) has posted a loss of ₹93 Cr in FY25 despite receiving a ₹29.26 Cr insurance award. What’s more? The company is in the middle of a 52.98% promoter stake sale to Coromandel International. With rising borrowing, falling equity, and mysterious trade receivables from ghost customers, this isn’t just a result update — it’s a thriller. 🎭
🧬 About the Company
- Sector: Agrochemicals (Crop protection, technical-grade APIs, formulations)
- Legacy: Formerly Nagarjuna Agrichem Ltd
- Operations: Manufacturing + R&D with domestic and export clients
- Products: Herbicides, fungicides, insecticides, and custom synthesis
👨💼 Key Managerial Personnel
Name | Role |
---|---|
G.V. Bhadram | Whole-time Director |
Satish Subudhi | Company Secretary |
Baby Paul (B S R) | Statutory Auditor (FY25) |
📊 FY25 Financials – Highlights
📌 Standalone Results (₹ in Lakhs)
Metric | FY25 | FY24 | % Change |
---|---|---|---|
Revenue from Operations | ₹1,25,189 | ₹1,78,088 | -29.7% |
EBITDA | ₹(8,423) | ₹2,926 | — |
Profit Before Tax (PBT) | ₹(9,650) | ₹724 | — |
Exceptional Income (Insurance win) | ₹2,926 | — | ✅ |
Net Profit / (Loss) | ₹(7,308) | ₹623 | — |
Even with a ₹29 Cr insurance income, the bottom line is deep in red. Without it, the hole would be deeper than an auditor’s sigh.
📌 Consolidated Results (₹ in Lakhs)
Metric | FY25 | FY24 | % Change |
---|---|---|---|
Revenue from Ops | ₹1,24,256 | ₹1,79,074 | -30.6% |
Net Loss | ₹9,213 | ₹623 Cr | 💥 |
Cash Flow from Ops | ₹(4,867) | ₹5,040 | Downside |
Total Assets | ₹1,26,310 | ₹1,81,827 | -30.5% |
Borrowings (Total) | ₹39,594 | ₹78,865 | 🔻50% |
🧮 Forward-Looking Fair Value (FV) Calculation
Let’s assume:
- Target EBITDA Margin Recovery: 10%
- Realistic Revenue (FY26): ₹1,35,000 Lakhs
- EBITDA = ₹13,500 Lakhs
- EV/EBITDA Multiple (AgChem Avg): 8x
- Enterprise Value = ₹1,08,000 Lakhs
- Less: Net Debt (₹39,594 – ₹5,731 cash) ≈ ₹33,863 Lakhs
- Equity Value = ₹74,137 Lakhs
- Shares Outstanding: ~10.06 Cr
🔮 Estimated FV/Share = ₹737
But: That assumes EBITDA bounces back 10x. Realistic FV if margin remains under pressure is closer to ₹250–₹300 range.
🌾 Growth & Industry Outlook
- Seasonality Matters: Q4 is always lean, but FY25 saw rainfall issues + export pressure.
- Industry Consolidation: Larger players are integrating backward; smaller ones are struggling with working capital.
- Takeover Effect: Coromandel International (Murugappa Group) will take control after acquiring 52.98%. If regulatory approvals come through by FY26, a full restructuring is expected.
- Global Demand: USA, Africa, and LATAM are still strong, but compliance and certification delays (especially EU) affect smaller Indian players.
🚩 Risks & Red Flags
- Losses Despite Insurance Windfall: Even a ₹29 Cr cash inflow couldn’t salvage profitability.
- Auditor Alert 🚨: ₹77.96 Cr of FY24 trade receivables were flagged for “ghost customers.” Now fully provided — but seriously?
- Debt Levels Still High: Despite halving borrowings, interest costs ate over ₹65 Cr.
- Equity Dilution: ₹100 Cr raised via preferential issue (EQ India Fund). Another stake sale to Coromandel underway.
- Subsidiary Drag: Australian and Nigerian ops posted net losses.
- Seasonal + Agro Dependent: Weather = Revenue = Mood swings.
💡 EduInvesting Take
Imagine running a business where your customers ghost you, auditors raise eyebrows, and your insurance claim becomes your biggest highlight. That’s NACL Industries in FY25.
But here’s the twist: The worst may be behind.
- Receivables cleaned up ✅
- Debt trimmed ✅
- New parent incoming ✅
So, at ₹189, you’re not just buying an agrochem stock — you’re buying a turnaround drama where Coromandel is the hero, and the villain is… well, probably bad monsoon.
Is this a toxic pesticide business or a sprayed-clean multibagger?
Let’s just say: if you can stomach a few cockroaches, this might just be a meal worth serving.
🏷️ Tags
NACL Industries, Agrochemicals, Q4 Results, FY25 Earnings, Coromandel Acquisition, Auditor Flag, Insurance Claim, Multibagger Stocks, EduInvesting, Crop Protection, Seasonal Business, Equity Dilution, Debt Restructuring
🗓️ Published: May 28, 2025
✍️ By: Prashant Marathe