1. At a Glance – The Corporate Version of “Main Kaam Kya Karta Hoon?”
Imagine a company with ₹444 crore market cap, ₹3.63 crore annual sales, and a P/E ratio of 377. No, this is not a startup pitch deck from Shark Tank. This is a listed company called GFL Ltd. And if you think that’s weird, wait till you see -821% operating margins and ROE of -2.96%.
This is not a business. This is a philosophy.
GFL is like that rich uncle in every Indian family who technically “does business,” but nobody knows what exactly. Turns out, most of its earnings come from other income and investments, not actual operations. The company’s quarterly sales are under ₹1 crore, but quarterly profit is ₹13 crore. Yes, profit is more than sales. Because why not?
Now add to this:
- Working capital days: 3,161 days (almost 9 years!)
- Debt: Zero (good)
- Business clarity: Also zero (not so good)
And then throw in major corporate drama:
- CMD passes away
- New CMD appointed
- INOX merger in pipeline
This isn’t just a stock. This is a full Bollywood plot.
So the real question is:
Are you buying a business… or a balance sheet with identity crisis?
2. Introduction – From Chemical Giant to Financial Ghost
Once upon a time, GFL was not this confusing.
It used to have a proper operating business—chemicals. Real factories, real products, real revenue. Then came FY20, and management decided to demerge the chemical business into Gujarat Fluorochemicals Limited (GFCL).
Translation:
They removed the actual business.
What remained?
A holding company with investments and financial income.
So today, GFL is part of the INOXGFL group, but its role is more like:
“holding shares, collecting income, and occasionally reminding investors that it still exists.”
Revenue breakup tells the story beautifully:
- Brokerage income ~75%
- Gains on investments ~18%
- Other gains ~7%
Basically:
This is not a business. This