Global Offshore Services Ltd Q2 FY26 – The Two-Vessel Comeback of a Once-15-Ship Empire!
1. At a Glance
Once upon a time, Global Offshore Services Ltd had 15 vessels sailing proudly across continents. Fast forward to FY26, and the company’s fleet now looks more like Noah’s Ark — just two ships and a dream. But hey, at least they’re both afloat.
At ₹72.7 per share and a market cap of ₹224 crore, this smallcap marine survivor is trying to steer through stormy waters — literally and financially. The company posted Q2 FY26 (September 2025) consolidated sales of ₹6.74 crore (down 7.16% QoQ) and a wafer-thin operating profit margin of 28%. Net profit for the quarter stood at ₹0.18 crore, which is technically a profit, though smaller than your local paanwala’s credit book.
ROE? -8.6%. ROCE? -5%. Debt? ₹62 crore. Stock performance? -32% over one year. In short, the ship hasn’t sunk yet, but the crew definitely deserves a motivational speaker onboard.
2. Introduction – From 15 Ships to 2, But Who’s Counting?
Global Offshore Services Ltd’s journey reads like a Bollywood saga — once rich, now lean, still fighting to stay relevant. Founded in 1976 (back when diesel was ₹1.10 a litre), the company rode India’s offshore oil boom, chartering vessels for ONGC, BP, Shell, and Petrobras.
Then came 2015 — the oil price crash that sent global exploration into hibernation and Global Offshore into survival mode. Contracts vanished faster than smallcap rallies after SEBI warnings. Debt piled up. Vessels were sold or scrapped. Subsidiaries sank. But Global Offshore did one thing right — it didn’t die.
After years of debt restructuring and a corporate detox session with Phoenix ARC, the company today has a clean balance sheet, a small fleet, and renewed ambition. The irony? They’re called “Global Offshore,” but their world currently fits inside two vessels: M.V. Mahananda and M.V. Mahanadi.
Still, in a world of bankrupt shipping names, GOSL’s survival deserves applause — or at least a polite slow clap.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Global Offshore Services Ltd isn’t manufacturing PET bottles (ignore that copy-paste mess in the screener dump). They provide offshore marine logistics to the oil & gas industry — think of them as Uber for oil rigs, except their rides cost $30,000 a day and can tow 5,000 tonnes.
Their services include:
Transporting personnel and materials to and from rigs
Anchor handling and towing of rigs
Supporting underwater construction projects
Assisting exploration platforms in India, West Africa, and Brazil
Clients include ONGC, Vedanta, BP, and Shell — the who’s who of the oil world.
Currently, one vessel is on a long-term charter, another recently bagged a ₹36 crore annual contract in September 2025, and a new 80 Ton BP DP2 AHTSV (built in 2006) has joined the fleet.
So yes, it’s not “massive,” but it’s a lean operation with focused assets. Basically, they downsized from a cruise ship to a speedboat — still floating, but now without room for ego.
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Q2 FY26 (Sep 2025)
Q2 FY25 (Sep 2024)
Q1 FY26 (Jun 2025)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
₹6.74 Cr
₹7.26 Cr
₹4.25 Cr
-7.16%
+58.6%
EBITDA
₹1.89 Cr
₹1.57 Cr
-₹2.47 Cr
+20.4%
Turned Positive
PAT
₹0.18 Cr
-₹2.08 Cr
-₹1.90 Cr
—
—
EPS (₹)
0.06
-0.80
-0.62
—
—
Commentary: After years of red ink, Global Offshore finally reported a positive PAT. Yes, it’s just ₹18 lakh, but it’s like spotting land after 10 years at sea. The turnaround from -₹1.9 crore last quarter is impressive. Margins have stabilized, operations are running, and new contracts might keep the tide rising — if oil prices behave.
5. Valuation Discussion – Educational “Fair Value” Range
Let’s crunch this academically:
a) P/E Method: TTM EPS = ₹2.48. Industry PE (Shipping peers) = ~13x. → Fair Value Range: ₹2.48 × (10–14) = ₹24.8 to ₹34.7 per share.
But wait, the stock trades at ₹72.7, implying it’s running on hope, not math.
b) EV/EBITDA Method: EV = ₹276 Cr; EBITDA (TTM) = ₹3.1 Cr. → EV/EBITDA = ~88x. Peers trade at 9–15x. Even SEAMEC looks cheaper. So let’s assume fair range = 15x EBITDA → EV ~₹46 Cr → Equity Value ~₹37 Cr → ₹12 per share.
c) DCF Method: Assume cash flows of ₹10 Cr growing 10% for 5 years, discount rate 12%. → PV ≈ ₹38–45 Cr. → Fair Value ~₹15 per share.
🎓 Educational Fair Value Range: ₹15 – ₹35 per share. (Current