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Godawari Power & Ispat Ltd Q1 FY26 – Steel Dreams, Captive Mines, and Capex Ka Chakravyuh


1. At a Glance

Godawari Power & Ispat (GPIL) is the Chhattisgarh-based iron & steel detective story—except here the mystery isn’t “who stole the jewels?” but “where did margins vanish?”. In Q1 FY26, revenue held steady at ₹1,323 Cr (–1.4% YoY), but PAT dipped 25% to ₹216 Cr. The company still flexes its trump card: 85% iron ore self-reliance via captive mines, saving raw material costs and making merchant miners cry. On paper, ROCE at 23% looks like steel, but underneath, profit volatility is shakier than a sponge iron billet fresh off the furnace.


2. Introduction

Imagine a company that mines its own ore, makes its own pellets, burns its own coal, and even produces its own power. Sounds like a dream setup? That’s GPIL. They call it “integrated operations,” but it’s basically a “ghar ka khana” model—everything in-house, less dependence on outsiders.

But like every desi family business, there’s drama: government export duties on iron ore and pellets, power plant fires, and a ₹6,000 Cr integrated steel plant project waiting for approvals. Add to this new-age side hustles like solar PV plants and even a loan to Deccan Gold Mines in Kyrgyzstan (yes, Kyrgyzstan). Clearly, GPIL wants to diversify its mining résumé like an overachieving LinkedIn profile.

So, is this company the future JSW-lite from Raipur, or will it stay trapped in the midcap steel purgatory, always profitable but never glamorous? Let’s peel the iron layers.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

GPIL’s business is like a thali—you order one item, but they serve everything.

  • Mining: 2 captive mines (Ari Dongri & Boria Tibu) with 165 MnT reserves, life of 35+ years. 85% of ore is self-sourced = fat savings. Subsidiary Ardent Steel isn’t so lucky—buys from merchant miners.
  • Pellets (2.7 MT capacity): 90% utilisation. Used partly in-house, partly sold.
  • Sponge Iron (0.6 MT): Near full utilisation at 99.9%. Desi jugaad efficiency at its best.
  • Steel Billets (0.5 MT) & Wires: Downstream expansion into value-added products.
  • Power (236 MW): Captive power plants, biomass, solar, wind—basically “Apna Bijli, Apna Bill.”
  • Ferro Alloys & Galvanised Products: Smaller share but adds spice.

The USP: integration. GPIL controls the entire value chain, from ore to finished steel wires. The catch? Any disruption (fire, export duty, government whimsy) hits them across the chain.

Q for readers: Do you think captive mining is enough to protect margins when steel prices swing like a Bollywood item number?


4. Financials Overview

Quarterly Snapshot (₹ Cr):

MetricQ1 FY26Q1 FY25Q4 FY25YoY %QoQ %
Revenue1,3231,3421,468-1.4%-9.9%
EBITDA324408318-20.6%+1.9%
PAT216287222-24.6%-2.7%
EPS (₹)3.234.223.31-23.5%-2.4%

Annualised EPS = ₹3.23 × 4 = ₹12.9
CMP = ₹244 → P/E ~19

Commentary: Volumes steady, but profits squeezed by lower steel realisations. QoQ flat, YoY disappointing. PAT trending like your new year resolutions—good intentions, weak follow-through.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range Only

(i) P/E Method

  • EPS annualised: ₹12.9
  • Sector P/E ~23
  • Fair range = 18×–23× = ₹230–₹295

(ii) EV/EBITDA

  • FY25 EBITDA ~₹1,110 Cr
  • EV = ₹15,959 Cr → EV/EBITDA = ~14×
  • Fair multiple: 10–12× → EV range ₹11,000–₹13,300 Cr
  • Per share = ₹180–₹220

(iii) DCF (conservative)

  • FCFF ~₹800 Cr
  • Growth 5%, discount 12%
  • PV = ₹11,000–₹13,500 Cr
  • Per share = ₹165–₹200

Fair Value Range (Blended): ₹180–₹260

Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. If steel prices tank, fair value behaves like molten iron—slips through your fingers.


6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama

  • Capex Explosion: ₹6,000 Cr integrated steel plant (2.5 MT capacity) got environment clearance July 2025. Clock starts now. Execution in 36 months.
  • Cold Rolling Mill + Battery Storage: In Aug’25, board
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