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Gujarat State Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd Q2 FY26: From Caprolactam Kings to Capex Chakras — GSFC Spins its Nylon Dreams with ₹3,187 Cr Sales, ₹324 Cr PAT and New Chair Shuffle


1. At a Glance

If you ever thought fertilizers were boring, wait till you meet Gujarat State Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd (GSFC) — a company that sells urea by day and dreams of green hydrogen by night. A proud child of the Gujarat government, GSFC was born in 1962 and still hasn’t lost its chemical charm. The stock closed at ₹192 on 14 November 2025, carrying a market cap of ₹7,669 crore — and a P/E ratio (11.5x) so low, even discount stores feel jealous. With a dividend yield of 2.6% and zero debt, GSFC’s balance sheet is cleaner than a monk’s WhatsApp chat.

The latest quarter (Q2 FY26) brought in ₹3,187 crore in sales and ₹324 crore in net profit — an 8.67% YoY bump in profit despite fertilizer price pressures and fluctuating industrial product demand. It’s not magic — it’s molecules.

And as the Bhagavad Gita wisely says, “Karmanye vadhikaraste, ma phaleshu kadachana.” (Do your duty, don’t chase the results.) GSFC seems to be taking that seriously — focusing on urea revamps, capex worth ₹4,100 crore, and new projects from sulphuric acid to HX crystals. Results will follow… hopefully faster than fertilizer subsidies.


2. Introduction

GSFC is the kind of PSU that walks into the chemicals party wearing a lab coat and holding both fertilizer and nylon in one hand. Founded in the Nehruvian era of “industrial dreams,” it has managed to stay relevant through decades of gas price swings, subsidy chaos, and bureaucratic rotations faster than a wind turbine.

The company operates across two big buckets — fertilizers (78% of revenue) and industrial chemicals (22%). If you ever wore a nylon shirt that gave you a static shock, GSFC probably had something to do with it. They’re the caprolactam kings — ruling the Nylon 6 value chain like it’s 1999.

But here’s the fun part: even though fertilizer demand remains solid thanks to India’s agri-hunger, GSFC’s industrial division is where the chemistry gets spicy. Melamine, methanol, nylon chips — basically the ingredients for everything from kitchen countertops to automotive parts.

The financials? Let’s say the company is like that quiet kid in class who doesn’t brag but always scores above average. ROE at 4.77% isn’t sexy, but a clean balance sheet and 31% dividend payout say: “I may be slow, but I’m stable.”

And in classic PSU style, the quarter also brought a leadership musical chair. Chairman Pankaj Joshi retired, and IAS officer Manoj Kumar Das took charge. The company’s journey now moves from “steady hand” to “new broom energy.” Let’s see what dust gets swept under the caprolactam rug.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

At first glance, you’d think GSFC just sells urea and hopes for rain. But this company is an industrial cocktail.

Fertilizer Division (78% revenue) — They make and sell everything from Urea and Ammonium Sulphate to DAP, APS, NPK, and traded fertilizers. Basically, they feed half of Gujarat’s farms and possibly most of your dinner.

Industrial Products Division (22% revenue) — This is where GSFC flexes. They produce Caprolactam, Nylon-6, Melamine, Methanol, and a range of compounds that go into consumer goods, automotive parts, and construction. It’s chemistry with margins.

Four Major Manufacturing Units — Spread across Vadodara, Surat, and Jamnagar, these facilities produce enough chemical output to make Breaking Bad look like a school lab experiment.

And if you thought this was just an old-school fertilizer story — nope. GSFC is busy expanding into new-age areas:

  • Ammonium Sulphate IV plant (132,000 MT annual capacity) started commercial production in Jan 2024.
  • HX Crystals plant expansion (6.6 KTPA capacity) due in FY25.
  • Two Sulphuric Acid plants (198 KTPA & 594 KTPA) in progress.
  • A Phosphoric Acid plant at Sikka.
  • Green Hydrogen Project under evaluation — because it’s 2025, and every self-respecting PSU wants a “green” badge.

In total, ₹4,100 crore is earmarked for these projects, and another ₹4,000 crore capex at Dahej is on the drawing board.

So yeah, GSFC doesn’t just make fertilizers — it fertilizes the future.


4. Financials Overview

Consolidated Quarterly Results (₹ in crore)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Sep ’25)YoY Qtr (Sep ’24)Prev Qtr (Jun ’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue3,1872,6352,18420.96%45.9%
EBITDA33828419319.0%75.1%
PAT3242981398.67%133.1%
EPS (₹)8.137.483.488.67%133.6%

Annualised EPS = ₹8.13 × 4 = ₹32.52
P/E = ₹192 / ₹32.52 = 5.9x (educational estimate; screener shows 11.5x TTM).

GSFC just delivered a 21% YoY sales boost and doubled profits QoQ — the fertilizer gods are clearly pleased.

Operating margin back at 11%, and PAT margin holding firm at ~10%. PSU efficiency miracle or fertilizer pricing luck? You decide.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range Only

Let’s be nerdy for a minute.

P/E Approach:

  • TTM EPS = ₹16.8
  • Industry P/E = 22.7
  • GSFC’s own P/E = 11.5
  • Fair Value Range (educational) = ₹16.8 × (10–20) = ₹168–₹336

EV/EBITDA Approach:

  • EV = ₹6,836 crore
  • EBITDA (TTM) = ₹769 crore
  • EV/EBITDA = 8.9x (current)
  • If fair range = 7x–10x → fair value ~₹180–₹260

DCF (simplified for education):
Assume free cash flow normalizes around ₹500 crore, 5% growth, 11% discount rate → intrinsic value roughly ₹200–₹250 per share.

📘 Educational Fair Value Range: ₹180 – ₹280
This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice.


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

Oh boy, GSFC’s Q2 FY26 came with enough drama for a Netflix docuseries.

Leadership Shuffle:

  • 1 Nov 2025: IAS officer Manoj Kumar Das took charge as Chairman.
  • 31 Oct: Former Chairman Pankaj Joshi retired.
  • Aug 2025: Sanjeev Kumar appointed
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