Gurunanak Agriculture Q1 FY26 IPO – ₹43.95 Cr Revenue, 147% PAT Growth, P/E Now 14.9x 🚜🌾
1. At a Glance
From threshers in Chhattisgarh to IPOs in NSE SME, Gurunanak Agriculture is harvesting not just crops, but also retail investors’ wallets. With flat revenues of ~₹44 Cr in FY24–25 but PAT jumping 147% to ₹6.06 Cr, the company has suddenly gone from sleepy tractor shed to Dalal Street tractor rally. The IPO is a fixed-price one at ₹75/share, valuing the company at ₹90 Cr market cap. P/E? Post issue, a not-so-holy 14.9x. Question is – are we investing in agri-tech innovation, or just funding another family-owned thresher shop upgrade?
2. Introduction
Agriculture in India has always been about sweat, soil, and jugaad. But throw in some shiny harvesters and a Chhattisgarh-based company with Guru Nanak’s blessings, and suddenly you’ve got an IPO. Gurunanak Agriculture, born in 2010, makes threshers, harvesters, reapers, and rotavators – basically every tool a farmer needs except a miracle for monsoon prediction.
The company has a 4-hectare facility in Durg and a distribution network spanning 7 states, 48 dealers, and exports to as far as Ghana, Nigeria, and Sri Lanka. Yes, while you were still figuring out how onions cost ₹80/kg, these guys were shipping threshers to Africa.
But the IPO isn’t about celebrating tractors – it’s about raising ₹28.8 Cr to set up a new harvester unit and meet working capital needs. The promoters, previously owning 99.99%, are now cutting their slice to 68% post-issue. So they finally want “public participation” – or at least your money to buy their next welding machine.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Simple. They make machines that help farmers reduce labor and increase yield efficiency:
Threshers – Separating grains from husks (Paddy, Wheat, Groundnut, Maize).
Reapers & Rotavators – Because manual sickles are so last century.
Harvesters – The new cash cow, capital-intensive but high demand.
Exports – Markets in Africa and South Asia, where mechanization is catching up.
Distribution channels:
Partnerships with other agri companies.
Their own dealer network (48 dealers).
Direct retail sales.
Roast: At its core, Gurunanak is the Hero MotoCorp of farm tools – except instead of Splendors, they sell rotavators. Same assembly, different paint, different margins.
Question: If farmers barely break even with mandi prices, will they really splurge on high-end harvesters from SMEs?
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Latest Qtr (Q1 FY26 est*)
YoY Qtr (Q1 FY25 est*)
Prev Qtr (Q4 FY25)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
11.0
11.1
11.2
-0.9%
-1.8%
EBITDA
2.5
1.3
2.4
92.3%
4.2%
PAT
1.5
0.6
1.4
150.0%
7.1%
EPS (₹)
1.25
0.50
1.15
150.0%
8.7%
*Run-rate based on FY25 financials.
Note: Revenue flatlined, but PAT skyrocketed. Translation: cost cuts and better margins, not demand boom.