01 — At a Glance
The Copper Comeback Story Nobody Saw Coming. Or Did They?
- 52-Week High / Low₹760 / ₹184
- TTM Revenue₹2,653 Cr
- TTM PAT₹667 Cr
- TTM EPS₹6.90
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹1.62
- Book Value₹30.9
- Price to Book18.1x
- Dividend Yield0.26%
- Debt / Equity0.05x
- 1-Year Return150%
Auditor’s Opening Note: Hindustan Copper posted ₹687 Cr Q3 FY26 revenue (+109.5% YoY) and ₹156 Cr PAT (+148.5% YoY). Trailing Twelve Months (TTM) revenue hit ₹2,653 Cr with PAT of ₹667 Cr. The stock is up 150% in one year and trading at 81x P/E — which is either “the deal of the century” or “pricing in a copper supercycle that may not materialize.” Copper prices at London Metal Exchange averaging $9,663/MT (FY2026 to date) vs $9,367/MT in FY2025. ICRA reaffirmed AA+ rating in October 2025. Interim dividend of ₹1 per share declared.
02 — Introduction
Welcome to India’s Last Monopoly That Actually Works
Let’s talk about Hindustan Copper Limited. Formed in 1967, it is the first Indian PSU and the only vertically integrated copper mining company in the country. It owns every operating copper mining lease in India. All of them. That’s not exaggeration — that’s corporate reality.
In a world obsessed with semiconductors, EV batteries, and AI infrastructure, copper is having a very quiet moment of legitimacy. Data centres need copper wiring. Renewable energy installations need copper. EVs need copper. Industrial machinery needs copper. And guess what? India produces roughly zero copper domestically. Enter HCL — the sole supplier to a growing domestic market with zero foreign competition inside the country.
The Q3 FY26 result is the kind of quarterly result that makes old-school investors weep with joy. Revenue up 109.5%. Profit up 148.5%. Operating margin at 36% in Q3. But here’s the kicker — this company is now trading at 81x earnings, with a share price that has climbed from ₹184 (52-week low) to ₹760 (52-week high) in less than 12 months. That’s a 313% swing. In a PSU. With a dividend yield of 0.26%. In an economy where fixed deposits yield 6%. Make it make sense.
We’re going to parse through the financials, the geopolitics of copper supply, contingent liabilities that read like a legal thriller, and whether this company is a genuine structural long-term story or just riding the commodity supercycle like a surfer who forgot to ask when the tide turns.
Concall Highlight (Feb 2026): “LME copper prices firm at $9,663/MT vs $9,367/MT in FY2025. Supply constraints in global market expected to support near-term pricing.” Management sounding appropriately optimistic without overcommitting. We respect that restraint.
03 — Business Model: Mining Copper, Printing Money (For Now)
The Vertically Integrated Copper Play That Controls Supply
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