IIFL Capital Services just posted ₹586 crore in quarterly revenue and ₹188 crore in profit for Q3 FY26. Operating margin is sitting at 32%. This is a capital markets company that prints 30%+ ROE like it’s Diwali bonus season.
Yet it trades below industry PE (Industry PE: 19.9 vs company at 17.5).
Debt-to-equity is 0.62 — not zero, but not “bhaisaab margin call aa gaya” territory either.
Retail broking, institutional broking, investment banking, distribution, global presence, DRHP filing machine on full throttle — and the market still pricing it like it’s a mid-table IPL team.
So what’s happening here?
Is this a disciplined capital market franchise quietly compounding… Or is the volatility monster waiting backstage?
Let’s open the trading terminal.
2. Introduction – From IIFL Securities to IIFL Capital: Same Engine, New Paint
In November 2024, the company changed its name from IIFL Securities Limited to IIFL Capital Services Limited.
Why?
Because “Securities” sounds like discount broking. “Capital Services” sounds like investment banking swagger.
But beneath the rebranding drama, this is still a 1996-born broking powerhouse — originally the broking arm of the IIFL Group.
This is not some fintech startup born during lockdown with a hoodie and valuation deck. This is a 30-year-old capital market veteran.
Q3 FY26 numbers show:
Revenue: ₹586 crore
PAT: ₹188 crore
Interim dividend: ₹3 per share
They also hosted earnings calls, released investor presentations, and even amended their Fair Disclosure code in February 2026. Governance paperwork seems active.
But here’s where it gets spicy:
Income Tax Department search in Jan 2025.
NSE penalties in 2025 (₹2.59 lakh, ₹5 lakh).
SAT reduced IIFL Commodities penalty to ₹1.20 crore (Nov 2025 order).
This is not a boring NBFC. This is capital markets. Drama is part of the package.
But the question is:
Does the profitability justify the noise?
Or is volatility the real business model?
Let’s decode.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine you built a financial supermarket.
Stocks? Yes. F&O? Of course. Commodities? Why not. Currency? Chalo karte hain. IPO? Line lagao. Mutual funds? Add to cart. Insurance? Subsidiary got IRDA license in Dec 2024.
That’s IIFL Capital.
Revenue Split (H1 FY26)
Retail Broking – 44%
Institutional Broking & Investment Banking – 32%
Financial Products Distribution – 23%
Retail share has reduced from 54% in H1 FY25 to 44% now. Institutional and distribution are rising.
Translation? They’re diversifying away from pure retail volatility.
In Q2 FY26 alone, investment banking completed 14 transactions:
10 IPOs
1 rights issue
1 QIP
2 private placements Filed 26 DRHPs.
That’s serious pipeline.
They cover ~306 stocks representing 71% of India’s market cap. Institutional sales teams in Mumbai, Singapore, London, and New York.
Retail side:
30 lakh customers
4.2 lakh active customers
3,500+ partners
100 branches
Operational assets are growing:
Equity DP Assets: ₹2,042 bn (H1 FY26)
Distribution Assets: ₹444 bn
Mutual Fund AUM: ₹183 bn
Margin Trading Book: ₹15.1 bn
So this is not just brokerage commission income. It’s ecosystem monetisation.
But here’s the real question:
Can they maintain margins when market volumes cool off?