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Indsil Hydro Power & Manganese Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹36.3 Cr Quarterly Sales, ₹3.88 Cr PAT, Zero Debt, and a Balance Sheet That Just Came Back From ICU


1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Plot

₹108 Cr market cap. ₹38.8 stock price. Book value of ₹70 staring at the market like “beta, mujhe toh ignore hi kar diya.”
Return in last 3 months? -21%.
Return in last 6 months? -31%.
ROCE? -3.49% (yes, negative).
Debt? ₹0 (yes, finally zero).

And then comes the plot twist — Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹3.88 Cr, up 43% QoQ, while sales grew a modest 6% QoQ. This is a company that defaulted, got sued, sold overseas assets, paid off lenders, shut units, and still walked back into profitability like a stubborn South Indian action hero who refuses to die before interval.

Indsil is not a clean compounder. It is not a momentum darling. It is a balance-sheet survival story happening inside one of the most cyclical, unforgiving industries — ferro alloys.

So the real question is not “cheap or expensive?”
The real question is: Is this a turnaround or just a dead cat doing parkour?


2. Introduction – From Defaults to Detox

Indsil Hydro Power & Manganese Ltd has been around since 1990, quietly supplying ferro alloys to steelmakers while occasionally blowing up its own balance sheet.

Between FY20 and FY24, things went downhill fast:

  • Debt ballooned
  • Interest costs ate profits
  • Operations got shut
  • Lenders knocked
  • Defaults were disclosed… repeatedly

By early 2024, this stock wasn’t an investment — it was a case study in stress management.

Then came the nuclear option:

  • Overseas smelter in Oman sold
  • ₹84.63 Cr borrowings cleared
  • Debt reduced to zero by H1 FY25

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Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →