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Jayaswal Neco Industries Ltd Q1 FY26 – Market Cap ₹6,688 Cr, PAT up 394% YoY, Promoters 99.9% Pledged. Steel Company or Crime Thriller?


1. At a Glance

Meet Jayaswal Neco Industries Ltd (JNIL) — a steelmaker with more twists than a Bollywood court drama. Market cap? ₹6,688 crore. Current price? ₹68.9. Quarterly sales? A strong ₹1,649 crore, with PAT exploding 394% YoY to ₹93 crore. Sounds heroic, right? Except for one tiny footnote: promoters have pledged 99.9% of their shares. Basically, the entire promoter holding is more “mortgaged” than your uncle’s second flat in Nagpur.

The company makes everything from billets, rolled products, pellets, pig iron, sponge iron to castings and even defense equipment. Operating margin is a healthy 17.5%, debt sits at ₹2,735 crore, and ROCE is a decent 12.6%. Yet, ROE is only 4.9% — the kind of result that makes you wonder if debt holders are eating all the biryani while equity holders lick the pickle.

And did we mention? The MD was convicted in the coal block allocation case in 2024, sentenced to 3 years, then bailed out by Delhi HC in Aug 2025. Welcome to Dalal Street’s “Steel Saga: Courtroom Edition.”


2. Introduction

Imagine a company that starts in 1976 as a humble foundry in Nagpur and grows into one of India’s largest integrated steel producers. Sounds like a classic “from furnace to fortune” story, right? Wrong. This is Jayaswal Neco, where the furnace keeps burning, but so do legal cases, debt restructurings, and promoter pledges.

The company is basically a steel supermarket: billets for construction, castings for autos, pellets for steel mills, pig iron for foundries, and even valves, ceramics, and defense equipment. If it can be melted, cast, rolled, or forged — chances are, JNIL has tried to sell it.

But while the furnaces at Siltara roar and Nagpur castings roll out, the balance sheet screams for oxygen. Debt has been a chronic companion, with ₹3,200 crore refinanced in Dec 2023 via high-coupon NCDs (14.5% p.a.!). Promoters diluted stake to 55%, pledged almost all of it, and somehow the market still gave the stock an 80% return in 3 months.

So what’s JNIL really? A turnaround steel story or just another leveraged play waiting for Act II in court?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

JNIL runs a vertically integrated steel operation:

  • Steel Products (91% revenue): Billets, rolled products (61% share), pellets (14%), sponge iron (11%), pig iron (5%). Basically, the entire steel buffet.
  • Castings (9% revenue): Automotive & engineering castings with plants at Nagpur, Bhilai, Anjora. Your car engine blocks may well have JNIL DNA.
  • Others (1% revenue): Trading coal, coke, PVC pipes — because why not sell masala papad on the side when running a dhaba?

Capacity flex:

  • 0.75 mtpa pig iron,
  • 0.25 mtpa sponge iron,
  • 1.2 mtpa pelletization,
  • 1 mtpa billet making,
  • 0.08 mtpa castings.

Add captive 54.5 MW power plant (supplies ~70% of power) and captive iron ore mines (100% raw material met internally). In short, JNIL’s business model is simple: mine ore, burn coal, melt metal, roll products, and pray margins survive Chinese imports.


4. Financials Overview

Quarterly Snapshot (₹ Crore)

Source table
MetricQ1 FY26 (Jun’25)Q1 FY25 (Jun’24)Q4 FY25 (Mar’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue1,6491,4381,675+14.7%-1.6%
EBITDA315165342+90.9%-7.9%
PAT9318.8102+394%-8.8%
EPS (₹)0.960.191.05+405%-9%

Commentary: Sales steady, EBITDA margins at ~19%, PAT jumped 4x YoY thanks to lower costs and stable steel prices. EPS annualized = ~₹3.8. At CMP ₹68.9, stock trades at ~18x forward earnings. Not cheap, but not insane either.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range

1. P/E Based:
EPS FY25 = ₹2.44. Industry PE ~23.
Fair Value = 2.44

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