1. At a Glance
Leo Dryfruits & Spices Trading Ltd (listed Jan 2025) is the kind of SME that thinks it can sell peri-peri cashews to cops and garam masala to sailors — and somehow make it a billion-rupee story. From Maharashtra-centric spice trading (99.5% of revenue) to a fresh ₹325–330 Cr order from Kendriya Police Kalyan Bhandar (KPKB), Leo is trying to level up faster than an IPL debutant. At CMP ₹77, market cap ~₹138 Cr, the stock is priced like “medium roasted almonds,” but the question is — can they digest such a big order with debtor days of 303?
2. Introduction
Founded in 2019, Leo Dryfruits is practically a pandemic baby. While the world was hoarding sanitizers, Leo was hoarding cashews. The business is split between trading (79%) and manufacturing/processing (21%) — making them less like ITC and more like your friendly kirana on steroids.
Their brands:
- VANDU → spices & dry fruits (bulk + retail).
- FRYD → frozen & semi-fried snacks (0.16% revenue; basically a hobby).
The growth numbers look dazzling: sales shot from ₹5 Cr in FY22 to ₹87 Cr in FY25 (155% CAGR). PAT grew 10x+ in three years. But it’s not all pista and pista shells: working capital days ballooned to 257, debtor days 303. Translation → your money is stuck in receivables longer than a Rajya Sabha bill.
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Leo’s business runs on 3 tracks:
- B2B (77%) → Bulk sales of spices, dry fruits, and groceries to wholesalers.
- B2C (17%) → Distributors, e-commerce (Amazon, Flipkart), police/navy canteens, CSD stores.
- D2C (6%) → Own website, direct orders.
Revenue breakup FY24:
- Whole Spices: 89% (basically a spice trader at heart).
- Dry Fruits: 9%.
- Blended spices/snacks: negligible.
- Frozen products: rounding error.
So despite fancy branding, 9 out of