MAS Financial Services Ltd Q1 FY26 – Gujarat’s Loan Machine Scaling Faster than Faf’s Cover Drive
1. At a Glance
MAS Financial Services (market cap ₹5,492 crore) is an Ahmedabad-based NBFC that lends everywhere your neighbourhood PSU bank says “Nahi milega, policy ke against hai.” From MSME loans to used cars, CVs, and affordable housing — they’re the moneylender with an RBI licence. CMP is ₹303, stock trades at P/E 16.9x (cheaper than Bajaj Finance 35x but richer than Shriram Finance 13x). FY25 revenues hit ₹1,698 crore (+25% YoY) with PAT of ₹328 crore (+22%). ROE is steady at 14.1%, ROA a modest 2.9%, while debt-to-equity sits at a not-so-light 3.5x (leverage is the name of the NBFC game, bhai).
Q1 FY26 looked solid: sales ₹466 crore (+28% YoY), PAT ₹86 crore (+19%). Promoter holding is 66.6% post a recent fall (down from 73% a year back thanks to QIP dilution). Dividend yield is 0.56% — enough for a cutting chai and half a maska bun in Navrangpura.
2. Introduction
NBFCs are like that cousin who started a coaching class after failing CA: flexible, street-smart, scalable. MAS Financial is no exception. They operate in the gap where banks either don’t reach (rural borrowers) or don’t bother (ticket sizes under ₹5 lakh). With a 10,200 crore AUM as of 9MFY24, they’re not a Bajaj Finance juggernaut, but in Gujarat and Rajasthan, MAS is the loan-wala you call when your tractor breaks down.
The company’s focus? Micro-enterprise loans (retailers, traders, kirana shops), SME loans, and smaller ticket vehicle/housing finance. Average loan size? Between ₹42,000 (micro) to ₹18 lakh (SME). This is true Bharat lending, not iPhone-on-EMI urban consumer lending.
Their “strategic parenting” model is interesting — instead of opening 1,000 branches, they tie up with 167 small NBFCs/MFIs across India, co-lend, and expand cheaply. Think of it as “Jio ka tower, local cable waale ka wiring.”
The irony? Gujarat accounts for 36% of their book. MAS stands for Microfinance Ahmedabad Special. Diversification beyond Gujarat is happening, but slow.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Breakdown of their business:
Micro Enterprise Loans (45% AUM, ₹4,345 cr): Kirana stores, traders, small manufacturers. Avg ticket ₹42,000. Basically “EMI par dukaan chalayenge.”
SME Loans (36% AUM, ₹3,450 cr): Up to ₹5 cr, avg ₹18 lakh. Mid-sized dealers, distributors, manufacturers.
2W Loans (7% AUM, ₹670 cr): Farmers and professionals borrowing ₹66k to buy Activas.
CV Loans (7% AUM, ₹662 cr): Small transporters buying second-hand Boleros and Tata 407s.
Salaried Personal Loans (5% AUM, ₹545 cr): For “approved company” employees, ₹1.9 lakh avg ticket.
Housing Loans (5% AUM, ₹544 cr): Rural housing finance, avg ticket ₹8.15 lakh, tenure up to 25 years.
Subsidiary MAS Rural Housing & Mortgage Finance (MRHMFL) extends affordable housing loans in semi-urban Gujarat, MP, Maharashtra, Rajasthan.
So, WTF do they even do? They’re the “last mile” lender, filling gaps banks avoid. The business thrives on yield spreads: borrow at ~8–9%, lend at 15–20%. Simple, scalable, risky — all at once.