Search for stocks /

Mawana Sugars Q3 FY26: ₹367 Cr Sales, ₹1 EPS, P/E 6.48 — Is This a Sweet Bargain or Sticky Trap?


1. At a Glance – Sugar, Spirit & Serious Undervaluation?

₹81.7 per share. Market cap ₹320 crore. Book value ₹117. P/E just 6.48. Dividend yield 4.90%. Debt-to-equity 0.02. And the latest quarter? Sales at ₹367 crore, PAT ₹3.93 crore, EPS ₹1.00.

Ladies and gentlemen, this is Mawana Sugars Ltd — a sugar mill that looks like it’s been priced by someone who has diabetes and hates sugar stocks.

The company is trading at 0.70x book value, earnings yield of 26.1%, and EV/EBITDA of 2.76. Sounds like a value investor’s dream, right?

But wait.

Quarterly profit declined 9.30% YoY. Operating margin in the latest quarter is 7.57%. Working capital days jumped to 69. Inventory days? 266.

So the question is simple:

Is this a hidden cash-flow machine selling below book value?
Or is it another cyclical sugar story that looks sweet only in certain seasons?

Let’s open the sugar sack.


2. Introduction – The 36-Year-Old Sugar Veteran

Incorporated in 1989, Mawana Sugars operates in three segments:

  • Sugar
  • Industrial Alcohol (Ethanol)
  • Co-generation Power

Basically, they crush sugarcane, squeeze out sugar, ferment leftovers into ethanol, and burn bagasse to generate power. Nothing goes waste. Even the gossip.

This isn’t a startup. This is a 36-year-old player with 19,000 TCD crushing capacity, 120 KLPD ethanol capacity, and 53.5 MW co-generation capacity.

Now here’s what makes it interesting:

  • Revenue FY25: ₹1,446 crore
  • TTM revenue: ₹1,539 crore
  • PAT TTM: ₹36 crore
  • 5-year profit CAGR: 22%
  • 5-year stock CAGR: 16%

Not bad for a business people only remember when sugar prices spike.

But sugar is a political commodity in India. Cane prices are controlled. Ethanol prices are controlled. Export quotas are controlled.

This is not a free-market business.

It’s more like a sugar mill with a government remote control.

And that changes everything.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

Segment 1: Sugar (80% of revenue)

They produce plantation white sugar, refined sugar, specialty sugar, pharma-grade sugar.

Basically, if it tastes sweet and is white, they probably make it.

Segment 2: Distillery (16%)

They produce:

  • Rectified spirit
  • Denatured spirit
  • Fuel ethanol

Ethanol is the new hero of the sugar industry. Government wants 20% ethanol blending. That means mills like Mawana get a more stable revenue stream.

Segment 3: Co-generation (2%)

They burn bagasse (sugar residue) to generate power for internal use and export to UP Power Corp.

Zero waste. Maximum extraction.

But here’s the real beauty:

Sugar is cyclical.
Ethanol is relatively stable.
Power is predictable.

Forward integration cushions volatility.

Smart move or survival strategy?

You decide.


4. Financials Overview – Q3 FY26 (Quarterly Results Detected)

The latest results are Quarterly Results (Dec 2025).

So per rule:

Annualised EPS = Q3 EPS × 4?
No.

Strict rule:

Join 10,000+ investors who read this every week.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!