Mercantile Ventures Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹260 Cr Market Cap, 0.80x Book Value, 20x P/E… but ROCE stuck at 1.5%: Value Stock or Value Trap?


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

Mercantile Ventures Ltd (MVL) is that awkward uncle of the stock market — rich on paper, polite in meetings, but refuses to work hard. With a market cap of ₹260 Cr, a current price of ₹23.2, and trading at just 0.80x book value, MVL looks like a classic bargain bin find. Sales have surged 30% YoY, profits are up a flashy 85% TTM, and Q3 FY26 profit grew 54.6% QoQ. Sounds hot, right?

Now comes the plot twist. ROCE is 1.53%, ROE barely 3%, EV/EBITDA is a mind-numbing 70x, and operating margins hover near 1% — thinner than airline coffee. This is a company sitting on assets, investments, subsidiaries, and schemes of amalgamation… but somehow struggling to squeeze out decent operating returns.

So the big question:
👉 Is MVL an undervalued turnaround play quietly compounding in the background, or just a sleepy balance-sheet-heavy company surviving on “other income jugaad”?

Let’s put on the detective hat 🕵️‍♂️ and investigate.


2. Introduction – From NBFC to Manpower Supplier: The Identity Crisis

Mercantile Ventures Ltd was incorporated in 1985, originally as an NBFC. Over time, it politely exited lending and reinvented itself as a leasing + facility management + manpower supply company. That’s corporate-speak for:

“We rent stuff, manage buildings, supply people, and invest surplus money wherever possible.”

MVL today earns money from:

  • Leasing of immovable properties
  • Security & manpower services
  • Maintenance & facility management
  • Investment income (interest, dividends, fair value changes)

And if that wasn’t enough, it has also been busy with amalgamations, acquisitions, subsidiaries, and related party transactions, making it less of a boring service company and more of a corporate structure puzzle.

Despite steady sales growth of 25–30% CAGR over 3 years, profitability has been inconsistent. Some years look decent, others fall flat thanks to negative operating leverage, erratic other income, and tax-rate gymnastics that would make a CA raise an eyebrow.

So before getting excited by low P/B and “almost debt-free” banners — we need

to understand how MVL actually makes money. Or tries to.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify MVL’s business for a tired investor scrolling at midnight.

A. Leasing of Properties

MVL acquires immovable properties and leases them out. Rental income forms roughly 11–13% of revenue. This is supposed to be the stable, annuity-like part of the business.

Problem?

  • Rentals are low-yield
  • Capital employed is high
  • Returns are… you guessed it… mediocre

Would you park hundreds of crores in real estate to earn single-digit yields? MVL apparently said yes.


B. Manpower & Security Services

This is the largest chunk.

FY23 segment revenue:

  • Security Services: ~49%
  • Manpower Services: ~26%

After acquiring Walery Security Management Ltd (WSML) in Dec 2023 (MVL holds 75.67%), manpower and security became even more central.

But manpower businesses have a dirty secret:

  • Low margins
  • High employee costs
  • Working capital stress
  • Price competition

In other words, high effort, low reward.


C. Facility Management & Sale of Services

Maintenance, housekeeping, and facility services form another ~50% combined revenue when you include “sale of services”.

Again — operationally heavy, margin-light.


D. Investment Activity

This is where MVL quietly survives.

Interest income, dividend income, and fair value changes often rescue profits when operating margins collapse. In FY25, other income was ₹12.88 Cr against operating profit of just ₹1.36 Cr.

Question for you 👇
If operating profit

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