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Midwest Gold Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹1.20 Cr Sales, ₹-3.25 Cr PAT, 76x Book Value — Granite, Gold & Gravity-Defying Valuation


1. At a Glance – The ₹6,145 Cr Mystery With ₹1.20 Cr Quarterly Sales

Imagine a company doing ₹1.20 crore in quarterly sales, reporting a ₹-3.25 crore loss, yet commanding a ₹6,145 crore market cap and trading at 76.4 times book value. Welcome to Midwest Gold Ltd, currently priced at ₹5,101, up 63.9% in 3 months and a mind-boggling 2,845% in 1 year.

ROE stands at -6.24%, debt at ₹152 crore, interest coverage at -1.84, and debtor days at 295 days. Inventory days? A royal 878 days.

This is not a typo. This is a geological formation of financial paradox.

The latest Quarterly Results (Dec 2025) show continued operating losses. Yet the stock trades like it discovered Wakanda.

So the big question is simple:

Is this a turnaround-in-progress… or a valuation that forgot gravity exists?

Let’s mine deeper.


2. Introduction – From Granite Blocks to Gold Blocks to Blocked Profits

Midwest Gold was incorporated in 1990. Originally known as Nova Granites (India) Limited, it processed granite blocks, mined minerals, and lived the stone life.

Then it diversified into gold mining. Because why not?

When granite margins are tough, just add gold to the story. And if gold isn’t enough, evaluate “various business opportunities to turnaround operations.”

Translation: we are searching.

Fast forward to FY26. The company is:

  • Reporting recurring losses
  • Net worth erosion historically
  • Raising ₹150 crore via preferential allotment at ₹1,500 per share
  • Approving borrowing limits up to ₹300 crore
  • Planning amalgamation of Midwest Energy

Meanwhile, the stock price behaves like it’s sitting on Fort Knox.

Have the fundamentals caught up to the valuation? Or is the valuation waiting for fundamentals to arrive by helicopter?

Let’s understand what they actually do.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Officially?

Processing and trading granite, marble, and other natural stones.

Historically?

Mining granite blocks and minerals.

Strategically?

Diversified into gold mining.

Currently?

Evaluating business opportunities for turnaround.

Revenue breakup FY24:

  • Sale of products ~95%
  • Excess provision written back ~2%
  • FVTPL financial asset loss ~1%
  • Other non-operating income ~2%

Which means core business is still product sales. But scale? Tiny.

Quarterly sales in Dec 2025: ₹1.20 crore.

For context, some mid-sized restaurants in Mumbai do that in a month.

So why ₹6,145 crore market cap?

Is the gold mine invisible? Is the granite magical?

Or is the market pricing in something we cannot see yet?

Let’s check the numbers.


4. Financials Overview – The Loss Factory

Q3 FY26 Financial Comparison (₹ in Crores)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Dec 25)YoY Qtr*Prev Qtr (Sep 25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue1.200.491.20145%0%
EBITDA-2.02-2.72-2.040.98%
PAT-3.25-3.78-3.537.93%
EPS (₹)-2.40-3.13-2.9017.24%

*YoY quarter taken from Jun 2025 data available.

Annualised EPS (Quarterly Rule Applied):
Average of Q1, Q2, Q3 EPS = (-3.13 -2.90 -2.40) / 3 = -2.81
Annualised EPS = -2.81 × 4 = -11.24

P/E cannot be calculated meaningfully because earnings are negative.

Commentary:

  • Sales stagnant QoQ
  • Operating losses persist
  • Slight sequential improvement in losses
  • Still structurally loss-making

So market cap ₹6,145 crore is not earnings-backed.

Then what is backing it?


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range (Educational Only)

We use 3 methods.

1️ P/E Method

Annualised EPS = -11.24
Industry PE = 14.2

Since EPS is negative, P/E valuation is not applicable. This method

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