Welcome to the dairy thriller called Milkfood Ltd — a company trading below book value, carrying debt equal to its market cap, and still managing to surprise investors with a Q3 FY26 profit after two quarters of absolute financial heartbreak.
After reporting an H1 FY26 loss of ₹8.55 crore, the company has suddenly shown a Q3 net profit of ₹1.41 crore. Is this a turnaround? Or just the calm before another butter storm?
When your debt equals your market cap, your ROE is barely above your savings account interest, and your interest coverage ratio is 0.72… you don’t run a dairy business. You run a financial survival camp.
But here’s the twist — Milkfood is sitting at 0.76 times book value. That’s like buying ghee at wholesale price. Tempting, right?
Let’s see whether this is premium desi ghee… or just overheated milk.
2. Introduction – The Jagatjit Dairy Diaries
Milkfood Ltd was incorporated in 1973. It is part of the Jagatjit Group. It sells desi ghee and milk powder under the “Milkfood” brand.
Sounds simple.
But dairy is not simple. It is weather dependent. It is cattle dependent. It is raw material volatile. It is brutally competitive.
And Milkfood operates in North India — where cooperatives dominate pricing and brands like Amul, Country Delight, and regional dairies squeeze margins like a tight buffalo grip.
The company has two plants: Patiala and Moradabad. Installed capacity includes 11,700 MTPA of ghee and 12,240 MTPA skimmed milk powder.
So operationally? Legit.
Financially? Moody.
H1 FY26 revenue fell 29% YoY to ₹147.71 crore. EBITDA turned negative. Net loss of ₹8.55 crore.
Q3 FY26? A tiny comeback.
Now the big question — is this structural recovery? Or accounting relief?