1. At a Glance – Cotton, Sugar & Warehouses in One Plate
₹97 stock price.
₹419 crore market cap.
Trading at just 0.41x book value (Book Value ₹234).
Stock P/E: 9.71.
ROE: a humble 1.11%.
ROCE: 3.86%.
3-month return: -14.4%.
Welcome to Nahar Industrial Enterprises Ltd, a 1983-born textile-and-sugar hybrid that now wants to moonlight as a warehousing landlord and part-time real estate developer.
Latest Q3 FY26 numbers?
Revenue: ₹340.20 crore (down 20.8% YoY)
PAT: ₹5.79 crore (up 9.87% YoY)
EPS (Q3): ₹1.34
Operating margin: 4.48% — not sexy, but not collapsing either.
And then there’s the plot twist: CRISIL revises outlook to Stable, rentals rising, warehouses filling up, and loss-making units being shut.
Is this a turnaround story stitched in cotton thread? Or just a textile company trying to become a landlord?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – The Textile Uncle Who Bought Warehouses
Nahar Industrial is part of the Nahar Group — a textile-heavy business house with deep roots in spinning and fabrics.
But this is not your fast-fashion Zara stock. This is the cotton mill that:
- Consumes over 4 lakh bales of cotton annually
- Runs 2.2 lakh spindles
- Operates 515 looms
- Has fabric processing capacity of 584 lakh meters per annum
- Also runs a 4,000 TCD sugar mill
- And a 14.5 MW cogeneration plant
And now? It is building warehouses in Ludhiana and Kolkata and planning commercial real estate development.
Because apparently, spinning yarn wasn’t volatile enough.
The stock has delivered:
- 5-year return: 16.2%
- 3-year return: 5.05%
- 1-year return: -2.62%
Sales growth over 5 years? -0.55%
Profit growth over 3 years? -58.7%
So this isn’t a growth rocket.
This is a cyclical veteran trying to reinvent itself.
Question: When a textile company starts talking more about warehousing rentals than yarn margins… should you lean in or lean back?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s simplify.
1️ Textile Business (~88% revenue FY23)
They spin yarn.
They weave fabric.
They process fabric.
Products include:
- 100% Cotton yarn
- Blended yarn
- Polyester yarn
- Dyed shirting fabrics
- Specialty fabrics
Clients include GAP, Tommy Hilfiger, Target, Zara, Allen Solly, Myntra and more.
They’re vertically integrated — which means they control multiple steps. Good for cost control, bad if the entire industry goes into a slump together (which textiles often do).
2️ Sugar Business (~12%)
They crush sugarcane at a 4,000 TCD mill and generate power from bagasse.
Sugar is regulated, politically influenced, and margin-sensitive.
So basically: volatile raw material + regulated output.
Comforting? Not really.
3️ Real Estate & Warehousing (The New Chapter)
They now