01 — At a Glance
The Sleeping Giant That Keeps Winning Orders (But Isn’t Building Yet)
- Q3 FY26 Consolidated Revenue₹3,022 Cr
- 9M FY26 Consolidated Revenue₹8,329 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT (Consolidated)₹197 Cr
- Q3 EPS (Annualised)₹2.84
- Full-Year FY26 EPS Guidance₹2.42
- Consolidated Order Book (Sep 2025)₹1,27,000 Cr
- Order Book / Revenue Ratio~10.3x
- Book Value₹9.89
- Debt / Equity0.00x
- Cash on Hand (Sep 2025)₹4,866 Cr
The Setup: NBCC closed 9M FY26 with ₹8,329 crore in consolidated revenue (+13% YoY), ₹559 crore PAT (+27% YoY), and a ₹1,27,000 crore order book. Translation: enough work for the next 10 years, a balance sheet that would make a banker weep, and a stock that has returned -21.7% in 6 months. The narrative is simple: the market doesn’t believe NBCC can execute. Fair point.
02 — Introduction
Meet NBCC: The Navratna That Collects Orders Like Pokémon Cards
NBCC (India) Limited is a Government of India Navratna Enterprise under the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs. Founded in 1960. One of the largest project management consultancy (PMC) and engineering procurement & construction (EPC) firms in India. Its clientele reads like a who’s who of Indian bureaucracy: Ministry of Defence, Ministry of Finance, Central Universities, IITs, IIMs, AIIMs, state governments, and PSU behemoths.
The business model is almost stupidly simple. The government calls NBCC and says, “We want to redevelop Delhi’s 100-year-old housing colonies, build industrial infrastructure, execute metro projects, and generally make things happen.” NBCC then hires contractors, manages the projects, takes a PMC fee (typically 4–8% of project cost), and hands over the completed asset. The company works on back-to-back subcontracting arrangements, meaning capital expenditure is negligible and working capital requirements are minimal. In short: low-risk, moderate-margin, cash-generation business disguised as a construction company.
Until December 2025, this business churned out results quietly. Management shared numbers, investors clapped politely, and the stock traded without much drama. But something shifted in recent quarters. NBCC started winning unprecedented order inflows. The Supertech case — where the Supreme Court appointed NBCC to complete 16 stalled residential projects (50,000 units, ₹9,445 crore) — became a watershed moment. Delhi is in the middle of a ₹1 lakh crore redevelopment spree. States like Rajasthan, Jharkhand, and J&K are throwing projects at NBCC. And yet, the stock tanked 21.7% in 6 months. Why? Because execution is a four-letter word that investors don’t believe NBCC will spell correctly.
Concall Gold (Feb 2026): “Main focus is to convert the order book to execution. That is our priority… hopefully next year we will change it.” Translation from management-speak: “We have 10 years of work. We’re going to try to actually do some of it.”
03 — Business Model: WTF Is a PMC Anyway?
Project Management Consultancy, Or How to Make Money Without Building Anything
NBCC operates via a straightforward lever: the government owns land, funds the project, defines the scope. NBCC steps in as the PMC. Their job: hire contractors, manage timelines, oversee quality, and shepherd the project to completion. The company doesn’t own the asset, doesn’t finance construction, and doesn’t bear commodity price risk (most contracts have cost-pass-through clauses). What they do bear: execution risk and reputational risk.
Revenue split (9M FY26): ~91% is PMC, ~7% is EPC (engineering, procurement, construction), ~2% is real estate development. PMC is the bread and butter. Margins on PMC range from 4–8% (down from 7–10% a few years back due to government push for cost efficiency). Industrial EPC is higher-margin (~10%+) but smaller. Real estate is the sleeping giant—small now, but can be transformational (Ghitorni, Gurugram 37D, Kochi have latent profit pools of ₹9,000–10,000 crore combined, though recognition is timing-dependent and back-ended).
Current order book (Sep 2025): ₹1,27,000 crore consolidated. Breakdown: ~40% “other PMC” (~₹45,000 crore—roads, water, metro-adjacent stuff), ~60% redevelopment (~₹67,000 crore—the juicy stuff). Redevelopment is NBCC’s new obsession. 7 GPRA colonies in Delhi, Supertech’s 16 projects, Rajasthan’s mega redevelopment packages. These projects are higher-margin (8–12%) and execution-heavy but require sustained delivery. Win some, lose some in terms of stock performance.
PMC Share~91%Revenue (9M)
EPC Share~7%Revenue (9M)
Real Estate~2%Revenue (9M)
Working Capital CycleMinimalBack-to-back Model
Structural Advantage: NBCC’s back-to-back subcontracting arrangement means it doesn’t hold inventory, doesn’t build up receivables beyond 90–120 days, and doesn’t face commodity price shocks. The government funds the project via client advances. Cash flow is smooth. The only variable: execution speed. Faster you build, faster you bill, faster you book PAT.
💬 Here’s the thing: would you trust a PSU to deliver a 50,000-unit housing project on time? Drop your answer in the comments.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers Game
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹0.71 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹2.84 | FY26 Full-Year EPS Guidance: ₹2.42
| Metric (₹ Cr, Cons.) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 3,022 | 2,809 | 2,914 | +7.6% | +3.7% |
| Operating Profit | 114 | 144 | 104 | -20.8% | +9.6% |
| OPM % | 3.8% | 5.1% | 3.6% | -130 bps | +20 bps |
| PAT (Cons.) | 197 | 202 | 157 | -2.5% | +25.5% |
| EPS (₹) | 0.71 | 0.73 | 0.57 | -2.7% | +24.6% |
Margin Squeeze & GRAP Saga: Q3 OPM dropped to 3.8% from 5.1% YoY. Management attributed this to construction bans under GRAP (Graded Response Action Plan) in Delhi for ~2 months (Nov–Dec 2025 and partial Jan). Amrapali + 7 GPRA collectively contribute 30–40% of NBCC’s turnover, and these projects got frozen. Result: missed execution, margin drag. Management expects a catch-up in Q4. For FY26 full-year, management guided: Revenue ₹14,000 crore, EBITDA margin 5–6%, PAT margin 6–7%. Translation: expect ~₹700–800 crore FY26 PAT, an annualised EPS roughly in line with the current ₹2.42 (which already incorporates conservative guidance).
05 — Valuation: The Fair Value Puzzle
Is 35x P/E Justified, or Just Crazy?
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