Search for stocks /

NILE Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹291 Cr Revenue, 47% PAT Jump, EPS ₹49.77 – Yet Trading at Just 10.4x PE. Lead King or One-Customer Risk?


1. At a Glance – The Lead Machine That Runs on One Customer

NILE Ltd is sitting at ₹1,782 with a market cap of ₹535 crore. In Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025 quarter), revenue came in at ₹291 crore, up 25.3% YoY. Net profit rose 47% YoY to ₹14.94 crore. EPS for the quarter: ₹49.77.

Annualised (Q3 logic applied carefully): average of Q1, Q2 and Q3 FY26 EPS × 4
= (₹49.70 + ₹38.64 + ₹49.77) / 3 × 4
= ₹46.04 × 4
= ₹184.16 approx.

At ₹1,782, that implies a forward annualised P/E of ~9.7–10x. Industry median P/E? 18.28.

Debt to equity? 0.06.
ROCE? 19.9%.
ROE? 14.7%.
Dividend yield? 0.27%.
Return over 3 years? 47.2% CAGR.

So here’s the spicy question:
Is this a boring lead recycler minting cash… or a company whose entire destiny depends on basically one customer?

Let’s put on the detective hat.


2. Introduction – The Lead Story Nobody Talks About

NILE Ltd has been around since 1984. That means it survived Harshad Mehta, dotcom crash, global financial crisis, demonetisation, COVID, and still said, “I recycle lead. That’s it.”

No fancy AI.
No EV battery hype (well… maybe now).
No influencer CEO on Twitter.

Just lead. Pure 99.97% lead.

It’s a secondary lead manufacturer. Translation: it melts scrap lead batteries and turns them into high-purity lead and alloys used by battery manufacturers.

And here’s the kicker.

Top 2 customers account for 100% of revenue.

Yes. 100%.

ARBL contributes ~91% and its group entity Mangal Industries ~9%.

If ARBL sneezes, NILE catches pneumonia.

And guess what? ARBL is setting up its own lead smelter expected operational in 2024.

You see the tension?

Now add to that:

• Windmill operations suspended (Feb 2026 announcement).
• Choutuppal plant operations suspended (Mar 2025).
• Lithium-ion recycling subsidiary starting operations (Mar 2024).

This company is like a thriller series. Every quarter, new plot twist.

So let’s decode the business properly.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Core Business: Lead Recycling

They operate two lead recycling plants:

• Choutuppal – ~32,000 TPA
• Tirupati – ~75,000 TPA

Total capacity: ~107,000 TPA.

They manufacture:

• Pure Lead (99.97%)
• Lead Antimony Alloys
• Lead Selenium Alloys
• Lead Calcium Alloys
• Lead Tin Alloys

Customers use these in:

• Lead-acid batteries
• PVC stabilizers
• Lead oxide

So essentially, if your car battery works, there’s a chance NILE supplied the lead.

Revenue breakup FY23:
• 91% from sale of lead products
• 8% from job work
• 1% other income

Translation: It’s a single-product, single-customer story.

Wind Power Business

They also had a windmill unit at Ramagiri, selling energy to Andhra Pradesh South Power Distribution Company Ltd.

But February 2026:
Windmill operations suspended after PPA expired.

So that revenue stream? Gone for now.

Lithium-ion Recycling – The New Bet

Subsidiary: Nile Li-Cycle Private Limited
Phase 1 commercial operations declared March 2024.

Capex plan: ₹600 million (₹60 crore approx) over FY24–FY26
75% debt funded.

Board noted ₹25.97 crore loan to Nile Li-Cycle in Feb 2026.

So the company is saying:
“Lead is old school. Lithium is future.”

Question for you:
Will lithium rescue them from single-customer dependency… or just add debt?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers Don’t Lie (But They Do Whisper)

Quarterly Performance (₹ Crores)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Dec 2025)YoY Qtr (Dec 2024)Prev Qtr (Sep 2025)YoY %
Join 10,000+ investors who read this every week.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!