01 — At a Glance
The Lending Software Guy Nobody Parties With. But Everyone Leans On.
- 52-Week High / Low₹1,378 / ₹724
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹220 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹20.70 Cr
- TTM EPS₹55.8
- Annualised EPS (Avg Q1-Q3 × 4)₹31.4
- Book Value / Share₹322
- Price to Book2.42x
- Cash & Equivalents₹971.60 Cr
- Debt₹7.89 Cr (Near Zero)
- Order Book (Dec 2025)₹656.68 Cr
Flash Summary: Nucleus Software posted Q3 FY26 revenue of ₹220 crore (up 6.97% YoY, flat QoQ) with PAT of ₹20.70 crore, down 21.6% QoQ but up 0.31% YoY in a choppy quarter. The stock tanked 16.4% in three months — mostly because the market decided that losing a CFO, a CEO transition, and a chairperson retirement in Q3 was less exciting than losing it all at once. Meanwhile, the company is sitting on ₹971 crore in cash (47% of market cap), processes 26+ million transactions daily for 200+ institutions globally, and is quietly building AI into FinnOne Neo. The stock trades at 12.8x P/E — lower than the IT services median of 35.7x — because apparently, financial responsibility is out of fashion.
02 — Introduction
Since 1986, They’ve Been The Nerdy Backbone Of Global Lending. Boring? Yes. Profitable? Also Yes.
Nucleus Software Exports is a 40-year-old Indian software company that does something nobody finds thrilling at parties: it powers lending operations. Not Fintech TikTok stars. Not blockchain unicorns. Just boring, unsexy lending software that helps 200+ banks in 50 countries say “yes” to loans and “no” to defaults.
The company was born in 1986 (the year Rajinikanth was still typecast as a villain). Forty years later, it is processing 26+ million transactions daily through a platform that manages USD 500 billion in loans in India alone and USD 700+ billion globally. Their flagship product, FinnOne Neo, is a digital lending solution that helps financial institutions streamline retail lending, corporate banking, Islamic finance, automotive finance, and transaction banking — basically every type of loan humans have invented.
The market cap is ₹2,067 crore. The stock trades at ₹785, down from ₹1,378 in the last 52 weeks. Why? Because in Q3 FY26, they had some management musical chairs (CFO resigned, then a new one joined, then the chairperson retired). Also, because India’s IT sector has been on a shopping spree, and everyone forgot that software that actually processes money is better than software that processes memes. Welcome to market irrationality at its finest.
The February 2026 Concall Reality Check: Management said they added “seven new logos” in FY26, all in lending. They described deal conversions as “definitely better than earlier quarters” and referenced a “significant pipeline.” But then they also said sales cycles are “long drawn, may go on for months, and few may even change financial year.” Translation: exciting growth is coming, but ask us again in 2028.
03 — Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?
They’re The Operating System For How Banks Say Yes To Loans.
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