1. At a Glance – The Curious Case of “Profit Without Business”
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to one of the most fascinating financial mysteries in Dalal Street — a company that calls itself a real estate developer, but behaves like your chacha’s fixed deposit portfolio.
Oswal Greentech Ltd is a ₹590 crore market cap entity generating barely ₹70 crore in annual sales, with operating margins that look like they forgot to wake up. Yet somehow — magically, mysteriously, and borderline suspiciously — it manages to report profits. Not from selling homes, not from building townships, but largely from interest income.
Yes, you read that right.
This is a “real estate” company where:
- Real estate contributes ~4% revenue
- Investment income contributes ~76% revenue
- And operating profit is basically an accidental byproduct
Meanwhile, the company:
- Has ROE of 0.34%
- Has zero meaningful growth for years
- Has contingent liabilities of ₹268 crore
- And still trades at a P/E of ~29
And just when you think it can’t get more interesting…
- CFO resigns
- Another CFO joins
- Independent directors resign
- MD & CEO resigns
- Audit report comes with qualified opinion
This is not a company. This is a full-blown corporate soap opera with a finance degree.
Now the big question is:
Are we looking at a hidden value stock… or a beautifully packaged balance sheet illusion?
2. Introduction – When Real Estate Becomes Side Hustle
Oswal Greentech started life as a chemicals and fertilizers company. Then somewhere along the journey, like many Indian corporates going through an identity crisis, it decided:
“Let’s become a real estate company.”
But instead of actually building and selling properties aggressively, it took a more… philosophical approach:
- Build a few projects
- Sell slowly
- Park money in investments
- Earn interest
- Call it a business
Classic jugaad capitalism.
The company operates under the Abhay Oswal Group and has two main verticals:
- Real Estate Development
- Investment (Inter-corporate deposits, equity investments, etc.)
Now here’s where things get funny.
In FY23:
- Real estate contributed ~4% revenue
- Investment income contributed ~76% revenue
So effectively:
You are buying a finance company disguised as a real estate developer.
Even more interesting:
- Sales have been declining for years
- Profits are volatile
- Cash flows are inconsistent
- Yet valuation hasn’t collapsed completely
Why?
Because markets love stories.
And this one sounds like:
“Hidden asset value + low price-to-book + promoter buying = multibagger potential”
But as any seasoned investor knows…