1. At a Glance – The Fabric Company That Became a Concrete Machine
Raymond Realty Ltd is currently trading at ₹417, nursing a bruised ego after a ~36% fall in 3 months and ~40% drop in 6 months, while sitting on a ₹2,780 Cr market cap and pretending nothing happened. Stock P/E is ~19x, lower than most listed real estate peers who are partying at 25–80x. ROCE stands at 16.4%, ROE looks cartoonishly high at 72.3% (we’ll decode that accounting gymnastics later), and debt-to-equity is a manageable 0.42.
Operationally, this isn’t some sleepy builder waiting for approvals. Q3 FY26 revenue came in at ₹758 Cr, PAT at ₹66.8 Cr, and quarterly sales growth printed a meme-worthy +721% YoY, profit growth +2,119% YoY. Yes, the base was tiny, but the ramp-up is real.
Bookings for 9M FY26 stand at ₹1,504 Cr, revenue at ₹1,864 Cr, and the company just launched Invictus BKC, because apparently Thane wasn’t enough flex. The question is simple: is the stock over-punished, or is the market sniffing something ugly?
2. Introduction – From Suit Stitching to Slab Pouring
Raymond used to measure success in thread count. Now it measures success in RERA carpet area sold. Raymond Realty Ltd (RRL) was demerged from Raymond Ltd on May 14, 2025, listed on July 1, 2025, and told the market: “Textiles are passé, real estate is where the real tailoring happens.”
This demerger matters. Earlier, real estate numbers were buried inside Raymond Ltd like an awkward cousin at a wedding. Post demerger, RRL stands naked in front of investors—cash flows, debt, land bank, execution skills, all exposed.
The timing wasn’t perfect. The stock listed, the market corrected, real estate stocks got moody, and RRL’s price collapsed from four digits to sub-₹450. But operationally, the company didn’t freeze. Projects progressed, bookings happened, launches continued, and debt stayed controlled.
So now we’re at that classic Indian market moment: