1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Business
RCI Industries & Technologies Ltd currently sits at a market cap of ₹10.7 crore, trades at ₹6.81 per share, and somehow manages to carry ₹236 crore of debt while generating ₹0.47 crore of quarterly revenue. If this sounds like a Netflix true-crime documentary, congratulations—you’re financially literate. The company’s book value is a stunning negative ₹99.4, ROCE is -7.52%, and operating margins are still allergic to positivity. Q3 FY26 did deliver a cosmetic miracle: losses narrowed sharply YoY, helped by other income and accounting gymnastics, but core business is still crawling. The real masala? This is a company that went through CIRP, survived NCLT, faced multiple FIRs, and has now been taken over by JTL group with fresh equity infusion. Copper rods, wires, and alloys may be the product—but governance drama is the real export here. Curious? You should be. Slightly scared? Also valid.
2. Introduction – From Copper King to Case File No. 437254
Once upon a time (read: pre-2020), RCI Industries was a legitimate copper and alloy manufacturer with revenues touching ₹2,000+ crore at peak. Then came the great collapse—sales evaporated faster than goodwill in a forensic audit. By FY23, revenue fell to ₹23 crore, and by FY25, the TTM revenue limped at ₹4.2 crore. That’s not a slowdown; that’s corporate cardiac arrest.
The company entered Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process in November 2022, and things escalated quickly—from auditor stress to Economic Offence Wing FIRs, allegations of fake GST ITC, bogus transactions, and non-return of job-work material. Basically, if there’s a chapter on “What Not To Do” in ICAI textbooks, RCI probably has a footnote.
But Q4 CY25 changed the script slightly. JTL Group acquired RCI for ₹46.5 crore, infused ₹10 crore equity, cancelled old shareholding, and effectively rebooted the balance sheet structure (not the numbers yet—structure). The promoters were wiped out, public shareholding reduced, and a new board walked in with a broom and a fire extinguisher. Is this a turnaround story or just a cleaner crime scene? Let’s dig.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
On paper, RCI is a non-ferrous metal manufacturer. In reality, it’s been a trading + manufacturing hybrid with wildly inconsistent execution.
Round products: Copper wires (annealed/unannealed), bunched wires, launching cables under the RIKAYAA brand.
Trading: Copper rods, ingots, scrap, zinc—basically buying and selling metals like a confused commodities desk.
Capacity (Installed, not utilised):
Copper wires: ~24,000 MTPA
Copper/brass strips: ~15,000 MTPA
Tin solder products: ~1,200 MTPA
The plants are located in Nalgarh and Baddi. Utilisation, however, has been closer to “power-cut level” than industrial scale. The business today is not constrained by demand or capacity—it’s constrained by trust, capital, and oxygen. Ask yourself: can you run a metal plant with negative net worth and zero working capital? Exactly.
4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Need Therapy
Result Type Detection: Quarterly Results
Latest official heading confirms Quarterly Results, so EPS is treated as quarterly and annualised accordingly.
Q3 FY26 Comparison Table (₹ Crore)
Metric
Latest Qtr (Dec-25)
YoY Qtr (Dec-24)
Prev Qtr (Sep-25)
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
0.47
0.49
3.58
-4.1%
-86.9%
EBITDA
1.20
-0.84
1.11
NA
8.1%
PAT
-0.03
-2.37
1.56
97.9%
-101.9%
EPS (₹)
-0.02
-1.51
1.00
98.7%
-102%
Annualised EPS (Quarterly × 4): ₹ -0.08
Yes, EBITDA turned positive. Yes, losses narrowed. No, this does not mean the business is healthy. Most of the improvement comes from other income (₹1.67 crore in Sep-25) and cost compression that looks more like shutdown efficiency than operating leverage. Would you celebrate weight loss caused by starvation? Exactly.
5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range (Purely Academic)
Let’s be honest: valuation here is an academic exercise, not an