Search for stocks /

RDB Real Estate Constructions Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹1,170 Cr Balance Sheet, ₹558 Cr Debt & ₹-9.8 Cr TTM Loss: Welcome to Demerger Hangover Economics


1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Profits

₹292 crore market cap.
₹169 stock price.
Debt of ₹558 crore.
TTM loss of ₹9.84 crore.
ROE of 1.31%.
Interest coverage below 1.

This company listed in Jan 2025 and immediately chose chaos.

RDB Real Estate Constructions Ltd (RDBRECL) is what happens when a demerged real estate business meets public markets before it meets stable cash flows. The stock has already seen ₹336 on the upside and ₹20 on the downside — a volatility range wider than a Kolkata real estate broker’s promises.

Latest quarterly revenue came in at ₹16.1 crore (up YoY), but PAT was –₹3.59 crore. That’s not a typo. The business is growing sales while actively losing money — a classic real estate rite of passage.

Price to Book? 1.62×
EV/EBITDA? 27.6×
Debt-to-equity? 3.1×

If balance sheets could talk, this one would say:
“Beta, pehle cash flow lao.”


2. Introduction – A Demerger, A Listing, And A Lot of Debt

RDBRECL was incorporated in 2018 but only became “investable” in January 2025 when it got listed on the BSE under the T Group — aka “Trade carefully, bhai” territory.

Before listing, it was a wholly owned subsidiary of RDB Realty & Infrastructure Ltd. Then came the NCLT-approved demerger in July 2024, where the entire realty business — assets, liabilities, subsidiaries, legal proceedings, EMIs, probably office plants — got transferred into this company.

And voilà:
New company.
Old debt.
Public shareholders.

This is not uncommon in Indian real estate. But what is uncommon is listing before the earnings stabilize. The result? A company with ₹1,170 crore assets, ₹558 crore borrowings, and quarterly profits that behave like Mumbai monsoons — unpredictable and usually disappointing.

The big question:
Is this a temporary post-demerger mess… or the real business model?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Build?

RDBRECL does exactly what you’d expect a Kolkata-based CREDAI-linked developer to do:

Residential

  • Group housing
  • Integrated townships
  • “Premium” apartments (marketing term, not financial one)

Commercial

  • Office spaces
  • Retail shops
  • Malls (yes, still)

Key projects:

  • Regent Crown
  • Regent Lake View

That’s it. No 47-project pipeline. No pan-India expansion. No Dubai teaser slide.

Revenue breakup FY24:

  • Construction activity: ~58%
  • Other income: ~38%

Pause.

When 38% of revenue is “Other Income”, you are not a real estate developer — you are a finance manager with buildings on the side.

Ask yourself:
If construction slows, what happens to revenue?


4. Financials Overview – Quarterly Table of Controlled Damage

EPS treatment locked accordingly.

MetricLatest Qtr (Dec’25)YoY QtrPrev QtrYoY %
Join 10,000+ investors who read this every week.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!