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Regency Fincorp Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹8.63 Cr Quarterly Income, 230% YoY PAT Jump, GNPA Down to 1.21%: Micro-Credit NBFC Trying to Grow Up

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

Regency Fincorp Ltd (RFL) is that small NBFC you probably ignored until it quietly delivered a 230% YoY jump in quarterly profit and suddenly started popping up on screeners like an over-enthusiastic intern. Current market cap sits at ~₹220 crore, stock price around ₹29.9, trading at a P/E of ~17.6, which is below the industry median of ~28.8. ROE is a modest ~6.17%, ROCE around 8.15%, and debt-to-equity at 0.76—not reckless, not conservative, just… polite.

Latest Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025) numbers show ₹8.63 crore in income and ₹3.40 crore PAT, with EPS at ₹0.46 for the quarter. Annualised, that EPS suddenly looks far more confident than the stock price chart over the last three months (-23%, ouch). Add to this a CRAR of ~50%, repeated promoter capital infusions, improving asset quality, and a strategic pivot away from risky JLG loans to secured SME lending—and you have a company that’s clearly trying to outgrow its micro-finance diapers.

But does execution match ambition? Or is this just another NBFC growth spurt before a fever? Let’s investigate. 🕵️♂️


2. Introduction – Small NBFC, Big Intentions

Regency Fincorp Ltd was incorporated back in 1993, which means it has survived liberalisation, multiple NBFC cycles, IL&FS, DHFL, Covid, and the great “everything NBFCs are shady” phase. Survival itself deserves one polite clap. 👏

RFL is a non-deposit taking, non-systemically important NBFC, registered with the RBI. Translation: it doesn’t take public deposits, it won’t crash the financial system if it sneezes, and RBI doesn’t hover over it like a helicopter parent—but still keeps an eye.

Historically, the company focused on micro-credit, primarily serving underserved women borrowers and MSMEs, largely via unsecured loans and JLG (Joint Liability Group) lending. Predictably, FY24 reminded everyone why unsecured micro-credit is not for the faint-hearted. Asset quality slipped, GNPA rose, and management got a gentle slap from reality.

Instead of pretending nothing happened (classic NBFC move), RFL did something rare: it changed strategy. By September 2024, management openly acknowledged stress in the JLG book and began capping JLG exposure at ~20% while pivoting towards secured SME lending, especially to existing borrowers.

So the current Regency story is not “fast growth at any cost.” It’s more like: “Boss, thoda sambhal ke chalte hain.” But does the data support this newfound maturity? Let’s dig deeper.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

At its core, Regency Fincorp does one simple thing: lend money. But who they lend to, how they lend, and how safely they lend

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