1. At a Glance – The Textile Tailor Who Also Builds Apartments
RRIL Ltd is currently trading at ₹17.4, sitting on a market cap of ₹212 crore. The stock has slipped 14.5% in the last 3 months, clearly not winning any short-term popularity contests. The company delivered ₹33.37 crore in Q3 FY26 sales and ₹1.74 crore in net profit, with an EPS of ₹0.14 for the quarter.
At current levels, the stock trades at a P/E of 27.3, Price to Book of 1.94, and an EV/EBITDA of 14.2. ROCE stands at 8.61%, ROE at 6.70%, and debt is a modest ₹7.98 crore, giving it a debt-to-equity of just 0.07.
It’s a small-cap textile company that also moonlights as a Mumbai real estate redeveloper. Sounds glamorous? Maybe. Profitable? Yes. Efficient? Debatable.
Now the real question — are we looking at a hidden Mumbai property jackpot… or just another textile company trying to look sexy?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – From Yarn to Yards
RRIL Ltd was incorporated in 1991. That means it has survived liberalisation, demonetisation, GST confusion, and several textile cycles. Respect.
Its business is split between:
- Textile manufacturing & trading
- Real estate redevelopment in Mumbai
In FY23, revenue mix was:
- Textile products ~75%
- Real estate ~23%
- Other income ~2%
Segment-wise:
- Textile & Allied Products ~76%
- Real Estate ~24%
So textiles are still the main show. Real estate is the side hustle — but in Mumbai, side hustles can sometimes out-earn main jobs.
Manufacturing plants are located in Umargaon (Gujarat) and Palghar (Maharashtra). Meanwhile, the real estate projects focus on redevelopment — especially in premium Mumbai suburbs like Santacruz West.
That’s like stitching fabric in Gujarat and flipping flats in Mumbai.
Diversification or distraction?
Let’s go deeper.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine this company as a businessman wearing two outfits:
Outfit 1: Textile manufacturer
Outfit 2: Mumbai real estate developer
Textile Division
They manufacture and trade textile products. While detailed product segmentation isn’t specified, textile and allied products contribute around three-fourths of revenue.