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Sagar Cements FY26: The Clinker Conundrum (₹2,650 Cr Revenue, ₹88 Cr Net Profit, Debt 8.3x EBITDA)

General information and entertainment, not investment advice. The author is not a SEBI-registered adviser or research analyst. No recommendation, no promised returns. Markets carry risk including loss of capital. Figures may not be current. Consult a registered adviser before acting.


1. At a Glance

Sagar Cements delivered FY26 sales of ₹2,650 crore—up 17% from ₹2,258 crore in FY25—and a net profit of ₹88 crore, a sharp turnaround from a ₹210 crore loss in FY25. The market prices the stock at ₹173 per share (prices referenced are not live), implying a P/E of negative in FY25, now irrelevant.

The operating profit margin recovered to 11% in FY26 (from 6% in FY25), driven by higher realizations and modest volume uplift of 6.1 MT. Q4 alone saw a ₹100 crore net profit, signalling traction.

Yet the balance sheet carries ₹1,708 crore in borrowings against ₹1,693 crore in net worth (equity capital plus reserves), a debt-to-equity of 1.01x—loose in absolute terms, acute when net debt hits 8.3x EBITDA, an India Ratings downgrade signal. The company is chasing earnings; the market is chasing deleveraging.

India Ratings downgraded to BBB+/Negative in May 2025. Capacity sits at 11 MTPA. FY27 guided at 7 MT volumes.


2. Introduction

Sagar Cements entered FY26 as a three-region player post the Andhra Cements acquisition (March 2023). South, Central, and East. The South still dominates at 70% of sales, with Telangana-Andhra as the anchor.

FY25 was grim: a collapse in cement prices (decadal low fall) squashed EBITDA per tonne from ₹456 to ₹273, and overall EBITDA crashed to ₹1,047 crore from ₹1,800 crore. The company burned ₹210 crore in losses and saw interest coverage slip to 0.7x. Liquidity was tested.

FY26 flipped. Prices stabilized and crept higher from April 2025 onward. Volumes rose 11% despite labour shortages and unseasonal rains. EBITDA per tonne recovered to ₹445 by Q4, and annualized EBITDA touched roughly ₹2,000 crore (operating profit of ₹292 crore plus depreciation of ₹240 crore). The company returned to profitability and mopped up cash.

In June 2026, the board approved the in-principle merger of Andhra Cements back into parent Sagar, with a share swap of 29:98. Capacity crossed 11 MTPA (Jeerabad grinding commissioned at 0.5 MTPA on 10 June). On 13 May, the board approved a new division: Superfine Building Materials, targeting high-margin niches like UHPC and structural repair at a potential margin of ~30%.


3. Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?

Sagar Cements manufactures cement: ordinary Portland (51% of sales mix), Portland-pozzolana (30%), Portland slag (9%), composite (3%), and specialty grades. It also derives 11% of revenue from captive power generation.

The cement travels two routes: 49% trade (bulk), 51% non-trade (retail brands, direct contracts). 67% is packaged, 33% bulk. A sprawling network of six active plants anchors this: Mattampally (3 MTPA, Telangana), Dachepalli (2.25 MTPA, Andhra), Gudipadu (1.25 MTPA, Andhra), Bayyavaram (1.5 MTPA, Andhra), Jaipur grinding (1.5 MTPA, Odisha), Indore (1.0 MTPA, Madhya Pradesh). Plus the soon-to-be-merged Andhra Cements subsidiary (post-acquisition capacity additions).

Limestone reserves total ~944 MT consolidated—enough for medium-to-long term. Captive power: 73 MW thermal, 14.1 MW waste-heat recovery, 16 MW solar/hydro. Lead distance has shrunk 38% since FY17, now ~251 km on average, cutting freight spend. The clinker factor (clinker as % of cement) hovers around 73%—a cost lever; blended cement—higher PPC and slag ratios—offers margin relief but faces regulatory pushback on OPC substitution.

The model is old school: dig, fire, grind, distribute, pray for prices. Capex-heavy, returns-lumpy, leverage-prone.


4. Financials Overview

Figures are consolidated, in ₹ crore.

Annual Performance (FY23–FY26)

MetricFY23FY24FY25FY26
Revenue2,2302,5052,2582,650
EBITDA393461372532
Net Profit30-43-21088
EPS (₹)2.31-3.32-16.056.70
OPM (%)7%10%6%11%

Revenue grew 17% in FY26, driven by volume lift (6.1 MT, +11% YoY) and price recovery. EBITDA expanded 43% to ₹532 crore. Net profit flipped positive to ₹88 crore after two consecutive loss years.

Q4 FY26 Performance

MetricQ4 FY26
Revenue787 crore
Operating Profit82 crore
EBITDA148 crore
Net Profit100 crore
Interest53 crore
EBITDA/Tonne₹445

Q4 saw a strong finish: ₹100 crore net profit on ₹787 crore sales (13% margin). EBITDA per tonne at ₹445 reflects a 104% jump from Q4 FY25’s depressed ₹218.

Concall Commentary (May 2026)

Management guided FY27 volume at ~7 MT, anchored on Jeerabad grinding ramp-up (+0.5 MT capacity), Andhra Cements expansion completion (+0.9 MT ramp-up post-capex), and organic growth. Cost headwinds flagged: petcoke/coal inflation (from ~$120 to ~$136–$140 CIF) translates to ~₹200 per tonne clinker, ~₹100–150 per tonne cement impact, inventoried through mid-Q2 FY27. Broader inflation (bags, explosives, diesel hike of ₹23.75/L) pegged at ~₹225–250 total per tonne if sustained. Management expects “very close to ₹600 EBITDA per tonne” in FY27 if pricing holds.


5. Market Expectations & Historical Multiples

This section describes how the market is currently pricing the company and how that compares with its own history and peer group. It is descriptive, not predictive.

Valuation Table

MetricCurrent5-Yr AvgPeer Median
P/EN/A*18.428.7
EV/EBITDA7.4x9.1x8.8x
P/B1.33x1.67x1.81x
ROE-1.05%
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