Sarveshwar Foods Q1 FY26 concall decoded: Basmati, Nimbark & Rights Issue Masala
Opening Hook
India may be debating onion prices, but Sarveshwar Foods just served up a spicier dish—Q1 FY26 net profit jumped 120% YoY to ₹7 crore (transcript, Aug 20, 2025). Revenues grew 29% to ₹301 crore, powered by organic foods and premium Basmati. Why it matters: global tariffs, long working capital cycles, and farmer linkages make rice a political crop as much as a business. But Sarveshwar is trying to turn Basmati into a lifestyle brand—via Nimbark organic, retail stores, and even plans for US/EU depots. Stick around—things get aromatic two scrolls down.
At a Glance
Revenue up 29% – Strong quarter at ₹301 cr, demand not boiled yet.
EBITDA ₹17.1 cr – Margin jumped to 5.6%; organic side adds real flavor.
PAT ₹7 cr – 120% YoY jump, value-add saving the plate.
Exports 15% mix – Mostly domestic now, but West is the growth spice.
Nimbark contributes 25% – Organic isn’t just yoga mats anymore.
Management’s Key Commentary
Rohit Gupta (Chairman): “Q1 shows resilience and adaptability.” – Translation: Audio dropped thrice, but numbers spoke louder.
CFO Anand Sharda: “EBITDA margin improved to 5.56% due to organic products.” – Translation: Rice is boring, organics pay the bills.
CSO Kamal Kant Sahoo: “Our ₹150 cr rights issue mainly funds working capital.” – Translation: We’re growing fast, but cash cycles age like rice in storage.
Rohit Gupta: “We’re planning depots in the US and EU.” – Translation: No more middlemen; why should importers keep 25% margins?
On tariffs: “India dominates organic Basmati; we’ll withstand US duty pressure.” – Translation: Pakistan is the only rival, and even they can’t take our saffron-walnut combo.
On retail: “Nimbark stores expanding beyond J&K and Punjab.” – Translation: Expect to see Kashmiri rajma next to quinoa in Chandigarh.
Numbers Decoded
Source table
Metric
Q1 FY25
Q1 FY26
Why it matters
Revenue – The Hero
₹233 cr
₹301 cr
29% growth; both domestic retail and exports simmering.