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πŸ› Sheela Foam Q2FY26 β€” The Great Indian Mattress War: β‚Ή875 Cr Sales, β‚Ή14 Cr Profit & 1,436 Cr Debt (Because Comfort Costs Money)


1. At a Glance

Welcome to the land where β€œSleepwell” is not just a mattress but a lifestyle, and Sheela Foam Ltd (NSE: SFL | BSE: 540203) is the brand that literally wants India to rest easy β€” even if its own balance sheet can’t.

For Q2FY26, the foam giant reported Revenue β‚Ή875 crore, PAT β‚Ή14.4 crore, and an OPM of 9.96%. That’s decent on paper until you notice the 27.8% YoY decline in profit and a P/E ratio of 127x, which is roughly the same as an Ambien overdose for valuation sense.

With a market cap of β‚Ή7,797 crore and ROE of 2%, Sheela Foam is making more mattresses than money. Debt ballooned from β‚Ή466 crore in FY24 to a soft-yet-suffocating β‚Ή1,436 crore in FY25, thanks to acquisitions of Kurlon and Furlenco, the corporate equivalent of adding a sofa and a bean bag to a bed and calling it β€œsynergy.”

But to give credit (and debt) where due, Sheela Foam now controls India’s largest mattress empire β€” Sleepwell + Kurlon + Furlenco, commanding nearly 30% of the Indian market and 40% in Australia through Joyce Foam.

At β‚Ή717 a share, this is a company that sells comfort to the country β€” but clearly, investors aren’t sleeping easy yet.


2. Introduction – The Foamfather Saga

Once upon a springy time, in 1971, a company decided that Indians deserved more than coir and cotton. Five decades later, Sheela Foam Ltd runs a kingdom of polyurethane, pillows, and patience.

Its flagship brand Sleepwell is to mattresses what Parle-G is to biscuits β€” omnipresent, nostalgic, and still slightly overpriced. Add to that the acquisition of Kurlon (India’s original β€œgood night” brand) and Furlenco, the hip furniture startup for millennials who move every six months, and you’ve got a portfolio stretching from old-school uncles to Instagram couples.

Yet, despite its consumer dominance, Sheela’s financials look like a half-inflated airbed. Revenues are rising at a sleepy 5% CAGR, while profits have fallen 43% YoY. Margins are thinner than a budget bedsheet.

Why? Because consolidation is expensive, and foam doesn’t scale like software. Raw material prices (especially TDI and polyols) have been volatile, freight costs still haunt them, and post-merger integration costs from Kurlon and Furlenco are biting harder than a spring mattress in May.

Still, this is the company that taught India to sleep better β€” even if investors are now losing sleep over the debt load.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Sheela Foam doesn’t just sell mattresses β€” it sells peace of mind with a finance charge.

Here’s their 3-layered mattress of a business:

  1. Mattresses (49% of revenue) – The Sleepwell and Kurlon brands dominate India’s organized market. From orthopaedic to spring to β€œCool Gel,” they’ve got a product for every backache and breakup.
  2. Technical Foam (20%) – Used in cars, furniture, filters, and acoustics β€” the unsung hero of Sheela’s stable.
  3. Furniture & Comfort Foam (8%) – Cushioning for homes, sofas, and the occasional boss’s chair.
  4. Others (23%) – Includes exports and niche foam products across Australia, Spain, and a tiny IT arm called STAQO, probably for people who prefer debugging over sleeping.

Their international footprint includes 24 manufacturing plants across India, Spain, and Australia with a combined capacity of 1,87,000 MTPA β€” or enough foam to wrap the entire Delhi NCR in comfort (which some people might say it deserves).

They’ve also gone aggressively retail β€” over 10,000 multi-brand outlets and 6,000 exclusive brand stores, up from 4,400 in FY22. Clearly, they’re trying to turn mattresses into a lifestyle statement β€” not just a necessity you buy once a decade.

But consolidation fatigue is real. The acquisition of Kurlon in FY24 and Furlenco in FY25 came with integration pains β€” and the company admits the real cost savings will only β€œfully reflect in Q3FY25.” Translation: β€œWe’re still unpacking.”


4. Financials Overview

Source table
Metric (β‚Ή Cr)Q2FY26Q2FY25Q1FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue8758128217.7%6.6%
EBITDA87707524.3%16%
PAT14.420.06.6-27.8%118%
EPS (β‚Ή)0.891.830.60-51.4%48%

Annualized EPS = β‚Ή3.56 β‡’ P/E β‰ˆ 201x (Please remove all sharp objects before reading).

Despite revenue inching up, profit dropped 28% YoY, because foam margins are melting faster than butter in Chennai. EBITDA margins stayed under 10%.

That 200x P/E ratio? It’s what happens when markets believe β€œSleepwell” can someday turn into β€œProfitwell.”


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range (Educational Only)

Let’s crunch the numbers and dreams:

1. P/E Method

Annualized EPS

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