Summit Securities Q3 FY26: ₹123 Cr PAT, ₹113 EPS, Trading at 0.13x Book — Deep Value or Deep Sleep?
1. At a Glance – The Most Boring Billionaire in the Room
If Indian stock market had a silent billionaire uncle sitting in the corner at a wedding—wearing a ₹10,000 kurta but refusing to give shagun—that would be Summit Securities.
Here’s a company sitting on ₹12,888 Cr of assets, casually generating profits, barely breaking a sweat, and trading at just 0.13x book value. That’s not a typo. The market is basically saying, “We know you’re rich… but we don’t care.”
Imagine owning a locker full of Reliance, HCL Tech, CEAT, SBI—and the market still pricing you like a neglected government guest house.
Revenue jumps 2000% QoQ, profit jumps 450%, margins flirting with 90%… and still the stock is down ~30% in a year. What kind of toxic relationship is this?
So the big question: Is this a hidden treasure… or just a glorified holding company that investors treat like leftover wedding sweets?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – The Case of the Invisible Rich Guy
Summit Securities is not your typical NBFC.
It doesn’t chase borrowers. It doesn’t give flashy loans. It doesn’t scream growth on CNBC.
Instead, it quietly sits there like a seasoned investor uncle who bought stocks in 2005 and never logged back into his Demat account.
Originally incorporated in 1997 (as RPG Itochu Finance), this company transformed itself through a 2009 restructuring where it absorbed multiple entities and—most importantly—their investment portfolios.
That’s the key: 👉 This is not a lending NBFC. 👉 This is an investment holding company disguised as an NBFC.
And what does it hold?
Reliance Industries
HCL Technologies
CEAT
CG Power
SBI
Plus unlisted bets like Spencer & Co.
Basically, this is a mutual fund without a fund manager presentation.
But here’s the twist…
Despite holding quality assets:
ROE = 0.85%
No dividend
No excitement
No narrative
Which brings us to the uncomfortable question: Is Summit Securities undervalued… or just underwhelming?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s simplify this.
Summit Securities earns money from 3 things:
Source table
Source
Contribution
Dividend Income
82%
Fair Value Gains
16%
Interest Income
2%
So basically:
They sit on shares
Collect dividends
Occasionally book gains
And call it a day
This is less “business” and more “portfolio management with a corporate office.”
No factories No employees scaling operations No aggressive lending
Just vibes and dividends.
And yes, they have only about 5 employees historically.
Let that sink in.
₹12,000+ Cr assets. 5 employees.
Even your local chai tapri has more staff.
So ask yourself: Is this efficiency… or just passive existence?
4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Confuse Everyone
(Quarterly Results detected → Q3 FY26 → Annualisation uses average method, not single quarter)