1) At a Glance – Buttered Popcorn Profits or Burnt Toast?
₹2,518 Cr market cap. ₹668 stock price. 64x P/E. 1.74x book. ROCE of 0.22%. ROE of 3.75%.
And yet — Q3 FY26 revenue at ₹407.47 Cr (up 95.6% YoY), PAT at ₹8.06 Cr (up 19.6% YoY), and EPS of ₹2.14.
Welcome to Sundrop Brands Ltd, formerly known as Agro Tech Foods.
Three-month return? -11.6%.
One-year return? -16.6%.
Five-year return? -4.9%.
The stock chart looks like it went on a crash diet.
But wait — something is cooking.
Gross margin expanded by 330 bps in Q3. EBITDA jumped 80% (as per management commentary). E-commerce up 31%. Advertising up 22%.
Also:
- Del Monte acquisition completed.
- Promoter stake reshuffle.
- ESOP cancellations.
- Name change.
- New Chairperson incoming April 2026.
This isn’t just a quarter. It’s a corporate soap opera with ketchup stains.
So the big question:
Is this a turnaround story in the making…
Or a 64x multiple waiting for reality to knock?
Let’s open the packet.
2) Introduction – From Edible Oil Uncle to Branded Foods Player
Once upon a time, this was primarily an edible oil company.
Then edible oils did what edible oils do — behave like commodities with mood swings.
Margins fluctuated. Volumes dipped. Revenue stagnated.
So management decided:
“Why fight in a low-margin oil war when you can sell popcorn at ₹10 and peanut butter at premium?”
Thus began the pivot.
Today the business mix looks different:
- Foods business: 55% in FY24 (vs 44% in FY22)
- Staples: 45% in FY24 (vs 56% in FY22)
They are clearly moving away from pure oil exposure and toward higher-margin FMCG categories like:
- ACT II popcorn
- Sundrop peanut butter
- Del Monte ketchup, pasta, olive oil
Then in November 2024, they acquired Del Monte Foods for ₹1,300 Cr via share swap.
Translation: “Let’s build a food platform.”
But here’s the twist.
Despite all this brand talk, the company’s OPM is just 2.56% (TTM).
You read that right.
A branded FMCG company with 2.5% operating margin.
Are we in the edible oil business or a discount kirana store?
Let’s decode the machine.
3) Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let me explain like you’re a smart but lazy investor.
1. Foods Business (55%)
This is the shiny side.
- ACT II Popcorn (Ready-to-Cook + Ready-to-Eat)
- Peanut Butter
- Chocolates
- Breakfast cereals
- Spreads & dips
Popcorn volume grew 12% in Q3.
RTE popcorn grew 36%.
They dominate the ₹10 price point. And that ₹10 moat? That’s their pride.
E-commerce is 25% of peanut butter sales.
Sounds modern, right?
But peanut butter is “a concern