Udayshivakumar Infra Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹47 Cr Revenue, ₹4.79 Cr Loss, Negative ROCE & 0.73x Book: Is This a Turnaround or a Construction Site Without Cement?
1. At a Glance – The Smallcap That Lost Its Hard Hat
At a market cap of just ₹117 crore and a current price of ₹21.2, Udayshivakumar Infra Ltd looks like a tiny civil contractor trying to build highways while standing on a financial pothole. The stock is down nearly 49% in one year and about 14% in the last 3 months. ROCE is a sad -0.92%, ROE is -5.07%, and the company just reported a Q3 FY26 net loss of ₹4.79 crore on revenue of ₹47.41 crore.
Price-to-book? A humble 0.73x. Sounds cheap, right? Except earnings are negative. EPS for the latest quarter is -₹0.87.
Debt stands at ₹63 crore, interest coverage is -1.55, and operating margin is negative. Meanwhile, working capital days have ballooned to 74 days.
So here we are: a civil construction player with a shrinking profitability profile, negative cash flows, and an order book history that once looked promising.
Is this a temporary mudslide… or a structural crack in the foundation? Let’s dig.
2. Introduction – From High Altitude Roads to High Altitude Losses
Udayshivakumar Infra Ltd (USIL) was incorporated in 1995. It builds roads, bridges, canals, irrigation projects, buildings — basically the things governments love to tender and contractors love to bid for.
The company is ISO certified (9001, 14001, 45001), which means processes are documented. Unfortunately, losses are also documented.
It primarily operates in Karnataka and executes government projects including National Highways and irrigation works. It even raised ₹66 crore via IPO in March 2023. Freshly listed. Fresh capital. Fresh hopes.
Fast forward to FY26 Q3: revenue of ₹47 crore, EBITDA negative, PAT negative, and margins swinging like a monsoon forecast.
In FY24, revenue shot up to ₹577 crore. In FY25, it crashed to ₹289 crore. TTM stands at ₹276 crore. That’s not volatility. That’s a financial rollercoaster.
And here’s the twist — the company has completed 30 projects worth ₹684 crore historically and had ongoing projects of ₹853 crore as of Dec 2022. But today? Losses.
So what exactly is happening? Execution issues? Cost overruns? Working capital stress? Or just construction business being… construction business?
Let’s unpack.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
USIL is basically a civil construction contractor with side hobbies.
Core activities:
High altitude road projects
Canal and irrigation projects
Bridge construction
Building projects
Ready Mix Concrete manufacturing
Revenue breakup FY23:
71% contracts
15% services
14% manufactured products
So they bid for government infrastructure tenders. If they win, they execute. If they execute efficiently, they earn. If they don’t… well… Q3 FY26 happens.
They also enter joint ventures for larger EPC-mode projects. For example:
JV project awarded by NHAI worth ₹175 crore
NH project LOA worth ₹29.53 crore
Water supply JV worth ₹119.78 crore
Sounds impressive, right?
But here’s the catch with EPC contracts: Margins are thin. Payment cycles are slow. Working capital is king.
If cement prices rise or bitumen spikes or receivables delay… profit evaporates.
And judging by inventory days hitting 365 days in FY25… something is clogging the pipeline.
If this were a Bollywood movie, this is the point where the contractor realizes the government payment is “under process.”
Question for you: In construction, is order book king… or cash flow king?
4. Financials Overview – The Numbers Don’t Lie (But They Do Cry)