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Vishnu Prakash R Punglia Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹177 Cr Sales, ₹30 Cr Loss, ₹717 Cr Debt & 42% Promoter Pledge — Infrastructure Star or Working Capital Trap?


1. At a Glance – The Rollercoaster Nobody Ordered

₹45 stock.
₹565 Cr market cap.
₹1,155 Cr TTM sales.
₹717 Cr debt.
Q3 PAT: –₹30 Cr.
Promoter pledge: 42.4%.
Return in 1 year: –75%.

Welcome to the dramatic universe of Vishnu Prakash R Punglia Ltd — a company that builds water pipelines, rail tracks, roads… and occasionally, investor heartbreak.

On paper, this is a serious infrastructure player with a ₹5,000+ Cr order book. In reality? Q3 FY26 numbers show ₹177 Cr revenue and a net loss of ₹30 Cr. Operating margins turned negative. Interest coverage is just 1.08. Debtor days are 217. Inventory days? A breathtaking 941.

The stock trades at 0.72x book value. Sounds cheap? Maybe. But when promoter holding falls from 67.8% to 52.6% and 42% of that is pledged, cheap starts looking like “stress sale.”

So what is this company? A temporarily squeezed EPC contractor waiting for government payments? Or a working capital black hole disguised as an order book machine?

Let’s investigate.


2. Introduction – Infrastructure, But Make It Stressful

Incorporated in 1986, Vishnu Prakash R Punglia Ltd (VPRPL) positions itself as one of India’s fastest-growing infrastructure development companies.

They operate across:

  • 9 states
  • 1 Union Territory
  • Multiple government departments
  • Central and state contracts

Core focus? Water supply projects. That’s 76% of H1 FY25 revenue mix.

They’ve completed over 75 water supply projects. They are an “AA” class contractor with Rajasthan PHED. They have 500+ construction equipment in-house.

Sounds impressive.

But here’s the twist.

Infrastructure is glamorous in press releases and brutal in cash flows.

Government projects mean:

  • Delayed payments
  • High receivables
  • Mobilization expenses
  • Litigation risk
  • Bank guarantees

And in VPRPL’s case, we also have:

  • Contract termination (North Western Railway)
  • ₹99.64 million exceptional loss in Q3 FY26
  • Credit rating downgrade to CARE BBB-
  • Promoter stake sale
  • Promoter loans infused back

This is not a boring EPC company. This is a full Netflix series.

Question: Are we looking at a turnaround-in-progress or a company constantly refinancing its own stress?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

They build things for governments.

1️ Water Supply Projects (76%)

Pipelines, water tanks, reservoirs, treatment plants, irrigation tunnels.

They ride on schemes like Jal Jeevan. Problem? Payments are slow. Management literally admitted sector-wide liquidity squeeze.

Water is life. But apparently, it’s not cash flow.

2️ Railways (13%)

Railway tracks, over-bridges, platforms, station redevelopment.

Railway order book share has increased to 33% as per management commentary. Why?

Because railway payments are faster.

Translation: “We like clients who actually pay.”

3️ Roads (6%)

State highways, flyovers, EPC-based road construction.

4️ Irrigation (5%)

Canals, reservoirs, pressurized piping systems.

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