📉 The Financial Deep Dive
Manugraph India Limited disclosed its unaudited financial results for the quarter and nine months ended December 31, 2025, revealing a mixed performance heavily influenced by exceptional items.
The Numbers:
Q3 FY26 Performance:
- Revenue from operations climbed 34.66% year-on-year to ₹6,355.07 lakhs from ₹4,719.20 lakhs in Q3 FY25.
- Total expenses rose 33.21% to ₹5,934.82 lakhs.
- Profit before exceptional items and tax (PBT) increased substantially by 63.18% to ₹431.81 lakhs.
- However, the company registered a net loss of ₹177.32 lakhs for the quarter, a sharp reversal from a net profit of ₹272.93 lakhs in the same period last year.
- Basic & Diluted Earnings Per Share (EPS) stood at (₹1.63), down from ₹4.62 in Q3 FY25.
Nine Months Ended FY26 Performance (9M FY26):
- Revenue from operations saw a significant jump of 53.47% year-on-year to ₹18,908.00 lakhs, up from ₹12,320.04 lakhs in 9M FY25.
- Total expenses increased by 57.37% to ₹17,452.47 lakhs.
- Profit before exceptional items and tax (PBT) grew by 19.03% to ₹1,467.14 lakhs.
- Crucially, the net profit for the nine-month period turned positive at ₹1,124.81 lakhs, a marked turnaround from a net loss of ₹0.95 lakhs in 9M FY25.
- Basic & Diluted EPS for the nine months was ₹4.62, a positive swing from (₹0.04) in 9M FY25.
The Quality:
The quarterly performance was overshadowed by a net loss driven by exceptional items totaling ₹-208.95 lakhs. This included a significant gain of ₹218.75 lakhs from the sale of non-current assets held for sale, partially offset by employee compensation expenses. While the operational profit before exceptional items showed strength, the net result highlights the impact of one-off events.
For the nine-month period, the turnaround in net profit was also heavily influenced by exceptional items. In 9M FY26, net exceptional items were ₹-144.10 lakhs (gain on asset sale ₹218.75 lakhs minus employee compensation ₹74.65 lakhs). This contrasts sharply with 9M FY25, where exceptional items amounted to ₹1,156.11 lakhs, solely due to employee compensation costs. The shift from a large employee compensation expense to a net gain from asset sale significantly boosted the nine-month net profit.
Expenses grew faster than revenue in the nine-month period (57.37% vs 53.47%), indicating potential pressure on operational efficiencies.
Risks & Outlook:
The company's profitability, particularly at the net profit level, appears highly sensitive to exceptional items, such as gains from asset sales and employee compensation costs. The lack of forward-looking guidance from the management makes it challenging to assess the sustainability of the current performance trends.
Investors should closely monitor the operational performance in upcoming quarters to ascertain if the growth momentum can translate into consistent profitability without relying on one-off gains. The differential growth rates between revenue and expenses in the nine-month period also warrant attention for potential margin impact.