Web Research
Web Research
Gravita's FY26 accounts are a pre-copper baseline: the ₹565–800 Cr RMIL acquisition (India's oldest copper manufacturer, est. 1946) closed on 12th March 2026 (Q4 FY2026), meaning roughly ₹1,000 Cr of incremental annual revenue begins consolidating only from Q1 FY27 — entirely absent from the reported FY26 numbers. The more concerning web revelation is a sharp working-capital stretch (cash conversion cycle up 47 days to 139 days in FY26) and previously unreported qualified standalone audit opinions for FY24 and FY25 related to ESOP accounting — neither visible in standard financial summaries — raising execution-risk questions as the company enters its most ambitious capital deployment phase since listing.
Price (₹)
Market Cap (₹ Cr)
Avg Analyst Target (₹)
▲ 18.4 % upside
Analyst Buy Ratings
What Matters Most
1. RMIL Acquisition: FY26 Is a Pre-Copper Baseline
Gravita acquired 99.44% of Rashtriya Metal Industries Limited (RMIL) on 12th March 2026 (Q4 FY2026) — completing in the final weeks of the fiscal year with no material copper revenue in FY2026 financials — so the ₹4,265 Cr FY26 revenue is effectively pre-RMIL. RMIL, India's oldest copper manufacturer (incorporated 1946), generated an estimated ₹1,000–1,100 Cr revenue from its Sarigam (Gujarat) facility making brass strips, coils, and cups. This acquisition adds a fourth major recycling metal and begins consolidating from Q1 FY27 onward.
There is a notable price discrepancy in public reporting: CNBCTV18 cited the term sheet value at ₹565 Cr while Economic Times reported ₹800 Cr. The ₹565 Cr likely reflects equity acquisition cost; ₹800 Cr is enterprise value including assumed debt. Separately, Gravita announced a greenfield copper recycling plant at Mandvi, Gujarat (₹160 Cr capex, 29,400 MTPA, operations in 12 months from May 2026). The combined copper buildout — RMIL manufacturing acquisition plus greenfield recycling — represents a fundamental shift from a lead-dominant recycler toward a diversified metals platform.
Sources: CNBCTV18 | Economic Times | BSE copper plant filing
2. Q4 FY26: Record Revenue, Compressed Margins
Q4 FY26 posted the highest quarterly revenue in company history (₹1,172.76 Cr, +13.1% YoY) but EBITDA fell 5.1% YoY to ₹121.37 Cr and net profit fell 3.4% YoY to ₹91.88 Cr — the first year-on-year profit decline in at least eight quarters. EBITDA margin compressed from approximately 12.3% in Q4 FY25 to 10.4% in Q4 FY26. Raw materials consumed ₹891.69 Cr (76.0% of revenue) in Q4 FY26, up from the year-ago ratio.
For the full FY26 year, operating profit grew 32.6% to ₹435 Cr (OPM improved to 10.2% from 8.5% in FY25), so the quarterly margin compression is a Q4-specific deterioration rather than a full-year trend. The working capital data (finding 3 below) suggests inventory pre-build ahead of new capacity commissioning is a contributing factor.
Sources: Moneycontrol Q4 FY26 | MarketsMojo analysis
3. Working Capital Explosion: CCC Jumps 47 Days in One Year
The cash conversion cycle stretched from 92 days (FY25) to 139 days (FY26) — the largest single-year working capital deterioration in Gravita's 12-year public history. Inventory days rose from 71 to 109; debtor days from 26 to 37. ROCE fell from 22% to 17%. Free cash flow turned negative at -₹46 Cr (vs. +₹175 Cr in FY25). CFO as a percentage of operating profit fell from 101% to 54%.
The most likely explanation is inventory pre-build to feed the Mundra capacity expansion (capacity more than doubled to 145,100 MTPA in February 2026) and elevated receivables as new geographies ramp up. If working capital normalises post-commissioning, ROCE should recover. If it persists into FY27, it signals structural deterioration as the company scales into copper and aluminium where working capital terms differ from legacy lead.
Sources: Screener.in consolidated
4. Qualified Standalone Audit Opinions: FY24 and FY25
Walker Chandiok and Co LLP (Grant Thornton affiliate) issued qualified opinions on Gravita's standalone financial statements for both FY24 (ended March 31, 2024) and FY25 (ended March 31, 2025). The FY24 qualification: employee benefit expenses were understated by ₹20.67 Cr, overstating profit before tax by the same amount due to incorrect accounting for Employee Welfare Trust shares under Ind AS 102. The FY25 opinion described a continued "material weakness." Interim FY26 quarterly reviews (Q1–Q3) returned clean conclusions, suggesting the issue was corrected.
The qualification is standalone-only (not consolidated). The quantum — ₹20.67 Cr against ₹378 Cr consolidated PAT — is not material to the investment thesis. However, the same auditor flagging the same issue for two consecutive years before correction is a governance signal. The FY26 annual standalone audit (just filed May 7, 2026) should be verified for any continuation.
Sources: India Infoline auditor report
5. Capacity Surge: Lead Volume Set to Jump ~37% by Q1 FY27
Two concurrent lead capacity additions will add approximately 125,000 MTPA: Mundra plant doubled from 64,800 to 145,100 MTPA (completed February 25, 2026) and Phagi (Jaipur) adding 45,000 MTPA by June 2026 for ₹30 Cr. Management has guided 60–70% utilisation within 1–2 quarters of commissioning, implying 25–30% volume growth in lead alone achievable in FY27. Both plants are MCX-empanelled for lead futures contracts, validating product purity (greater than 99.98% purity standard).
Sources: BSE Phagi expansion filing | Filingreader Mundra press release | Batteries International
6. Li-Ion Battery Recycling: First-Mover in India's Formal Sector
Gravita officially commenced lithium-ion battery recycling operations at Mundra on January 23, 2026 (BSE Regulation 30 filing). Initial capacity is 6,000 MTPA — pilot scale. India's EV fleet is growing rapidly, making lithium-ion battery recycling a multi-billion-rupee market by FY29-30. Revenue contribution in FY27 is unlikely to be significant, but FY28-FY30 optionality on lithium, cobalt, and nickel recovery is meaningful.
Sources: BSE Reg 30 Li-ion filing
7. Analyst Consensus: 9/9 Buy, Zero Sells — but DCF Models Disagree
As of May 8, 2026: 9/9 analysts covering Gravita on Investing.com rate it Buy with an average target of ₹2,087 (+18.4% from ₹1,763). ICICI Securities is most bullish at ₹2,670 (+51.4%); Motilal Oswal targets ₹2,300. B&K Securities initiated Buy in January 2026; JM Financial initiated in March 2026.
The contrarian view: Alpha Spread's DCF places intrinsic value at ₹1,238 (implying 31% overvaluation at then-current prices) while ValueInvesting.io's Peter Lynch model puts fair value at ₹1,311. The stock trades at 34.3x P/E vs. a 5-year average of 23.3x — a 47% premium to its own history. The divergence reflects differing growth assumptions: sell-side models price in RMIL accretion and capacity ramp; DCF models anchor to trailing returns. PEG ratio from public sources is 0.82 (near median), partially justifying the premium.
8. Promoter Selling and Founder Death
Promoter holding declined 10.6 percentage points over three years (66.48% in June 2023 to 55.88% in March 2026). Largest event: Rajat Agrawal sold 25 lakh shares at ₹1,991.52/share (₹497.88 Cr) in a block deal on May 23–26, 2025. In May 2023, Agrawal also sold 32 lakh shares at approximately ₹565/share (₹180.80 Cr) to Nomura affiliates. Additionally, co-founder Dr. Mahaveer Prasad Agarwal — the original Chairman — passed away March 10, 2026 (disclosed per Regulation 30). Zero promoter pledging is confirmed.
The promoter retains 55.88% — above the SEBI minimum — and holding has been stable for four consecutive quarters since June 2025, suggesting the sell-down is complete. No promoter buy was found in any source. The timing of both block deals at prices well above current levels (₹565 in 2023 adjusted for splits; ₹1,991 in May 2025 vs. current ₹1,763) suggests value realisation at elevated multiples rather than a fundamental concern.
Sources: InsiderScreener | ET block deal May 2023
9. ICRA AA- Stable + QIP Fully Deployed with Zero Deviations
ICRA maintained its AA- Stable rating through the RMIL announcement. The monitoring report filed May 7, 2026 confirms all ₹909.47 Cr of FY25 QIP net proceeds were fully utilised by March 31, 2026 with no deviation: ₹530 Cr repaid borrowings, ₹250 Cr working capital, ₹201 Cr general corporate purposes. Interest expense fell from ₹46 Cr (FY25) to ₹25 Cr (FY26), directly reflecting the debt repayment.
Sources: BSE ICRA monitoring report
10. European ESG Loan and Contingent Liabilities
Gravita Netherlands BV (80% owned, Romania waste-tyre plant) secured a €34 million ESG-linked long-term loan guaranteed by Gravita India, enabling the European subsidiary to self-finance capex and working capital. On the risk side: (1) customs duty demand of ₹70.10 Cr (plus interest and penalties) for pre-import conditions from 2017-2019 — not provisioned, management believes case is strong; (2) income-tax demand of ₹4.1 Cr (April 2026). These are contingent liabilities that could crystallise.
Sources: CNBCTV18 ESG loan
Recent News Timeline
What the Specialists Asked
Governance and People Signals
Promoter holding declined 10.6 percentage points from June 2023 to June 2025, then stabilised at 55.88% for four consecutive quarters through March 2026. Zero promoter pledging confirmed throughout. The step-down from 59.27% to 55.88% in June 2025 coincides with Rajat Agrawal's ₹497.88 Cr block deal. The stabilisation suggests the planned sell-down phase is complete.
Board and Management
Board average tenure: 1.7 years — very short, reflecting a 2024-2025 refresh. Rajat Agrawal's 33.6-year tenure anchors continuity. CEO Malhotra's compensation (₹47.36 Mn, 81% performance-linked) is confirmed in line with Indian market benchmarks ($423K average). The formal separation of Chairman and CEO roles in October 2024 is a governance improvement, although Rajat holds the combined "Chairman cum Managing Director" title, retaining MD authority.
Employee sentiment (multi-platform survey data): AmbitionBox 4.4/5 (405 reviews), Glassdoor 3.9/5 (44 reviews), Indeed 3.6/5 (27 reviews). Plant-level reviews on Indeed surface concerns about management-centric culture and work-life balance. The divergence between AmbitionBox (likely HQ-biased) and Indeed (more plant-level reviews) may reflect genuine HQ-vs-operations culture gap rather than a systemic issue.
Industry Context
India's Recycling Formalisation Wave
India's Battery Waste Management Rules (BWMR) 2022 mandating EPR compliance, combined with GST reverse-charge on scrap and MCX futures empanelment requirements, are structurally advantaging the organised sector. The formal lead recycling market estimate growing from ₹4,800 Cr (FY25) to ₹10,400 Cr (FY26) — if directionally correct — implies a market more than doubling in one year. Even at a fraction of this growth rate, the organised-vs-informal share shift creates a multi-year volume tailwind for Gravita, which controls the largest organised processing footprint.
Capacity vs. Demand Balance
India's secondary lead market growth is tied to automotive lead-acid battery replacement cycles. EV transition for two-wheelers (the largest battery volume category) is slower than for passenger cars, meaning lead acid battery scrap will grow for at least 5–7 more years before EVs meaningfully reduce supply. Gravita's ~125,000 MTPA incremental capacity (Mundra +80,300 MTPA + Phagi 45,000 MTPA) appears well-timed to absorb growing formal-sector supply.
Copper Recycling: New Market, New Dynamics
India's copper recycling market is smaller and more fragmented than lead recycling. RMIL's Sarigam plant serves domestic manufacturers of electrical and automotive components — downstream manufacturing economics, not commodity-spread recycling. Gravita's track record in aluminium (entered FY2016, now 8.1% of revenue but only 1.4% of operating profit after 10 years) suggests copper will take a long time to become meaningfully profitable at the group level.
The 10-year revenue CAGR of 26% and PAT CAGR of 54% confirm Gravita as a sustained compounder. The FY2019 dip (OPM 5%) and FY2023 dip (OPM 7%) are the two episodes that break the margin expansion narrative — both preceded strong recoveries. The FY2026 ROCE of 17% vs. 32% peak in FY2023 is the current concern: capital is being deployed faster than it is being put to work. Whether the RMIL/copper/li-ion investments deliver returns that justify the current valuation (34.3x P/E) is the central question for the next two years.
All monetary figures are in Indian Rupees (₹). Financial data shown in Crore (₹ Cr) where 1 Crore = 10 million rupees.