Ceenik Exports burns ₹9 cr on derivatives as core business vanishes
The company shuttered its garment unit last April and is pivoting to proprietary trading. A net loss of ₹9.41 cr wipes out 11% of its market cap.
What's new
- Annual net loss widened to ₹9.41 cr from ₹5.01 cr.
- Derivatives trading losses hit ₹9.68 cr, overshadowing revenue.
- Company discontinued garment operations and is now pivoting to derivatives and realty.
Why it matters
Ceenik is effectively exiting its legacy business to chase volatile market returns. With derivative losses already exceeding the company's annual revenue base, this pivot places the firm's remaining capital at significant risk.
What we're watching
- Whether the new object clause succeeds in stabilizing the bottom line.
- Sustainability of the firm's remaining cash reserves.
- Director-level oversight of the new derivative-heavy mandate.
The full read
Ceenik Exports ended FY26 in the red, posting a net loss of ₹9.41 crore. The result is a sharp deterioration from the ₹5.01 crore loss seen in the prior year. The firm's pivot is now complete: it shuttered its garment division in April 2025 and is transitioning its primary object clause to focus on real estate and proprietary derivatives trading. This move has proved costly. Derivative bets alone caused a loss of ₹9.68 crore, nearly nullifying the company's operating ability. Realty and investment income, meanwhile, dropped to a mere ₹2.16 crore, down from ₹16.02 crore in the previous year. For a company with an ₹83 crore market capitalization, an annual loss of this scale hits shareholders hard. The firm has shed its manufacturing identity only to tie its future to the high-risk performance of derivative markets. What changes from here is whether this new focus produces a floor for the company's cash position or accelerates the current decline.