Cranex lends ₹3 cr—almost 5% of its market cap—to a non-group entity
The nano-cap crane maker is putting cash to work at 9%, secured against listed equity, but the loan is a financial transaction, not a business catalyst.
What's new
- Cranex has entered a binding loan agreement to lend up to ₹3 cr to Kalyan Capitals.
- The loan is secured against listed equity shares and carries 9% interest.
- The deployment equals 4.7% of the company's ₹64 cr market cap.
Why it matters
For a nano-cap manufacturer, diverting ₹3 cr—roughly 4.7% of its market value—into a loan rather than working capital or expansion raises questions about cash allocation. The absence of a promoter link suggests arms-length, but the counterparty's credit and collateral quality are now relevant.
What we're watching
- Utilisation of loan proceeds by Kalyan Capitals.
- Any impact on Cranex's liquidity for core operations.
- Whether this signals a shift towards treasury income.
The full read
Cranex, a nano-cap crane maker, is lending up to ₹3 crore to Kalyan Capitals at 9% per annum, secured against listed equity. The amount is almost 5% of Cranex's ₹64 crore market cap. While the loan is arms-length—no promoter connection—it is a material diversion of cash from a company that likely needs capital for its manufacturing business. The 9% return is decent, but the risk lies in reduced liquidity for working capital or expansion. For a stock that trades thinly, this financial transaction may be read as a sign that management sees better returns outside its core business.