Glittek Granites posts ₹39 lakh loss as revenue collapses to ₹4.68 lakhs
Annual results confirm near-zero operating business; market price of ~₹44.78 far above open offer of ₹12.65, pricing in a turnaround that financials don't support.
What's new
- Revenue collapsed to ₹4.68 lakhs from ₹203.63 lakhs as old inventory sold at scrap value.
- Net loss of ₹39.45 lakhs vs profit of ₹685.86 lakhs, which included prior-year asset sales.
- Market price of ~₹44.78 far exceeds open offer of ₹12.65, implying turnaround hopes.
Why it matters
These results confirm that Glittek Granites is effectively a shell without an operating business. The open offer at ₹12.65 looks deeply inadequate against the market price, but the financials offer no rationale for the premium. Investors are betting on a control premium or a turnaround that the company's own audited accounts do not support.
What we're watching
- Whether the change-of-control process proceeds and if the open offer gets revised.
- Any clarity on the company's post-acquisition business plan from the acquirer.
- The auditor's emphasis on delayed MSME payments: potential future liabilities.
The full read
Glittek Granites reported its FY26 audited results, and they paint a stark picture. Revenue has virtually dried up to just ₹4.68 lakhs from ₹203.63 lakhs a year ago, as the company sold stagnant inventory at scrap value. Net income swung from a profit of ₹685.86 lakhs (boosted by prior-year asset sales) to a loss of ₹39.45 lakhs. The balance sheet shows negative other equity of ₹234.71 lakhs, meaning accumulated losses have eroded shareholder funds. Meanwhile, the stock trades at around ₹44.78, far above the open offer price of ₹12.65 per share in the ongoing change-of-control transaction. The market appears to be pricing in a revival or a control premium, but these audited numbers offer no evidence of a turnaround. The auditor's unmodified opinion includes an emphasis on non-provision of interest on delayed MSME payments, adding a governance layer. For investors, this filing crystallises the company's distressed state: the operating business is near-zero, and the gap between market price and open offer is a bet on something the financials don't show.