Tipsheet
What matters at India’s listed companies
Earnings · Electronics

Mirc Electronics posts FY26 results; net loss includes one-time charges

Backward-looking annual numbers show restructuring costs, inventory write-downs, and asset sale gains; auditors appointed.

2 earlier stories on Mirc Electronics Ltd.
Mkt cap₹1,453 cr
ROE0.00%
Debt / eq.0.81
FY26 Annual results for year ended March 31, 2026

What's new

  • Board approved audited Q4 and full-year results for FY26.
  • Net loss includes exceptional items: restructuring, inventory write-downs, asset sale gains.
  • Statutory auditors appointed during the meeting.

Why this matters

The results are routine and backward-looking, as expected by the market. The exceptional items cloud the underlying performance, but the filing offers no new forward-looking guidance. The key question remains whether operational profitability can recover without one-off adjustments.

What we're watching

  • Next quarter's performance absent exceptional items.
  • Any management commentary on restructuring progress.
  • Market reaction to the auditor change.

The full read

Mirc Electronics' audited FY26 results are a routine regulatory requirement — anticipated and backward-looking. The board approved numbers that include a significant net loss after exceptional items such as restructuring costs, inventory write-downs, and gains on asset sales. Statutory auditors were also appointed. While the one-time charges distort the picture, the filing adds no new information beyond what was already priced in. For an investor, the real story is not the loss but whether the company can generate sustainable earnings absent these adjustments.

Primary source BSE · NSE · Tijori

An independent reading of the company's own disclosure — the primary filing above is the final word.

  1. Today · 8:11 PM IST Mirc Electronics posts FY26 results; net loss includes one-time charges
  2. 4d ago Mirc Electronics posts heavy annual loss on restructuring charges
  3. 4d ago Mirc Electronics posts net loss in FY26, hit by restructuring and write-downs