Net Pix swings to profit, but revenue is still just ₹56.67 lakh
The nano-cap reported a ₹0.39 lakh net profit for FY26, reversing a ₹3.77 lakh loss, but the scale remains negligible.
What's new
- Net Pix reported a net profit of ₹0.39 lakh for FY26, versus a net loss of ₹3.77 lakh in FY25.
- Revenue rose to ₹56.67 lakh from ₹47.15 lakh in the prior period.
- The filing includes the routine appointment of an internal auditor.
Why this matters
This is a company making less than ₹57 lakh in annual revenue. The return to profit is welcome, but the numbers are so small they barely register against a ₹10 crore market valuation. The filing is a compliance exercise, not a business catalyst.
What we're watching
- Whether revenue crosses into crore territory to give the profit figure any weight.
- Any shift from this nano-cap status to a scale where results matter.
- Management's plan to grow from a sub-₹60 lakh revenue base.
The full read
Net Pix Shorts Digital Media is a nano-cap with a market value of ₹10 crore and FY26 revenue of ₹56.67 lakh. In that context, a net profit of ₹0.39 lakh is less a turnaround than a rounding error. The company did reverse a ₹3.77 lakh loss, and revenue grew about 20% from ₹47.15 lakh, but the scale is so far from material that the filing is essentially a compliance check. The numbers are too small to alter expectations or signal a change in the underlying business. An internal auditor was appointed, which is standard.
Questions answered
- What was the key change in Net Pix's FY26 results?
- The company posted a net profit of ₹0.39 lakh, swinging from a net loss of ₹3.77 lakh in FY25. The profit is tiny, representing less than 0.1% of its ₹10 crore market cap.
- How did revenue perform?
- Revenue rose to ₹56.67 lakh from ₹47.15 lakh, a growth of about 20%. The absolute scale remains extremely small for a publicly listed entity.
- Is there any other news in the filing?
- The filing includes the routine appointment of an internal auditor. There is no strategic commentary, guidance, or other material disclosure.
- Do these numbers justify the company's market value?
- A ₹10 crore market cap values the company at over 17 times its current annual revenue. The profit figure alone is negligible. The valuation is based on potential, not current performance.