Sanco Trans profit surges to ₹10 cr, but land gain flatters the numbers
FY26 total comprehensive income jumped nearly seven-fold, but a ₹3.06 cr one-off gain is a big part of the story. Revenue grew 32%.
What's new
- FY26 total comprehensive income surged to ₹10.02 cr from ₹1.53 cr.
- Revenue from operations grew 32% to ₹139.04 cr.
- Board recommended a dividend of ₹4.50 per share.
Why this matters
The headline profit number is inflated by a one-time gain, but the core logistics business still grew. The profit-before-tax rise excluding the exceptionals shows the underlying momentum is real, not just a land-payment windfall.
What we're watching
- Whether the 32% revenue growth rate holds in FY27.
- How profit trends after the one-off gain rolls off.
- Final dividend payout after shareholder approval.
The full read
Sanco Trans posted a ₹10.02 crore profit for FY26. That's nearly seven times the ₹1.53 crore from the year before. Revenue from its logistics operations climbed 32% to ₹139.04 crore. The bottom line got a ₹3.06 crore lift from a one-off gain tied to interest on enhanced land-compensation payouts. Strip that out, and profit before tax still rose sharply. The core business is growing. For a nano-cap, these swings are amplified. The board is paying out a ₹4.50 per share dividend. The test for FY27 is whether revenue growth holds once the land gain rolls off.
Questions answered
- What was the main driver of Sanco Trans's profit growth?
- The profit jump was driven by a 32% revenue increase to ₹139.04 crore, combined with a ₹3.06 crore exceptional gain from interest on enhanced land-compensation payouts.
- How large was the one-time gain compared to total profit?
- The exceptional gain was ₹3.06 crore, accounting for about 31% of the ₹10.02 crore total comprehensive income.
- What did the board decide about dividends?
- The board recommended a dividend of ₹4.50 per equity share for FY26, subject to shareholder approval at the annual general meeting.
- Did the core business perform well without the one-off item?
- Yes. Profit before tax rose sharply even after excluding the exceptional gain, pointing to strong growth in the core logistics operations.