Sandhar FY26: Consolidated revenue up 25% but one-time gains inflate growth
Standalone revenue grew just 3%, dividend unchanged at ₹4, and telematics exploration is a repeat disclosure.
— 2 earlier stories on Sandhar Technologies Ltd. →What's new
- Consolidated revenue grew 25% YoY, including one-time gains from business transfers and asset sales.
- Standalone revenue rose only 3%, indicating muted organic performance.
- Final dividend maintained at ₹4 per share; internal auditors re-appointed.
- Board reiterated vehicle telematics exploration, already disclosed in prior meetings.
Why it matters
The headline 25% consolidated growth is misleading—one-time items do the heavy lifting. With standalone expansion of just 3%, the underlying business is barely growing. The unchanged dividend and routine re-appointments suggest no urgency to signal confidence or change. Investors need to focus on organic trends next quarter.
What we're watching
- Q1 FY27 standalone performance, stripping out one-time items.
- Any concrete telematics deals or partnerships.
- Whether margin trends improve without asset-sale support.
The full read
Sandhar's FY26 annual results are a case of headline versus reality. Consolidated revenue jumped 25%, but the company itself attributes the boost to one-time gains from business transfers and asset sales. Strip those out, and standalone revenue—the true measure of operational health—rose just 3%. The board kept the final dividend at ₹4 a share, matching last year's payout, and secured an unmodified audit opinion. There was nothing new in the telematics update, which repeats exploration already flagged. For a company that trades on auto-sector cyclicality and EV narratives, a 3% organic growth rate and a static dividend offer little fresh direction. The filing is what it is: a routine, unsurprising periodic update.