Urja Global reports profit as auditor flags ₹46 cr in undocumented assets
The auditor qualified its opinion over missing evidence for mining investments, coinciding with a sudden management overhaul.
— 1 earlier story on Urja Global Ltd. →What's new with Urja Global Ltd.
- Standalone net profit grew to ₹1.91 cr from ₹1.44 cr on ₹58.53 cr revenue.
- Auditor qualified the report due to missing proof for ₹46.35 cr in investments and loans.
- Company saw a leadership shakeup, including the resignation of the CFO and CS.
Why this matters for Urja Global Ltd.
A clean profit figure means little when the auditor cannot vouch for the bulk of the company's assets. The combination of an audit qualification on material balances and a simultaneous exit of the CFO and CS suggests deep internal control issues that demand immediate scrutiny.
What we're watching
- Any clarification from the board regarding the missing documentation.
- How the new CEO, Amitav Roy, addresses the audit qualification.
- Potential regulatory inquiries into the unverified mining investments.
The full read
Urja Global posted a marginal increase in annual profit to ₹1.91 crore for FY26, but the numbers come with a significant asterisk.
The auditor issued a qualified opinion. It explicitly noted that it lacked documentation for ₹46.35 crore in mining project investments and loans, alongside a failure to reverse ₹34.25 lakh in GST input tax credits. The audit issues emerged during a management exodus, as both the CFO and company secretary stepped down while the company appointed Amitav Roy as the new CEO. For a micro-cap entity with a ₹602 crore valuation, a question mark hanging over ₹46 crore in assets is not a routine audit hurdle. The missing evidence for these projects represents roughly 7% of the company's total market cap, creating a risk profile that investors simply cannot ignore. The next test is whether the new leadership can substantiate these balances or if they represent a permanent, unrecoverable impairment.