Vandan Foods revenue doubles to ₹259 cr, but profits crater
Operating costs and debt service eroded the bottom line in FY26, turning a full-year profit into a second-half loss.
— 1 earlier story on Vandan Foods Ltd. →What's new
- Annual revenue surged to ₹259.6 cr from the prior year.
- Higher raw material and finance costs pushed the company to a ₹2.86 cr loss in the second half.
- Balance sheet expansion is evident through a sharp rise in borrowings and trade payables.
Why it matters
Revenue growth is failing to convert into earnings. For a business of this size, the reliance on debt and rising payables to scale operations poses a clear risk if input costs remain elevated.
What we're watching
- Whether the company can stabilize raw material costs in the coming quarters.
- Debt maturity profiles and the sustainability of current borrowing levels.
- Signs of potential cash-flow strain resulting from ballooning trade payables.
The full read
Vandan Foods managed a massive top-line expansion in FY26, with revenue more than doubling to ₹259.6 crore. The scale-up came at a high cost, however. Net profit for the year collapsed to ₹1.32 crore, down from ₹6.91 crore a year earlier. The pressure on margins became acute in the second half of the year, which closed with a ₹2.86 crore loss. The company’s balance sheet reflects the strain of this growth phase; it shows a sharp spike in borrowings and trade payables. With a market capitalization of just ₹30 crore, Vandan is now effectively running a high-turnover, low-margin operation that is highly sensitive to rising finance and raw material costs. Profitability has suffered a severe blow, and the transition into a loss-making second half signals that the current scaling model is testing the company's financial endurance.