Vandan Foods revenue doubled, but profits evaporated in FY26
A ₹259.6 cr top-line failed to cover rising input and finance costs, forcing a loss in the second half and burning ₹24.3 cr in cash.
— 1 earlier story on Vandan Foods Ltd. →What's new with Vandan Foods Ltd.
- Annual revenue jumped to ₹259.6 cr from ₹108.2 cr in FY25.
- Net profit slumped 81% to ₹1.32 cr, with H2 swinging to a ₹2.86 cr loss.
- Operating cash flow turned to a negative ₹24.3 cr, funded by rising debt and trade payables.
Why this matters for Vandan Foods Ltd.
Vandan Foods is a textbook example of scaling into a liquidity trap. While the company aggressively grew its top-line, it did so by cannibalizing its bottom line and exhausting its cash reserves.
What we're watching
- Whether the company can stabilize input costs to prevent further losses in FY27.
- Management’s plan to address the negative operating cash flow.
- The sustainability of the current debt-funded balance sheet expansion.
The full read
Vandan Foods grew its annual revenue to ₹259.6 crore in FY26, more than double the ₹108.2 crore it recorded in FY25. Yet, this expansion masked a deterioration in core earnings. Net profit collapsed to ₹1.32 crore from ₹6.91 crore a year prior. The second half of the year proved particularly difficult, as the company swung to a net loss of ₹2.86 crore, battered by surging input costs and rising finance charges. The aggressive growth left deep scars on the balance sheet. Total assets doubled to ₹118.6 crore, but the company financed this growth through increased borrowing and trade payables. Most alarming is the operating cash flow, which turned to a negative ₹24.3 crore. For a nano-cap with a ₹30 crore market capitalization, this level of working capital stress suggests the company's recent expansion is not yet sustainable.