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An editorial reading of India’s listed companies.
Brief /Earnings / Textiles

Vishal Fabrics profit up 35% but cash flow evaporates on receivables surge

Operating cash flow drops to ₹2.9 cr from ₹107.6 cr; ₹121.5 cr locked in trade receivables.

2 earlier stories on Vishal Fabrics Ltd.
₹2.9 cr Operating cash flow for FY26

What's new

  • Net profit rose 35% to ₹32.2 crore; operating cash flow crashed to ₹2.9 crore.
  • Trade receivables swelled by ₹121.5 crore, locking up cash.
  • Equity warrants converted, raising ₹114.75 crore and expanding equity to ₹638 crore.

Why it matters

Profit growth means little if cash isn't coming in. The ₹121.5 cr receivable build suggests customers are paying slower or sales were on credit. The ₹114.75 cr capital raise offsets some balance-sheet pressure, but working capital discipline is the real test.

What we're watching

  • Whether management addresses receivable collection in the next concall.
  • Q1 FY27 cash flow trend to see if receivables unwind.
  • Any impact on credit rating or borrowing costs.

The full read

Vishal Fabrics reported a 35% net profit jump to ₹32.2 crore for FY26, but the quality of earnings is questionable. Operating cash flow all but dried up to ₹2.9 crore from ₹107.6 crore, as trade receivables ballooned by ₹121.5 crore. That means profits are largely on paper — cash hasn't followed. The company did raise ₹114.75 crore through warrant conversions, expanding equity to ₹638 crore, which helps the balance sheet but doesn't fix the collection problem. An unmodified audit opinion and asset revaluation gains of ₹17.1 crore add some gloss, but the cash flow statement tells a different story.

Primary source BSE filings for VISHAL NSE filings for VISHAL Research VISHAL on Tijori Finance Our reading is derived from the exchange filing. Verify on the exchange before acting.