A 34-year-old Mumbai NBFC quietly compounding through rural & semi-urban two-wheeler loans. PAT up 5.5× in five years. Net cash. 58 branches. The bonus has already happened — the next question is whether the next AUM doubling actually shows up in the share price.
A 1992-founded, Mumbai-listed retail NBFC writing small-ticket loans for two-wheelers, used cars, used three-wheelers, and consumer goods — almost entirely to rural and semi-urban borrowers across Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Rajasthan.
Shalibhadra hands out very small loans — most cheques are under ₹1 lakh — to buyers of new and used two-wheelers in towns where the big banks won't bother. They take a piece of the dealer relationship, do their own credit underwriting on the doorstep, collect monthly EMIs (collection efficiency stays above 99%), and earn a fat spread between what they borrow at and what they lend at.
It's a vintage NBFC model: low ticket, high frequency, high yield, high touch. Not glamorous. But the unit economics, when run by a careful family-promoted operator, are excellent.
The CEO is Vatsal Minesh Doshi, second-generation promoter. The company has 175 employees on roll (the AUM-supporting field force is closer to 190 across 58 branches). Promoter holding sits at 57.78% as of March 2026 — high enough to signal commitment, with retail at 39.99% and FIIs at 2.24%.
Below is the FY21 → FY26 picture. Revenue has roughly doubled. Net profit has gone up 5.5×. EPS has tripled even after the May 2025 3:1 bonus issue diluted the share count. This is what a small NBFC executing well looks like — not a moonshot, just a quiet operating staircase.
Management is publicly committed to more than doubling AUM from ₹220 cr to ₹500 cr by FY29. If the spread holds at current levels, PAT could comfortably travel to ₹40–45 cr by FY29. At today's market cap of ~₹232 cr, that's a forward P/E in the 5–6× range on management's own plan — provided they execute.
Despite operating excellence, the stock has had a brutal 18 months. The share traded above ₹800 in mid-2024 (pre-bonus, adjusted basis), peaked around ₹211 post-bonus, and now sits at ~₹75. That's a ~65% drawdown from highs while fundamentals improved. This is the classic small-cap NBFC pattern: narrative wave up, valuation reset down, fundamentals slowly catching up.
3:1 bonus, record date 4 June 2025. For every 1 share held, holders received 3 additional shares of ₹10 face value. Any pre-June-2025 chart you see (especially the ₹844 peak some sites still quote) is on a pre-bonus, non-adjusted basis. On a bonus-adjusted basis, the all-time high is closer to ₹211 — and we're now 64% off that.
"The company is net cash over the years — what's the policy to give back to investors? Dividend, buyback, or just reinvest into the loan book?" — that's the question that matters most for any small NBFC at this size.
The honest answer: Shalibhadra is not a capital-return story today, and probably won't be one until FY29. Here's why, with the actual numbers.
Capex at an NBFC is two very different things. (a) Physical capex — branches, IT, vehicles, office fit-outs — which for Shalibhadra has been tiny, in the ₹0.1–1.1 cr per year range. (b) Loan-book deployment — every new loan written is a use of cash. That is the real capex of an NBFC, and it dwarfs everything else.
| FY | Physical Capex (₹ cr) | Net Loan Book Growth (₹ cr) | Operating Cash Flow (₹ cr) | Dividend Paid (₹ cr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FY21 | 0.2 | −16.1* | +7.4 | 0.0 |
| FY22 | 0.0 | +5.2 | +1.8 | 0.25 |
| FY23 | 0.2 | +25.7 | −4.6 | 0.40 |
| FY24 | 0.1 | +39.0 | +2.5 | 0.63 |
| FY25 | 0.9 | +48.0 | −27.0 | 0.84 |
| FY26 | 1.1 | +44.0 | −19.7 | 1.24 |
| 6Y Total | 2.5 | +145.8 | −39.6 | 3.36 |
*FY21 figure reflects net pandemic-era loan book contraction. Physical capex from cash-flow statement; loan book growth from balance-sheet receivables delta.
Branches, IT, fit-outs — combined over six years. Less than what a single Dubai mall outlet spends on signage. NBFCs of this size are asset-light by design.
Net receivables grew from ~₹6 cr (FY21) to ~₹152 cr. This is where the money goes. Every rupee of retained profit and every new borrowing gets re-deployed into more two-wheeler loans.
Tiny — about 5–8% of cumulative PAT. Token-level, signalling-only payout. Management's clear preference is to reinvest the rupee back into the book at ~16% gross yield.
Reading three years of dividend declarations gives a clear picture:
There is no buyback policy, no SEBI-filed buyback authorisation, and no public statement of intent. The capital-return policy is effectively:
1. Pay a small, token cash dividend (~5–8% payout ratio) to keep retail shareholders signalled. 2. Use bonus issues every few years to reward holders psychologically and improve float. 3. Plough every other rupee — plus borrowed money at ~12% — back into the loan book at ~16% gross yield. The spread is the entire game.
A buyback only becomes rational once AUM growth slows below ~15% AND incremental ROE falls below cost of equity. On management's FY29 plan, that's at least three years away.
Small-cap NBFCs live or die on promoter alignment. Here is the picture as of the latest quarterly disclosure:
What this tells us: Zero domestic mutual fund or insurance presence — the stock is too small (₹232 cr) for them to deploy meaningfully. The 2.24% FII slice is interesting — it indicates some niche India small-cap funds have taken positions, but it's not a base of support. Retail at ~40% means the price is set by retail sentiment, which explains the violent drawdowns.
On 27 March 2026, promoter group member Ayushi Doshi acquired 78,500 shares on-market, taking her stake to 7,54,100 shares (2.44%). Promoter buying after a 60%+ drawdown is the single most encouraging signal in the file. They're putting their own cash where the lending book is.
Three scenarios, plain arithmetic. None of these are predictions — they're sensitivity ranges based on what management has publicly committed to and what the unit economics have historically delivered.
| Scenario | FY29 AUM | FY29 PAT | Implied P/E today | Fair value @ 12× P/E | Upside / (downside) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bear — plan misses | ₹350 cr | ₹28 cr | 8.3× | ₹109 | +45% |
| Base — plan met | ₹500 cr | ₹40 cr | 5.8× | ₹156 | +107% |
| Bull — plan beaten | ₹600 cr | ₹48 cr | 4.8× | ₹187 | +149% |
Calculations assume ~30.9 million bonus-adjusted shares outstanding, net interest margin holding at present levels, opex absorbed by branch leverage, and no equity dilution. All three scenarios produce a positive expected value at today's ₹75 entry — but the bear case still requires AUM growth of ~17% CAGR, which is below the company's recent run-rate but well above the broader NBFC industry.
It's roughly where peer small NBFCs (Arman Financial, Spandana, MAS Financial) trade in steady state. Two-wheeler-focused players have historically commanded a small discount to MFI peers because of the unsecured nature of part of the book. 12× is conservative; a "good" small NBFC growing 20% can trade at 15-18× P/E without being expensive.
Currently 3.01%. If it crosses 4.0% on a normalized basis, the thesis is broken. Watch the Q1 FY27 result (Aug 2026).
99%+ today. A drop below 96% would signal rural distress is biting before the headline GNPA moves.
Latest NCD at 12%. If new borrowings start coming at 13%+, the spread story is in trouble.
AUM per branch is ~₹3.8 cr today. Track whether new branches added in FY27 reach ₹3 cr+ within 12 months.
Watch for any pledge of promoter shares, related-party transactions, or insider sales. So far, only buying. A reversal would be a serious red flag.
The ₹500 cr AUM plan implies needing ~₹100 cr of additional capital over three years. If they fund it with a QIP at below book, existing-holder EPS gets diluted.
Three statements I'm prepared to defend:
1. The business is genuinely good. PAT compounded ~41% CAGR over five years, GNPA controlled, promoter buying at the lows, public roadmap to double again. This is not a hopium story; it's a small operator quietly executing.
2. The stock has been punished mostly for being illiquid and out-of-fashion, not for missing operationally. A 63% drawdown from peak alongside record profits is a sentiment story, not a business story.
3. The capital-return question (Mustafa's) is the real risk-management question. Until FY29, this is a "compounder where the dividend is replanted in the loan book, not paid out." If you need cash returns from your equity, this is not the cheque to write. If you're holding for a 2–3× re-rating over 3–5 years, the entry around ₹75 looks rational on three different scenario lines.
Worth a 1–2% tracking position for an India small-cap allocation, with the understanding that liquidity will hurt on the way in and on the way out. Add only on weakness below ₹70. The catalyst is the FY27 and FY28 AUM prints, not anything the market does in the next quarter.
A clean PDF for offline reading, or the self-contained HTML if you want the live charts and links. Both are mirror copies of this page — no analytics, no tracking.
Every figure in this field note is verifiable. Here are the public sources behind each section: