Business
Know the Business
Rajesh Exports presents as an integrated mine-to-consumer gold company. On the inside it is a Swiss refining toll (Valcambi) wrapped in an offshore bullion-trading book (REL Singapore) wrapped in an Indian listed shell with 112 employees and a sub-scale retail brand. About 98% of consolidated FY25 revenue sits in REL Singapore Pte Ltd — the same line SEBI's 3-June-2026 ex-parte interim order alleges has been misstated by approximately ₹15.15 lakh crore over FY21–FY25 (allegation; company is contesting). The market is not pricing growth or cycle; it is pricing the outcome of that regulatory process.
Bottom line. This is not a jewellery retailer. It is a refining-and-bullion conglomerate where reported revenue is one of the largest line items on any Indian listed company's P&L (₹7.79 lakh crore FY26) but reported net profit is ₹112 crore, ROCE is 2%, and the entire P&L is under regulatory examination. Judge the business legs separately. Most of the equity-investable economics — if any — sit in (i) Valcambi-as-asset and (ii) whatever the standalone India entity can be made into. Almost none sit in the consolidated revenue line.
1. How This Business Actually Works
Three stacked businesses with three different economics, badged as one.
The single most diagnostic disclosure in the FY25 annual report sits in Annexure III. REL Singapore Pte Ltd, a 100%-owned subsidiary, reported turnover of ₹4,16,072 crore against the listed parent's consolidated revenue of ₹4,23,099 crore — 98.3%. The standalone India parent reported FY25 sales of ₹7,027 crore (per Screener.in standalone P&L), PBT of ₹29 crore, and zero foreign-exchange earnings or outgo in both FY24 and FY25 (Director's Report disclosure; scope appears standalone-only and is on the SEBI list of contested disclosures). The standalone parent is a small operation by group standards; the economic mass, such as it is, lives in Singapore which routes to Valcambi in Switzerland.
Source: REL FY25 Annual Report, Director's Report and Annexure III (AOC-1); Screener.in standalone P&L for standalone sales line.
That is the inside of the business. The rest of the report works downstream of this single fact: the size of the consolidated P&L is a consequence of an accounting choice made inside a Singapore subsidiary, not of a growing pool of Indian customer demand.
2. The Playing Field
There is no listed Indian refining-only peer. Screener.in groups Rajesh Exports against jewellery retailers because that is the closest visible bucket, but the comparison reveals separation, not similarity.
Source: screener.in consolidated, as of 2026-06-05. RAJESHEXPO ROCE/ROE per current Screener.in scrape (consolidated).
The peer table has two structural buckets and one outlier. Retailers and exporters cluster at 20–26% ROCE because brand, store network, and customer trust create durable pricing — that is what "good" looks like in this industry. PC Jeweller sits at 10% ROCE with a roughly three-year CCC, the cautionary tale of a once-organised retailer dragged down by governance/regulatory issues and inventory build-up. Rajesh Exports stands alone at 2% ROCE and a 1-day CCC, the unmistakable signature of a trader, not a retailer. The 1-day CCC is the cleanest single picture of what the company actually is: a bullion book that turns over so fast and at such thin margin that almost no working capital sits between the buy-leg and the sell-leg. Titan needs 211 days of jewellery inventory across 900+ showrooms; Rajesh Exports needs almost none. They are not in the same industry.
The chart is the single most important visual for a newcomer. RAJESHEXPO reports roughly 9× Titan's reported revenue (₹7,78,716 cr vs ₹87,584 cr FY26) while earning roughly 1/80th the operating profit (₹107 cr vs ₹8,355 cr) and trading at roughly 1/130th the market cap (₹2,936 cr vs ₹3,75,969 cr). This is what gross-vs-net accounting does to a refiner-bullion business: the same physical activity can produce a revenue line that looks like an oil major or one that looks like a regional jeweller, depending on whether the company takes title to the gold inventory or only collects a treatment fee. The Indian peer set provides no apples-to-apples reference because no other listed Indian company operates a Swiss refinery routed through a Singapore bullion book.
3. Is This Business Cyclical?
Yes, but on three axes that fight each other. As a refining toll, Rajesh Exports' margin per ounce is shaped by Western refining capacity utilisation — observers report chronic overcapacity. As a bullion trader, it is highly leveraged to volume × spread, where volume tracks central-bank buying, ETF flows, and arbitrage windows more than Indian wedding demand. As the holding company of an aspirational jewellery retailer, it is theoretically pro-cyclical to Indian organised retail share gain, but the retail leg is too small to move the consolidated needle. So the visible cycle in the financials is the working-capital cycle of the bullion book — and that cycle has been violent.
The cash-flow trace shows what cyclical means here. FY21 alone consumed ₹10,252 crore of operating cash — a year when reported sales were up 31% to ₹2,58,306 crore and reported net profit was ₹845 crore. The two facts are only reconcilable in a working-capital book where receivables, payables, and inventory all moved adversely relative to revenue. FY18 and FY22 show smaller versions of the same dynamic: revenue line up, cash going the wrong way. Then FY25 flips: ₹7,738 crore of operating cash in a year when sales jumped 51% and operating profit fell 49%. None of this is what a jewellery-retail cycle looks like. It is the signature of a working-capital book that has to be re-financed each year against gold-price moves, FX moves, and counterparty terms — and that book is mostly invisible to outside analysts because the underlying subsidiary financials are not posted on the company website (a point SEBI flags).
The clearest cycle visible is the inverse one: revenue and ROCE move in opposite directions. Revenue scales with bullion-book turnover, but margin per rupee of revenue shrinks because the underlying activity is a toll, not a brand. ROCE peaked at 20% in FY16 when reported sales were ₹1,65,000 crore and fell to 2% in FY26 when reported sales hit ₹7,78,716 crore. The gap is hard to explain through economies-of-scale; it is what gross-line padding tends to look like.
4. The Metrics That Actually Matter
Standard retail metrics — SSSG, store count, studded ratio — barely exist here because the retail leg is barely real. The metrics that genuinely move investor judgment on Rajesh Exports are different.
The OCF-vs-OP chart is the metric people skip and shouldn't. Across FY21–FY25 the company reports cumulative operating profit of ₹4,434 crore and cumulative operating cash flow of ₹(1,921) crore. Cash conversion is negative through a full cycle. This is the most important single number in the entire report, and it points the same direction the SEBI order does.
5. What Is This Business Worth?
There is no single-engine answer. Rajesh Exports has to be approached on a sum-of-the-parts basis because the consolidated number is dominated by an offshore book whose revenue treatment is itself the contested question. The right way to underwrite this name is to ignore the consolidated P&L size and price each leg on what it could be worth independently.
The market is trading the stock at roughly 0.17× reported book — a level that historically signals one of two things: either book is overstated (and the discount is correctly anticipating a write-down), or book contains a strategic asset that the market is not pricing because the holding company taints it. Both can be true at the same time. Investments on the balance sheet (₹11,797 cr at FY26) are roughly 4× the market cap, and the largest component is the carrying value of REL Singapore — which is itself a book invested in trading inventory and inter-company positions. Whether the Valcambi asset is valuable in someone else's hands is a different question from whether equity holders can ever crystallise that value through this holding-company structure, especially while the SEBI process is active.
6. What I'd Tell a Young Analyst
Read the subsidiary annexure before you read the P&L. If 98% of consolidated revenue sits in one offshore subsidiary and 0% of foreign-exchange earnings are recorded at the listed parent, the consolidated revenue line is largely an accounting choice, not a business signal — and any analysis that anchors on it (growth rates, EV/sales, "size") is wrong before it starts. Watch the cash conversion cycle, not the revenue growth: a 1-day cycle with a stated retail strategy is a contradiction, and the cycle wins. Watch standalone cash flow and standalone PBT; they are what the listed entity actually owns. Watch the SEBI process: it is a binary node where the upside case requires the order to be vacated or settled benignly, and the downside case includes extended promoter prohibition and restated equity. Finally, do not confuse owning a great asset (Valcambi is widely regarded as world-class) with owning a great holding company; the discount the market applies to the gap between the two is rational under current information and could widen further before it narrows.
Three signals that would change the thesis, in order of importance. (1) SEBI interim order vacated or settled without restatement of consolidated revenue — re-rates the entire structure. (2) Direct publication of Valcambi standalone P&L and treatment-fee revenue on the company website (an obligation SEBI says is unmet) — would, for the first time, let an analyst price the Swiss refinery on its own merits. (3) Disclosed retail store count, SSSG, and segment EBITDA for Shubh Jewellers — would convert eleven years of stated retail intent into a measurable, valuable leg. Until at least one of these arrives, the stock is a wager on a regulatory outcome, not a thesis on a business.
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