Axis Solutions Ltd (AXISOL) — share price & stock analysis
From losses in FY23 to record profits — and the market still prices it like the bad old days.
Axis Solutions Ltd (AXISOL) trades at ₹171 as of 2 March 2026 — beating NIFTY 500 for 30 weeks. The machine reads this as turnaround, cheap vs history: from losses in FY23 to record profits — and the market still prices it like the bad old days. It trades at a P/E of 29.4× (the 31st percentile of its own range); the price is in Stage 2 — advancing, 30 weeks in; the business cycle reads DEEP CYCLICAL / EXPANSION. Fundamentals-momentum score: 89/100 (mostly improving).
Data as of 2 March 2026 · every number traces to its Screener source column · not investment advice.
- Market cap
- ₹807 Cr
- P/E
- 29.4×
- ROE
- 39.8%
- vs own 10-yr valuation
- 31st pctile
- Book value / share
- ₹25.9
- EPS (TTM)
- ₹5.81
- 10-yr median P/E
- 53.5×
- Revenue (FY25)
- ₹201 Cr
- Profit after tax (FY25)
- ₹35 Cr
- Weinstein stage
- Stage 2 (30 weeks)
- Data as of
- 2 March 2026
Profits swing violently in this business — real losses in FY23. That is what “deep cyclical” means: the same company looks brilliant at the top of its cycle and broken at the bottom.net_profit
Where the clock stands now: earnings sit at 100% of their historical range, margins are mid-band, and the market pays the cheap end of its range (31st percentile). That reads as EXPANSION — the comfortable middle — the easy money off the bottom is made; from here the story has to keep delivering.net_profit
5 of the 6 things we track are currently moving the right way — nearly everything is pulling in the same direction.
Where the levels actually stand: ROCE 30% — a high-quality engine; debt moderate (0.32× equity); margins mid-band. Momentum says which way things are moving; these say where they are.
Read this number for what it is: it measures the DIRECTION of change, not the quality of the business. A mediocre business getting better scores high here; a great one having a soft quarter scores low. Profit, sales and margins count double.
The business grew faster than the stock
Since Dec 2017, earnings per share grew 3,773% while the stock is up 271%. The business has outrun its own share price.pricettm_eps
When profits grow faster than the price, the stock quietly gets cheaper while doing better — the market hasn’t fully caught up.
Today’s P/E of 29.4× sits near the bottom of its own range — it has been cheaper than this only 31% of the time against its own 10-year history.pe_ratio
Data: Price, EPS and valuation (sampled — full series in the embedded dataset)
| Period | Price (₹) | EPS (TTM) (₹) | P/E (×) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 17 | 47.3 | – | 315.3 |
| Dec 17 | 49.4 | 0.1 | 411.7 |
| Jan 18 | 43.5 | 0.1 | 362.9 |
| Feb 18 | 42.0 | 0.1 | 350.0 |
| Mar 18 | 47.5 | 0.1 | 396.2 |
| Apr 18 | 45.4 | 0.1 | 378.3 |
| May 18 | 43.8 | 0.1 | 364.6 |
| Jun 18 | 38.0 | 0.1 | 316.2 |
| Jul 18 | 37.2 | – | 310.0 |
| Aug 18 | 17.8 | – | 148.3 |
| Sep 18 | 15.8 | 0.2 | 75.5 |
| Oct 18 | 16.8 | 0.2 | 80.0 |
| Nov 18 | 8.3 | 0.2 | 39.6 |
| Nov 18 | 9.1 | 0.2 | 45.2 |
| Dec 18 | 9.1 | 0.2 | 45.4 |
| Jan 19 | 5.3 | 0.2 | 26.2 |
| Feb 19 | 4.5 | 0.2 | 23.9 |
| Mar 19 | 3.6 | 0.2 | 18.7 |
| Apr 19 | 3.1 | 0.2 | 16.4 |
| May 19 | 3.2 | – | 17.1 |
| Jun 19 | 5.0 | 0.3 | 19.0 |
| Jul 19 | 7.6 | – | 29.1 |
| Aug 19 | 5.5 | 0.1 | 39.2 |
| Sep 19 | 8.3 | 0.1 | 58.9 |
| Oct 19 | 4.6 | 0.1 | 33.1 |
| Nov 19 | 7.8 | 0.1 | 55.7 |
| Dec 19 | 8.1 | 0.2 | 54.0 |
| Jan 20 | 8.1 | 0.2 | 53.7 |
| Feb 20 | 8.3 | 0.2 | 55.3 |
| Feb 20 | 5.0 | 0.1 | 38.3 |
| Dec 20 | 4.5 | – | – |
| Jan 21 | 6.0 | – | – |
| Jan 21 | 4.8 | – | – |
| Feb 21 | 4.3 | 0.1 | 71.5 |
| Mar 21 | 4.1 | 0.1 | 68.2 |
| Apr 21 | 4.0 | 0.1 | 67.3 |
| May 21 | 3.9 | 0.1 | 65.2 |
| Jun 21 | 7.0 | 0.1 | 116.3 |
| Jul 21 | 6.0 | 0.1 | 99.5 |
| Aug 21 | 5.3 | 0.1 | 88.7 |
| Sep 21 | 6.4 | – | 107.0 |
| Oct 21 | 10.6 | 0.2 | 56.0 |
| Nov 21 | 7.7 | – | 40.5 |
| Dec 21 | 8.1 | – | – |
| Jan 22 | 7.3 | – | – |
| Feb 22 | 6.0 | – | – |
| Mar 22 | 5.3 | – | – |
| Apr 22 | 4.7 | – | – |
| May 22 | 3.9 | – | – |
| Jun 22 | 3.8 | – | – |
| Aug 25 | 22.1 | 5.7 | 3.9 |
| Sep 25 | 26.9 | 5.7 | 4.7 |
| Oct 25 | 43.7 | 5.8 | 7.6 |
| Nov 25 | 53.1 | 5.8 | 9.2 |
| Dec 25 | 78.4 | 4.9 | 15.9 |
| Jan 26 | 95.3 | 4.9 | 19.3 |
| Feb 26 | 148 | 5.8 | 29.9 |
| Mar 26 | 171 | 5.8 | 29.4 |
Price is the weekly close (₹). EPS is trailing-twelve-month profit per share, anchored on Screener's own snapshots (the window starts at the first stable snapshot — earlier IPO-era share-count revisions are excluded, since they are not earnings events); between snapshots it is filled from price ÷ P/E (an exact identity), and any fill straying more than 18% from the neighbouring snapshots is dropped rather than shown. The lower panel is the P/E — what the market pays per rupee of profit; the dotted line is its long-run median (53.5×).
Stage 2: the trend is up, and has been for 30 weeks
STAGE 2 · ADVANCING · 30 WEEKSPrice trends have a life cycle: they base (1), advance (2), top out (3) and decline (4). This chart is in Stage 2: advancing — 30 weeks so far, confirmed.stage
The price sits above its rising 200-day average (₹32 today) and its strength against the index is still improving — trends like this persist more often than they reverse, which is why the system rides them instead of guessing the top.dma_200
Beating NIFTY 500 for 30 weeks — relative strength is the market’s live opinion, and right now it is on this stock’s side.rs_mansfield
What would end it: two Friday closes in a row below the 200-day line. That is the house exit rule — mechanical, no debates.dma_200
Data: Weekly price, moving averages and stage (sampled — full series in the embedded dataset)
| Period | Price (₹) | 200-DMA (₹) | 50-DMA (₹) | Stage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 16 | 59.2 | 56.0 | 58.1 | 4 |
| Apr 16 | 50.1 | 55.4 | 54.8 | 4 |
| Jun 16 | 55.0 | 53.9 | 51.4 | 4 |
| Jul 16 | 46.9 | 53.0 | 50.0 | 4 |
| Aug 16 | 43.0 | 51.0 | 46.7 | 4 |
| Oct 16 | 40.2 | 50.7 | 48.0 | 4 |
| Nov 16 | 42.5 | 48.1 | 42.7 | 4 |
| Dec 16 | 45.1 | 46.5 | 42.3 | 4 |
| Feb 17 | 61.8 | 49.1 | 53.0 | 4 |
| Mar 17 | 53.9 | 52.6 | 59.3 | 2 |
| May 17 | 39.1 | 52.2 | 53.3 | 2 |
| Jun 17 | 50.3 | 50.7 | 49.4 | 4 |
| Jul 17 | 46.9 | 51.0 | 51.0 | 4 |
| Sep 17 | 45.1 | 49.9 | 48.0 | 4 |
| Oct 17 | 51.5 | 50.1 | 49.7 | 4 |
| Dec 17 | 47.3 | 50.1 | 49.9 | 3 |
| Jan 18 | 44.3 | 50.2 | 50.0 | 3 |
| Feb 18 | 42.0 | 48.2 | 44.5 | 4 |
| Apr 18 | 44.2 | 47.0 | 44.1 | 4 |
| May 18 | 43.8 | 46.4 | 44.3 | 4 |
| Jun 18 | 35.4 | 44.6 | 40.7 | 4 |
| Aug 18 | 17.8 | 41.0 | 32.8 | 4 |
| Sep 18 | 17.3 | 35.9 | 23.1 | 4 |
| Nov 18 | 8.3 | 30.7 | 16.8 | 4 |
| Dec 18 | 8.0 | 25.7 | 11.9 | 4 |
| Jan 19 | 5.3 | 21.3 | 8.6 | 4 |
| Mar 19 | 4.2 | 17.9 | 6.2 | 4 |
| Apr 19 | 3.1 | 14.6 | 4.4 | 4 |
| Jun 19 | 3.5 | 13.0 | 3.9 | 4 |
| Jul 19 | 7.6 | 11.0 | 5.1 | 4 |
| Aug 19 | 7.2 | 9.8 | 5.8 | 4 |
| Oct 19 | 4.6 | 9.2 | 6.2 | 4 |
| Nov 19 | 8.3 | 8.7 | 6.9 | 4 |
| Jan 20 | 8.1 | 8.6 | 7.7 | 4 |
| Feb 20 | 6.8 | 8.4 | 7.8 | 4 |
| Dec 20 | 4.5 | 7.8 | 6.1 | 4 |
| Jan 21 | 5.9 | 7.4 | 6.2 | 4 |
| Feb 21 | 4.3 | 6.7 | 5.0 | 4 |
| Apr 21 | 4.8 | 6.1 | 4.5 | 4 |
| May 21 | 3.9 | 5.6 | 4.2 | 4 |
| Jul 21 | 5.9 | 5.7 | 5.5 | 4 |
| Aug 21 | 5.3 | 5.8 | 5.8 | 2 |
| Sep 21 | 8.3 | 5.8 | 6.1 | 4 |
| Nov 21 | 7.7 | 6.6 | 7.9 | 2 |
| Jan 22 | 7.3 | 6.8 | 8.1 | 2 |
| Feb 22 | 6.0 | 6.8 | 7.8 | 2 |
| Mar 22 | 4.8 | 6.7 | 7.3 | 3 |
| May 22 | 3.9 | 6.6 | 6.7 | 3 |
| Aug 25 | 17.4 | 6.8 | 7.3 | 4 |
| Sep 25 | 26.9 | 8.1 | 11.9 | 2 |
| Oct 25 | 48.2 | 11.4 | 22.0 | 2 |
| Dec 25 | 78.4 | 16.4 | 36.0 | 2 |
| Jan 26 | 105 | 20.9 | 48.4 | 2 |
| Mar 26 | 171 | 32.1 | 78.8 | 2 |
Losses, then a rebuild: profits are at an all-time high
Over 11 years, sales went from ₹0.0 Cr to ₹201 Cr, and profit from ₹0.0 Cr to ₹35.0 Cr.revenuenet_profit
The books show real losses in FY23 (worst: ₹−33.0 Cr). Everything about today’s cheap-looking numbers must be read against that history — the recovery is what you are buying.net_profit
Data: Revenue by year
| Period | Revenue (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 0 |
| FY15 | 0 |
| FY16 | 1 |
| FY17 | 0 |
| FY18 | 9 |
| FY19 | 14 |
| FY20 | 34 |
| FY21 | 38 |
| FY22 | 28 |
| FY23 | 67 |
| FY24 | 136 |
| FY25 | 201 |
Data: Profit by year
| Period | Profit after tax (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 0 |
| FY15 | 0 |
| FY16 | 0 |
| FY17 | 0 |
| FY18 | 0 |
| FY19 | 0 |
| FY20 | 0 |
| FY21 | 0 |
| FY22 | 0 |
| FY23 | -33 |
| FY24 | 32 |
| FY25 | 35 |
Data: OPM % by year
| Period | OPM % (%) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 48.0 |
| FY15 | -38.0 |
| FY16 | 0.0 |
| FY17 | 35.0 |
| FY18 | 0.0 |
| FY19 | 0.0 |
| FY20 | 0.0 |
| FY21 | 0.0 |
| FY22 | 0.0 |
| FY23 | -41.8 |
| FY24 | 18.4 |
| FY25 | 18.4 |
Sales jumped 23% last quarter — the 6th straight quarter of growth
Dec 25 sales were ₹46.0 Cr, up 23% on the same quarter last year.revenue
That makes 6 quarters of growth in a row — this is a trend, not a blip.revenue
Data: Quarterly sales
| Period | Revenue (₹ Cr) | YoY growth (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Mar 22 | 0.0 | – |
| Jun 22 | 0.0 | – |
| Sep 23 | 39.0 | – |
| Dec 23 | 26.0 | – |
| Mar 24 | 56.0 | – |
| Jun 24 | 23.0 | – |
| Sep 24 | 42.0 | 8.2 |
| Dec 24 | 37.0 | 45.6 |
| Mar 25 | 99.0 | 77.4 |
| Jun 25 | 27.0 | 19.8 |
| Sep 25 | 48.0 | 15.7 |
| Dec 25 | 46.0 | 23.4 |
Margins are widening — 6% → 16% in a year
Of every ₹100 of sales, the company keeps ₹15.7 as operating profit (a year ago it kept ₹6.5).opm_pct
Zoom out and this is the page's quiet hero: annual operating margin bottomed at −41.8% in FY23 and has been rebuilt to 18.4% — that recovery, not sales alone, is what powers the profit growth elsewhere on this page.operating_profit
The gross margin moved the same way (38% → 48%), so this is about input costs and pricing power — the raw-material equation improved.gpm_pctopm_pct
Data: Three margins, quarterly
| Period | Gross (%) | Operating (%) | Net (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mar 22 | 100 | 93.3 | 333 |
| Jun 22 | – | – | – |
| Sep 23 | 58.2 | 43.5 | 41.5 |
| Dec 23 | 51.2 | 15.5 | 11.6 |
| Mar 24 | 37.3 | 4.3 | 3.1 |
| Jun 24 | 82.8 | 47.0 | 44.0 |
| Sep 24 | 42.1 | 23.3 | 21.4 |
| Dec 24 | 37.9 | 6.5 | 4.6 |
| Mar 25 | 33.5 | 14.3 | 14.4 |
| Jun 25 | 51.0 | 11.6 | 8.1 |
| Sep 25 | 39.6 | 13.5 | 10.6 |
| Dec 25 | 47.7 | 15.7 | 12.8 |
Profit exploded 239% — mostly from keeping more of each sale
Dec 25 profit after tax was ₹5.9 Cr, up 239% year on year.net_profit
Data: Quarterly profit after tax
| Period | PAT (₹ Cr) | YoY growth (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Mar 22 | 1.0 | – |
| Jun 22 | 0.0 | – |
| Sep 23 | 16.0 | – |
| Dec 23 | 3.0 | – |
| Mar 24 | 12.0 | – |
| Jun 24 | 10.0 | – |
| Sep 24 | 9.0 | -44.2 |
| Dec 24 | 2.0 | -41.8 |
| Mar 25 | 14.0 | 22.7 |
| Jun 25 | 2.0 | -78.1 |
| Sep 25 | 5.0 | -42.7 |
| Dec 25 | 6.0 | 239.3 |
The single biggest driver was keeping more of each sale.
Data: Where the profit change came from (Dec 24 → Dec 25)
| Component | Effect (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|
| PAT Dec 24 | 2 |
| More sales | +1 |
| Fatter margins | +4 |
| Other income | −0 |
| Depreciation | −0 |
| Interest | −0 |
| PAT Dec 25 | 6 |
Does the profit turn into cash?
The wrinkle is the latest year: FY25 collected ₹−21.0 Cr against ₹35.0 Cr of reported profit — about -60%. One year isn’t a trend, but it is the line to watch.operating_cash_flownet_profit
The gap sits in receivables: customers now take 174 days to pay, up from 119. Profit booked, cash pending.debtor_days
Data: Cash collected vs profit reported (annual)
| Period | Operating cash flow (₹ Cr) | Profit after tax (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| FY14 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY15 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY16 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY17 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY18 | -4.0 | 0.0 |
| FY19 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY20 | -2.0 | 0.0 |
| FY21 | -2.0 | 0.0 |
| FY22 | -4.0 | 0.0 |
| FY23 | -19.0 | -33.0 |
| FY24 | 11.0 | 32.0 |
| FY25 | -21.0 | 35.0 |
The cash cycle is stretching — more money stuck in the pipeline
One rupee now takes about 219 days to go out the door as materials and come back as collected cash — up from 145 days the year before.cash_conversion_cycle
The biggest mover: customers taking longer to pay (119 → 174 days).debtor_days
Data: Days of cash locked up (annual)
| Period | Customers owe (debtor days) (days) | Stock on shelf (inventory days) (days) | We owe suppliers (payable days) (days) |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY14 | 70.0 | – | – |
| FY15 | 0.0 | – | – |
| FY16 | 265 | – | – |
| FY17 | 765 | – | – |
| FY18 | 370 | 11.0 | 284 |
| FY19 | 162 | 17.0 | 80.0 |
| FY20 | 222 | 0.0 | 200 |
| FY21 | 184 | 0.0 | – |
| FY22 | 558 | 0.0 | – |
| FY23 | 96.0 | 232 | 224 |
| FY24 | 119 | 129 | 103 |
| FY25 | 174 | 117 | 72.0 |
Steady, unhurried investment
The productive asset base has gone from ₹0.0 Cr (FY14) to ₹48.0 Cr, with another ₹1.0 Cr of capacity under construction right now.fixed_assetscwip
The build is bigger than the cash engine: investing outflows (₹5.0 Cr) exceeded operating cash (₹−29.0 Cr) over the last 3 years — the difference comes from debt or shareholders.investing_cash_flowoperating_cash_flow
Data: Assets in place vs under construction (annual)
| Period | Fixed assets (₹ Cr) | Under construction (CWIP) (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|---|
| FY14 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY15 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY16 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY17 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY18 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY19 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY20 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY21 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY22 | 0.0 | 0.0 |
| FY23 | 20.0 | 0.0 |
| FY24 | 47.0 | 1.0 |
| FY25 | 48.0 | 1.0 |
Debt is present but comfortable
For every ₹100 shareholders have put in (and left in), the company has borrowed ₹32 — total borrowings have grown from ₹0.0 Cr to ₹38.0 Cr over the window.borrowings
Data: Total borrowings (annual)
| Period | Borrowings (₹ Cr) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 0.0 |
| FY15 | 0.0 |
| FY16 | 0.0 |
| FY17 | 0.0 |
| FY18 | 4.0 |
| FY19 | 4.0 |
| FY20 | 5.0 |
| FY21 | 7.0 |
| FY22 | 11.0 |
| FY23 | 61.0 |
| FY24 | 35.0 |
| FY25 | 38.0 |
Data: Debt vs shareholders’ money (annual)
| Period | Debt ÷ equity (x) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 0.0 |
| FY15 | 0.0 |
| FY16 | 0.0 |
| FY17 | 0.0 |
| FY18 | 0.2 |
| FY19 | 0.2 |
| FY20 | 0.2 |
| FY21 | 0.3 |
| FY22 | 0.4 |
| FY23 | -61.0 |
| FY24 | 0.6 |
| FY25 | 0.3 |
Every ₹100 kept in the business earns ₹30 — a high-quality engine
Return on capital employed is 30.0% (a year ago: 32.0%). This is the single best test of business quality: what the company earns on the money it keeps.roce_pct
Data: Returns on capital (annual)
| Period | ROCE (%) |
|---|---|
| FY14 | 4.0 |
| FY15 | 4.0 |
| FY16 | 5.0 |
| FY17 | 1.0 |
| FY18 | 2.0 |
| FY19 | 3.0 |
| FY20 | 2.0 |
| FY21 | 2.0 |
| FY22 | 0.0 |
| FY23 | -59.0 |
| FY24 | 32.0 |
| FY25 | 30.0 |
A Dec 24 event lifted promoter holding — not steady buying
Promoters hold 85.6% (up 83.2 points over 8 quarters). Foreign funds own null%, domestic funds 1.7%.promoters_pctfiis_pctdiis_pct
The promoter move came in a single step (Dec 24) — promoters rarely buy on-market, so a jump like this is almost always an allotment, infusion or restructuring: a capital event, not a slow accumulation of conviction. Worth knowing which, before reading it as a signal.promoters_pct
Data: Who holds the shares, quarterly
| Period | Promoters (%) | Domestic funds (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Mar 23 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Jun 23 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Sep 23 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Dec 23 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Mar 24 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Jun 24 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Sep 24 | 2.5 | 0.0 |
| Dec 24 | 85.6 | 0.0 |
| Mar 25 | 85.6 | 0.0 |
| Jun 25 | 85.6 | 1.7 |
| Sep 25 | 85.6 | 1.7 |
| Dec 25 | 85.6 | 1.7 |
Strong on the data — worth the deeper look if the story keeps its promises
The numbers lean positive, and the price hasn’t fully caught up with the improvement.
Best thing in the data: profit rising (₹1.7 Cr → ₹5.9 Cr).net_profit
Biggest worry: cash generation falling (₹11.0 Cr → ₹−21.0 Cr).operating_cash_flow
Machine-written research from Screener data — every number traces to its source column. Sector Alpha is not a SEBI-registered investment adviser; nothing here is a recommendation to buy or sell. Not investment advice.
Straight answers from the data
What does Axis Solutions Ltd do?
Incorporated in 1985, Axis Solutions Ltd manufactures various engineering products. It is listed in the Engineering - Light - General sector with a market capitalisation of ₹807 Cr.
What is Axis Solutions Ltd's share price?
As of 2 March 2026, Axis Solutions Ltd trades at ₹171, with a market capitalisation of ₹807 Cr. Beating NIFTY 500 for 30 weeks. Prices are weekly closes from Screener data; this page refreshes with each weekly update.
What is Axis Solutions Ltd's share price target?
Sector Alpha does not publish broker-style price targets. Our discounted-cash-flow model estimates Axis Solutions Ltd's intrinsic value at ₹292 per share under base assumptions (bear ₹104, bull ₹292), against the current price of ₹171 — a 71% margin of safety. The current price already implies roughly 17% annual earnings growth. These are model estimates, not forecasts — treat them as one input alongside the valuation history below, not as a target.
Is Axis Solutions Ltd stock overvalued or undervalued?
Axis Solutions Ltd trades at a P/E of 29.4× — the 31st percentile of its own 8.2-year trading range (median 53.5×), which is below the middle of its own historical range. The business grew faster than the stock. Since Dec 2017, earnings per share grew 3,773% while the stock is up 271%. The business has outrun its own share price.
What did Axis Solutions Ltd report in its latest quarterly results?
In its most recent reported quarter (Q3 FY26, quarter ended December 2025): Dec 25 sales were ₹46.0 Cr, up 23% on the same quarter last year. Dec 25 profit after tax was ₹5.9 Cr, up 239% year on year. Figures are from Screener-scraped quarterly filings; the page updates when the next quarter is filed.
Is Axis Solutions Ltd growing?
Sales jumped 23% last quarter — the 6th straight quarter of growth. Dec 25 sales were ₹46.0 Cr, up 23% on the same quarter last year.
Are Axis Solutions Ltd's profits growing?
Profit exploded 239% — mostly from keeping more of each sale. Dec 25 profit after tax was ₹5.9 Cr, up 239% year on year.
What are Axis Solutions Ltd's operating margins?
Margins are widening — 6% → 16% in a year. In the most recent quarter, of every ₹100 of sales, the company keeps ₹15.7 as operating profit (a year ago it kept ₹6.5).
Is Axis Solutions Ltd stock in an uptrend?
Stage 2: the trend is up, and has been for 30 weeks. Axis Solutions Ltd is in Stage 2 — advancing, 30 weeks in (confirmed). Stages follow Stan Weinstein's four-phase read of weekly price against the 200-day average: basing (1), advancing (2), topping (3), declining (4).
Is Axis Solutions Ltd beating the NIFTY 500?
Yes — beating NIFTY 500 for 30 weeks, as of 2 March 2026. Relative strength is measured weekly against the NIFTY 500 (Mansfield RS): a positive reading means the stock has outperformed the index over the trailing window, week after week.
Where is Axis Solutions Ltd in its business cycle?
The data reads Axis Solutions Ltd as a deep cyclical business currently in its expansion phase — earnings at an all-time high for this company, valuation at the 31st percentile. Profits swing violently in this business — real losses in FY23. That is what “deep cyclical” means: the same company looks brilliant at the top of its cycle and broken at the bottom.
Does Axis Solutions Ltd have too much debt?
Debt is present but comfortable. For every ₹100 shareholders have put in (and left in), the company has borrowed ₹32 — total borrowings have grown from ₹0.0 Cr to ₹38.0 Cr over the window.
What is the bull case for Axis Solutions Ltd?
From losses in FY23 to record profits — and the market still prices it like the bad old days. Best thing in the data: profit rising (₹1.7 Cr → ₹5.9 Cr). Sales jumped 23% last quarter — the 6th straight quarter of growth.
What is the bear case for Axis Solutions Ltd — what could break the story?
Biggest worry: cash generation falling (₹11.0 Cr → ₹−21.0 Cr). Two quarters of margins reversing would kill this story. The nearest-term thing to watch: if quarterly growth slips below 12%, the story weakens. This falsification condition is stated up front so the thesis can be checked against incoming quarters, not defended after the fact.
Is Axis Solutions Ltd a stock worth studying right now?
Sector Alpha does not publish buy or sell recommendations — this is a research read, not advice. What the data says: strong on the data — worth the deeper look if the story keeps its promises. The numbers lean positive, and the price hasn’t fully caught up with the improvement. Across the 7-model scorecard the composite research signal is study deeper at 73% confidence. This is machine-written research compiled from Screener data — every number traces to its source — and it is not investment advice. Do your own diligence.