Aastha Spintex Limited is bringing a ₹170 crore mainboard IPO to the market — a pure fresh issue from a Gujarat-based cotton yarn and ginning company whose entire offer proceeds are tied to a single acquisition. Below is an end-to-end breakdown of the business, financials, shareholding, and the risks an investor should weigh before applying.
IPO Snapshot
| Company | Aastha Spintex Limited |
| Issue Type | Fresh Issue only (100% Book Built) |
| Total Issue Size | Up to ₹17,000 lakhs (₹170 crore) |
| Face Value | ₹10 per share |
| Price Band | To be announced (not yet fixed in RHP) |
| Anchor Investor Date | Thursday, June 25, 2026 |
| Issue Opens | Monday, June 29, 2026 |
| Issue Closes | Wednesday, July 01, 2026 |
| Listing | BSE & NSE (Mainboard); Designated Exchange: BSE |
| Lead Managers | BOI Merchant Bankers Ltd, PNB Investment Services Ltd |
| Registrar | Bigshare Services Pvt Ltd |
Note: As this is a Red Herring Prospectus, the price band, lot size, and per-share P/E are not yet disclosed and will be advertised at least two working days before the issue opens.
About the Business — What Aastha Spintex Actually Does
Aastha Spintex is engaged in the manufacturing and trading of cotton yarn and cotton bales. It runs a semi-automated, integrated ginning + spinning facility at Halvad, Morbi district, Gujarat. The company produces 100% cotton yarn in counts ranging from Ne 26 to Ne 40, covering carded, combed, and compact combed varieties (higher Ne = finer yarn).
The operating model has two stages that both throw off saleable output:
- Ginning: raw cotton is cleaned and pressed into cotton bales. Bales are either used in-house for spinning or sold to other mills. Cotton seed, a by-product, is sold to oil-extraction and animal-feed industries.
- Spinning: cotton is spun into yarn for knitting and weaving. Cotton waste by-products (comber, licker-in, hard waste) are sold to non-woven and open-end yarn makers.
End-use of its yarn spans denim, terry towels, shirting, sheeting, sweaters, socks, bottom-wear, home textiles, and industrial fabrics. The company operates exclusively B2B, selling to textile manufacturers, yarn exporters, bulk purchasers, and fabric processors.
Installed Capacity
| Division | Installed Capacity (per annum) |
| Ginning | 12,000 MT |
| Spinning | 7,700 MT |
Clients, Vendors & Supply Chain
The 7 Seas Impex Dependence
Within Gujarat, Aastha sells directly. For sales outside Gujarat and for exports, the company routes the majority of its cotton yarn through a single reseller — 7 Seas Impex. This reseller is also the company’s single largest customer. The dependence, while reducing over time, remains significant:
| Customer Group (% of product sales) | 9M FY26 | FY25 | FY24 | FY23 |
| Top Customer (7 Seas Impex) | 22.99% | 33.88% | 54.73% | 66.61% |
| Top 5 Customers | 44.28% | 51.66% | 79.05% | 75.47% |
| Top 10 Customers | 57.27% | 59.94% | 84.71% | 80.88% |
Except for 7 Seas Impex, the company does not sign long-term contracts with customers — sales run on individual purchase orders.
Suppliers (Vendors)
Raw cotton and cotton bales are the principal raw materials. The supply base is concentrated: the top 10 suppliers accounted for 71.30% of total raw material and stock-in-trade purchases (₹23,417.52 lakhs of ₹30,427.78 lakhs) in the period ended December 31, 2025, with the largest single supplier at 21.83%. Cotton is an agricultural commodity available mainly October–March, making working capital seasonal.
Power / Energy Supply Chain
The facility runs partly on captive renewable energy — a 1 MW rooftop solar, 4 MW ground-mounted solar, and 2.7 MW wind plant. Solar and wind together met roughly 60% of total power consumption in the period ended December 2025, helping control power costs.
Objects of the Issue — Where the ₹170 Crore Goes
This is the single most important feature of the IPO: the proceeds are almost entirely earmarked for acquiring Falcon Yarns Private Limited, not for organic capacity or general expansion.
| Object | Amount (₹ lakhs) |
| Part payment of purchase consideration for acquiring Falcon Yarns Pvt Ltd | 11,151 |
| Inter-corporate deposits for Falcon’s working capital | 1,000 |
| General Corporate Purposes | [●] (max 25% of gross proceeds) |
The Falcon Yarns Acquisition
The total agreed cost to acquire 100% of Falcon Yarns is ₹13,151 lakhs, in three tranches:
- Tranche I & II: ₹2,000 lakhs already paid (acquiring ~15.21% of Falcon, which Aastha now holds).
- Tranche III: Balance ₹11,151 lakhs for the remaining 84.79% — to be funded from IPO proceeds (long-stop date July 31, 2027).
Falcon operates a 35,904-spindle spinning unit near Rajkot with an annual capacity of 9,757 MT. Post-acquisition, Aastha’s combined spinning capacity jumps from 7,700 MT to 17,457 MT per annum. Falcon also carries a residual VAT concession entitlement under the Gujarat Textile Policy 2012.
Financial Performance
Revenue and profitability scaled sharply from a weak FY23, though the 9-month FY26 figures below are not annualised and should not be directly compared to full years.
| Particulars (₹ lakhs) | 9M Dec’25 | FY25 | FY24 | FY23 |
| Revenue from Operations | 31,328.50 | 35,116.02 | 30,486.16 | 23,926.50 |
| EBITDA | 3,525.37 | 4,636.18 | 3,424.59 | 1,160.02 |
| Profit After Tax (PAT) | 1,755.62 | 2,291.62 | 1,628.76 | 105.83 |
| Net Worth | 15,318.16 | 12,105.21 | 7,637.83 | 6,000.94 |
| Total Borrowings (NC+C) | 10,147.40 | 9,505.12 | 8,285.92 | 8,100.61 |
| RONW (%) | 11.46% | 18.93% | 21.32% | 1.76% |
| EPS — Basic (₹) | 5.79* | 8.29 | 5.96 | 0.39 |
| NAV per Share (₹) | 50.53 | 43.80 | 27.97 | 21.97 |
*9-month EPS is for a part-year and is not annualised. The company also reported negative net cash movement in several periods.
Peer Comparison (FY25, Standalone)
| Company | Revenue (₹ lakhs) | EPS (₹) | P/E | RONW |
| Aastha Spintex (Standalone) | 31,328.50 | 8.29 | N.A.* | 18.93% |
| Aastha (Proforma Consolidated) | 59,713.82 | 9.00 | N.A.* | 20.07% |
| Ambika Cotton Mills | 70,207.04 | 114.83 | 14.25 | 7.27% |
| Lagnam Spintex | 60,556.46 | 7.28 | 11.15 | 10.64% |
| Pashupati Cotspin | 63,670.28 | 0.82 | 106.54 | 8.35% |
*Aastha’s P/E cannot be computed as the issue price is not yet fixed. Investors can calculate it once the price band is announced. Notably, Aastha reports the highest RONW among its listed peers for FY25.
Shareholding Pattern (Pre-Issue)
| Category | No. of Shares | % |
| Promoters & Promoter Group | 2,34,86,509 | 74.23% |
| Public | 81,55,681 | 25.77% |
| Total | 3,16,42,190 | 100% |
Promoter holding will dilute post-issue as fresh shares are issued. Promoters: Divyang Jashwantbhai Patel (Chairman & MD), Vivek Rasiklal Gothi (Whole-time Director), Jashvant Valjibhai Patel (Executive Director), and Rasiklal Valjibhai Patel (Administrative Head).
Future Goals & Strategy
- Inorganic-led growth: The Falcon acquisition more than doubles spinning capacity and is the centrepiece of the company’s stated strategy.
- Expanding the customer base and geography: Reducing reliance on the 7 Seas Impex reseller by building direct pan-India and overseas relationships.
- Value-chain integration: Strengthening the order book and operational efficiency across ginning and spinning.
- Sustainable manufacturing: Continued use of captive solar and wind power to keep energy costs down.
Pros & Cons
| Strengths (Pros) | Risk Factors (Cons) |
|
• Highest RONW (18.93% FY25) among listed peers. • Integrated ginning + spinning operations with by-product revenue streams. • Strong revenue and PAT growth from FY23 to FY25. • Captive renewable power (~60% of consumption) cushioning energy costs. • Falcon acquisition to roughly double spinning capacity to 17,457 MT. |
• Entire issue tied to one acquisition — execution and integration risk. • Falcon acquisition price of ₹33.33/share is well above its ₹14.46/share buyback (Sept 2024), raising valuation-premium concerns. • Heavy dependence on a single reseller, 7 Seas Impex, for out-of-Gujarat and export sales. • Customer and supplier concentration (top 10 suppliers = 71% of purchases). • Operations rely on a single manufacturing facility. • Past non-compliances under the Companies Act (compounding applications filed; internal auditor appointment lapse). • Negative cash flows in past periods; commodity (cotton) price and seasonality risk. • Price band, lot size and valuation not yet known. |
The Bottom Line
Aastha Spintex is essentially asking investors to fund a transformational acquisition that would double its spinning footprint. The standalone financials show strong returns and growth, but the offer’s success hinges on integrating Falcon Yarns smoothly, reducing single-reseller dependence, and managing cotton-cycle volatility — all against a backdrop of past regulatory compliance gaps. The valuation case can only be fully assessed once the price band is announced.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and is based on the company’s Red Herring Prospectus dated June 18, 2026. It does not constitute investment advice, nor a recommendation to buy, sell, or subscribe to any securities. Securities market investments are subject to market risks; read all related documents carefully before investing. As per SEBI guidelines, investors are advised to consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser and rely on their own independent examination before making any investment decision.