507984 (Desi Farms India Limited) heads into its May 15 earnings event with a month of steady selling behind it and a shareholder base almost entirely in the hands of insiders.
The price tells the clearest story. Desi Farms closed at ₹641 on April 29, down roughly 10% over the past month and off 6% across the week. A modest 1.9% bounce on the final session offered limited comfort. The stock is now near the lower end of its three-month range of ₹626–₹754, a range that formed after the name ran sharply higher from much lower levels in 2025.
Ownership is the defining structural feature of this stock. Two names — Sunil Shahi and Narendra Goel — between them hold more than 93% of shares, and the Goel family collectively accounts for a further cluster of holders. This is a tightly held micro-cap, with a market cap of roughly $6.6 million and only nine holders of record in the institutional data. That concentration means price moves can be amplified by thin liquidity rather than broad-based positioning shifts, and any volume above the ordinary is worth noting. No short interest data is available for this name on the BSE, which is consistent with the negligible free float available for borrowing.
The earnings track record offers limited encouragement into the May 15 print. The four most recent events in the history all produced negative one-day moves in the range of -0.94% to -1.0%, with five-day drifts of similar magnitude. These are small moves in percentage terms but consistent in direction — the stock has not rewarded the earnings event in any of the documented prior instances.
Valuation context is sparse. An enterprise value of approximately ₹839 million ($10 million) is the headline figure, with no forward earnings multiples or analyst coverage available. Factor scores are modest: a dividend score of 47 and a sector score of 50 place the stock squarely in the middle of the distribution on both metrics. No external analyst coverage or recent news flow was detected on this name.
The May 15 results are the next concrete event to watch. Given the track record of post-earnings softness and the one-month price decline leading into the print, the setup is one in which any positive surprise from the company's dairy and agricultural business could be a meaningful catalyst — while a neutral or weak result would align with the pattern already established.
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