Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited FFC.KA
Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited (FFC.KA) earns a Piotroski F-score of 5/9 (mixed financial health), with an Altman Z″ in the safe zone. It pays a dividend yielding 30.17% (safety: at-risk). FY2025 revenue was ₨ 483.8B at a 17.2% net margin.
Quality score trend · recomputed for each fiscal year
Each year's score is computed from that year's filing — a rising Piotroski F or Altman Z″ means improving financial health, a fall is worth a look.
Piotroski F breakdown · 5/9 tests passed
- Positive return on assets
- Positive operating cash flow
- Rising ROA
- Cash flow exceeds net income
- Lower long-term debt
- Rising current ratio
- No share dilution
- Rising gross margin
- Rising asset turnover
Altman Z″ components · safe zone
| Component | Value |
|---|---|
| Working capital / assets | 0.114 |
| Retained earnings / assets | 0.3 |
| EBIT / assets | 0.163 |
| Equity / liabilities | 0.746 |
FAQ
Is FFC.KA financially healthy?
Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited's Piotroski F-score is 5/9 (8–9 is excellent, 0–3 weak), and its Altman Z″ distress score is in the safe zone.
Does FFC.KA pay a dividend, and is it safe?
Yes. Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited pays a dividend yielding about 30.17% with a 85.4% payout ratio, rated “at-risk” for safety.
How profitable is FFC.KA?
In FY2025, Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited had a net margin of 17.2% and a return on equity of 32.0%.
Is FFC.KA overvalued or undervalued?
Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited trades at about 9.8× trailing earnings — above its 10-year norm (10-year range 3.1×–10.1×, median 6.6×). Stocktoria reports the data, not buy/sell advice.
Is FFC.KA a good stock to buy?
Stocktoria doesn't give buy or sell advice, but here is the data on Fauji Fertilizer Company Limited: a Piotroski F-score of 5/9, an Altman Z″ in the safe zone, a P/E of about 2.8×, a dividend yield of 30.17%. Weigh these quality and valuation signals against your own goals.
Computed from company filings · PK · as of 2025-12-31. Figures in PKR. Facts plus Stocktoria's own computed scores — not investment advice.