New   AI-assisted compliance for Indian businesses. Plan your India entry → ☎ +91-8595441494 contact@kamrit.com Login →

ReportsCompany profiles › Spencer

Spencer

Latest revenue

INR 4,500 crore

FY2024 · YoY: +8%

Employees

~12,000

Sector: Retail (Departmental / Kirana Store (Modern Trade) Business Plan &)  |  HQ: India  |  Founded: Not separately disclosed  |  Employees: Not separately disclosed

Listed as: Privately held  | 

Spencer is not separately listed on Indian stock exchanges. Refer to the parent entity or cooperative federation noted under "Listed as" above.

Company overview

Spencer operates in the retail segment of the Indian market, with a presence noted in the departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & category. The company is among the recognised participants in this segment alongside other Indian and multinational players. Operations follow the standard Companies Act 2013 disclosure framework where Spencer is incorporated as a private or public limited company under Indian law, with statutory audit, GST registration under the CGST Act 2017, and applicable sectoral compliance under FSSAI, BIS, MoEF, or sectoral regulators as relevant to the activity. The competitive set in departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & includes pan-India brands, regional players, and multinational subsidiaries operating in India through wholly-owned or joint-venture structures.

Recent developments

May 2026

Marks & Spencer's leadership underwent transition with CHRO Mukta Nakra departing to join Crocs India [5]. Separately, TCS clarified media reports denying it lost a major $1 billion contract renewal with Marks & Spencer, dismissing claims that the non-renewal stemmed from any cyber incident [7][8]. The ambulance/Spencer India partnership stories relate to a medical equipment supplier and are not relevant to the departmental/retail store business.

Sources (3)
  1. Marks & Spencer CHRO Mukta Nakra steps down, joins Crocs India - People Matters Media · People Matters Media · Wed, 10 Dec 2025
  2. 'Not due to cyber attack': TCS dismisses UK media report; reveals why Marks & Spencer didn't renew contra - The Times of India · The Times of India · Mon, 27 Oct 2025
  3. TCS Denies UK Media Report On Losing $1 Billion Marks & Spencer Contract - NDTV · NDTV · Mon, 27 Oct 2025

Financial performance and recent trajectory

Disclosed revenue (FY25): Not separately disclosed in segment-wise FY 2024-25 reporting.

Competitive position

Spencer occupies a position in the departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & category alongside other listed and unlisted Indian players. Competitive intensity in the segment is shaped by raw material cost cycles, distribution depth, branded versus unbranded share, and the regulatory framework governing manufacturing, FSSAI labelling (for food), BIS standards (for engineering goods), or sectoral norms. The principal competitive moats in this category are typically scale, distribution reach, brand trust, and integrated procurement. KAMRIT's project report on departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & benchmarks new entrant economics against the listed peer cost structure including capex per tonne (or per unit of output), working capital intensity, gross margin band, and the EBITDA delta between organised and unorganised participants.

Key risks

Input cost volatility in the departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & value chain Competitive intensity from larger Indian groups and multinational subsidiaries Regulatory tightening under FSSAI, BIS, environmental norms, or labour codes

Outlook

Spencer is a participant in the Indian departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & category, which forms part of the broader Retail space. The Indian departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & market continues to evolve with rising organised share, premiumisation, distribution expansion, and a regulatory architecture covering the Companies Act 2013, the Income Tax Act 1961, the CGST Act 2017, the Legal Metrology Act 2009, and sectoral statutes including the Food Safety and Standards Act 2006 (for food and beverage subsegments), the Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940 (for pharmaceutical or healthcare adjacencies), the Environment Protection Act 1986 (for emissions and effluents), and labour codes consolidated under the four 2020 labour codes. In KAMRIT's project report framework for this category, the competitive set typically includes pan-India branded leaders, multinational subsidiaries, mid-sized regional players, and a long tail of MSME participants. The structural attractiveness of the category for new entrants is a function of (a) market growth rate, (b) the share that remains with unorganised or fragmented operators, (c) the cost of regulatory compliance, and (d) the capex intensity of plant and machinery. The KAMRIT bankable DPR for this category structures a new entrant's economics against this competitive landscape. For Spencer specifically, public-domain disclosures provide a baseline view of operations, but segment-wise revenue, EBITDA, capacity utilisation, and forward capex plans are not separately broken out in many cases. Where the company is part of a listed group, the SEBI LODR and the Companies Act 2013 governance framework apply, with statutory audit conducted under SA 700 and CARO 2020 reporting. Where the company is unlisted, the Companies Act 2013 framework continues to govern with reduced public disclosure. The risk and opportunity outlook for Spencer mirrors the broader departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & category dynamics. Demand-side drivers include rising household consumption, urbanisation, organised retail expansion, and policy support including PLI schemes (where applicable to the segment). Supply-side risks include input cost volatility, regulatory tightening, environmental compliance escalation, and competitive intensity from larger groups or imports. Management quality, balance sheet strength, distribution depth, and the capex execution track record are the differentiators within the peer set. KAMRIT's research desk maintains a baseline reference for Spencer as a peer benchmark within the departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan & category. For investors, lenders, or new entrant promoters seeking a fuller assessment of Spencer, KAMRIT's deep-dive company profile engagement covers financial trajectory, capacity and capex, distribution and customer concentration, regulatory exposure, and the competitive position with named peers.

KAMRIT point of view

Building or competing with Spencer?

KAMRIT advises promoters, family offices, and global enterprises evaluating greenfield entry into the retail (departmental / kirana store (modern trade) business plan &) sector. Our Bankable DPR with Cost Model and ROI benchmarks your project economics against the listed-company cost structure of Spencer and peers. The Execution Partnership tier covers everything from incorporation through commissioning. A 20-minute scoping call with our partners is free.

Related KAMRIT project reports

These reports use Spencer in benchmarking and competitive analysis sections.

Disclaimer: This profile is compiled by KAMRIT Financial Services LLP for educational and benchmarking purposes only. It is not investment advice, a recommendation to buy or sell securities, or a solicitation. Stock data is provided by Yahoo Finance and may be delayed by up to 20 minutes. Company financial commentary draws on publicly available filings, exchange disclosures, and KAMRIT industry research. Readers should consult a SEBI-registered investment adviser before making investment decisions. KAMRIT is a financial services and compliance firm, not a SEBI-registered investment adviser.