1. At a Glance
Indo Farm Equipment Ltd (IFEL), Himachal’s pride in tractors and cranes, just went public in Jan 2025 and already has investors sweating with its 42× earnings multiple. FY25 revenue: ₹408 Cr, PAT: ₹26.5 Cr, Market Cap: ₹1,134 Cr. Sounds decent — until you realise it has delivered only 7–10% sales growth CAGR over 5 years, while P/E is priced like it’s the next Escorts Kubota. Think of it as a tractor that looks like a Lamborghini in valuation but pulls like a Maruti 800.
2. Introduction
Founded in 1994, Indo Farm started out making tractors and slowly diversified into cranes, harvesters, and rotavators. On the surface, it’s a classic Indian mid-cap “farm-to-factory” story: a captive foundry, in-house R&D, and an NBFC (Barota Finance Ltd) to finance its own products.
But scratch deeper: the company is trying to play three roles at once — tractor maker (65% of revenue), crane manufacturer (34%), and now a wannabe infra-equipment player (via tower crane tech bought from China). The IPO raised ₹260 Cr, part of which goes to crane expansion and NBFC infusion.
So investors must ask: is Indo Farm building a Mahindra-style diversified empire or is it going to be the “Hero Cycles of Tractors” — solid products but forever overshadowed by bigger brands?
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Main Businesses:
- Tractors (65% revenue):
- Range: 16–110 HP.
- Features: fuel efficiency, dual-clutch, reverse PTO, and even AC tractors.
- Pipeline: electric tractor in R&D.
- Pick-and-Carry Cranes (34% revenue):
- 9–30 ton lifting capacity.
- Now expanding capacity 5× (from 720 cranes to 3,600 cranes p.a.) using IPO proceeds.
- Other Products (tiny ~0.3%): rotavators, harvesters, spare parts.
- Barota Finance Ltd (NBFC): Their in-house finance arm, basically ensuring farmers and contractors can actually buy their machines.
- Tower Crane Technology (new): Recently acquired tech from China’s Sichuan Hongsheng & Beida Commercial to make tower cranes locally.
Key Insight: Indo Farm’s model is part tractor, part crane, part NBFC. That’s three business lines in one — but each needs capital, R&D, and dealer push. Scaling all three together = high ambition, high execution risk.