Kross Ltd: 62% Revenues From 5 Clients, 100% Drama From Axle-Walas 🚛🔧
Date of Publishing -
Spotted a factual error — a wrong number, date, or fact? Tell us and we will check the source.
1. At a Glance
Kross Ltd, fresh from its IPO hangover (Sept ’24), is the new desi “axle king” on Dalal Street. Incorporated in 1991, this company manufactures high-performance and safety-critical parts for trucks, tractors, and trailers—basically the bones and joints of India’s logistics backbone. At ₹189/share, ₹1,220 Cr market cap, 23.9x earnings, and 21.7% ROCE, Kross is pitching itself as a “precision auto components” play. But with 62% revenues tied to just 5 clients, this feels less like diversification and more like a toxic relationship.
2. Introduction
Imagine your truck breaks down because a king pin snapped. Or your tractor axle fails mid-harvest. Who do you blame? No, not the driver’s kismet—most likely, it’s a Kross part gone wrong.
Kross has spent three decades quietly building its reputation among OEMs like Tata International DLT, Ashok Leyland, Dana, Hino, and TAFE. But here’s the kicker: 97% of sales are domestic, exports just 3%. For a company shouting “high performance” and “global quality,” it’s still playing gully cricket while its peers like Bharat Forge are smashing sixes worldwide.
The IPO was a blockbuster (₹500 Cr raised), but post-listing, stock performance has been… let’s say, more Hero Splendor than Harley Davidson. Flat in 6 months, despite profit growth. Why? Maybe investors realized axles aren’t as glamorous as EV batteries or ADAS sensors.
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Kross builds mission-critical metal parts for:
Trailer parts: Axles, suspensions, landing gears, king pins.
Tractor parts: Rear axle, hydraulic lift, rock shaft.