JNK India Ltd Q1 FY26 + FY25: A ₹1,600 Cr Market Cap Heater Maker Trading at 65x P/E With Cooling Profits
1. At a Glance
Here’s JNK India, the company that literally builds industrial heaters but ironically has its stock price frozen. With a market cap of ₹1,615 Cr and a current price of ₹289 (after collapsing 57% in one year from its IPO highs of ₹744), JNK is that friend who bought Dogecoin in 2021 and is still holding on. Its FY25 sales were ₹484 Cr, with a PAT of just ₹25 Cr – a 6.3% margin that’s thinner than the onion slice in your roadside vada pav. Current P/E? A toasty 65x. ROE fell to 8.6% in FY25 from 23% a few years ago. Q1 FY26 results added more ice: sales at ₹98.9 Cr (+12.5% YoY) but PAT collapsed 82% to ₹1.17 Cr. Meanwhile, promoters (including Korean parent JNK Global) still hold a controlling 67.6% stake. In short: the heaters are hot, but the stock is giving investors frostbite.
2. Introduction
Imagine a company that builds giant heaters for oil refineries, petrochemical plants, and steel factories. Sounds boring? That’s because it is. But boring industries often make for hot profits – until they don’t.
JNK India, incorporated in 2010, came to the market with swagger: Dangote Refinery in Nigeria, Pemex in Mexico, IOCL in Faridabad, Reliance in Jamnagar – these are not side gigs; these are IPL finals-level contracts. Yet, despite this power-packed client list, the financials are starting to look like a badly managed buffet – too many dishes, but nothing filling.
The stock listed at ₹621 in 2023 after a hyped IPO, ran to ₹744, and has since crashed harder than Adipurush reviews. Why? Margins dropped, order execution slowed, and working capital turned into a black hole with 261 debtor days. Still, the order book of ₹1,311 Cr (81% domestic, 19% international) suggests this isn’t a scammy stock – just a mid-cap stuck in engineering hell.
So is JNK the next Thermax or just another “EPC story” destined for arbitration cases?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
JNK India builds process-fired heaters, reformers, cracking furnaces, incinerators, and flares. Translation: if you’ve ever seen a refinery with giant towers belching smoke and fire, chances are JNK’s work is in there somewhere.
Heating Equipment (~96% of FY24 revenue): Crude heaters, CCR heaters, reformers. Basically the “ovens” of the oil & gas industry.
Flares & Incinerators (~4%): Waste gas management. Because industries also need stylish chimneys to burn money—oops, hydrocarbons.
New Energy Bets: Hydrogen generation systems, solar EPC, and energy storage – because every EPC company now needs to drop the word “hydrogen” to stay in investor decks.
Clients: Reliance, IOCL, HPCL, Numaligarh Refinery, Tata Projects, and even Pemex (Mexico). Plus Dangote in Nigeria, where JNK basically built the refinery’s heaters.
Foreign Parentage: Korean giant JNK Global is promoter, giving them tech credibility.
It’s an oligopoly market – only 6–7 companies play here. Thermax is the cool senior; JNK is the eager fresher.
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Q1 FY26
Q1 FY25
Q4 FY25
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)
98.9
87.9
189.0
12.5%
-47.7%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)
3.4
9.5
18.4
-64.2%
-81.5%
PAT (₹ Cr)
1.17
6.5
13.3
-82.0%
-91.2%
EPS (₹)
0.21
1.17
2.38
-82.0%
-91.2%
Commentary: Sales grew YoY, but profits melted like Amul butter in Chennai heat. EBITDA margin dropped to 3.4% from 10.8% last year. The “65x P/E” club feels like a cruel joke.