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Ador Welding Ltd Q1 FY26 – Sparks Flying, Profits Missing, and the Battery-Powered “Rhino-E” Trying to Save Face


1. At a Glance

Ador Welding Ltd, the self-proclaimed “torchbearer” of India’s welding industry, is currently welding more hopes than profits. With a market cap of ₹1,685 Cr, a stock price parked at ₹968 (after a rollercoaster high of ₹1,408 and a pit stop at ₹777), the company is trading at a P/E of 38.9, way above the industry average of 28.8—because who doesn’t like paying BMW rates for a Maruti quarter? Last quarter, Ador pulled in ₹252 Cr in sales but coughed up a loss of ₹3.95 Cr, turning sparks into smoke. ROCE stands at a handsome 20.3%, ROE at 13.9%, and dividend yield at 2.06%, so at least shareholders get some welding rod-sized consolation prize while waiting for management’s Rhino-E battery welder to light up results.


2. Introduction

Picture this: a company that’s been around since the days when welding was considered a blacksmith’s cousin job, now promising to make India’s welding industry look cool, green, and global. Enter Ador Welding Ltd. A household name in industrial circles (and absolutely unknown outside), Ador makes everything from welding electrodes to welding machines, and even exotic flares for petrochemical projects.

But here’s the twist: while Ador is busy launching India’s first battery-powered welder (Rhino-E) to reduce emissions, their profit emissions seem to be leaking. The last few quarters resemble a broken circuit—revenues steady, profits vanishing, and investors wondering if they should bring popcorn for the drama.

The company boasts clients like Tata, Reliance, DRDO, and NTPC. In theory, this sounds like the Avengers of corporate India. But in practice, Ador often looks like that side character in a Bollywood film—always present, rarely the hero.

So the big question: is Ador Welding just going through a bad quarter, or is it practicing for a long career as a “government supplier with excuses”?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Alright, lazy investor—here’s the welding gyaan in English:

  • Welding Consumables (77%): Think of electrodes, fluxes, wires—basically the “bread and butter.” Or in Ador’s case, “roti and burnt dal.” Over 200+ types of electrodes are sold to industries who literally cannot run without them.
  • Welding Equipment (19%): Fancy welding machines, cutting tools, protective gear, and automation kits. Basically, the power tools that make you look like Iron Man without the suit.
  • Flares & Process Equipment (4%): Here’s where Ador pretends to be an EPC company—designing and erecting flares for oil and gas projects. With an ONGC project worth ₹114 Cr in hand, they finally felt like Reliance for a brief moment.

Geographically, India brings 86% of revenue, exports 14% (up from 5% two years ago). So yes, Ador is like that NRI cousin who suddenly found foreign relatives interesting after years of ignoring them.

And oh, they’ve got three factories across Maharashtra, Chhattisgarh, and Dadra. Together, they churn out 59,000 MT of consumables and 15,000 units of equipment annually—plenty of capacity to weld investor hopes.

Question for readers: If your primary business is consumables, should you be innovating in equipment, or doubling down where the money already is?


4. Financials Overview

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Jun ’25)YoY Qtr (Jun ’24)Prev Qtr (Mar ’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue252 Cr269 Cr310 Cr-6.3%-18.7%
EBITDA-4.4 Cr27.2 Cr31.1 Cr-116%-114%
PAT-3.95 Cr19.9 Cr18.1 Cr-120%-122%
EPS (₹)-2.2714.610.4-115%-122%

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