SJS Enterprises Ltd Q2 FY26 — ₹242 Cr Sales, ₹43 Cr PAT, Chrome-Plated Margins, and a 7,000-SKU Glam Factory
1. At a Glance
If “bling” had a manufacturing unit, it would probably look like SJS Enterprises Ltd (NSE: SJS | BSE: 543387) — the Michelangelo of auto stickers. From 2D appliqués to 3D badges that make every Bajaj and Hero look slightly richer, this company paints, plates, and polishes India’s automobile dreams.
As of Q2 FY26, SJS clocked ₹242 crore revenue (+25.4% YoY) and ₹43 crore PAT (+48.4% YoY) — that’s more shine than your neighbor’s new Royal Enfield. Margins are brighter too: EBITDA ₹72.8 crore, OPM 28%, and Net Cash ₹1,589 crore, proving aesthetics can be as profitable as engineering.
At ₹1,632 per share, the stock has sprinted +74% in six months — a comeback powered by chrome, creativity, and an acquisition that glued Spain’s Walter Pack to Bengaluru’s SJS. With ROCE 22.8% and ROE 18.9%, SJS is currently one of India’s few auto component players that make vehicles prettier and investors richer.
2. Introduction
Some auto parts companies build engines. Some build suspensions. SJS builds first impressions.
Born in Bengaluru in 1987 and reborn post-IPO as a design-to-delivery powerhouse, SJS Enterprises has turned itself into the Louis Vuitton of vehicle branding. Every sticker, applique, and chrome accent you see on a Bajaj, TVS, or Whirlpool appliance probably passed through an SJS press somewhere in Karnataka or Pune.
What makes this story unique is how SJS married aesthetics with engineering. It isn’t just slapping decals — it’s integrating design thinking, surface chemistry, and precision tooling into high-volume manufacturing. The company now serves 175+ customers across 22 countries, including Japan, Italy, USA, and Brazil.
But let’s not get carried away by the shine — the real glamour is in the numbers. Over the past three years, revenue grew 27% CAGR, PAT 28% CAGR, and the stock 53% CAGR. The auto cycle may rise and fall, but SJS keeps cashing in on “every badge that moves.”
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s decode the chrome jungle.
SJS operates in the decorative aesthetics space — think of it as the “cosmetic surgeon” for cars, bikes, and appliances. Its core proposition? “Design-to-delivery.” Meaning: they handle everything from concept sketches to final glossy parts.
Product Universe (~6,700 SKUs):
2D & 3D appliques and dials
3D “lux” badges, aluminum overlays
In-Mold Label (IML) / In-Mold Decoration (IMD) parts
Chrome-plated injection molded plastics
Painted & printed plastic trims
Lens mask assemblies for lighting panels
Revenue Mix FY23:
2W segment – 45%
PV (Passenger Vehicles) – 33%
Consumer Appliances – 15%
Others – 7%
They even run a small aftermarket brand — Transform — selling decorative accessories for two- and four-wheelers.
Clients? A who’s who of industrial India: Bajaj Auto, TVS, Royal Enfield, M&M, Honda, Whirlpool, Samsung, Godrej, and even Toyota Tsusho recently joined the list.
And because SJS likes its portfolio futuristic, it’s now developing In-Mold Electronics (IME) — embedding circuits inside plastic trims. Basically, smart dashboards that look like glass and act like touchscreens.
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric (₹ Cr)
Q2 FY26
Q2 FY25
Q1 FY26
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
242
193
210
+25.4%
+15.2%
EBITDA
72.8
50.0
56.0
+45.6%
+30.0%
PAT
43.0
29.0
35.0
+48.4%
+22.9%
EPS (₹)
13.7
9.3
11.0
+47.3%
+24.5%
Commentary: That’s not growth — that’s a chrome-plated rocket. Revenue up 25%, PAT up 48%, margins up by 300 bps. For a company making “aesthetic components,” SJS’s financials are aesthetic themselves.
5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range
Let’s buff out the shine and see what the fair polish looks like.
(i) P/E Method
EPS (TTM): ₹44.2 Industry P/E: 33x SJS trades at ~37x