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Sansera Engineering Ltd Q2FY26 – Precision Parts, Perfect Timing, and a 42% Profit Punch


1. At a Glance

If Lord Krishna preached efficiency on the battlefield, Sansera Engineering seems to have adopted it in the workshop. With a market cap of ₹9,661 crore, stock price of ₹1,556, and a Q2FY26 PAT of ₹71.4 crore (up 41.6% YoY), this Bengaluru-based engineering marvel has quietly forged its way into the global auto and aerospace elite — quite literally, since forging and machining are its bread and butter.

The company reported Q2FY26 revenue of ₹825 crore, up 8.1% YoY, with operating margins holding firm at 17%, proving that even when global auto exports take a detour, Sansera doesn’t lose its drive. From Auto ICE contributing 73% of revenues to its xEV and Aerospace bets slowly revving up, it’s not just a component maker — it’s a future-ready engineering story with a torque twist.

In the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna says, “You have the right to work, but never to the fruit of work.”
Sansera must’ve nodded politely and replied — “Sure, but a 28% profit growth is still nice, right?”


2. Introduction

Let’s be honest — most investors hear auto ancillary and immediately imagine a boring bolt-and-nut business. But Sansera Engineering isn’t here to tighten screws; it’s here to engineer precision. From two-wheelers to space modules, this company forges components with the same focus as your mom aligning your school tie before an exam.

Listed at ₹744 in 2021, the stock has nearly doubled, powered by 28.7% six-month returns. While ROE stands at 10.5% and ROCE at 13.4%, both seem modest until you realize this company operates in a sector where raw material volatility can wipe out a year’s profit faster than you can say “semiconductor shortage.”

But here’s the twist: Sansera’s diversification across auto (ICE + xEV) and non-auto sectors (like aerospace, off-road, and agriculture) means it’s not just another cyclical story. It’s an engineering company with a PhD in torque and a minor in diversification.

The company’s 17 facilities (across India and Sweden) are where forging meets finesse. As of Q1FY26, its order book of ₹2,024 crore is roughly two-thirds international, and 25% of that is from the Aerospace and Defense segment. This is no small feat — it’s like graduating from making scooter crankshafts to building parts that keep Airbus in the sky.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

If Sansera were a restaurant, its menu would confuse you — they serve connecting rods for motorcycles, steering systems for cars, drivetrain parts for EVs, and aerospace components for Airbus. But here’s the beauty — they do all of it well.

Their operations are split into four gourmet

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