1. At a Glance
Saint-Gobain Sekurit India Ltd is that quiet kid in the auto-components classroom who doesn’t shout growth stories but tops the exam anyway. Market cap sits around ₹921 crore with the stock chilling near ₹101, after giving shareholders a mild heartburn over the last 3–6 months. Sales for TTM are ₹231 crore, PAT at ₹42.7 crore, and operating margins flirting around 20–21% like they own the place.
Debt? Basically non-existent (₹1.43 crore). ROCE at 20%, ROE at ~14.5%. Dividend yield close to 2%, payout ratio north of 50%. Promoters hold a solid 75% and haven’t played musical chairs with shares.
Latest quarter (Dec 2025): Sales ₹62 crore (+16% YoY), PAT ₹11 crore (+11% YoY). No fireworks, no drama — just laminated glass printing money slowly and politely.
But here’s the real hook: this is not a volume monster; it’s a precision-margin nerd with OEM stickiness, aftermarket gravy, and a French parent who hates chaos. So… boring business, exciting cash flow? Let’s dig.
2. Introduction
If automotive glass were a Bollywood genre, Saint-Gobain Sekurit India would be “critically acclaimed, low box-office, cult following.” No hype cycles. No EV buzzword abuse. No LinkedIn founders crying about disruption. Just windshields. Thick ones. Expensive ones. Certified ones.
Incorporated in 1973, this company has survived oil shocks, Maruti’s teenage years, BS norms, COVID, EV mania, and still wakes up every morning to laminate glass in Pune. It sits under Saint-Gobain’s Mobility division — meaning global tech, global standards, and local execution.
The market mostly ignores it because it’s small, slow-growing, and doesn’t promise 10x in 18 months. But the numbers quietly whisper something else: consistent margins, high return ratios, and capital discipline that would make most midcaps uncomfortable.
So the question isn’t “why is this cheap?”
The real question is: why does this still exist
on the exchange instead of being fully swallowed by the parent?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Simple explanation for a lazy investor:
They make automotive glass so good that OEMs don’t want to risk switching suppliers.
More detailed version (still lazy-friendly):
Saint-Gobain Sekurit India manufactures laminated automotive glass, primarily windshields. These are not your roadside replacement glasses — these are safety-critical, regulation-heavy, OEM-approved components.
Customers include:
- OEMs (cars, trucks, buses, LCVs, 3-wheelers)
- Automotive aftermarket (steady, higher-margin repeat business)
The Chakan, Pune plant is ISO 14001, ISO 45001, and IATF 16949 certified — which is corporate-speak for “don’t mess up, people’s lives depend on this glass.”
The company has upgraded from manual to automated cutting and grinding to cater to large-format windshields — think modern cars with giant front glasses that look like IMAX screens.
Translation:
Higher ASPs, higher margins, more OEM lock-in.
This isn’t a scaling story. This is a defensive moat + slow expansion story.
Would you trust a new supplier for your windshield at 120 kmph? Exactly.
4. Financials Overview
Quarterly Comparison (Figures in ₹ Crore)
| Metric | Latest Qtr (Dec 25) | YoY Qtr (Dec 24) | Prev Qtr (Sep 25) | YoY % | QoQ % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 62 | 53 | 60 | 16.1% | 3.3% |
| EBITDA | 13 | 11 | 13 | ~18% | ~0% |
| PAT | 11 | 10 | 11 | 11.1% | ~0% |
| EPS (₹) | 1.23 | 1.11 | 1.18 | 10.8% | 4.2% |
Annualised EPS (Q3 rule):
Average of
