1. At a Glance
Oswal Pumps Ltd is what happens when government policy, solar dreams, and a vertically integrated factory floor decide to do bhangra together. Market cap sits at ₹4,323 Cr, the stock is currently trading near ₹379, and yes — that’s after a brutal -41.7% in 3 months and -52.9% in 6 months. Ouch. But fundamentals? They’re flexing. Q3 FY26 revenue ₹501 Cr (+32% YoY), PAT ₹93 Cr (+15.7% YoY), OPM ~26%, ROCE ~78%, ROE ~87% — numbers that usually make CFOs frame screenshots.
The twist: 87% of revenue comes from PM-KUSUM. Which means Oswal doesn’t just sell pumps — it sells patience, paperwork, and persistence. Add a 12.4x P/E against an industry cruising near 39x, and you’ve got a valuation that looks suspiciously sober for a stock with this kind of growth swagger. But then come the villains: debtors at 160 days, working capital days at 86, and negative operating cash flow in FY25. This is a solar success story with a cash-flow cliffhanger. Curious? You should be.
2. Introduction
Oswal Pumps wasn’t born in a solar lab with TED Talk dreams. Incorporated in 2003, it did the unsexy work first — pumps, motors, distribution — and only later strapped solar panels to the business model when India’s policy winds turned green. Fast forward to today, and Oswal is one of India’s fastest-growing vertically integrated solar pump manufacturers, supplying everything from solar modules to submersible pumps to turnkey systems under PM-KUSUM.
The company has supplied 0.23 million pumps out of the ~0.61 million installed under PM-KUSUM, translating into a ~38% market share. That’s not participation; that’s domination. And domination funded by the government is both a blessing and a bureaucratic endurance test.
Oswal raised ₹1,387 Cr via IPO and listed on June 20, 2025. The fresh issue of ₹897 Cr was earmarked for capex, subsidiary investments, debt repayment, and general corporate purposes — basically, growth with a safety helmet. Since then, revenues have exploded, margins expanded, and the balance sheet has bulked up. But markets, being markets, noticed the working-capital bloat and slammed the brakes.
So the real question: is Oswal a solar compounder temporarily punished for cash-flow sins, or a policy-dependent rocket that needs constant government fuel? Let’s open the files.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine explaining Oswal Pumps to a farmer, a bureaucrat, and an investor — and all three nodding. That’s the business model.
Oswal designs, manufactures, and sells:
- Solar-powered pumps (submersible & monoblock)
- Grid-connected pumps
- Electric motors (induction & submersible)
- Solar modules
- Turnkey solar pumping systems under PM-KUSUM
This is vertical integration done properly. Motors? In-house. Pumps? In-house. Solar modules? In-house. Installation and commissioning? Also in-house or via empanelled partners. This matters because PM-KUSUM isn’t a product sale — it’s a project. And projects reward companies that control timelines, costs, and compliance.
Revenue-wise, turnkey solar pumping systems are the cash cow:
- Submersible turnkey: 66.6%
- Monoblock turnkey: 11.9%
That’s nearly 78% from turnkey execution alone.
Geographically, Maharashtra (