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Empire Industries Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹189 Cr Sales, ₹17.63 EPS, 72.6% Promoter Hold — Old-School Conglomerate at 15x PE


1. At a Glance – The 1900 Vintage Multibagger That Forgot To Multibag

A company incorporated in 1900. Yes, before Independence. Before your great-grandfather bought his first radio. And today, Empire Industries Ltd sits at a modest ₹559 Cr market cap, trading at ₹932, down ~14% in the last 3 months.

Latest quarter (Dec 2025) numbers?
Revenue: ₹189 Cr
PAT: ₹11 Cr
EPS: ₹17.63

Stock P/E: 15.1
Industry P/E: 24.9
ROCE: 14.4%
ROE: 11.1%
Dividend yield: 2.68%
Debt: ₹182 Cr
Debt-to-equity: 0.56

This is not a flashy tech startup. It’s a glass bottle + frozen food + machine tools + property rental + co-working + vending machine combo platter.

Is it undervalued?
Or just underwhelming?

Let’s open this 125-year-old corporate time capsule.


2. Introduction – The Corporate Khichdi You Didn’t Order

Imagine someone walked into a boardroom in 1960 and said:

“Let’s make pharma bottles.”
“Okay.”
“Also import frozen salmon.”
“Sure.”
“Add machine tools from Germany.”
“Why not?”
“And rent out office space.”
“Of course.”

That, ladies and gentlemen, is Empire Industries.

It operates across:

  • Amber glass bottles for pharma
  • Machine tools & industrial equipment
  • Frozen & chilled food imports
  • Property rentals & development
  • Co-working spaces
  • Vending solutions (Grabbit+)

This is what I call a conglomerate with commitment issues.

Revenue breakup FY23:

  • Glass bottles: ~35%
  • Trading & services: ~43%
  • Property: ~11%
  • Others: ~11%

Geographically:

  • 88% Domestic
  • 12% Exports

So this isn’t global domination. It’s solidly Indian with a small international side hustle.

But here’s the real question:

If a company does everything, does it excel at anything?

Let’s dig.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

1. Vitrum Glass – Pharma Bottles Division

They manufacture 1.9+ million glass bottles per day at Vikhroli.

Sizes range from 5ml to 650ml.
Clients include pharma giants like Glaxo, Pfizer, Abbott, Cipla.

Pharma bottles are boring.
And boring is good.

Stable demand. Repeat orders. Sticky relationships.

But margins? Not explosive.


2. Machine Tools & Industrial Equipment

They represent foreign manufacturers of precision tools.

Think German engineering meets Indian commission income.

This is mostly a trading/agency business.
Low asset intensity.
But also low pricing power.


3. Frozen Foods

They import frozen & chilled foods and distribute to hotels & restaurants.

This is essentially a cold-chain trading business.

Margin profile? Moderate.
Risk? Inventory & working capital.


4. Property & Business Centres

They:

  • Lease office space
  • Develop residential/commercial projects
  • Own land in Ambernath (35 acres with MIDC NOC)
  • Offer co-sharing office solutions

This is the hidden value angle.
Real estate inside a 125-year-old company is often where the surprise lies.

But how much of earnings is coming from property?
Only ~11% revenue in FY23.

So this isn’t a real estate play disguised as glass.

It’s a diversified middle-class corporate uncle.

Now let’s look at numbers.


4. Financials Overview

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