1. At a Glance – The Water Gate Story Just Got Complicated
Jash Engineering Ltd is trading at ₹400, sitting on a ₹2,544 crore market cap, and flexing a ROCE of 25% and ROE of 22.4%. Sounds impressive, right?
But hold the applause.
Q3 FY26 revenue came at ₹160.5 crore, down 11% YoY. PAT? A modest ₹13.07 crore, down a brutal 62% YoY. EBITDA margin fell from 23.1% to 12.8%. Ouch.
Stock P/E is 45.8, compared to industry median of 28.6. Price-to-book? 5.7×. Dividend yield? 0.49% — basically emotional support.
3-month return: -13%.
1-year return: -18.5%.
And yet… order book stands at a solid ₹923 crore as of 1 Feb 2026, with 65% from outside India.
So what’s happening here?
Global water infra giant under temporary tariff turbulence?
Or margins taking swimming lessons without a life jacket?
Let’s dive in.
2. Introduction – When Water Control Meets Global Chaos
Jash Engineering is not your typical small-cap dream factory. It doesn’t make EV dreams or AI promises.
It makes gates. Literally.
Sluice gates. Flap gates. Weir gates. Screening equipment. Valves. Hydropower screws.
If water flows somewhere, Jash probably installed something to control it.
India. USA. UK. Thailand. Russia. Saudi Arabia coming soon.
This company exports to 45+ countries and claims to be among Top 5 globally in water control gates.
But Q3 FY26 was rough.
Chairman admitted margin compression due to US tariff uncertainty. Exports to US fell sharply. Gross margins dropped from 61% to 56%. EBITDA nearly halved.
Yet, management doubled down on:
- Acquiring WesTech India
- Acquiring Penstocks UK
- Expanding SEZ at Pithampur
- Forming Saudi subsidiary
- US trade deal optimism (tariff cut from 25% to 18% pending ratification)
Is this a temporary dip before global dominance?
Or are global ambitions becoming expensive?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine this.
Every time a city builds:
- A sewage treatment plant
- A desalination plant
- A flood control system
- A hydropower project
Someone needs heavy-duty gates, screens, valves, surge control systems.
That someone calls Jash.
Core Segments (FY24 mix)