1. At a Glance – The Glue That Refuses to Break
At ₹62 per share and a market cap of ₹285 crore, Nikhil Adhesives Ltd is currently trading like a forgotten chemistry practical file from Class 12. The stock is down 37.3% in three months and 39.6% in one year. Ouch.
Yet here’s the twist: Q3 FY26 sales came in at ₹133.07 crore with PAT of ₹3.52 crore and OPM at 5.77%. Annualised EPS based on Q3 (average of Q1, Q2, Q3 × 4) stands at ₹3.21, giving a recalculated P/E of around 19.3 — roughly in line with the displayed 18.4.
ROCE is 17.1%. ROE is 13.8%. Debt to equity is 0.33. Enterprise value sits at ₹328 crore with EV/EBITDA at 9.14.
So here’s the big question: is this a dull adhesive company quietly compounding… or just sticking investors in a long-term wait?
Let’s peel this layer by layer.
2. Introduction – Welcome to the Sticky Business
If India builds houses, paints walls, stitches textiles, and manufactures furniture — somebody somewhere is supplying the glue.
That “somebody” might just be Nikhil Adhesives.
Incorporated in 1986, the company manufactures polymer emulsions, industrial adhesives, consumer wood glues, and construction chemicals. It also trades specialty chemicals. It’s not glamorous. It won’t trend on Instagram. But if your tiles don’t fall off and your wall paint doesn’t peel, you can quietly thank companies like this.
The interesting part? It’s the largest producer in India of MAHACOL RDP (Re-Dispersible Polymer) with 12,000 MTPA capacity — marketed as a 100% import substitute. In a country that loves shouting “Make in India,” that’s not a small claim.
The company has multiple plants — Dahanu, Silvassa, Dahej, Bangalore, Himachal — with total capacity of 135,000 MTPA.
Sounds solid, right?
But then you look at five-year sales growth of just 6.75% and three-year sales growth of negative 10%.
So is this a slow compounder or a company trying to find momentum again?
Let’s decode.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine Pidilite, but on a strict middle-class budget.
Nikhil