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Tolins Tyres Q3 FY26: ₹93 Cr Revenue (+33.8% YoY), 21% ROCE, 12x P/E — Smallcap Rubber Rocket or Just a Retread Story?


1. At a Glance – The Rubber That Refuses to Burst

Here’s a ₹439 crore market cap company selling tyres at ₹111 per share, trading at a P/E of 12.2, with ROCE of 21.3% and ROE of 18.2%. Sounds boring? Wait.

Q3 FY26 revenue came in at ₹93.29 crore, up 33.8% YoY. PAT stood at ₹10.49 crore. Sales are ₹319 crore TTM, PAT ₹36 crore, and debt is just ₹15.7 crore. Debt-to-equity? A sleepy 0.05.

But here’s the masala.

Working capital days have ballooned from 73 to 258 days. Cash flow from operations in FY25? Negative ₹61 crore.

So what do we have?

A growing tyre company with improving capacity utilisation, strong promoter holding (68.5%), low debt, but cash flow that behaves like a teenager — unpredictable and expensive.

Is this a rubber compound ready to explode upward, or is it just air pressure?

Let’s dissect.


2. Introduction – Smallcap Tyre, Big Ambitions

Tolins Tyres is not MRF. It is not Apollo. It doesn’t have Bollywood-level brand recall.

It has something else — niche positioning.

Founded in 2003, the company manufactures:

  • Precured Tread Rubber (PCTR)
  • Light Commercial Vehicle tyres
  • Agricultural tyres
  • 2W & 3W tyres
  • Bonding gum and rubber compounds

It has 3 manufacturing facilities — two in Kerala and one in Ras Al Khaimah, UAE.

IPO raised ₹230 crore and listed in September 2024. Since then, the stock has corrected ~25% in 3 months.

Why?

Because markets are emotional. Rubber companies are cyclical. And smallcaps don’t get forgiveness for working capital issues.

But Q3 FY26 shows a rebound.

Management says deferred demand due to GST revision in Q2 converted into Q3 orders. Tractor rear tyre launch is starting to contribute.

So is this a turnaround quarter? Or just catch-up revenue?

Let’s get into the machine room.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

They do two things:

1. Sell new tyres

For:

  • Light Commercial Vehicles
  • Agriculture
  • Two/Three wheelers

2. Sell tyre retreading materials

Precured Tread Rubber (PCTR) — used to retread old tyres.

This is where it gets interesting.

India is price-sensitive. Retreading is cheaper than buying new tyres. So PCTR is a steady business, especially for fleet operators and state transport undertakings.

Revenue mix Q2 FY26:

  • Tread Rubber: ~68%
  • Tyres: ~32%

Geographical split:

  • Domestic: 94%
  • Exports: 6%

So basically — India-focused, retreading-heavy, working capital-intensive.

They’ve signed a 3-year offtake agreement with Apollo

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