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Linde India:₹192 Cr Profit. 99.2x P/E. Gas Business Gets Spicy. Management Gets Choppy.

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Linde India Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Quarterly Reporting (Dec 2025)

Linde India:
₹192 Cr Profit. 99.2x P/E.
Gas Business Gets Spicy. Management Gets Choppy.

Industrial gases meet project engineering chaos. Quarterly profit soars 68%, stock trading at astronomical multiples, and the company just lost both its MD and CFO in December. Business as usual in the world’s most overvalued specialty gases company.

Market Cap₹57,858 Cr
CMP₹6,784
P/E Ratio99.2x
ROCE16.9%
Div Yield0.07%

The Gas Giant With Bipolar Stock Charts and Chaotic Management

  • 52-Week High / Low₹7,870 / ₹5,202
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue₹701 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT₹192 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 EPS₹22.46
  • Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹89.84
  • Book Value₹463
  • Price to Book14.6x
  • Dividend Yield0.07%
  • Debt / Equity0.02x
  • Operating Profit Margin37%
Auditor’s Opening Observation: Linde India closed Q3 FY26 with ₹701 crore quarterly revenue (+15.7% YoY) and a shocking ₹192 crore PAT (+68% YoY). The operating profit margin expanded to a stratospheric 37%. But here’s the kicker: at ₹6,784, the stock trades at 99.2x trailing P/E. You’d think that kind of valuation comes with a 40-year growth roadmap and a ticket to Mars. Instead, it’s a gas company with ₹67 crore debt, a dividend yield of 0.07%, and management turnover that reads like a soap opera script. Stock price CAGR: 38% over 10 years. Recent performance: a roller coaster held together by quarterly earnings surprises and pure faith.

Meet Linde India: 75% BOC, 100% Confusing

Linde India Limited is 75% owned by BOC Group, UK. That name should ring bells. BOC is part of the sprawling Linde plc family (formerly Praxair merged with Linde AG). So imagine this: a British-German industrial gases conglomerate decided to run a subsidiary in India, and that subsidiary decided that its valuation should rival a software unicorn.

The business is straightforward. Companies need industrial gases — oxygen for steel mills, nitrogen for chemicals, helium for semiconductors, carbon dioxide for food processing. Linde has 26 operating plants, runs on-site installations, merchant bulk deliveries via cryogenic tankers, and packaged gas cylinders. They also do project engineering — designing, building, and commissioning air separation units (ASUs) for big-ticket clients like TATA, SAIL, JSW, HPCL, and ONGC. The order book hit ₹2,020 crore as of March 2025.

Business model is solid. Execution has been textbook. Financial results are impressive. But the valuation? It’s trading like the Indian version of a Silicon Valley hypergrowth company. At 99.2x P/E and 14.6x book value, Linde is pricing in a level of growth that would make Tesla jealous. Revenue is growing at 7% annually over five years. ROCE is 16.9%. Compare that to the valuation, and you’re staring at the kind of disconnect that either resolves with a 60% stock price collapse or proves the market’s prescience. We’re betting on the former.

Plus, December 2025 was a bloodbath for internal management. The MD resigned. The CFO announced departure. The company appointed an interim CFO. SEBI is investigating related-party valuations. It’s a lot.

Context Note: Over 10 years, Linde’s stock delivered a 38% CAGR — rare for an industrial gases company. Over the last 3 months alone: +15.9%. This is peak euphoria pricing meeting genuine business quality. The gap between the two is where investing stories get written.

Two Legs. One Stable. One On Fire. Both Overpriced.

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