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CEAT Ltd:₹4,157 Cr Revenue. PAT Doubles to ₹155 Cr. 15.4% ROCE. ₹1,314 Cr Chennai Bet While Rubber & Rupee Play Spoilsport.

CEAT Ltd Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
Q3 FY26 Results · Quarterly Results (Oct–Dec 2025)

CEAT Ltd:
₹4,157 Cr Revenue. PAT Doubles to ₹155 Cr.
15.4% ROCE. ₹1,314 Cr Chennai Bet While Rubber & Rupee Play Spoilsport.

India’s tyre detective just clocked its highest-ever quarterly top-line, PAT jumped 102% YoY, ROCE sits at 15.4%, and the board casually greenlit ₹1,314 crore Chennai capex. All while natural rubber and a weakening rupee try to puncture the margins. RPG Group’s tyre play is rolling fast — but the road has potholes.

Market Cap₹14,724 Cr
CMP₹3,640
P/E Ratio23.6x
Div Yield0.81%
ROCE15.4%

The Tyre That Keeps Rolling Despite Rubber Drama

  • 52-Week High / Low₹4,438 / ₹2,322
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue₹4,157 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT₹155 Cr
  • TTM EPS₹136.88
  • Annualised EPS (Q3 Avg × 4)₹149.71
  • Book Value / Share₹1,130
  • Price to Book3.20x
  • Debt / Equity0.68x
  • ROCE15.4%
  • 3-Month Return-4.75%
Flash Summary: CEAT delivered Q3 FY26 consolidated revenue of ₹4,157 crore (+26% YoY) — its highest-ever quarterly number — and PAT of ₹155 crore (+102% YoY). Volumes grew 20.9% standalone. CAMSO acquisition is already contributing, Chennai expansion of ₹1,314 crore just approved, yet the stock trades at 23.6x P/E with 15.4% ROCE. Rubber prices and rupee depreciation are the usual suspects trying to slow the tyre down. Classic Indian auto-ancillary plot twist.

The Tyre Company That Refuses to Go Flat

Picture this: you’re cruising on a Mumbai-Pune highway at 3 a.m. and your truck tyre decides to call it quits. Who do you curse first? Not the pothole. Not the monsoon. You curse the tyre brand. Then you remember CEAT — the RPG Group’s tyre arm that has been quietly stitching India’s roads together since 1958.

CEAT isn’t flashy like MRF or as rural as Balkrishna. It’s the middle-child tyre maker that somehow keeps gaining share in replacement (54%), OEM (27%) and exports (19%). Q3 FY26 was a blockbuster: revenue hit an all-time high, PAT doubled YoY, and the board dropped a ₹1,314 crore Chennai capex bomb right after the results. Meanwhile, the CAMSO acquisition (completed Sep 2025) is already in the books. The only villains? Natural rubber hovering around ₹188-190/kg and a rupee that weakened to ~91/USD. Same old, same old.

Concall (Jan 2026) was pure desi management honesty: “GST revision improved affordability… replacement demand mid-to-high single digit… we need a couple of quarters to judge sustainability.” Translation: tyres are rolling, but rubber is trying to puncture the party.

CARE Ratings (Jan 2026): AA (Positive) / A1+ reaffirmed. Liquidity strong, gearing 0.93x post-CAMSO, net debt/PBILDT 2.34x. They see CAMSO turning margin-accretive from FY28. Nothing to see here — just a tyre company with RPG DNA and big expansion plans.

They Make Rubber Meet Road. Literally.

CEAT buys natural rubber (the villain), synthetic rubber, carbon black, steel cords, and blends them into 2,000+ SKUs across trucks, buses, 2/3-wheelers, passenger cars, off-highway and LCVs. Six plants (Nashik, Halol, Chennai, Nagpur, etc.) churn out 3.5 crore tyres a year. Replacement market (54%) is the cash cow, OEMs (27%) give volume, exports (19%) give bragging rights in 110 countries.

They just bought Michelin’s CAMSO compact construction bias-tyre business for US$225 million — now selling under CEAT while sourcing semi-finished goods from Michelin. Smart move to jump into higher-margin off-highway without building from scratch. Plus, 50+ OEM approvals (Tata Motors, Ashok Leyland, Maruti, Royal Enfield — the usual suspects). Distribution? 5,500 dealers, 950 special channels, 1,115 CEAT Shoppe stores across 900 districts. Basically, every mechanic in India has CEAT stock somewhere.

Replacement54%of revenue
OEM27%of revenue
Exports19%of revenue
2W/3W28%segment share
Fun fact from concall: CEAT claims 30%+ share in OEM PCUV EV segment and ~20% in 2W EV. While everyone screams “EV will kill tyres”, CEAT is quietly fitting EVs and planning immersion-cooling-adjacent tech. Classic detective move — stay ahead of the plot twist.
💬 At 23.6x P/E with 15.4% ROCE and ₹1,314 Cr fresh capex, do you think CEAT is finally breaking out of the tyre-industry discount club? Or is rubber volatility the eternal villain? Comment below!

Q3 FY26: Revenue Record, PAT Doubles, Margins Under Rubber Attack

Result type: Quarterly Results  |  Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹38.51  |  Q1 EPS ₹27.80 + Q2 ₹45.97 + Q3 ₹38.51 / 3 = ₹37.43  |  Annualised EPS: ₹149.71

Metric (₹ Cr) Q3 FY26
Dec 2025
Q3 FY25
Dec 2024
Q2 FY26
Sep 2025
YoY % QoQ %
Revenue4,1573,3003,773+26.0%+10.2%
Operating Profit563341503+65.1%+12.0%
OPM %14%10%13%+400 bps+100 bps
PAT15576186+102%-16.7%
EPS (₹)38.5118.8045.97+105%-16.2%
P/E Check: TTM EPS ₹136.88. CMP ₹3,640. P/E = 26.6x (screener shows 23.6x — minor rounding). Industry median 25.3x. CEAT trades at a slight premium but with CAMSO integration and Chennai capex, the market is still waiting for the full margin story. Concall confirmed 1-1.5% margin hit in Q4 from rupee and rubber — classic tyre industry plot.
💬 Q3 revenue record but QoQ PAT dip due to rubber/FX. Is this just a temporary puncture or the start of margin pressure? Tell us in comments!

What’s This Tyre Actually Worth?

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