01 — At a Glance
The Sticker Company That’s Quietly Eating Everyone’s Lunch
- 52-Week High / Low₹1,930 / ₹811
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹2,435 Mn
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹450 Mn
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹13.96
- Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹55.84
- Book Value₹236
- Price to Book6.71x
- Dividend Yield0.16%
- Debt / Equity0.05x
- Net Cash₹2,031 Mn
The Setup: SJS makes decorative plastic bits for cars, two-wheelers, appliances, and now—buckle up—automotive display systems. The company just posted its highest-ever quarterly revenue (₹2,435 million), highest PAT (₹450 million), highest margins (30.5%), and highest PAT margin (18.5%). Meanwhile, it’s already collected ₹1,229 million in profit in just nine months. FY25 full-year PAT? ₹1,188 million. They’ve basically lapped the entire year. And the stock is up 93% in one year. Is this overheating or just acceleration? Let’s find out.
02 — Introduction
How Does A Sticker Company Become A Growth Beast?
SJS Enterprises makes things that your car’s dashboard needs to look fancy. Decals, badges, overlays, logos, dial covers, chrome-plated bits—basically, all the shiny things that make you think “oh wow, this is a premium vehicle” before you realise it’s still the same engine that breaks down at 80,000 km.
The company has been around since 1987. Nobody knows about them because they sell B2B to Bajaj, TVS, Maruti, Mahindra, Whirlpool, Samsung—basically every OEM that needs to make their products look less depressing. Then, in FY23-24, they acquired Walter Pack India (WPI), a company that makes high-value components like in-mold decoration (IMD), in-mold electronics (IME), and other fancy stuff. This acquisition didn’t just diversify revenue. It weaponised the company.
And if that wasn’t enough, in December 2025, they signed an exclusive five-year technology license with BOE Varitronix (a Hong Kong display company) to manufacture and assemble automotive display systems in India. Kit value for cars could jump from 4–6 units to 5–8 units. That’s 40–60% more content per vehicle. Suddenly, SJS isn’t just a sticker company. It’s a content-per-vehicle expansion play.
Concall Insight (Feb 2026): Management: “We’ve already surpassed our full-year FY25 PAT within the first 9 months of FY26.” Translation: they’re not bragging. They’re warning you that this company is operating at a completely different level now.
03 — Business Model: Why Your Mechanic Respects This Company
They Sell Plastic Confidence. To Everyone. All Day.
Here’s the brutal simplicity of the business: car makers want cars to look premium. Motorcycle makers want motorcycles to look like motorcycles. Appliance makers want fridges to look like fridges that don’t smell. SJS designs, manufactures, and delivers the aesthetic components that make all of this happen.
The revenue mix? 9M FY26 consolidated: Two-wheelers 38.8%, Passenger vehicles 42.3%, Consumer & Others ~18.9%. This is the magic—they’re not dependent on one segment. A recession hits 2W? PV carries them. PV crashes? Consumer durables hold. It’s like having three different hedge funds, except it’s all one company.
The real genius is the export story. In Q3 FY26 alone, exports hit ₹283 million, up 146% YoY. 9M FY26 exports are already ₹656 million—higher than the entire FY25 exports at ₹568 million. They’re selling to Stellantis (Europe’s largest auto group), validating for new platforms, and the management says they see “no hiccup at all” in near-term disruption. They’re targeting 14–15% of revenue from exports by FY28. This is not a domestic story anymore.
2-Wheeler38.8%9M FY26 Mix
Passenger Vehicles42.3%9M FY26 Mix
Consumer Durables15.4%9M FY26 Mix
Exports11.6%Q3 FY26 Contribution
Concall Highlight: “When one OEM launches a product, it sets the benchmark and other OEMs follow suit.” This is SJS management describing the herd mentality of car makers. One Mahindra launch with fancy badges? Ten other OEMs call SJS asking for similar. Premiumization = forced volume growth.
💬 Have you ever bought a car and thought “wow, those badges look premium”? Yeah, you just gave SJS royalties without knowing it. Drop your thoughts on design-driven automotive premiumization!
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers Are Doing Backflips
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹13.96 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹55.84 | Current Stock P/E: 32.5x (vs Annualised: 28.3x)
| Metric (₹ Mn) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 2,435 | 1,788 | 2,123 | +36.4% | +14.7% |
| EBITDA | 756 | 482 | 659 | +56.9% | +14.7% |
| EBITDA Margin % | 30.5% | 26.9% | 31.0% | +360 bps | -50 bps |
| PAT | 450 | 277 | 432 | +62.5% | +4.2% |
| PAT Margin % | 18.5% | 15.5% | 20.3% | +300 bps | -180 bps |
| EPS (₹) | 13.96 | 8.80 | 13.71 | +58.6% | +1.8% |
The Reality Check: Yes, EPS is up 58.6% YoY. Yes, revenue is up 36.4%. Yes, margins are at all-time highs. But—and this is the auditor hat talking—Q2 margin was 20.3%, which is why Q3 came in at 18.5%. This isn’t a straight-line trajectory. It’s a staircase. Which is fine. It’s actually better because it shows the company isn’t pulling one-time accounting magic. It’s sustainable operational leverage.
05 — Valuation: Fair Value Range
Is ₹1,580 Cheap or Overcooked?