01 — At a Glance
The Excavator That Nobody Talks About (And Everybody Needs)
- 52-Week High / Low₹47.0 / ₹23.3
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹1,239 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹71 Cr
- TTM Revenue₹5,293 Cr
- TTM EPS₹2.57
- Book Value / Share₹39.6
- Price to Book0.63x
- Order Book (Dec 2025)₹15,123 Cr
- Book-to-Bill3.08x
- Total Debt (Sep 2025)₹1,560 Cr
Flash Summary: Patel Engineering is down 40% in a year, trades below book value, runs ₹15,123 crore order book, and just raised ₹400 crore from shareholders who paid ₹27 per share (while the stock trades at ₹24.9). The joke writes itself. Management says they’re “disciplined on margin” and turned down aggressive bids. The market says: “We don’t care, we’re leaving.”
02 — Introduction
When Your Company Is Literally Underground, Visibility Gets Tough
Patel Engineering is the Bollywood film nobody watches but everyone knows exists. Founded in 1949, they’ve built 87 dams, 15,000+ MW of hydropower capacity, 300+ km of tunnels, and more irrigation projects than you can spell. They’ve completed the Koyna Dam (1,880 MW), the Subansiri Lower project (2,000 MW — India’s largest hydro project), and enough tunneling work to make Elon Musk jealous. The company has literally shaped India’s infrastructure — and the stock price reflects none of this.
Q3 FY26 results landed on February 14, 2026. Revenue was ₹1,239 crore (modest growth). PAT was ₹71 crore (5.7% margin). The market yawned. Then management announced a ₹400 crore rights issue at ₹27 per share — which was trading at ₹35 at the time. Spoiler: the stock did not take kindly to this dilution. Fast forward to today: CMP is ₹24.9. Shareholders who participated in the rights issue are now underwater. Shareholders who didn’t are watching the company slowly rebuild its balance sheet.
The real story? An order book worth ₹15,123 crore with a book-to-bill ratio of 3.08x. That’s 3 years of revenue visibility in a sector where execution is everything and margins are thin. The question isn’t whether they’ll stay in business — it’s whether they’ll ever turn that visibility into actual profit.
Concall Insight (Feb 2026): Management repeatedly said “execution continues to remain our biggest strength,” citing Subansiri Unit 2 & 3 commissioning (500 MW), Kiru concrete milestones, and Parnai tunnel breakthroughs. The concall screamed “we know how to execute.” The stock price screamed “we don’t care, you’re expensive.”
03 — Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?
They Dig. They Build. They Wait. They Collect. Repeat.
Patel Engineering is an Engineering, Procurement & Construction (EPC) contractor. In plain English: someone briefs them on a big infrastructure project. They bid. If they win (at a razor-thin margin, because India’s construction market is cutthroat), they mobilize equipment, hire workers, and spend 3–5 years building a dam, tunnel, or transmission line. They collect money as milestones are achieved. After 5 years, they move on to the next project. This repeats forever. The only pauses are when projects finish and new bids open.
Their revenue mix (Q3 FY26): Hydro 57%, Irrigation 22%, Tunnelling 13%, Roads/Others 8%. Translation: they are a “hydro + government project” company. About 64% of their order book is central government / PSUs. Another 34% is state government. International is 3%. This is not a business with diversification. It’s a business with single points of failure called “government policy.”
The margin story is brutal. OPM (Operating Profit Margin) has ranged from 12–15% for the past 3 years. PAT margin sits at 5.2% (FY25). Interest cost is ₹68 crore per quarter. For a ₹1,200+ crore revenue company, that’s a 5.7% drag on pre-tax profits. In the concall, management blamed “project mix” for margin compression. Translation: they won lower-margin projects. The competitive bid environment chewed them up.
Hydro Mix57%of Q3 revenue
Gov Backed98%of order book
Book-to-Bill3.08xStrong visibility
Debt (Sep’25)₹1,560 CrDown from ₹1,603 Cr
On the concall, management dropped a bombshell: they bid on Dibang (a ₹15,000 crore mega hydro project) but lost. The L1 was almost ₹1,000 crore cheaper. Management’s response? “We choose not to compromise on margin… particularly… technically complex hydro and underground projects.” Translation: we’d rather be unprofitable than wrong on risk. The market hated this. The stock fell further.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers Go Sideways
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹0.71 | Avg Q1–Q3 EPS: (₹0.78+₹0.72+₹0.71)/3 = ₹0.74 | Annualised EPS: ₹2.94
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 1,239 | 1,206 | 1,208 | +2.73% | +2.56% |
| Operating Profit | 145 | 184 | 159 | -21.2% | -8.8% |
| OPM % | 11.7% | 15.3% | 13.2% | -360 bps | -150 bps |
| PAT | 71 | 82 | 73 | -13.4% | -2.7% |
| EPS (₹) | 0.71 | 0.80 | 0.72 | -11.3% | -1.4% |
The Margin Meltdown: Operating margin collapsed from 15.3% (Q3 FY25) to 11.7% (Q3 FY26). Management blamed “project mix and execution phasing.” Translation: they won cheaper projects and are still mobilizing on hydro work (which requires heavy upfront spending with delayed revenue recognition). This is the exact opposite of a profit story. And yet, the order book sits at ₹15,123 crore, suggesting this margin compression is a temporary phase, not a permanent crisis. Or is it? At 11.7% OPM, even on ₹5,000 crore annual revenue, you’re looking at ₹585 crore in operating profit. Deduct ₹68 crore in quarterly interest (₹272 cr annualized), taxes, and you get to ₹200–250 crore in PAT. That’s a 4–5% PAT margin on ₹5,000 crore revenue. That’s fine. It’s not exciting. But it’s fine.
💬 If the order book is ₹15,123 crore (3.08x book-to-bill), why is the stock down 40% in a year? Is it the rights issue overhang, or has the market priced in permanent margin compression? What’s your take?
05 — Valuation: Fair Value Range
Is 0.63x Book Value A Gift or A Death Trap?