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NOCIL: India’s Rubber Chemical King Who’s Losing The Game To Chinese Dumping₹9.25 Cr Profit. 38.2x P/E. CRISIL Outlook: Negative.

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

NOCIL: India’s Rubber Chemical King Who’s
Losing The Game To Chinese Dumping
₹9.25 Cr Profit. 38.2x P/E. CRISIL Outlook: Negative.

India’s largest rubber chemical manufacturer just reported profits that would make a startup proud, yet trades at an eye-watering P/E that says the market has given up on the story. Chinese competitors are dumping, US tariffs are tanking exports, and the company’s antidumping petitions remain pending. But there’s a ₹250 crore capacity expansion coming. Chaos or opportunity?

Market Cap₹2,404 Cr
CMP₹144
P/E Ratio38.2x
Div Yield1.39%
ROE5.94%

The Rubber King Who Forgot The Crown Comes With Responsibility

  • 52-Week High / Low₹211 / ₹125
  • Q3 FY26 Revenue₹315.84 Cr
  • Q3 FY26 PAT₹9.25 Cr
  • TTM EPS₹3.55
  • Annualised EPS (Q3 Avg × 4)₹2.36
  • Book Value / Share₹106
  • Price to Book1.36x
  • ROCE6.65%
  • Market Share (India)~40%
  • CRISIL Rating (Oct 2025)AA/Negative
Flash Summary: NOCIL delivered Q3 FY26 PAT of ₹9.25 crore — down 28% YoY despite flat revenue. The margin compression is brutal: OPM contracted 210 bps to 8.49% as Chinese dumping continued to squeeze prices. At ₹144, the stock has returned -21% in 6 months and -3.88% in 5 years. CRISIL just revised outlook to Negative in October 2025. The company is betting on antidumping duty investigations to save the day. Spoiler: government wheels turn slowly in India.

The Rubber Chemicals Kingdom: 40% Market Share. 0% Pricing Power.

NOCIL is India’s largest rubber chemical manufacturer — and if that doesn’t sound exciting, that’s because it isn’t. The company makes chemicals that go into tyres, belts, hoses, and other rubber products. Think of them as the invisible ingredient in your car tyre that you never think about until it goes flat on the Mumbai-Pune expressway at midnight.

Founded in 1961, part of the Arvind Mafatlal Group, NOCIL commands ~40% of India’s rubber chemicals market. They manufacture accelerators, anti-degradants, and specialty chemicals under brands like Pilfex and Pilnox. Two manufacturing facilities — one in Navi Mumbai and one in Dahej — with a combined capacity of 1,15,000 MTPA. On paper, dominance. In practice, a nightmare.

The nightmare has a name: Chinese dumping. Since late 2022–2023, cheap imports from China, Korea, Thailand, and EU have pummeled domestic realizations. In FY25, NOCIL’s revenue fell 4% YoY despite 5% volume growth — meaning prices fell harder than volume rose. The company filed for antidumping duty in October 2024. DGTR initiated investigations. Findings expected “in 1.5 to 2 months” according to the February 2026 concall. That was four weeks ago. The waiting game continues.

Q3 FY26 profit collapsed 28% YoY to ₹9.25 crore. Operating margins fell to 8.5% from 10.4% in Q2. The stock is at ₹144 — down 32% from its 52-week high of ₹211. CRISIL just changed the rating outlook from Stable to Negative. Is this a dead company walking? Or a hidden gem trading at a disaster-level valuation while waiting for antidumping duty to arrive like a delayed IRCTC booking confirmation?

CRISIL Rating Update (Oct 2025): CRISIL AA/Negative (outlook revised from Stable). The agency expects “subdued performance in the near term” due to “dumping by players from China, Korea, Thailand and EU.” But they maintained the AA rating, not downgraded it — which is important. They also said operating margins should improve from FY27 onwards, “benefitting from the antidumping duty implementation.” The faith is conditional. The timing is uncertain.

Chemicals That Make Rubber Useful. That’s It. That’s The Business.

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