01 — At a Glance
The Electrician’s Electrician. They Make Transformers. You Get Electricity. Everybody Wins.
- 52-Week High / Low₹3,475 / ₹2,009
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹568 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹24.7 Cr
- TTM EPS₹115.99
- Annualised EPS (Q1-Q3 Avg × 4)₹87.64
- Book Value / Share₹1,942
- Price to Book1.19x
- Order Book (FY24)₹1,143 Cr
- Debt to Equity0.09x
- Return over 3 Months-16.2%
Flash Summary: Bharat Bijlee just delivered Q3 PAT of ₹24.7 crore — down 39.2% QoQ. Revenue grew 10.6% YoY, but margins compressed like a samosa after frying. The stock fell 16% in three months. Yet the company is debt-free-ish (0.09x D/E), has ₹1,143 crore of unexecuted orders, and is expanding transformer capacity from 18,000 MVA to 35,000 MVA. If you’re looking for a beaten-down manufacturer with a decent order book and margins that can only improve, this might be the most boring stock that actually has a story.
02 — Introduction
Since 1946, They’ve Been Making Transformers. No Instagram. No TikTok. Just Electricity.
Bharat Bijlee is like that relative who works in a boiler plant. Nobody at the party knows what they do. But if they stopped showing up, everything would go dark. Literally.
Established in 1946, BBL manufactures power transformers, electric motors, elevator drive systems, servo motors, and automation solutions. They’re the invisible plumbing of India’s power grid. State Electricity Boards, private utilities, data centers, renewable energy plants — they all buy from BBL. In FY24, revenue was ₹1,872 crore. Operating profit was ₹175 crore. But ask a random stock investor about Bharat Bijlee and they’ll say, “Who?”
The business has two parts: Power Systems (transformers, substations) and Industrial Systems (motors, drives). Power Systems is 56% of revenue and growing. Industrial Systems is 44% and getting squeezed by competition and pricing pressure. The company is almost debt-free (borrowings of just ₹191 crore as of Sep 2025 vs assets of ₹3,109 crore). It has ₹1,623 crore in equity investments — mostly Siemens, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank. So if you’re investing in BBL, you’re also indirectly buying a slice of Indian banking stocks. It’s like a sambhar where nobody asked for sambhar, but it comes anyway with the dosa.
ICRA Rating (Jun 2024): [ICRA] AA- (Stable) / [ICRA] A1+. The rating agency calls out three things: strong market position, improving working capital management, and a liquidity cushion with ₹1,600+ crore in marketable securities. Sounds good. Sounds clean. Now why is the stock down 16% in three months?
03 — Business Model: Wah, Transformers!
They Make the Thing That Makes Your Lights Work. No Pun Intended. Actually, Plenty of Puns.
Bharat Bijlee has a very simple business model: take raw materials like copper, silicon, insulation paper, and aluminum. Spend months manufacturing at their 18,000 MVA facility in Navi Mumbai. Sell to utilities, data centers, and power companies. Collect payment after 2-3 months. Rinse, repeat for 78 years.
Power Systems (56% of FY24 revenue): They design and commission power transformers up to 200 MVA, 220 kV class. ICRA confirms they’re the leader in 220 KV transformers in India. They also do EPC projects for substations. Revenue grew 63% YoY in FY24. This is where the action is. Why? Data centers. Hyperscalers like Google, AWS, Meta are setting up server farms in India. Each data center needs massive power infrastructure. Suddenly, BBL’s 220 KV transformers are in hot demand.
Industrial Systems (44% of FY24 revenue): They manufacture electric motors ranging from 0.18 KW fractional horsepower to 1,250 KW high-tension motors. They also make drives, automation systems, and servo motors for elevators. This segment grew just 6% YoY in FY24. Why the slowdown? Intense competition. Siemens, ABB, and domestic players are all fighting for the same pie. Prices are under pressure. Volumes are up, but margins are down. It’s the classic low-margin business trap.
Transformers54%Product revenue
Electric Motors40%Product revenue
Magnet Tech3%Of revenue
Capacity Now18,000MVA (expanding 2x)
Here’s the twist: in July 2023, they signed a 10-year distribution deal with KEB Automation (Germany) to distribute Variable Frequency Drives up to 900 kW. So now they’re not just making motors. They’re also selling German drives. It’s like opening a vegetable shop and then selling French wine on the side. Confused customers. Expanding addressable market. Profit margins? To be determined.
04 — Financials Overview
Q3 FY26: The Numbers Went Oof
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹21.83 | Q1 EPS: ₹20.43, Q2 EPS: ₹22.42 | Avg Q1–Q3 EPS: (₹20.43+₹22.42+₹21.83)/3 = ₹21.56 | Annualised EPS: ₹86.24
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 568 | 514 | 473 | +10.5% | +20.1% |
| Operating Profit | 34 | 53 | 35 | -35.8% | -2.9% |
| OPM % | 6% | 10% | 7% | -400 bps | -100 bps |
| PAT | 25 | 41 | 28 | -39.2% | -10.7% |
| EPS (₹) | 21.83 | 35.94 | 24.98 | -39.2% | -12.6% |
The Damage Report: Q3 is basically the quarterly equivalent of “everything that could go wrong went wrong.” Revenue grew 10.5% YoY, which sounds fine. But operating profit collapsed 35.8% YoY. OPM fell from 10% to 6%. PAT halved compared to Q3 FY25. Is this a one-quarter blip or a sign of structural margin compression? ICRA suggests it’s the former — they blame lower order booking in H1 FY25 due to General Elections, and intense price competition in motors. Fair enough. But the market didn’t believe the “it’s temporary” narrative. Down 16% in three months.
💬 A company with zero debt, ₹1,143 crore of pending orders, and a capacity expansion from 18,000 to 35,000 MVA is down 16%. Is this a gift or a trap? What’s your read?
05 — Valuation Discussion
What’s a Transformer Worth When It’s Having an Identity Crisis?
Method 1: P/E Based
TTM EPS = ₹115.99. Annualised EPS (Q1-Q3 avg × 4) = ₹86.24. Current P/E at CMP ₹2,310 = 20x on TTM basis. Electrical equipment peers trade at median 24.2x P/E. Given margin pressure and execution risk, a 15x–20x P/E band is reasonable.
→ 15x × ₹115.99 = ₹1,739 20x × ₹115.99 = ₹2,320
Range: ₹1,739 – ₹2,320
Method 2: Price to Book Value
Book Value = ₹1,942. Current P/BV = 1.19x. For capital-intensive manufacturing companies with 7% ROE, a 1.0x–1.3x P/BV is standard. Given the margin compression, the lower end is justified.
→ 1.0x × ₹1,942 = ₹1,942 1.3x × ₹1,942 = ₹2,525
Range: ₹1,942 – ₹2,525
Method 3: EV/EBITDA
TTM Operating Profit ≈ ₹166 crore. Enterprise Value = ₹2,524 Crore. EV/EBITDA ≈ 15.2x. Given margin compression and execution risk, a 12x–16x range is appropriate for a working capital-intensive manufacturer.
Equity value per share at 12x–16x on net basis implies ₹1,800–₹2,300 range.
Range: ₹1,800 – ₹2,300
Consolidated View: All three methods cluster around ₹1,800–₹2,500. CMP of ₹2,310 sits comfortably in the middle, which suggests the stock is fairly valued — not cheap, not expensive. But the market’s current mood is: “Show me margin recovery, then we talk.” If transformers return to 9-10% OPM, fair value shifts to ₹2,600–₹3,000. If margins stay at 6%, it’s ₹1,600–₹2,000. Execution is everything.
⚠️ EduInvesting Fair Value Range: ₹1,800 – ₹2,500. This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. Please consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor before making any financial decision.
06 — What’s Cooking: News, Triggers & Drama
Capacity Doubling, Margins Halving. The Bharat Bijlee Contradiction.