01 — At a Glance
The Bifurcated Beast: Decaying Auto, Exploding Defense
The Setup: Bharat Forge is on a meme. The stock has returned 77% in one year and 60% in six months. The P/E is 78.8x — a company trading at 3x the sector median — because the market is pricing in defense revenue reaching 20–30% of total by 2028. Meanwhile, traditional automotive (60%+ of legacy revenue) is getting rocked. North America Class-8 truck exports down 51% YoY. Europe is “patchy.” Only India domestic is holding up. Q3 FY26 consolidated revenue: ₹4,343 crore. Profit: ₹273 crore (down from ₹299 crore in the prior quarter, annualised EPS ₹22.20 vs reported full-year EPS ₹23.62). The stock is pricing in miracles, and management is describing them as “certainties.” Let’s untangle this.
- 52-Week High / Low₹1,936 / ₹919
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹4,343 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹273 Cr
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹5.53
- Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹22.20
- Book Value₹196
- Price to Book9.83x
- Dividend Yield0.44%
- Debt / Equity0.71x
- Return (1 Year)+76.9%
02 — Introduction
Welcome to the Weirdest Valuation in India: A Company Worth ₹92,000 Crores But Making ₹273 Crore Quarterly
Bharat Forge is not your grandmother’s auto component supplier. Your grandmother’s supplier made crankshafts, axles, and engine blocks. Bharat Forge does too — but also artillery systems, unmanned drones, tank turrets, and missiles. They export to North America, Europe, Asia, and everywhere else that still buys cars or weapons.
For 30 years, it was a boring auto-forging story with 12–15% ROCE and predictable 12–15% net margins. Then in 2022, the Ministry of Defence greenlit a defence industrial plan. Bharat Forge pivoted hard. They acquired assets, built factories, signed MOUs. Revenues went from ₹410 crore in FY23 to ₹1,772 crore in FY25 — a 330% jump in two years. An executable order book of ₹9,467 crore in defence sitting in the treasury like a loaded gun.
The market saw this and decided the past 30 years were irrelevant. The stock price tripled on the assumption that by 2028, defence would be 20–30% of total revenues with 25%+ EBITDA margins, effectively doubling the company’s intrinsic value. Problem: the traditional auto business (automotive still ~60% of revenues) is collapsing in real-time. North America Class-8 trucks, which once represented 40%+ of export revenue, are now irrelevant. Europe is in a “secular problem.” Only India domestic is growing.
So you have a stock at a 78.8x P/E because the market is betting the entire future on defence scale-up working out perfectly, on time, with no delays, no cost overruns, and no geopolitical surprises. It’s a thesis. It’s also a very expensive one.
Concall Update (Feb 2026): Management said defence revenue would grow “30–40% plus” next year, and the segment could “become as big as our business today is” if global opportunities pan out. They also said, literally: “let’s look at 20%, 30%” of total revenue by 2028–2029. This is directional aspiration, not guidance. Treat accordingly.
03 — Business Model: WTF Is This Company, Exactly?
Half Auto Supplier. Half Defence Contractor. Both Underperforming.
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