1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Punch
Cyient, once the cool nerd of Indian engineering services, is currently having an existential market moment. The stock is chilling at ₹1,134, down ~4.3% over 3 months and a painful -33.6% over 1 year, while the broader IT crowd keeps arguing about AI, GenAI, and who stole whose engineer. Market cap stands at ₹12,609 Cr, which sounds respectable until you remember this company used to flex like a midcap alpha nerd.
Latest Q3 FY26 numbers show Revenue at ₹1,848 Cr (down QoQ and YoY), PAT at ₹97 Cr, and EPS at ₹8.26. Margins? Compressing faster than your patience during a long concall. Yet, Cyient still flashes a ROCE of 16.6%, ROE of 12.8%, and a dividend yield of 2.29%, reminding investors it hasn’t forgotten old-school shareholder love.
Debt is low (Debt/Equity 0.08), balance sheet isn’t screaming for help, but working capital days have ballooned to 64 days. Translation: cash is working overtime, but not efficiently. With EV/EBITDA at ~10x and P/E at 22.6x, the market seems unsure whether Cyient is a sleepy engineer or a future semiconductor ninja.
Curious why the market can’t make up its mind? Let’s dissect the patient.
2. Introduction – From Infotech Enterprises to Identity Crisis
Cyient started life in 1991 as Infotech Enterprises—basically the OG engineering outsourcing brain before it was cool. Over the years, it morphed into a serious ER&D services powerhouse, touching transportation, telecom, sustainability, aerospace, semiconductors, and now even design-led manufacturing.
But here’s the problem: Cyient is doing many smart things at once, and the market hates multitaskers unless earnings explode. While peers shout “AI-first!”, Cyient quietly executes engineering-heavy, long-cycle projects. That’s great for annuity-style revenue, not so great for Twitter hype cycles.
FY25 saw DET segment order intake of US$ 836 Mn and 24 large deals worth US$ 370.8 Mn. Sounds sexy. Yet quarterly numbers look meh, margins wobble, and EPS keeps sliding quarter after quarter. Investors are asking: Where’s the operating leverage, boss?
And just when you think stability is coming, boom—independent director resignations, Norway branch closure, Israel subsidiary shutdown. Not red flags, but definitely yellow post-its stuck on the governance file.
So is Cyient a misunderstood engineer… or just stuck between old IT and new-age tech narratives?
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