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East India Drums & Barrels Q3 FY26: ₹56.87 Cr Revenue, ₹1.05 Cr PAT, 54% ROE — From CIRP To Central PSU Darling?


1. At a Glance – The Barrel That Refused To Burst

East India Drums & Barrels Manufacturing Ltd is currently trading at ₹108 with a market cap of ₹159 crore. In the last one year, the stock has delivered a jaw-dropping 433% return. Yes, you read that right. Four hundred and thirty-three percent. Meanwhile, in the last 3 months? Down 2.94%. Welcome to smallcap mood swings.

Q3 FY26 numbers (December 2025 quarter) show revenue of ₹56.87 crore and PAT of ₹1.05 crore. EPS for the quarter stands at ₹0.71. Stock P/E is 33. Book value is ₹13.8. Price to book? A spicy 7.8x.

ROE is 54.3%. ROCE is 35%. Debt to equity? 2.56. Interest coverage? 1.79. Current ratio? 0.99.

So here’s the puzzle:

A company that once had zero operations, went into CIRP, and now bags contracts from HPCL, IOCL, BPCL, and even the Indian Army… trading at 7.8x book.

Is this a phoenix… or just a well-painted steel drum?

Let’s open the lid.


2. Introduction – From Insolvency To Indian Oil

This story has more twists than a Netflix crime documentary.

In FY21, the company generated zero operational revenue. Only rental income. That’s it. Manufacturing drums? On vacation.

Then came CIRP. NCLT Mumbai appointed a Resolution Professional in April 2022.

Fast forward to 2024–2026 and suddenly:

  • BPCL orders worth ₹18–23 crore.
  • IOCL LOAs worth ₹8.6 crore and ₹11.76 crore.
  • Defence orders via GeM.
  • Contract from Indian Army.
  • HPCL LOA in February 2026 worth ₹94.77 lakh.

This is not a slow comeback. This is a Bollywood redemption arc.

But wait.

Debt stands at ₹52.3 crore.
Interest coverage is 1.79.
Other liabilities are ₹69 crore.

So yes, the company is making money. But it’s also walking a financial tightrope.

Question for you:
Is this a turnaround genius story — or are we watching Act 2 before Act 3 disaster?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

They make barrels. That’s it.

Steel drums. Mild steel barrels. Plastic barrels. Fuel tanks.

Capacity: 50 liters to 200 liters.

Used for:

  • Petroleum
  • Lubricants
  • Chemicals
  • Solvents
  • Defence storage

Imagine every refinery, oil depot, chemical plant. Now imagine thousands of blue drums stacked like Lego blocks. That’s the business.

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