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Euro Panel Products Q3 FY26: ₹127 Cr Sales, 27.8% PAT Jump, 22.8 P/E — Premium Cladding or Polished Hype?

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1. At a Glance – The Shiny Panel Story

₹183 per share. ₹448 Cr market cap. ₹127.42 Cr quarterly sales. ₹5.70 Cr quarterly profit. 27.8% YoY profit growth. And trading at 22.8 times earnings while the industry median P/E sits around 20.6.

Welcome to Euro Panel Products Ltd, the company that literally wraps India in shiny aluminium skin.

In Q3 FY26 (December 2025 quarter), sales came in at ₹127.42 Cr versus ₹99.43 Cr a year ago. Net profit stood at ₹5.70 Cr versus ₹4.56 Cr last year. OPM is hovering around 10%. Debt-to-equity is 0.89. EV/EBITDA is 13.3.

Stock is down 8.82% in 3 months and 24.6% in 6 months — which means either the market is sleeping… or it knows something.

Promoters hold 63.38%. No pledge. Zero dividend.

And here’s the kicker: they just migrated to the mainboard and got a CRISIL rating upgrade to BBB+/Stable for ₹150.7 Cr facilities.

So the big question: Is this a growth story clad in aluminium… or just a pretty façade?

Let’s peel the panel layer by layer.


2. Introduction – From SME to Mainboard, Now What?

Incorporated in 2013, Euro Panel Products started manufacturing Aluminium Composite Panels (ACP). For those who don’t know, ACP is what makes buildings look expensive without actually being expensive.

You’ve seen it everywhere — airports, metro stations, malls, hospitals. That glossy outer skin? Chances are, someone like Eurobond supplied it.

They listed on NSE Emerge on 24 December 2021. SME journey done. Now migrated to mainboard in 2025.

That’s like moving from coaching class cricket to IPL trials.

But does the balance sheet match the ambition?

Revenue in FY25: ₹423 Cr
PAT in FY25: ₹18 Cr
Quarterly PAT in Q3 FY26: ₹5.70 Cr

Growth is visible. Margins are steady around 10%. But debt is ₹129 Cr. Interest coverage is 3.2.

Not bad. Not bulletproof either.

And remember — capex plans ahead, funded 75% by debt.

So let me ask you:

When a company making decorative building skins borrows heavily to expand… is that confidence or construction risk?


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Let’s simplify.

They sandwich a core material between two aluminium sheets.

Congratulations. That’s ACP.

But wait — they’ve turned this sandwich into a premium product portfolio:

  • ACP Grid
  • Fire Retardant ACP
  • Aluminium HPL
  • Aluminium Core Composite (EUROCORE)
  • Aluminium Honeycomb (EUROCOMB)
  • Zinc Composite Panels

Brands:

  • Eurobond (90% revenue) – Premium
  • Archer (10%) – Budget

Distribution:
80+ distributors
11 depots
5000+ retail touchpoints

Exports to USA, Brazil, Africa, Middle East, Nepal, Sri Lanka.

Manufacturing capacity:
20,000 sq meters per day at Umergaon, Gujarat.

Now here’s the real model:

  1. Buy aluminium.
  2. Process.
  3. Sell to builders, infra, corporates.
  4. Pray aluminium prices don’t spike.
  5. Pray construction cycle doesn’t slow.

Revenue split:
99% from product sales. No fancy financial engineering.

Clients include:
Zydus, Torrent Pharma, NBCC, SEBI, ONGC, Wipro, Amazon, TVS, SBI, HDFC, Larsen & Toubro.

So they aren’t selling to random shed builders.

But here’s the question:

In a commodity-like business, what gives them pricing power? Brand? Distribution? Or just glossy brochures?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers Don’t Lie

EPS:
Jun 2025: 2.33
Sep 2025: 2.70
Dec 2025: 2.33

Average = (2.33 + 2.70 + 2.33) / 3 = 2.45
Annualised EPS = 2.45 × 4 = ₹9.8

Recalculated P/E = 183 / 9.8 ≈ 18.7

Interesting. Market shows 22.8 P/E (based on FY25 EPS ₹7.52).
But annualised current run-rate P/E is ~18.7.

Quarterly Comparison Table (₹ Crores)

MetricLatest Qtr (Dec 25)YoY Qtr (Sep 24)Prev Qtr (Sep 25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue127.4299.43129.8628.2%-1.9%
EBITDA13.059.3814.8739.1%-12.2%
PAT5.704.566.6225.0%-13.9%
EPS (₹)2.331.862.7025.3%-13.7%

Commentary:

YoY growth solid. QoQ softening.

Margins dipped slightly QoQ. Nothing dramatic.

Revenue stable around ₹125–130 Cr run-rate.

Question for you:

Would you value this at industry median P/E of 20.6 or give it a premium for growth?


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range

1) P/E Method

Industry P/E: 20.6
Annualised EPS: ₹9.8

Fair Value = 9.8 × 18 to 21 range
= ₹176 to ₹206


2) EV/EBITDA Method

EV = ₹571 Cr
EV/EBITDA = 13.3

Annualised EBITDA approx = 13.05 × 4 = ₹52.2 Cr

If fair EV/EBITDA range = 11–14
Implied EV = ₹574 Cr to ₹731 Cr

After adjusting debt approx ₹129 Cr
Equity Value range roughly aligns ₹445–600 Cr

Per share roughly ₹180–240 range.


3) Simplified DCF

Assume:
PAT ₹23 Cr annualised
Growth 12%
Discount 14%

Indicative range suggests ₹170–220 zone.


Fair Value Range:

₹170 – ₹220

This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice.


6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama

  • Migrated to NSE/BSE mainboard in Aug 2025.
  • Reported 26% PAT rise.
  • Capacity expansion plans.
  • CRISIL upgraded rating to BBB+/Stable (₹150.7 Cr facilities).
  • Approved QAR 500,000 unsecured loan to subsidiary at 8.5%.

Loan to subsidiary? Hmm.

Capex funded 75% by debt? Double hmm.

Growth ambition is visible. But leverage creeping.

Interest coverage: 3.2.

Comfortable… but not luxurious.

Let me ask:

If construction cycle slows, can they comfortably service higher debt?


7. Balance Sheet – Latest Consolidated (Mar 2025)

(Data limited in provided dataset; values as per latest column)

ItemMar 2025
Total Assets
Net Worth
Borrowings
Other Liabilities
Total Liabilities

Debt disclosed: ₹129 Cr
Debt-to-equity: 0.89

Observations:

  • Leverage moderate.
  • Interest cost ₹11 Cr annually.
  • Expansion debt incoming.

Sarcastic take:

• Not overleveraged, but not zero-debt baba either.
• Growth funded by borrowing.
• Needs strong cash flows to avoid stress.


8. Cash Flow – Sab Number Game Hai

YearOperatingInvestingFinancing
Mar 20259-2011

Operating cash: ₹9 Cr
Investing: -₹20 Cr (capex?)
Financing: ₹11 Cr

Net cash: zero.

Translation:

Business generated cash. Spent more on growth. Borrowed to fill gap.

Classic expansion mode.

Question:

Are they compounding… or compounding debt?


9. Ratios – Sexy or Stressy?

RatioValue
P/E22.8
EV/EBITDA13.3
PAT Margin~4.3%
Debt/Equity0.89
Interest Coverage3.2

Margins thin.
Valuation fair.
Leverage manageable.

Not screaming cheap. Not screaming expensive.


10. P&L Breakdown – Show Me the Money

MetricFY25
Revenue423
EBITDA42
PAT18

10% OPM business.

This is not a SaaS rocketship. It’s a construction material company.

Stable. Moderate margin. Volume-driven.


11. Peer Comparison – ACP Arena

CompanyRevenue QtrPAT QtrP/E
Prec Wires1347.6137.7042.48
Vidya Wires448.1615.5621.52
Baheti Recycling315.149.2730.71
Euro Panel127.425.7022.78

Euro sits comfortably in middle valuation band.

Not cheapest. Not frothy.


12. Shareholding – Family Business Vibes

Promoters: 63.38%
FIIs: 0%
DIIs: 1.29%
Public: 35%

No pledge.

Promoter group dominated by Shah family.

SME-style concentrated ownership.

No big institutional confidence yet.


13. Corporate Governance – Angels or Devils?

  • Auditor changed in FY22.
  • CFO change in FY22.
  • No promoter pledge.
  • CRISIL upgrade in 2025.

Nothing alarming in dataset.

But governance maturity will be tested now that they’re on mainboard.


14. Industry Roast – The Aluminium Drama

ACP industry thrives on:

  • Real estate cycle
  • Infrastructure spending
  • Aluminium prices
  • Fire safety regulations

Margins thin. Competition high. Branding matters.

Fire-retardant panels gaining traction.

Export markets diversifying.

But this is still cyclical.

When construction booms, ACP shines.

When it slows… panels gather dust.


15. EduInvesting Verdict

Euro Panel Products is not a fantasy stock.

It’s a solid mid-sized industrial manufacturer with:

Strengths:

  • Established brand (Eurobond)
  • Wide distribution
  • Mainboard listing
  • Credit rating upgrade
  • Growing quarterly profits

Weaknesses:

  • Thin margins
  • Debt-funded expansion
  • Low institutional participation

Opportunities:

  • Infra push
  • Export growth
  • Premium fire-retardant panels

Threats:

  • Aluminium price volatility
  • Construction slowdown
  • Rising interest costs

At ₹183, valuation sits within fair value band of ₹170–220.

It’s priced reasonably for growth — but not dirt cheap.

This is the kind of business that compounds steadily if execution remains disciplined.

Not flashy. Not fraudulent. Just industrial.

The question is:

Will they build long-term brand moat… or remain just another aluminium sheet supplier?

Time — and margins — will decide.


Written by EduInvesting Team | Date