1. At a Glance – The Tyre That Forgot How to Inflate Profits
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the curious case of Goodyear India — a company that sells tyres but somehow keeps its profits deflated like a punctured autorickshaw tube on a Nagpur road. You’ve got ₹2,462 Cr revenue, ₹56.7 Cr PAT, and margins thinner than roadside chai. And yet, the stock trades at a P/E of 28 — because apparently hope is the most valuable commodity in India after onions.
This is a company where profits can jump 160% in a quarter… and still leave you wondering, “Bas itna hi?” The balance sheet says “almost debt-free,” but the P&L whispers, “I’m trying my best, okay?”
We’re dealing with a firm that dominates farm tyres — basically riding on tractors across India — but struggles to convert that dominance into meaningful shareholder returns. It’s like being the captain of a cricket team that wins the toss every time but still manages to lose the match.
And just when you think things are stable, boom:
- Inventory theft at plant
- HR head resignations
- Tax disputes of ₹30 Cr impact
- Parent company “reviewing” the business
This is not a tyre company. This is a Netflix drama waiting for a budget.
So the big question:
Is this a boring steady compounder… or a slow-motion wealth erosion machine?
Let’s investigate.
2. Introduction – The Tractor King Who Forgot Urban Roads
Goodyear India is not your flashy Apollo Tyres or CEAT. This is the “gaon ka king” — dominating the farm tyre segment while others fight for SUVs and sedans in cities.
95% of revenue comes from tyres.
100% of revenue is domestic.
And most of that? Farm tyres.
So essentially, this company’s fate depends on:
- Monsoon
- Tractor demand
- Rural economy
In other words… not exactly the most predictable business.
Now here’s where it gets spicy.
While peers are busy:
- Exporting globally
- Expanding premium segments
- Increasing margins
Goodyear India is:
- Fighting for 5% operating margin
- Losing revenue growth (-3.66%)
- Watching profits decline over 5 years
And yet, the company suddenly launches premium products like:
- Assurance ComfortTred
- EfficientGrip SUV
Translation:
“Bhai rural se paisa nahi aa raha… chalo urban luxury try karte hain.”
But the execution? Still questionable.
Let’s be honest:
This is a company stuck between two worlds:
- Not premium enough for urban domination
- Not efficient enough for rural scale
And that’s a dangerous place to be.
So ask yourself:
Is Goodyear India evolving… or just reacting?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Alright, let’s simplify this.
Goodyear India does three things:
- Makes tyres
- Sells tyres
- Depends heavily on tractors
That’s it.
Breakdown:
- Farm tyres → core business
- Commercial truck tyres → secondary
- Passenger car tyres → trying hard
- Tubes & flaps → side hustle
Revenue mix:
- Tyres = 95%
- Tubes & flaps = 5%
So basically:
If tyres sneeze, the entire company catches fever.
Now here’s the twist.
Customers include:
- Mahindra Tractors
- Escorts
- Tata Motors
So they’re B2B heavy in farm segment.
Which means: