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Harsha Engineers International Ltd Q1 FY26 + “P/E 35.3, EV/EBITDA 18.5, Net Profit Flatter than a Dosa” Mystery Case


1. At a Glance

Imagine Sherlock Holmes stuck in a Vadodara chai tapri, staring at a ₹3,863 Cr company that makes tiny bearing cages but controls 50–60% of India’s organized market. Globally, it’s just 6.5% market share — basically like being the best dancer at a Gujarati wedding but forgotten once you step into a Bollywood set. The stock trades at a pricey P/E of 35.3, but growth has been more “rickshaw speed” than “Bullet Train”.


2. Introduction

Harsha Engineers International Ltd (Harsha Engg to friends, “kya kar raha hai yaar” to investors) incorporated in 2010, is India’s pride in precision bearing cages. Think of it as the unsung hero behind your vehicles, trains, and even windmills — while the spotlight hogs (like SKF, Timken, Schaeffler) make billions selling the final bearings, Harsha supplies the cages that keep them rolling.

For a company with 7,500+ products, exports to 25 countries, and plants in India, China, and Romania, you’d expect fireworks. But the financials read like a boring engineering student’s assignment: some steady margins, flattish sales growth (3% CAGR over 3 years), and occasional scandals (USD 1 mn recall in FY24 — yes, someone literally said “bhai, product galat nikla”).

The business is split like a politician’s promises:

  • Engineering (91%) – Brass, steel, polyamide cages. No, not cage fighting, literal metal cages.
  • Solar EPC (9%) – The “side hustle” where they install rooftop/ground-mounted solar plants. Grew 99% in 2 years, probably because the government kept shouting “Renewables!”.

Investors are puzzled: Is this a global export champion, or just another Gujarat-based engineering midcap hyped during IPO and now sleepwalking? Let’s dig deeper.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Harsha makes bearing cages — the little metallic/nylon pieces that separate rolling elements inside bearings. Without these, your car wheels, trains, or wind turbines would turn into friction festivals.

The company supplies to all Top 6 global bearing makers. That’s like being a tuition teacher for all six IIT JEE toppers — great prestige, but the toppers walk away with the fat salaries, and you still live in a 2BHK.

They also run a Solar EPC division, installing ~500 MW solar projects. But they’ve now decided: “Bhai, bada project headache hai, hum chhote rooftop aur 4-5 MW ground mount hi karenge.” Basically, moving from “wedding planner for Ambanis” to “decorating your cousin’s shaadi tent.”

So yeah, they’re global, they’re diversified, but at the end of the day, it’s still a cage factory with a solar side hustle.

Question for you: If a company sells cages to SKF and Schaeffler, but you only know SKF, who do you credit for the bearing? 🤔


4. Financials Overview

MetricLatest Qtr (Q1 FY26)Same Qtr Last Yr (Q1 FY25)Previous Qtr (Q4 FY25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue₹365 Cr₹343 Cr₹373 Cr6.4%-2.1%
EBITDA₹55 Cr₹55 Cr₹35 Cr0.0%57.1%
PAT₹38 Cr₹36 Cr-₹2 Cr5.2%Big Comeback
EPS (₹)4.173.96-0.265.3%“from jail to bail”

Commentary:

  • Revenue crawling like Mumbai traffic — 6.4% YoY growth.
  • PAT staged a “Bollywood hero comeback” after last quarter’s negative EPS.
  • EPS annualized = ~₹16.7. At CMP ₹424, that’s P/E ~25.4 (not 35.3, Screener misguiding like fake astrology baba).

5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range

We’ll play three valuation games, just like three

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