Hindustan Aeronautics:
₹1.87 Cr PAT. ₹1,90,000 Cr Order Book.
Your Tax Rupees, Flying Higher.
A public sector defence champion with an order book the size of Infosys’s market cap. They make jets, helicopters, and keep doing what they do. No drama, just contracts worth ₹62,370 crore for 97 LCA Mk-1A fighters signed in September 2025.
The Defence Ministry’s Favourite Contractor
- 52-Week High / Low₹5,166 / ₹3,354
- Q3 FY26 Revenue₹7,699 Cr
- Q3 FY26 PAT₹1,867 Cr
- Q3 FY26 EPS (₹)27.91
- Annualised EPS (Q3×4)₹111.64
- Book Value₹555
- Price to Book7.25x
- Operating Margin30.5%
- Debt / Equity0.00x
- Order Book₹1,90,000 Cr
When Your Portfolio’s Most Boring Stock is Also a Strategic Asset
Welcome to Hindustan Aeronautics Limited — a public sector undertaking so boring it’s actually fascinating. Since 1940, this company has been making aircraft and helicopters for the Indian Defence Forces. No VC funding. No pivot announcements. No social media wars. Just steel, engines, and government contracts.
The company is 71.6% government-owned through the President of India, making it India’s only domestic supplier of fighter jets, attack helicopters, transport aircraft, and the engines that power them. It’s not a choice to buy from HAL — it’s a geopolitical decision. That moat is stronger than any tech network effect ever could be.
In Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025), HAL’s revenue crossed ₹7,699 crore (up 10.7% YoY), PAT surged to ₹1,867 crore (up 29.6% YoY), and the order book expanded to a mind-boggling ₹1,90,000 crore — nearly twice the company’s annual revenue. Most companies would need a decade to execute that pipeline. HAL is in year two of a 5-6 year manufacturing expansion worth ₹14,000-15,000 crore.
The stock trades at 30.2x P/E, sits at a 52-week low of ₹3,354 and high of ₹5,166, and has delivered 16.6% returns over the last 12 months. Not spectacular by startup standards. Fortress-like by stability standards. Let’s break down the numbers — and explain why a defence PSU is suddenly the hottest topic in your mutual fund disclosures.
Manufacturing, Services, and Some ISRO Collaboration on the Side
HAL’s business is brutally simple: design, manufacture, and repair military aircraft and helicopters. The revenue split is roughly 24% Manufacturing (growing fast) and 70% Services — repair, overhaul, and maintenance for both Indian defence services and export customers. The remaining 6% is R&D, space tech, and miscellaneous work.
Manufacturing segment revenue has grown 16% between FY23 and FY25, driven by massive defence contracts: 156 LCH Prachand helicopters (₹62,370 crore deal signed Sep 2025 — for 97 LCA Mk-1A jets). 240 AL-31FP engines for Su-30MKI. 12 more Su-30MKI aircraft. Plus Mid-Life Upgrade contracts for Dornier-228 planes. It’s the kind of order backlog that guarantees a decade of work.
The Services segment earned ₹20,000 crore in repair and overhaul (ROH) orders during FY25 alone. This is where margins live — HAL has monopolistic control over maintenance for aircraft already in IAF inventory. Your fighter jet needs an engine overhaul? Government calls HAL. No competitive bidding. It’s a utility-grade business, but with 31% operating margins.
Q3 FY26: The Quarterly Numbers
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹27.91 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹111.64 | Full-year FY25 EPS (TTM): ₹133.02
Source table
| Metric (₹ Cr) | Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % | QoQ % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 7,699 | 6,957 | 6,629 | +10.7% | +16.1% |
| Operating Profit | 1,871 | 1,683 | 1,558 | +11.2% | +20.0% |
| OPM % | 24% | 24% | 24% | Flat | Flat |
| PAT | 1,867 | 1,440 | 1,669 | +29.6% | +11.8% |
| EPS (₹) | 27.91 | 21.53 | 24.96 | +29.6% | +11.8% |
Is ₹4,024 Reasonable for a Maharatna Defence PSU?
Method 1: P/E Based
FY25 TTM EPS = ₹133.02. Sector median P/E = 57.3x (outlier, because Bharat Electronics and BDL are higher). For defensive PSUs with ROCE 33.9%, justified P/E: 20x–28x (vs peers). HAL deserves premium for order visibility.
Range: ₹2,660 – ₹3,725
Method 2: EV/EBITDA Based
FY25 EBITDA = ~₹9,621 Cr (operating profit minus D&A). Current EV = ₹2,24,635 Cr – net cash → EV/EBITDA = 23.3x. Defence/aerospace comps trade at 12x–18x. HAL’s order book commands premium: 16x–20x justified.
EV range (16x–20x): ₹1,53,936 Cr – ₹1,92,420 Cr → Per share (on net cash):
Range: ₹2,302 – ₹2,878
Method 3: DCF Based
Base FCF: ~₹8,000 Cr (from ₹13,643 Cr OCF less capex ₹2,026 Cr, normalized). Growth: 7–8% (FY26 guidance 8–10%) for 6 years. Terminal growth: 3%. WACC: 9% (low debt, stable cash flows).
→ Terminal Value (3% growth / 6% cap rate): ~₹1,33,000 Cr
→ Total EV: ~₹1,71,500 Cr (on net cash position of ~₹33,793 Cr)
Range: ₹2,565 – ₹3,750
Contracts, Capex, and a Maharatna Upgrade Nobody Expected
🔋 The Big One: ₹62,370 Crore LCA Mk-1A Contract (Sep 2025)
The Ministry of Defence signed a jaw-dropping ₹62,370 crore contract with HAL in September 2025 for 97 Light Combat Aircraft Mk-1A (Tejas). Deliveries begin 2027-28 over 6 years. This alone provides revenue visibility until 2033. HAL has already received 5 GE-414 engines for these aircraft (Nov 2025) and expects to deliver 5 aircraft in FY26. The company has inaugurated a 3rd production line capable of 8 aircraft/year (Oct 2025). At peak, 24 LCA aircraft/year across all lines. Most profitable order in company history.
✅ Recent Order Wins (Feb-Mar 2026)
- • Mar 3, 2026: ₹2,901 Cr contract for 6 ALH Mk-III (MR) helicopters
- • Feb 12, 2026: ₹2,312 Cr contract for 8 Dornier-228 (Indian Coast Guard)
- • Jan 29, 2026: ₹1,800+ Cr contract to supply 10 Dhruv NG helicopters to Pawan Hans
- • Pipeline: 143 ALHs + 1 lakh Cr in potential future orders
⚠️ Execution Risks (Real Talk)
- • Working capital days increased: 121 days (Mar 2025) vs 37 days (Mar 2024)
- • Inventory days at 736 (up from 544) — higher WIP for new platforms
- • Liquidated damages: 1.6–2.3% of revenue (modest, but monitored)
- • Single customer dependency: 90%+ revenue from Indian Defence Ministry
The Fortress of Tax Rupees
Source table
| Item (₹ Cr) | Mar 2023 | Mar 2024 | Mar 2025 | Sep 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Assets | 69,276 | 80,911 | 108,698 | 123,145 |
| Net Worth (Eq + Reserves) | 23,572 | 29,138 | 34,981 | 37,114 |
| Borrowings | 52 | 50 | 51 | 11 |
| Other Liabilities | 45,652 | 51,723 | 73,665 | 86,019 |
| Total Liabilities | 69,276 | 80,911 | 108,698 | 123,145 |
Borrowings of ₹11 Cr? That’s not even a rounding error. Interest coverage of 1,170x means HAL could service debt 1,170 times over with operating profits. In practical terms: you’d have to be insane to borrow.
Other Liabilities jumped from ₹73,665 Cr (Mar 2025) to ₹86,019 Cr (Sep 2025). This isn’t debt — it’s customer advance payments from Defence Ministry for massive contracts. Free working capital financing.
Fell from ₹12,246 Cr (FY24) to ₹2,314 Cr (FY25) after settling ₹10,018 Cr in sales tax disputes. Government reimbursed. Balance sheet clean. No hidden bombs.
Operating Cash is Not a Mirage
Source table
| Cash Flow (₹ Cr) | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating CF | +8,223 | +8,830 | +13,643 |
| Investing CF (Capex) | -5,728 | -6,410 | -10,771 |
| Free CF | +2,495 | +2,420 | +2,872 |
| Financing CF (Dividends) | -1,731 | -1,999 | -2,579 |
| Net Cash Flow | +1,370 | -186 | +294 |
30% Margins, 34% ROCE, Zero Debt — Pick Your Favourite
4-Year Revenue & Profit Growth
Source table
| Metric (₹ Cr) | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 24,620 | 26,927 | 30,381 | 30,981 |
| Operating Profit | 5,415 | 6,686 | 9,752 | 9,621 |
| OPM % | 22% | 25% | 32% | 31% |
| PAT | 5,080 | 5,828 | 7,621 | 8,364 |
| EPS (₹) | 75.96 | 87.14 | 113.96 | 125.07 |
Note: FY25 PAT declined slightly from FY24 baseline (₹8,364 Cr vs ₹7,621 Cr growth), but TTM shows continued strength. The company expects 8–10% growth in FY26–27 as LCA manufacturing ramps.
HAL vs the Defence Club
Source table
| Company | Q3 Revenue (₹ Cr) | Q3 PAT (₹ Cr) | P/E | ROCE % | OPM % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HAL | 7,699 | 1,867 | 30.2x | 33.9% | 30.5% |
| Bharat Electronics | 7,154 | 1,580 | 57.4x | 38.9% | 29.7% |
| Bharat Dynamics | 567 | 73 | 85.8x | 19.7% | 12.5% |
| Garden Reach | 1,896 | 171 | 42.0x | 36.6% | 10.1% |
| Zen Technologies | 178 | 56 | 49.1x | 37.2% | 39.9% |
Verdict: HAL is the largest by market cap, most diversified (manufacturing + services), and trades at a **discount** P/E (30x) vs Bharat Electronics (57x) and BDL (86x). But margins are comparable or better. The “cheap” Maharatna relative to peers.
71.6% Government, 0.00% Pledged, 100% Boring
- Government of India71.6%
- FIIs (Foreign Institutions)10.86%
- DIIs (Domestic Institutions)9.68%
- Public / Retail7.77%
Pledge: 0.00%. Shareholding stable at 71.6% (Government). FIIs have been trimming positions slightly (12.93% in Dec 2023 → 10.86% now). Retail participation growing as awareness spreads. Number of shareholders: 12.64 million (as of Dec 2025).
Government of India: 71.6%
The President of India holds 71.6% through the Ministry of Defence. HAL is one of India’s core defence assets, tasked with manufacturing fighter jets, helicopters, and engines under Make in India. Privatization is off the table. Dividend policy is stable at 31.4% payout.
Maharatna Status (Oct 2024)
HAL was elevated to Maharatna, highest tier of government PSU classification (9 total in India). This gives autonomous financial powers: can invest up to ₹5,000 Cr without government approval, set own dividend policy, and borrow independently. No immediate change in dividend, but provides strategic flexibility.
AAA Rated, Zero Corruption, No Surprises
✅ The Fortress
- ✓ ICRA AAA (Stable) rating — highest credit quality
- ✓ Clean audit history, no material qualifications since 1940
- ✓ Quarterly concalls maintained; investor access excellent
- ✓ Maharatna status — regulatory autonomy confirmed
- ✓ Zero debt, net cash position of ₹33,793 Crore (Jun 2025)
- ✓ 24-year revenue CAGR: 7% (stable, predictable)
- ✓ Customer concentration mitigated by long-term contracts
⚠️ Watch List
- ⚠ 90%+ revenue from single customer (Defence Ministry) — no diversity
- ⚠ Working capital intensity increasing — WC Days 121 (up from 37)
- ⚠ Government budget cycles — order inflow timing uncertain
- ⚠ Liquidated damages: 1.6–2.3% of revenue (penalty clause risk)
- ⚠ Capex cycle: ₹14–15k Cr over 5 years — execution risk if delays occur
- ⚠ Geopolitical risk: Pakistan/China tensions could affect budget allocation
The Indian Defence Industrial Complex: Waking Up Slowly
India spends ~$72 billion/year on defence (2% of GDP), with imports comprising 60–70% of equipment. The government has a stated target: reduce import dependency to 50% by 2025 (already missed), then to 40% by 2030. That gap gets filled by domestic players — primarily HAL. It’s not competition; it’s mandate.
🚁 Helicopter Manufacturing: Peak Capex Cycle Now
HAL is building a greenfield helicopter facility in Tumakuru (Karnataka) for LCH Prachand and ALH platforms. Peak capex occurs in FY25–FY27. Once online, capacity will expand from ~120 helicopters/year to 200+. This is the biggest manufacturing bet HAL has made in decades. Margins will compress during capex, then expand 2027 onwards.
✈️ LCA Mk-1A: From Prototype to Production Powerhouse
The Tejas LCA Mk-1A fighter jet was a 30-year-old idea that just became ₹62,370 crore reality. HAL has 3 production lines with combined capacity of 24 aircraft/year. The 97-aircraft contract locks in revenue until 2033. Margins on this program are expected to improve as production ramps and overhead gets absorbed. This is the growth engine for FY26–FY32.
🔧 MRO Services: The Hidden Margin Machine
Repair, overhaul, and maintenance (ROH) services account for 70% of revenue but likely 80%+ of profit margins. HAL is the only authorized MRO facility for most Indian defence platforms. The company received ₹20,000 crore in ROH orders in FY25 alone. This is recurring, predictable, high-margin business that requires zero new capex to grow — just utilization of existing assets.
🚫 Private Sector Competition: Hyped, Overrated
Tata, Mahindra, and L&T have all announced aerospace ambitions. Reality: none have secured major HAL-scale defence contracts. Why? 1) High barriers to entry (security clearances, R&D investment), 2) Government preference for PSUs on Make in India (offset requirements), 3) HAL’s existing relationships unmatched. Private sector will capture adjacent opportunities (unmanned vehicles, simulation, training platforms) — not core manufacturing.
The macro setup: India’s defence spending is rising 5–6% annually. HAL’s order book of ₹1,90,000 Cr represents 7–8 years of revenue at current run rate. This is not a cyclical boom — it’s structural. The government wants domestic defence production. HAL is the only option at scale. Competitors exist, but they’re boutique players capturing small niches.
The Maharatna’s Valuation Moment
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited is the kind of company that breaks every startup investor’s mental model. Zero debt. 33.9% ROCE. 31% operating margins. 71.6% government owned. ₹1,90,000 crore order backlog. It’s not exciting. It’s not disruptive. It’s not pivoting into AI. It’s a defence manufacturer executing a decade-long contract cycle with government backing.
Q3 FY26 Reality: Revenue of ₹7,699 crore (up 10.7% YoY), PAT of ₹1,867 crore (up 29.6% YoY), and a production ramp that’s just beginning. The September 2025 LCA Mk-1A contract (₹62,370 crore for 97 jets) is the largest defence procurement in Indian history. HAL has space to deliver 24 aircraft/year once all production lines are hot. That’s not hope — that’s contractual obligation.
Valuation Reality: Fair value range is ₹2,500–₹3,750. CMP ₹4,024 trades at a 7–41% premium. This premium reflects: (1) government backing as risk hedge, (2) pension fund / DII accumulation (they love stable, dividend-paying PSUs), (3) India’s defence spending tailwinds, (4) 5-year order visibility. Not expensive on a PEG (1.67), but pricey on absolute P/E (30.2x).
Historical Context: The stock delivered 49.8% CAGR over 5 years — driven by capex cycle and defence budget increases. A decade forward? Expect 7–10% annual returns, plus dividends (0.99%). It’s a multi-year compounder for patient capital, not a 3x lottery ticket.
✓ Strengths
- ₹1,90,000 crore order book — 7–8 years of revenue locked in
- 33.9% ROCE, 31% OPM — world-class capital efficiency
- Zero debt, ₹33,793 Cr net cash — fortress balance sheet
- Maharatna status (Oct 2024) — strategic autonomy granted
- Government backing — geopolitical importance unmatched
- 71% of business is services (high-margin, recurring ROH orders)
✗ Weaknesses
- 90%+ revenue from single customer (Defence Ministry dependency)
- Capex cycle: ₹14–15k Cr over 5 years — execution risk
- Working capital intensity rising — WC Days 121 vs 37 historically
- Manufacturing margins compress during ramp (FY26–FY27 headwind)
- Geopolitical risk — defence budget allocation tied to border tensions
- Slow revenue growth (6–8% guidance) vs multibagger expectations
→ Opportunities
- LCA Mk-2 / AMCA (Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft) programs ahead
- Helicopter exports — partnership with Airbus for A-320 MRO in Nasik
- Engines: GE partnership for 113 F404-GE-IN20 engines (2027–2032)
- ISRO tech-transfer for SSLV manufacturing (10-year production contract)
- ROH services for exported platforms (growing civil aviation)
- Margin expansion as production lines reach steady state (2027+)
⚡ Threats
- Economic slowdown → Defence budget cuts (unlikely, but geopolitical)
- Execution delays → Liquidated damages hit (though managed so far)
- Supply chain disruptions for imported components (engines, avionics)
- Private sector competition ramping (Tata, Mahindra aerospace)
- Debt if capex overruns occur (unlikely given GoI backing, but possible)
- Political transitions could affect order inflow / priority
HAL is a company that trades on hope + stability, not excitement.
The current valuation of ₹4,024 reflects 7 years of institutional money slowly recognizing that defence spending is the one government budget that always gets funded — in peacetime or tension. A Maharatna PSU with zero debt, ₹1,90,000 crore of locked-in contracts, and 33.9% ROCE is not a speculative bet. It’s a portfolio hedge for investors who believe India’s defence capabilities matter.
For traders: This is a 7–8% annual grinder. For long-term wealth builders: This is a steady compounder on par with slow-growing utilities. For income seekers: Dividends will rise as capex normalizes post-2027.