Indo Farm Equipment Ltd Q3 FY26 — ₹106 Cr Quarterly Revenue, 39.7% Profit Jump, but ROE Still Limping at 5.6%


1. At a Glance

Indo Farm Equipment Ltd is that guy in the tractor-crane party who brought both desi and imported drinks—but forgot to chill them properly.
Market cap stands at ₹816 Cr, the stock is trading around ₹170, down ~23% in 3 months, and investors are clearly not amused. Despite reporting ₹105.9 Cr Q3 FY26 revenue and ₹5.56 Cr PAT (up 39.7% YoY), the stock still wears a 27.7x P/E like it’s Escorts Kubota’s distant cousin. Spoiler: it isn’t.

ROCE sits at 7.74%, ROE at 5.56%, and working capital days have ballooned to 184 days—basically, money is stuck in tractors taking a long scenic route. Debt is ₹180 Cr, manageable but not tiny. Promoters hold a solid 69.8%, no pledging, which is refreshing in smallcap land.

The headline?
Profits are growing, balance sheet is healing, but returns are still meh.
So… turnaround brewing or just post-IPO sugar rush? Let’s dig.


2. Introduction

Indo Farm Equipment is a classic Indian manufacturing story: founded in 1994, bootstrapped growth, tractors for farmers, cranes for contractors, and now—post IPO—trying to convince Dalal Street that it deserves a premium multiple.

The company operates under Indo Farm and Indo Power, selling tractors from 16 HP to 110 HP, pick-and-carry cranes up to 30 tons, plus harvesters and rotavators. Sounds solid, right?

But here’s the catch:
This is not a volume monster.
This is not a pricing king.
This is a capital-heavy, working-capital-hungry, slow churn business.

Yet Q3 FY26 numbers surprised positively. PAT jumped nearly 40% YoY, margins held up, interest costs fell, and IPO money started cleaning up the

balance sheet. Naturally, the question arises:

👉 Is this the start of an earnings re-rating cycle?
👉 Or just a good quarter doing overtime on Excel sheets?

Let’s proceed with forensic gloves on.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Think of Indo Farm as operating at the intersection of Indian agriculture + infra jugaad.

Tractors (65.46% of revenue)

  • Entry-level to mid-HP tractors
  • Focused on value-conscious farmers
  • Competes with giants who sneeze bigger volumes than Indo Farm’s annual output

Pick & Carry Cranes (34.25%)

  • 9–30 ton cranes
  • Used in construction, infra, logistics
  • Higher margins, more cyclical, more exciting

Others (0.29%)

  • Rotavators, harvesters, spare parts
  • Financially irrelevant, emotionally comforting

Manufacturing is done at Baddi, Himachal Pradesh, spread across 1,27,840 sq. m, with 12,000 tractors + 720 cranes capacity. Captive foundry gives cost control—good moat, but not a castle.

Exports contribute ~10% of sales, spread across Africa, Middle East, Latin America, Europe. Not bad, but not a forex superhero either.

The real kicker?
They also own an NBFC subsidiary (Barota Finance Ltd) to finance their own products. Smart? Yes. Risky? Also

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