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Jash Engineering:When a Valve-Maker Gets Clobbered by Trump’s Tariffs. And Then Says “Jugaad Toh Hona Hi Hai.”

Jash Engineering Q3 FY26 | EduInvesting
9M FY26 Results · Oct–Dec 2025

Jash Engineering:
When a Valve-Maker Gets Clobbered by Trump’s Tariffs.
And Then Says “Jugaad Toh Hona Hi Hai.”

A water control equipment maker just delivered a quarter where profits fell 62%, order intake froze, and the CEO casually said “tariff uncertainty scared us more than the tariff itself.” Then they announced a ₹30 crore acquisition in the UK. Because apparently survival mode is just business as usual.

Market Cap₹2,318 Cr
CMP₹368
P/E Ratio41.7x
ROE22.4%
Book Value₹70.3

The Water Pipe Company That Just Discovered Volatility Is Real

  • Market Cap₹2,318 Cr
  • Current Price₹368
  • 52-Week High / Low₹699 / ₹321
  • P/E Ratio41.7x
  • Book Value/Share₹70.3
  • 9M FY26 Revenue₹287 Cr
  • 9M FY26 PAT₹23.4 Cr
  • Qtr Profit Var-61.8%
  • ROCE25.0%
  • Return (3M)-15.6%
Flash Summary: Jash Engineering hit a profit crater in Q3 (PAT down 62% QoQ to ₹13.4 crore). The reason? The US tariff shock that turned their Rodney Hunt US business into a cautionary tale about geopolitical concentration risk. Revenue is down 11% QoQ. Gross margins compressed. But the management call was full of a weird optimism — they’re buying UK companies, setting up Saudi operations, and saying “FY27 should be normal.” The stock is down 15.6% in 3 months and trades at 41.7x P/E. Because apparently being profitable while executing a complete geographic pivot is just part of the deal.

When Your Business Model Meets an Orange-Haired Tariff Cyclone

Picture this: you’re a 52-year-old engineering company in Indore. You make water control gates, screening equipment, industrial valves. You know, the sexy stuff that makes wastewater treatment plants actually function. You’ve built a global footprint — 45 countries, ₹11 lakh crore order books, export revenues at 63% of sales. Life is good.

Then Donald Trump Jr. becomes President. And decides to slap 25% tariffs on Indian exports. Your US subsidiary, Rodney Hunt Inc., which used to ship ₹36 crore worth of products annually? Now facing the question: “Do I absorb the cost? Do I pass it to the customer? Or do I freeze and pray the policy changes?” Management call transcript, verbatim: “We were never affected by the tariff. You are affected by the uncertainty of tariff… and stopped us from taking any major orders in America.”

Translation: Your US business dropped from ₹36 crore to ₹29 crore (a ₹7 crore crater). Your India-US export shipments in 9M FY26? Only ₹35 crore. Your whole original FY26 plan of ₹860 crore revenue is now downgraded to ₹775–₹800 crore. That’s ₹60–₹85 crore of vaporized expectations. And your gross margins went from healthy to “we paid the tariff out of our pocket” levels. Q3 PAT fell 62%. The stock is down 38% in a year. But here’s the thing — the company didn’t panic. It pivoted. M&A. Saudi Arabia. UK expansion. It’s a lesson in how a midcap responds to a black swan: not by praying, but by diversifying the hell out.

India Ratings Note (Feb 2026): Affirmed IND A- / Stable. The rating agency basically said “yes, tariff shock happened, yes, working capital got stretched, but the business is resilient.” Which is a fancy way of saying “bad quarter doesn’t kill a good company.” Consolidated order book at ₹923 crore. India-domestic business rescued the quarter when US exploded. Margin recovery expected in FY27 once tariff clarity improves.

Not Sexy. Not Fashionable. But Every Wastewater Plant On Earth Needs One.

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