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Kirloskar Brothers Ltd Q3 FY26 – ₹1,116 Cr Revenue, ₹125 Cr PAT, ROCE 27.6%: Legacy Pumps, Modern Profits, and a Trademark Soap Opera


1. At a Glance – The Kirloskar Pump That Refuses to Break

Kirloskar Brothers Ltd (KBL) is one of those companies your grandfather trusted, your father installed, and your municipality still delays payment to. At a market cap of ₹12,983 crore, KBL currently trades at ₹1,635, down ~20% over one year, which means the stock market has officially decided to ignore fundamentals for a while.
Despite that drama, the company clocked Q3 FY26 revenue of ₹1,116 crore with PAT of ₹125 crore, up 14.5% YoY even as sales dipped 2.45% QoQ. ROCE stands tall at 27.6%, ROE at 21.6%, debt-to-equity a saintly 0.10, and interest coverage a relaxed 19.6x.

Dividend yield is a polite 0.45%, not life-changing but enough to buy samosas for the AGM queue. Promoters hold a steady 66%, pledges are zero, and EPS for TTM is ₹50.3.
So why is the stock sulking? Maybe because markets prefer apps over pumps. Or maybe because Kirloskar is busy fixing India’s water problems instead of narrating AI buzzwords every quarter.

But here’s the thing: when infra cycles turn, boring companies suddenly become very interesting. Ready to dig deeper?


2. Introduction – From Municipal Borewells to Global Boardrooms

Kirloskar Brothers is not a startup pretending to be an engineering firm. It is an engineering firm that survived wars, reforms, and WhatsApp forwards. Part of the Kirloskar Group, KBL focuses on fluid management systems—pumps, valves, motors, and hydro turbines—used everywhere from irrigation canals to nuclear power plants.

Over the years, KBL has quietly transformed itself. In FY10, 75% of its business was low-margin EPC projects—the kind that look big on PowerPoint but destroy cash flows. By FY23, EPC exposure was slashed to ~5%. That single strategic decision explains most of

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