01 — At a Glance
The Bearing Company That Drives 90% of Indian Roads. Literally.
NRB Bearings is a 60-year-old maker of needle roller bearings that has somehow become so invisible that nobody talks about it, yet so essential that your two-wheeler, your truck, and your motorcycle literally cannot move without them. The company posted Q3 FY26 revenue of ₹328 crore (up 18% YoY), PAT of ₹38 crore (up 44% pre-exceptional), and declared a ₹3.20 per share interim dividend because apparently they enjoy distributing cash. The stock trades at 15.8x P/E, a 35% discount to the industry median of 24.33x — not because the company is bad, but because the market hasn’t figured out that NRB is actually boring in the way that compounds wealth.
Flash Summary: Q3 revenue ₹328 crore (+18% YoY). PAT ₹38 crore pre-exceptional (+44% YoY). EBITDA margin sustained at 19%+. The company is entering industrial bearings (JV with Unitec, 75% stake, Europe access). They acquired Mahant Toolroom for ₹27.5 crore to enter aerospace with an order book of ₹25+ crore already secured. ROE at 12.7% (3-year average), stock up 22% in 3 years, and yet the market treats it like a mid-cap car parts supplier. Because that’s exactly what it is — except better.
02 — Introduction
When 90% of Vehicles Are Held Together By Your Company And Nobody Knows Your Name
Founded in 1965 by Trilochan Singh Sahney (may he rest in profits), NRB Bearings is living proof that you don’t need to be a fintech, a quick-commerce startup, or have a cult personal brand to make serious money. You just need to manufacture friction solutions that literally every moving vehicle in India depends on.
Here’s the thing about NRB: they own 60% of the needle roller bearing market in India. 90% of vehicles running on Indian roads have their bearings. That’s not an exaggeration — that’s their actual claim, and nobody on a Reddit thread has proven them wrong. Yet somehow when Harshbeena Sahney Zaveri (Vice Chairwoman and MD) or the management talks, people listen respectfully and then move on to discussing some fintechs that burn cash like it’s going out of style.
Q3 FY26 was the “let’s shift gears” quarter. Revenue ₹328 crore, PAT ₹38 crore pre-exceptional (+44% YoY growth), EBITDA margin solidly at 19%+. But here’s the real headline: the company announced a JV with Unitec (Italy) for industrial cylindrical roller bearings, installed a new CFO with 25+ years of M&A and greenfield experience, and acquired Mahant Toolroom to fast-track entry into aerospace. The promoter family underwent a settlement in Jan 2026 that consolidated control. If you’ve been sleeping on this company because it sounds boring — welcome to the party. Boring is the new contrarian play.
CRISIL Rating Note (July 2025): CRISIL AA-/Stable; CRISIL A1+. Rating reaffirmed through all the recent corporate actions. The company’s interest coverage ratio jumped from 8.33x (FY24) to 20.21x (FY25) after repaying long-term debt. Capital structure described as “healthy,” liquidity as “strong.” In short: India’s rating agency thinks NRB is doing fine. Everyone else should probably pay attention.
03 — Business Model: Bearings in Everything, Money in Pockets
If It Spins, It Probably Has An NRB Bearing Inside It
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