Power & Instrumentation (Gujarat) Ltd Q2 FY26 – The Electrician That Just Plugged Into ₹102.78 Crore of Orders and a 51% Subsidiary!
1. At a Glance
If the Indian power sector had a backstage electrician fixing the cables before the big show, Power & Instrumentation (Gujarat) Ltd (PIGL) would be that unsung hero. Founded in 1975, this Ahmedabad-based electrical EPC company has gone from fixing substations to wiring government megaprojects like a desi Tony Stark with a multimeter.
As of December 2, 2025, the stock trades at ₹149, down nearly 52% YoY, giving it a market cap of ₹264 crore. But before you underestimate this transformer whisperer, let’s talk performance — Q2 FY26 revenue ₹70.9 crore, PAT ₹4.74 crore, and a net margin near 6.7%, all while juggling fresh ₹102.78 crore in RDSS orders and taking majority control of its subsidiary Peaton Electricals (PECL).
With ROCE at 19.8% and ROE at 14.5%, PIGL is running a clean, low-voltage business with Debt-to-Equity at 0.18 and Interest Coverage of 6.93x. This is not a company burning wires to stay alive — it’s quietly electrifying the government grid one feeder at a time.
2. Introduction
Welcome to the parallel universe of Indian electrical EPC contractors — where every tender feels like a survival game and every transformer is a character with trust issues. Power & Instrumentation (Gujarat) Ltd has been around since the Emergency era (yes, 1975) and has evolved from pulling cables to powering smart cities.
In a world where the government’s RDSS (Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme) is the golden goose, PIGL seems to be collecting the eggs. In October 2025, the company announced two turnkey orders worth ₹102.78 crore from AVVNL Rajasthan, both for 11kV feeder segregation — a job so specific it could be India’s version of precision surgery for electricity distribution.
But the real plot twist came in September 2025, when PIGL acquired an additional 35.82% stake in subsidiary Peaton Electricals, taking its holding to 51.06%. Why? Because Peaton just got CPRI approval for an 11kV, 3000 Amp segregated-phase busduct system, branded PhiBar — a fancy name for industrial busducts that’ll make big factories run smoother than a buttered circuit.
The stock might have tripped over the 200-DMA recently, but operationally, the current is strong and the boardroom fuses are intact.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine you need to electrify an airport, a hospital, or an entire village cluster. You call PIGL. The company operates as a turnkey EPC electrical contractor, offering design, supply, installation, testing, and commissioning (DSITC) of everything from 132kV substations to internal lighting systems.
Their service bouquet reads like an electrician’s wishlist:
Cable management, UPS, Access Control, BMS Systems
Their clientele is equally eclectic — ISRO, SEBI, ONGC, AAI, HPCL, BPCL, IOCL, Cadbury, Vodafone, and even Ford. Basically, if it has lights on, PIGL has probably touched a wire there.
Their revenue comes ~83% from product sales and ~17% from services, showing a tilt toward high-volume, hardware-heavy contracts — the kind that test both patience and cash flow.
And yes, after years on NSE Emerge, PIGL finally migrated to the NSE & BSE mainboards in May 2023, officially graduating from the small-cap kiddie pool to the deep end of Dalal Street.