1. At a Glance – Blink and You’ll Miss the Debt
₹165 crore market cap. Stock down ~27% YoY. Revenue sprinting like a tractor in low gear but torque is real. Q3 FY26 sales at ₹35.7 crore (+26% YoY) and PAT at ₹1.67 crore (+16.8% YoY) — respectable for an SME machining shop. OPM holding steady near 14–15%, ROE ~13.5%, ROCE ~11.7%.
But wait. Borrowings are ₹78 crore, debt-to-equity 1.56, interest coverage 2.59. This is not a debt-free Diwali company. Promoters still hold 70.8% (no pledge), FIIs tiptoed in at ~1.7%. Valuation? 21.5× P/E, 10.9× EV/EBITDA, 3.28× P/B — not screaming cheap for a balance sheet that lifts heavy housings all day and heavier interest at night.
Question for you already: Is the market paying for growth or ignoring leverage risk?
2. Introduction – Machining Money the Hard Way
Founded in 2018, PECL is not here to sell dreams; it sells precision-machined iron to OEMs. It’s a subsidiary of Pritika Auto Industries and part of the Pritika Group, a known tractor-component name in North India. Translation: this isn’t a garage startup; it’s a bolt-on capacity expansion vehicle.
The business model is simple, brutal, and OEM-dependent. You invest in land, CNCs, fixtures, quality systems, people… then wait for OEM volumes to behave. When volumes behave, operating leverage smiles. When they don’t, the interest meter keeps running.
FY25–FY26 so far shows strong top-line momentum, helped by higher-weight components, new orders (₹50–70 crore visibility over 4–5 years), and capacity ramp-up. But cash flows? Historically patchy. Working capital? Sticky. Inventory days went north of 140 days. This is not a SaaS company; this is metal, oil, and patience.
So the story is clear: execution vs leverage. Now let’s tear it apart.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
PECL manufactures precision