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Rajoo Engineers Ltd Q3 FY26 — ₹88 Cr Revenue, 25% OPM, ROCE 33%: When a Boring Capital Goods Stock Accidentally Becomes Sexy


1. At a Glance – The Stock That Slapped Everyone in the Face

Rajoo Engineers is that typical “ignore kar diya yaar” capital goods stock which suddenly wakes up one fine quarter and says: “Surprise, I make money now.”
Market cap sits around ₹1,246 Cr, the stock price is licking the ₹70 zone, while ROCE is flexing at 32.6% like it just joined a CrossFit gym.

Latest quarterly numbers?

  • Revenue: ₹87.6 Cr
  • PAT: ₹16.8 Cr
  • OPM: 25% (yes, capital goods, not SaaS)
  • QoQ & YoY growth: So strong that even pessimists had to blink twice

And all this while the stock is down ~66% over one year. Classic Indian market behaviour: punish the stock, ignore the business.

Debt? Almost non-existent.
Order book? ₹140 Cr waiting patiently.
Promoters? Still holding ~60.7%, no pledges, no drama.

So the obvious question — Is this a cyclical fluke or a structural turnaround?
Grab popcorn. 🍿


2. Introduction – A Veteran Who Refused to Retire

Rajoo Engineers was incorporated in 1986, which means this company has survived Harshad Mehta, dotcom bubble, GFC, COVID, and your last three favourite midcap disasters.

Promoted by the Doshi family, Rajoo has been quietly building plastic extrusion machinery from Gujarat — not glamorous, not headline-grabbing, but deeply embedded in the packaging, FMCG, and industrial plastics ecosystem.

For years, Rajoo lived the life of a boring exporter:

  • Moderate margins
  • Lumpy orders
  • Cyclical cash flows
  • Zero excitement

Then suddenly, from FY23 onwards, something changed:

  • Margins expanded
  • Profits exploded
  • Working capital improved
  • Return ratios went nuclear

The stock? Slept.
The business? Woke up.

Why? Because Rajoo didn’t chase scale blindly — it chased specialisation, customisation, and high-value machinery.

And when operating leverage kicked in, it kicked hard.

So let’s decode what exactly they do — without using jargon that only consultants understand.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Imagine plastic. Now imagine stretching, shaping, layering, coating, laminating, and forming it into everything you use daily — packaging films, sheets, thermoformed trays, industrial films, pipes.

Rajoo builds the machines that do this magic.

Their Core Segments:

  • Blown Film Lines (mono & multilayer)
  • Sheet Lines
  • Extrusion Coating & Lamination Lines
  • Thermoforming Machines
  • PVC & Specialty Lines

They don’t sell mass-produced junk. These are customised, application-specific machines with:

  • Engineering-heavy design
  • Customer-specific configuration
  • Long sales cycles
  • High switching costs

Repeat orders contribute ~60% of annual business — that’s the real moat.

Clients include names like:

  • Uflex
  • Reliance Industries
  • Indian Oil
  • Large packaging exporters

Once installed, customers come back for:

  • Capacity expansion
  • Upgrades
  • Replacement lines

Basically, Rajoo is not selling machines — it’s selling embedded manufacturing capability.

Question for you: How many capital goods companies in India enjoy repeat business like a subscription model?


4. Financials Overview – Numbers That Make You Sit Straight

🔒 Result Type Lock:

The latest declared results are Quarterly Results.
So EPS treatment = Quarterly EPS × 4 for annualisation.

📊 Quarterly Comparison Table (₹ Cr)

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Dec 2025)YoY Qtr (Dec 2024)Prev Qtr (Sep 2025)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue87.656.092.056.2%-4.8%
EBITDA22.011.018.0100%22.2%
PAT16.89.414.079.2%20.0%
EPS (₹)0.940.570.7964.9%19.0%

Annualised EPS:
0.94 × 4 = ₹3.76

At CMP ₹69.6 → P/E ≈ 18.5

That’s cheaper than:

  • Industry PE (~30)
  • Many slower, weaker peers

And this is after

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