Rolex Rings Ltd: 21% Margins, 172 Working Capital Days – The Forging Giant with Patience of a Monk (and Cash of a Banker)


1. At a Glance

Rolex Rings Ltd is one of India’s top five forging companies — making bearing rings, automotive components, and other precision-forged parts. It’s a supplier to automotive, industrial machinery, wind turbines, and even railways. Margins hover at 20–23%, ROCE at 22.8%, and debt is practically extinct at ₹14 Cr. But don’t let the “Rolex” name fool you — they’re not selling watches, they’re selling metal rings that cost less than a coffee but can hold up a truck.


2. Introduction

Founded in Rajkot (aka India’s industrial Lego set), Rolex Rings has been quietly stamping, forging, and machining its way into global supply chains. If your car moves smoothly, there’s a fair chance it’s because of their components.

While auto component stocks love cyclical joyrides, Rolex is built like an old-school Maruti diesel engine — reliable, efficient, but sometimes slow on acceleration. The good news: it’s shed debt faster than an IT company sheds interns after appraisal season. The bad news: sales growth over five years is a modest 12%, and working capital days have inflated like an overcooked puri — from 121 to 172 days.


3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)

Core Segments:

  • Hot Rolled Forged Rings – primarily for bearings.
  • Machined Components – automotive parts like transmission gears, shafts, and engine components.
  • Industrial Supply – for wind turbines, railways, and heavy machinery.

Customers: Leading bearing manufacturers, auto OEMs, and industrial machinery makers worldwide.
Moat: Precision quality, long-term contracts, and decades-old supplier relationships.

In forging,

consistency is king — one defect in a batch and you’ve just forged yourself a loss. Rolex Rings has managed to avoid that PR disaster.


4. Financials Overview

Latest Quarter (Q1 FY26):

  • Revenue: ₹292 Cr (+0.9% QoQ, -6.2% YoY)
  • OPM: 21% (holding steady despite softer volumes)
  • Net Profit: ₹49 Cr
  • EPS: ₹18.05

Fresh P/E Calculation:
Annualized EPS = ₹18.05 × 4 = ₹72.20
At CMP ₹1,382 → P/E = 19.13 (slightly cheaper than the displayed 20.35 due to quarterly strength).

TTM Performance:

  • Revenue: ₹1,136 Cr
  • Net Profit: ₹173 Cr
  • ROE: 19.2%
  • ROCE: 22.8%
  • Dividend Payout: 0% (management prefers reinvesting profits — or hoarding them like a doomsday prepper).

5. Valuation (Fair Value RANGE only)

MethodBasisMultiple / AssumptionValue (₹ Cr)Per Share (₹)
P/EEPS ₹72.20 × 18–2218x – 22x3,118 – 3,8071,147 – 1,400
EV/EBITDAEBITDA ₹231 Cr × 8–98x – 9x1,848 – 2,0791,350 – 1,520
DCF8% growth, 12% discount, 10 yearsConservative~₹3,500 Cr~₹1,430

Fair Value Range: ₹1,300 – ₹1,450 per share.

Disclaimer: This FV range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice.


6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama

  • Debt Near Zero: Down from

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