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Studds Accessories Limited Q3 FY26 – ₹1,656.7 mn Revenue, ₹207.2 mn Profit, ~20.9 Annualised EPS: India’s Helmet King Riding with a Slight Factory Delay


1. At a Glance – Helmets, Margins, and a Small Construction Drama

Studds Accessories Ltd is that rare Indian consumer manufacturing story where scale, brand, and profitability actually coexist without burning cash like a startup flash sale. With a market cap of ~₹1,966 crore, a CMP of ~₹500, and a ROCE of ~22.6%, Studds sits comfortably in the “boringly good” category.

Q3 FY26 delivered ₹163 crore in quarterly revenue, ₹20.7 crore PAT, and ~26% YoY profit growth, proving that helmets are not just safety gear but also margin gear. The company is almost debt-free (D/E ~0.02), runs on a clean balance sheet, and sells ~7.4 million helmets annually—which is more than the population of some countries.

Valuation-wise, headline P/E looks ~26×, but once you recalculate EPS properly, things look slightly more reasonable. The only buzzkill? Facility-V commissioning has been delayed to Q2 FY27, reminding us that even helmet kings can trip on construction timelines. Still, if boring cash machines had a mascot, it would probably be wearing a Studds full-face helmet.


2. Introduction – From Local Helmetwala to Global Lid Lord

Founded in 1975, Studds Accessories didn’t wake up one morning and decide to dominate the global helmet market. This is a slow, grinding, mould-by-mould, visor-by-visor compounding story.

The company operates across mass (Studds) and premium (SMK) segments, giving it pricing power from ₹875 to ₹12,800. That means it sells helmets to first-time scooter riders and to weekend superbike warriors pretending they’re in MotoGP.

India’s helmet market is driven by regulation, rising two-wheeler penetration, and safety awareness. Studds has quietly positioned itself at the intersection of all three. Add exports to 70+ countries, OEM supplies to Hero, Royal Enfield, Yamaha, and institutional channels like CSD, and you get a distribution moat that’s not easy to replicate.

The IPO in Nov 2025 was purely OFS, so no balance-sheet juicing. Promoters still hold ~61.8%, skin firmly in the game. This isn’t a flashy story—it’s a compounding one. And those are usually the dangerous ones… in a good way.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

In simple terms: they make helmets… at insane scale.

Studds designs, moulds, paints, tests, and sells helmets across 240+

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