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Sundaram Clayton Ltd Q1 FY25 – ₹2,191 Cr Sales, ₹-173 Cr Loss, ROE -19 %, and a TVS Family Die-Casting Drama


1. At a Glance

Sundaram Clayton Ltd (SCL) — once the shining aluminum arm of the TVS empire — is currently the kid at the family wedding who spilled coffee on the white shirt and is pretending nothing happened. FY25 TTM sales stand at ₹ 2,191 crore with a net loss of ₹ 173 crore. ROE = -19 %, ROCE = -2.4 %. The stock trades around ₹ 1,703 (a 27 % fall YoY), market cap ₹ 3,754 crore, book value ₹ 440, debt ₹ 1,493 crore (1.54 × D/E).
Operating margin? 4.6 %. Interest coverage? Negative.
Dividend yield 0.28 % — probably symbolic.

In short, a once-legendary die-caster now caught in an ironical cycle — melting aluminum but burning cash.


2. Introduction

There was a time when Sundaram Clayton was the quiet cash cow feeding TVS Motor’s growth. Today, it’s more of a nostalgic relative everyone respects but no one lends money to without collateral.

Founded in 1962 as a joint venture between TVS Group and Clayton Dewandre (UK), SCL became India’s benchmark for aluminum die-casting. From motorcycle crankcases to truck brake systems, if it had aluminum in it, SCL probably made it.

Then came 2023’s corporate soap opera of demerger — the aluminum business became SCL DCD Ltd and the parent renamed itself TVS Holdings Ltd. Think of it as a Bollywood reboot — same cast, new name, bigger budget, less clarity.

The current Sundaram Clayton is essentially the die-casting entity, and the results have been messy. Losses from the US subsidiary (Sundaram Holdings USA Inc), high capex, and interest burden have turned the once-stable balance sheet into a metallic mystery.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

SCL manufactures aluminum die-cast components used in two-wheelers, cars, and commercial vehicles (CVs). In plain English, they mold molten metal into auto parts that no one notices until they break.

Core Operations:

  • Die Casting & Machining: Supplying precision components to OEMs like TVS Motor, Hyundai, Cummins, Daimler, and Volvo.
  • Subsidiary Support: Loss-making SHUI (USA) that continues to bleed because “strategic presence in North America” sounds better than “burning dollars abroad.”
  • Global Footprint: Exports ≈ 44 % of sales; domestic ≈ 56 %.

Plants at Padi, Mahindra City, Oragadam (Chennai) and Belagondapalli (Hosur) make a network that’s technically sound but financially fatigued.

The company’s new Thervoy Kandigai facility is supposed to be state-of-the-art. Investors are still waiting for the “state of profit.”


4. Financials Overview

Source table
MetricQ1 FY25Q1 FY24Q4 FY24YoY %QoQ %
Revenue₹ 512 Cr₹ 580 Cr₹ 587 Cr-11.8 %-12.8 %
EBITDA₹ 16 Cr₹ 10 Cr₹ 31 Cr+60 %-48 %
PAT-₹ 57.8 Cr-₹ 56 Cr₹ 144 Cr * (one-off gain)-3 %n/a
EPS (₹)-26.2-20+65

(That ₹ 144 Cr profit in Q4 FY24 was from other income — not operating performance.)

Commentary: Revenue down, profit down, cash down — the holy trinity of stress. Even with exports helping volumes, currency gains couldn’t rescue EBITDA margin (3 %). The balance sheet feels like an auto part with too much wear and tear.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range Only

Method 1 – P/B Approach (since no earnings)

Book Value ≈ ₹ 440 / share.

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