1. At a Glance
VST Tillers Tractors (VSTT) is India’s largest power tiller manufacturer and a compact tractor player with a serious export game. Q1 FY26 profit jumped 95% YoY, riding on a 48% revenue surge and a ₹23.79 Cr fair value gain. The company just launched five new fuel-efficient tractor models under the FENTM series — because apparently 2025 is the year to mix farming with marketing pizzazz. Debt? Almost nil. Margins? Steady. ROE? Meh. Valuation? At 35.8x, it’s pricing in more than just rain-fed optimism.
2. Introduction
Founded in 1967 as a joint venture with Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, VSTT started with a simple mission: make farming less back-breaking. Today, they sell under VST Shakti (tillers) and FIELDTRAC (tractors), the latter meeting strict EU standards. The Mitsubishi partnership is long over, but the VST family still owns 51% of the company.
Over the past decade, they’ve transformed from a sleepy domestic player into an exporter with a tech focus. But this isn’t a fairy tale — revenue CAGR over the last 3 years is just 5%, ROE is under 10%, and working capital days have exploded to 254. Still, the stock’s up 25% CAGR over 5 years, proving that farmers aren’t the only ones reaping.
3. Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Core Lines:
- Power Tillers – Market leader in India for over 50 years.
- Compact Tractors – Domestic + EU markets.
- Agri Implements – Attachments for tillers and tractors.
Revenue is still heavily domestic, but exports are a growing slice, especially with FIELDTRAC tractors in Europe. The playbook: build robust, fuel-efficient machines for small farmers and niche export buyers.
4. Financials Overview
- Market Cap: ₹4,162 Cr
- Q1 FY26 Revenue: ₹282.45 Cr (+48.2% YoY)
- Q1 FY26 Net Profit: ₹44.56 Cr (+95% YoY)
- TTM Revenue: ₹1,086 Cr
- TTM PAT: ₹116 Cr
- ROCE: 12.8%
- ROE: 9.8%
Fresh P/E Calculation:
EPS (Q1 FY26) = ₹51.55 → Annualised EPS = ₹206.2
CMP = ₹4,806 → Forward P/E = 23.3
(TTM P/E = 35.8 from historical earnings.)
Comment: Forward P/E looks far more reasonable — the big profit spike has shifted the maths.
