Walchandnagar Industries Q3 FY26: ₹81 Cr Revenue, EPS ₹0.69… Comeback King or Zombie Engineering Relic?
1. At a Glance – The Comeback Nobody Asked For (Yet)
If Indian engineering companies were Bollywood characters, Walchandnagar Industries would be that veteran actor who once worked with Raj Kapoor, built half the country’s infrastructure, then disappeared into obscurity… and now suddenly shows up in a web series claiming a “comeback arc.”
Founded in 1908. Built India’s first shipyard. Helped create HAL. Worked with ISRO, DRDO, nuclear reactors… basically, this company has more historical swag than your entire mutual fund portfolio combined.
And yet…
Today it’s sitting with:
Negative ROE (-25%)
Negative ROCE (-8%)
Losses in FY25
Promoter pledge ~49%
Interest coverage that looks like a student loan repayment crisis
But suddenly in Q3 FY26, the company posts:
Revenue jump
Positive PAT
EPS: ₹0.69
So the big question:
👉 Is this a real turnaround… or just one quarter of “adjusted optimism”?
2. Introduction – Legacy vs Reality
Walchandnagar is one of those companies where history is more impressive than present performance.
Let’s be honest.
This company:
Worked on Agni missiles
Contributed to Chandrayaan missions
Supplies to nuclear reactors
Has relationships with ISRO, DRDO, NPCIL
Basically, if India launches something into space or builds a reactor, there’s a decent chance Walchand touched it at some point.
And yet…
Financials tell a completely different story:
Sales shrinking over years
Profits inconsistent (mostly losses)
Margins swinging like crypto
Debt sitting quietly like a ticking bomb
So what’s happening here?
👉 Classic Indian PSU-adjacent story: Great capabilities, terrible execution cycles.
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Imagine a company that:
Makes gearboxes for sugar mills
Builds nuclear reactor components
Supplies missile casings
Manufactures centrifugal machines
Works on space hardware
Sounds like 5 companies stitched together after a corporate buffet.
Core Segments:
Heavy Engineering (77%)
Foundry & Machine Shop (14%)
Others (9%)
They operate in:
Defence
Nuclear
Aerospace (DNA segment)
Industrial equipment
From the company presentation:
Supplies to ISRO, DRDO, NPCIL
50+ years of engineering experience
High entry barriers
Limited competition in niche areas
So theoretically: 👉 This is a moat-heavy, high-tech, strategic company
But practically: 👉 It behaves like a loss-making EPC contractor with mood swings
Let me ask you:
Would you trust a company with nuclear expertise… but negative ROE?
4. Financials Overview – The “Finally Green Quarter” Table