Yuken India is basically the hydraulics ka Bajaj mixer grinder – it makes pumps, valves, and power packs that keep industries moving but shareholders yawning. With 9 factories churning out 90,000 pumps and 7.8 lakh valves annually, the company is everywhere – from BHEL turbines to JCB excavators. But at P/E 57, investors are paying “Ferrari rates for a JCB engine sound.”
2. Introduction
Born in 1976 with Japanese DNA (Yuken Kogyo as parent), Yuken India has been doing the same thing for nearly five decades: hydraulics. Pumps, valves, cylinders – all the boring-but-essential equipment that ensures your power plants, steel mills, and injection molding machines don’t collapse.
On paper, it looks steady – ₹452 Cr sales, ₹23 Cr PAT FY25. But investors scratching their heads: why pay 57x earnings for a company with ROE < 9%?
The kicker – despite India’s capex boom, Yuken hasn’t really capitalized. Sales growth in last 5 years = ~13%. Profit growth = lumpy. Stock returns in last year = -19%. Matlab “factory chal rahi hai, lekin market ka dil nahi jeet rahi hai.”
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Think of Yuken as a hydraulics kirana store:
Pumps (28% revenue): Vane pumps, piston pumps. Basically the heart that keeps machines pumping oil.
Valves (40%): Pressure controls, flow controls – the brain of hydraulics.
Others (32%): Cylinders, power units, systems.
But unlike flashy EV startups, their products are more like “industrial constipation relief.” Nobody notices them unless they stop working.
Fun twist – Yuken also sells eco-friendly gear: chip compactors, power saver valves, servo-driven pumps. Imagine Baba Ramdev’s Patanjali but for hydraulics – “green solutions to oil leakage problems.”