
A certain type of stock that appears to be a niche industrial play, makes very little noise on financial news channels, and then quietly compounds at a rate that makes everything else in your portfolio feel like an apology, is one that experienced investors often overlook the first time around. That type of business is HBL Engineering, which has its headquarters in Hyderabad and is listed on both the NSE and BSE. The share price has increased by more than 558% in the last three years. The gain exceeds 1,700% over five years. They are not typos. These numbers simply make you question what you could have been doing.
The stock is currently trading at about ₹796, well below the 52-week high of ₹1,122 that was reached earlier in the cycle. The part of the story that tends to distinguish calm investors from anxious ones is that peak, which is followed by a significant correction. The company’s fundamentals haven’t gotten worse; revenue for FY2026 was ₹3,303 crore, almost twice as much as the previous year, and net profit reached ₹814 crore, with a five-year compound profit growth of 118%. Therefore, the correction appears less like a business issue and more like a cooling-off in valuation, which occurs when a stock moves more quickly than even robust short-term earnings can support.
Although HBL‘s operations aren’t as glamorous as those of some tech companies, there is something almost comforting about what it does. The company produces industrial batteries, including nickel-cadmium, lithium, and lead, as well as power systems that supply data centers, telecom infrastructure, railroads, and defense. One of its more well-known customers is the Vande Bharat train program. The Indian defense establishment has also supplied lithium batteries for upcoming naval projects. Businesses like HBL are typically in a fairly comfortable position when a government is making significant investments in infrastructure and domestic defense capabilities. Tailwind may still have a few years left.
The order from Chittaranjan Locomotive Works in May 2026, which was reportedly worth ₹17.14 billion, gave the stock a sharp shock and briefly drove it toward ₹875 before a decline began. For order-driven industrial stocks, this is a well-known pattern: the announcement causes a spike, profit booking ensues, and the market then watches to see if execution matches the announcement. The investor base has remained largely devoted despite the volatility because HBL has generally performed well on this front in recent years. At 59.11%, the promoter holding indicates a level of conviction at the top that is frequently reassuring to retail investors.
However, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that the stock is currently trading at a P/E of about 26, which is almost ten times its book value. In and of themselves, those figures are not concerning, but they do come with expectations. Operating margins above 44% were achieved in the September 2025 quarter, which was truly remarkable and might be challenging to replicate consistently. Operating margins compressed back toward 12% in the most recent March 2026 quarter, a reminder that the company has some lumpiness due to its reliance on large orders arriving and being completed within a specific reporting window.
However, it is difficult to dispute the larger picture. With a 45% return on equity and ₹618 crore in free cash flow in FY2026 alone, the company is practically debt-free. These metrics tend to draw institutional attention for an industrial stock that is trading below ₹800. Currently, foreign institutional investors own slightly less than 6% of the company, a percentage that could increase if international attention to India’s infrastructure and defense spending keeps growing. It’s genuinely unclear if the share price of HBL Engineering will reach its peak again or enter a slower appreciation phase. The underlying business has developed into something worthy of serious consideration, which appears to be less ambiguous.