Exide Industries DCF Value Analysis March 2026
Exide Industries Limited is India’s largest lead-acid storage battery manufacturer with over 109 years of operating history. Originally incorporated as Chloride Industries Ltd, it was rechristened in August 1995. The company operates 10 factories across five Indian states, of which 8 manufacture lead-acid batteries and 2 produce Home UPS Systems. It also has manufacturing facilities in Sri Lanka, Singapore, and the UK.
The business is organized into two primary segments: Automotive (contributing ~70% of sales) and Industrial (~30%). Within automotive, the company serves OEMs directly and the replacement aftermarket — the latter delivering better margins and constituting the backbone of earnings stability. Its brands — Exide, SF Sonic, PowerSafe, and Dynex — are deeply embedded in India’s retail battery ecosystem with over 2,200 customer touchpoints and distribution across 60+ countries.
The strategic pivot underway is toward lithium-ion batteries through Exide Energy Solutions Ltd (EESL), a wholly-owned subsidiary. Exide has now invested ₹4,802 crore into EESL as of March 2026, funding a Gigafactory in Bengaluru in partnership with technology licensor SVOLT Energy. MoUs are in place with Hyundai Motor and Kia Corp to supply EV batteries. This gives Exide a potential first-mover advantage in domestic lithium-ion cell manufacturing — a critical strategic asset if India’s EV transition accelerates.
| Metric | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 | Q3 FY26 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 13,280 | 14,840 | 15,956 | 16,588 | 4,201 |
| EBITDA | 1,340 | 1,540 | 1,760 | 1,893 | ~482 |
| EBITDA Margin % | 10.1% | 10.4% | 11.0% | 11.4% | ~11.5% |
| PAT | 740 | 822 | 1,053 | 1,077 | ~575 (9M) |
| PAT Margin % | 5.6% | 5.5% | 6.6% | 6.5% | ~6.8% |
| EPS (₹) | 6.16 | 6.84 | 8.76 | 8.96 | 9.27 (TTM) |
Revenue growth has been modest — a 5-year CAGR of 3.56% — underperforming the industry average of 7.42%. However, margin trajectory has been encouraging, with EBITDA margins expanding ~130 bps from FY22 to FY25. PAT grew sharply from FY22 to FY24 (+42%) before plateauing in FY25 due to higher depreciation and capex at EESL. The Q3 FY26 standalone quarterly PAT of ₹195 crore represents 23.7% YoY growth, suggesting operating momentum is intact.
| Quarter | Revenue (₹ Cr) | PAT (₹ Cr) | PAT Growth YoY | EPS (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 FY26 | 4,695 | 273 | +37.4% | 3.21 |
| Q2 FY26 | 4,445 | 298 | +3.8% | 3.50 |
| Q3 FY26 | 4,201 | 195 | +23.7% | 1.84* |
*Q3 EPS from StockInvest; may differ from annualized TTM EPS of ₹9.27. Revenue sequentially declining due to seasonal automotive slowdown.
At current levels near ₹300, the stock trades at a marginal discount to our DCF intrinsic value of ₹310–₹340. Given near-zero debt, strong cash generation from the legacy lead-acid business, and the optionality from EESL, staged accumulation at these levels is warranted for long-term investors.
Given the structural transformation underway and heavy capex cycle, investors should consider trimming positions as the stock approaches our fair value ceiling or if near-term earnings disappoint materially without a clear EESL catalyst to compensate.
Exide’s growth story has two distinct chapters: the steady, cash-generative lead-acid core, and the high-risk, high-reward lithium-ion venture.
Lead-Acid Core: India’s vehicle parc is expected to grow at 6–8% annually through 2030. The replacement battery cycle (typically 3–5 years) provides annuity-like demand, with margins superior to OEM supply. Industrial batteries benefit from the data center boom (power backup), solar storage adoption, and telecom tower densification. Export business (~8–9% of revenue) is growing despite a setback in European industrial markets.
EESL — The Strategic Wildcard: Exide Energy Solutions is targeting a 6–12 GWh lithium-ion Gigafactory in Bengaluru, funded by the ₹4,802 crore invested to date. Technology partnerships with SVOLT (China) and MoUs with Hyundai/Kia provide credibility. If EESL successfully begins production by FY27–28 and ramps to commercial scale, it could add ₹2,000–₹4,000 Cr in annual revenues by FY30 — potentially transforming Exide’s growth trajectory from mid-single-digit to mid-double-digit.
| Metric | FY25A | FY26E | FY27E | FY28E |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (₹ Cr) | 16,588 | 17,200 | 18,900 | 21,500 |
| EBITDA Margin | 11.4% | 11.5% | 12.0% | 12.5% |
| PAT (₹ Cr) | 1,077 | 1,150 | 1,340 | 1,620 |
| EPS (₹) | 8.96 | 9.55 | 11.12 | 13.46 |
| P/E at CMP ₹300 | 33.5x | 31.4x | 27.0x | 22.3x |
Estimates are projections based on consensus guidance and management commentary. EESL revenues not included in FY26–27E; incorporated from FY28E.
- EESL Bengaluru plant achieves commercial production milestone ahead of schedule (FY27)
- Large EV OEM supply contract win by EESL (beyond Hyundai/Kia MoU)
- Lead prices stabilize or fall, boosting margins by 50–100 bps
- Strong replacement cycle driven by aging vehicle parc; market share gains from unorganized players
- Solar and data center UPS demand surges, diversifying industrial revenue
- Government PLI incentives for domestic battery manufacturing benefit EESL capex returns
- Margin improvement as EESL shifts from capex to production (depreciation absorption)
- EESL execution delays — technology transfer, ramp, or off-take uncertainty beyond FY28
- Lead price volatility (key raw material) compressing already-thin margins
- OEM automotive demand weakness persists; car inventory correction continues
- Amara Raja accelerates Li-Ion via Gotion partnership, diluting EESL’s first-mover edge
- Chinese battery imports (dumping risk) undercut domestic pricing post-EV scale
- ROE structurally depressed at 6.6% due to heavy EESL investment without near-term returns
- Technology change risk: LFP vs NMC preference shift could render SVOLT tie-up suboptimal
| Company | Mkt Cap (₹ Cr) | Revenue (₹ Cr) | P/E (TTM) | P/B | EBITDA Margin | 5Y Rev CAGR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exide Industries (EXIDEIND) | 25,572 | 16,588 | 31.7x | 1.81x | 11.4% | 3.6% |
| Amara Raja Energy (ARE&M) | ~16,200 | ~12,400 | ~22x | ~2.0x | ~13.5% | ~7.5% |
| HBL Engineering | ~5,800 | ~2,200 | ~38x | ~5.5x | ~14% | ~12% |
| Eveready Industries | ~2,100 | ~1,650 | ~30x | ~4.0x | ~8.5% | ~3% |
| Sector Avg | — | — | ~28x | ~2.8x | ~12% | ~7.4% |
Exide trades at a premium P/E of 31.7x despite below-sector revenue growth and below-sector EBITDA margins. The premium is being paid for brand leadership, balance sheet purity (zero debt), and EESL optionality. Amara Raja offers a more attractive near-term earnings profile with higher margins and faster growth, but Exide’s larger scale and established EESL infrastructure give it a long-term advantage if Li-Ion commercializes. At the current compressed price level, Exide’s risk-reward is more balanced than at the ₹430+ highs.