Energy Mission Machineries (India) Limited, a manufacturer of sheet-metal forming machines, outlined plans to expand its product range, strengthen export business and improve working-capital efficiency as capacity additions and backward-integration projects progress. The company said it is seeing rising demand for tandem machines and increasing adoption of CNC plate-rolling machines in shipbuilding, sectors that management expects to contribute to future growth.
According to a stock exchange filing, the company completed the expansion of annual installed capacity from 900 to 1,500 machines in July 2025, with utilisation now at about 65 percent and manufacturing cycle times reduced to two–three months from three–four months. A 5,000-square-metre backward-integration facility under its subsidiary EM Press Form Solutions Pvt. Ltd. is scheduled for completion by January 2026 and expected to be operational in fiscal 2027. Management stated that the project is intended to reduce job-work and logistics costs and support a target profit-after-tax margin of 9–10 percent.
The filing showed strong interest in hydraulic CNC press brakes, which accounted for 73 percent of revenue in the first half of fiscal 2026, followed by shearing machines at 14 percent. Newly introduced hydraulic press machines are gaining traction, and the company noted that tandem machines—previously fully imported—represent a growing opportunity. Energy Mission also reported increasing demand from shipbuilding companies for its CNC plate-rolling machines.
Exports remain a key focus area, with management stating that overseas shipments are expected to exceed 10 percent of revenue next year. Export margins are about eight percent higher than domestic margins, supported by orders reviving in the United States and the Middle East and by a US subsidiary that provides local sales support.
The company also said it expects improvements in working capital as inventory levels normalise following capacity expansion. Inventory days had previously been elevated because more than 600 product variants require 400–500 components each, combined with large-machine dispatch cycles and earlier assembly-space constraints.
Consolidated revenue for the first half of fiscal 2026 was INR 758.51 million, up 4.15 percent year on year. EBITDA was INR 116.06 million and profit after tax was INR 64.22 million, with margin expansion supported by lower job-work and logistics expenses. The order book for the period stood at about INR 550 million, with a broader order-in-hand figure of INR 791.69 million presented in the investor materials.
Energy Mission competes with domestic manufacturers such as Hindustan Hydraulics and Rajesh Machine Tools and with imported machinery from Amada, Trumpf, LVD and suppliers from Turkey and China. The company said its competitive positioning is supported by cost advantages, shorter delivery times and the ability to customise machines.
Energy Mission manufactures press brakes, shearing machines, plate-rolling machines, ironworker machines and busbar processing machines, and provides engineering services and after-sales support. The company is headquartered in Ahmedabad, Gujarat.
