Amber Enterprises India Ltd (NSE: AMBER), a leading manufacturer of heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) equipment and an increasingly diversified player in electronics manufacturing services (EMS), released its unaudited financial results for the third quarter ended December 31, 2025. The company’s quarter demonstrated revenue stability with meaningful profitability improvements, marking a cautious recovery from challenging prior quarter comparisons.
Quarterly Highlights
For Q3 FY2026, Amber Enterprises reported total consolidated revenue of ₹2,133.33 crore, representing a 26.6% year-on-year increase from ₹1,294.76 crore in Q3 FY2025. Operating income rose to ₹99.98 crore (up 75.1% YoY), while profit after tax stood at ₹35.87 crore, up 86.8% year-on-year compared with ₹19.20 crore in the prior period.
Although the reported numbers illustrate a recovery relative to the year-ago quarter, results should be interpreted in the context of a weak Q2 FY26, when the company reported a net loss of ₹32.86 crore due to operational and cost headwinds.
Segmental Analysis
Electronics Division (EMS): This segment remains the “star performer.” With a guidance of 40-45% growth for FY26, the division is on track to hit its $1 billion revenue target in three years.
Expansion: Mass production at the new multilayer and HDI PCB plants is slated for Q3 FY27.
Acquisitions: Recent integration of Shogini Technoarts and Ascent Circuits has bolstered the company’s backward integration in PCB manufacturing, reducing dependence on external suppliers.
Mobility & Railway Subsystems (Sidwal): Despite a muted start to the year due to project delays, the Railway division showed signs of revival in Q3.
Margin Outlook: Management expects margins to normalize to the 18-22% range in H2 FY26.
New Tech: The JV with Korea Circuit and Yujin is expanding Amber’s portfolio into high-tech railway components and HVAC pantry doors.
Consumer Durables (RAC & Components): The RAC segment faced headwinds from new BEE (Bureau of Energy Efficiency) norms effective January 1, 2026.
Market Share: Amber maintains a 26-27% share in the total Indian RAC market.
Con Call Highlights & Management Commentary
During the post-earnings call, CEO Jasbir Singh and CFO Sudhir Goyal addressed investor concerns:
Exceptional Loss: The one-time hit was attributed to the impairment of a joint venture investment and costs related to transitioning to new regulatory standards.
Debt & Capex: The company projected a total FY26 capex of ₹700-850 crore. Despite a net debt of ₹1,012 crore in September, management expects to turn cash positive by the end of FY26.
QIP Completion: Amber successfully utilized ₹986 crore from its recent ₹1,000 crore QIP to strengthen the balance sheet and fund the electronics expansion.
Key takeaways for investors
Revenue growth momentum returned in Q3 FY26, reflecting demand across HVAC and newer segments.
Profitability improvement from last year’s losses suggests stabilizing operations, but margin pressures require monitoring.
Strategic diversification and capacity expansion remain central to the growth narrative, though execution risk persists.
Conclusion
Amber Enterprises’ Q3 FY26 results underscore a measured recovery trajectory, with year-on-year revenue growth and profitability turnaround following a weak previous quarter. The topline strength and EBITDA expansion signal resilience in core segments, though full margin stabilization and consistent bottom-line performance will depend on effective execution of its diversification strategy and cost management.
Amber is no longer just an “AC company.” It is a diversified manufacturing play. While Q3 earnings were bruised by accounting adjustments and regulatory shifts, the long-term narrative of “Make in India” and electronics localization remains the primary driver for long-term investors.