The Future of India Inc: Companies to Watch out for



Company website;

 
The leading CNC machine manufacturers of India;


Has secured investments from the likes of Morgan Stanley and Societe Generale. Strong consolidated y-o-y revenue and expanding rapidly. Had a blockbuster ipo too.



 

Specializes in aerospace and turbine component manufacturing. Supplies components to the likes of Siemens, Honeywell, Mitsubishi, Rolls Royce, Boeing, Safran and GE.




Has a packed order book and expanding aggressively;


Article on their founder, 10th fail and a self-taught engineer;

 

(Use 12ft.io if paywall appears)

Company website;


Their robots are used across a number of airports and cities. Has overseas orders too.

 

Specializes in aerospace and turbine component manufacturing. Supplies components to the likes of Siemens, Honeywell, Mitsubishi, Rolls Royce, Boeing, Safran and GE.




Has a packed order book and expanding aggressively;


Article on their founder, 10th fail and a self-taught engineer;

Azad engineering a great company. Not far may they will develop full fledge aero-engines.
 

Hycom Engineering, a manufacturer and supplier of precision engineering products to JCB, Bobcat, and John Deere, among others, aims to double its revenue to ₹115 crore by FY29. The company reported ₹50 crore in revenue for FY25.

The engineering company is also discussing establishing a third facility in Bidadi, with a proposed capital expenditure of ₹100 crore. Currently operating two plants in Peenya that manufacture 40,000 units annually, Hycom aims to double this capacity to 80,000 units by FY29, according to M Seethapathy Rao, Chairman and Managing Director of Hycom Engineering.

Founded in 2010, Hycom Engineering is the manufacturer and supplier of swivel joints and rotary actuators used in construction equipment, material handling, and access equipment in India. As part of its market diversification strategy, Hycom is targeting exports alongside its domestic operations to capitalise on these trends.

“Our goal is to grow faster than the overall market,” Rao added. “While addressing the domestic demand, we are also focusing on exports to accelerate our growth.”

“Exports account for 15-18 per cent on our sales, and by FY29, we plan to increase this to 35-40 per cent,” he said.
 
PTC Technologies becomes India’s first private company to commission a Vacuum Arc Remelting (VAR) furnace for producing aerospace-grade titanium alloy ingots.
 
PTC Technologies becomes India’s first private company to commission a Vacuum Arc Remelting (VAR) furnace for producing aerospace-grade titanium alloy ingots.
Nice, but would have been better if the Indian company had developed the actual machinery, which is what I was hoping from the title -:)
 
First software co on this thread;




 
First software co on this thread;




Wasn't aware QH is Indian. Will switch to them over imported AV products.
 
Wasn't aware QH is Indian. Will switch to them over imported AV products.

Let us know how these products perform and give us a review on this forum. Perhaps we can generate enough interest to encourage purchases of these indigenous products.

Advise as well on the user friendliness of this program.
 
A little known company with global reach;


Specializes on chemical process equipment engineering and corrosion protection and lately, has been on an acquisition spree.


Interview of CEO;


Some interesting bits;

While a small portion of our components involves foreign exchange, approximately 80% to 90% of our sourcing is entirely indigenous. The forex components mainly stem from two areas: certain chemicals that are unavailable in India and specific high-alloy steels required for equipment manufacturing. While India produces a significant amount of steel, the quality of materials like carbon steels is more common, and high-alloy steels must be sourced internationally.
 
Nice, but would have been better if the Indian company had developed the actual machinery, which is what I was hoping from the title -:)
Big step though. We have 21% of worlds titanium ore in reserves. We ship our ore to Russia for refining and making ingots. Russia and China are 2 biggest producers of ingots in the world, both have stopped supplying to west.

 
Big step though. We have 21% of worlds titanium ore in reserves. We ship our ore to Russia for refining and making ingots. Russia and China are 2 biggest producers of ingots in the world, both have stopped supplying to west.

I hope we tightly control ores and ingots supply and only trade for certainly equally
PRized tech or alloy know how. Let's not squander our minerals.
 

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