People
The People Running This Company
Grade: B−. Two founder families own half the company directly and run it day-to-day, which is the strongest possible alignment with outside shareholders — but the same fact means the board is structurally unable to challenge them, and the cleanest "independent" director sits on the executive committee of a related-party customer. Pay is modest in absolute terms but rose 20% in a year when consolidated PAT fell 20%, and a ₹95 crore standalone impairment of the Romania subsidiary in FY2025 is a real, recent capital-allocation scar.
Governance Grade
Skin-in-Game (1-10)
Founder Families Stake
Promoter Group (SEBI cap)
1. The People Running This Company
This is a two-family business. The Shahs and the Rangwalas founded Harsha in 1986; their sons run it today, their daughters and wives sit on the share register, and a Whole-time Director from the third family branch (Hetal Naik, née Shah) closes the loop.
The two founders — Rajendra Shah and Harish Rangwala, both 77, both Lukhdhirji Engineering College mechanical engineers, both with 52 years in precision bearing cages — still chair the board and run it day-to-day. Succession risk is real but managed: Vishal Rangwala (USC engineering management, joined 2007) is CEO, and Pilak Shah (NC State, joined 2006) is COO. Both have been at Harsha for nearly two decades and were formally re-appointed in December 2024 for five-year terms. The CFO (Maulik Jasani) and CS (Kiran Mohanty) are professional, non-family hires.
Succession sketch: Founders are 77; CEO and COO are 48 and 44 respectively. The transition has been happening for 15+ years and is essentially complete on operations. Strategy and capital allocation still flow through the founders.
2. What They Get Paid
Pay is modest for a ₹1,400+ crore (consolidated) revenue company and roughly 70% variable. But pay rose 20%+ for the next-gen executives in FY2025 while consolidated PAT fell 20% and standalone PAT fell 72% — there's a clear pay-performance disconnect in the year the Romania impairment landed.
The remuneration structure for all five whole-time directors was revised effective 1 October 2024 — approved by the board in May 2024 and by shareholders at the September 2024 AGM. The revision pushed commission above base salary for every promoter executive. Independent directors get only a ₹20,000-per-meeting sitting fee — total ₹3.8 lakh across all five non-execs combined. No ESOPs. No stock options. No warrants outstanding. The cash commission is the variable comp.
The disconnect: Vishal Rangwala and Pilak Shah saw pay rise ~20% in FY2025; consolidated PAT fell 19.85%, and standalone PAT fell 72.1% after the ₹95 crore Romania impairment. The commission formula appears to lag a single year of weakness — bonus pools paid in FY25 were partly based on FY24 performance. Worth watching whether FY26 pay normalises lower; if it stays elevated, the formula needs scrutiny.
3. Are They Aligned?
Yes — by ownership, very much so. The cleanest summary: the people running the company own roughly half of it. Promoters at the 75% SEBI cap; promoter directors and immediate relatives alone hold ~50% directly; no ESOP dilution; promoters bought 0.39 percentage points in mid-2025 to hit the cap.
Skin-in-the-Game (1-10)
Promoter Family Direct %
Promoter Buying (last 12m, pp)
Insider activity. Promoter holding moved from 74.61% (held flat for 8 quarters through Mar 2025) to 74.72% (Jun 2025) to 75.00% (Sep 2025 onwards). That's the SEBI maximum; they cannot legally buy more without breaching the 25% minimum public float rule. No promoter selling. Trendlyne records no insider trade disclosures since 2015 — the only SAST filing in recent memory was an acquisition by the Mili Mehta Family Trust (promoter group) of 14.7 lakh shares in November 2023.
Dilution. Share count unchanged at 9,10,44,105 since the IPO. No ESOP plan, no stock options outstanding, no warrants, no GDR/ADR. This is a clean equity stack.
Dividend. ₹1 per share final dividend for FY2025 (₹9.1 crore total payout, ~10% payout ratio). Yield ~0.25%. Promoter family received ~₹4.3 crore of that dividend pool. Modest. The company is reinvesting in capacity (₹120 crore annual capex run-rate) and a fourth facility (Bhayla via Harsha Advantek subsidiary).
Related parties. The single line that matters is AIA Engineering Limited: Harsha sold ₹15.11 crore of goods to AIA in FY2025 (vs ₹0 in FY24); Rajendra Shah sits on AIA's board as Non-Executive Non-Independent; and Harsha's "Independent" director Kunal Shah is AIA's Executive Director, Corporate Affairs and former CFO. This is at arm's length per filings, but the relationship is dense (see Section 4). Other RPTs are immaterial: ₹65 lakh of services from Ecological Service Inc., ₹15 lakh from Manish Naik (Hetal's husband), ₹1.24 crore CSR to Aastha Charitable Trust (Dr. Bhushan Punani's organisation — he is also an Independent Director).
Capital allocation. IPO Sep 2022 raised ₹455 crore fresh + ₹300 crore OFS at ₹330. Of the ₹429 crore objectives, ₹420 crore deployed by Mar 2025 (debt repayment ₹270 cr; capex ₹68 cr; renovation ₹7 cr; general ₹74 cr). Board extended the unutilised deployment deadline to Mar 2026 — a single approval, not a pattern of slippage. The big scar: a ₹95 crore standalone impairment of Harsha Engineers Europe SRL (Romania) in FY2025 (₹27.7 crore at consolidated level). The Romania subsidiary, acquired pre-IPO, has not performed; this writedown is the first explicit admission. China subsidiary loan outstanding ₹20.7 crore is performing.
The alignment bull case: Founders own ~25% personally and their families ~25% more. No dilution. Promoters bought back to the SEBI cap in 2025. Auditor's report is clean. No SEBI penalties. No promoter pledges or encumbrances disclosed in 2024–2025. There are very few mid-cap Indian industrials where insider economic interest is this concentrated, this transparent, and this undiluted.
4. Board Quality
Five executive promoters; five "independent" directors — formally compliant with SEBI LODR. The independents are senior people with real CVs, but two have ties to the company's universe that complicate the label.
The independents, candidly:
- Mr. Ambar Patel — MD of Shilp Gravures, GCCI committee chair. Clean. Long-serving (since pre-IPO 2022). Chairs the Nomination & Remuneration Committee and Stakeholders' Relationship Committee.
- Dr. Bhushan Punani — IIM-Ahmedabad alum, Distinguished Alumnus 2011, General Secretary of Blind People's Association (where Rajendra Shah is President). The BPA link is a soft connection, not a financial one, but it's worth noting that the company channels CSR through Aastha Charitable Trust, a related promoter-influenced entity.
- Mr. Ramakrishnan Kasinathan — ex-SKF India, Johnson & Johnson, Asian Institute of Management. Genuinely independent supply-chain consultant. Owns 500 shares (the only ID with any equity stake). Most credible "outsider."
- Mr. Kunal Shah — Chairman of the Audit Committee. He is concurrently Executive Director, Corporate Affairs at AIA Engineering, where Rajendra Shah is a Non-Executive Director and which is a related party that bought ₹15.11 crore of goods from Harsha in FY2025. He is "independent" by SEBI's letter but materially conflicted by any reasonable read.
- Ms. Priyanka Agarwal Chopra — Wharton MBA, CEO of IIMA Ventures, appointed November 2024 to replace Prof. (Dr.) Neharika Vohra (who resigned citing "other professional commitments"). Strong CV but only one board meeting attended in FY25 and an evident learning curve on a manufacturing business.
The cross-directorship that matters: The Audit Committee chair (Kunal Shah) is an executive at the largest related-party customer (AIA Engineering). The Chairman (Rajendra Shah) sits on AIA's board. RPT sales jumped from ~₹0 in FY24 to ₹15.11 crore in FY25. Each transaction was approved by the Audit Committee — which is chaired by an AIA executive. This is the single biggest governance flag in the file.
Family on the board: 5 of 10 (50%) are immediate family — Rajendra is father to Pilak and Hetal, Harish is father to Vishal. Combined with 5 IDs (one of whom is the AIA cross-director), the math is that no resolution opposed by the families can pass. There is no realistic mechanism for the board to override the founders.
Committees. Audit, NRC, Stakeholders, CSR, Risk, and Management. Audit is independent-majority (3 ID + 1 promoter). NRC and Stakeholders are independent-chaired. Risk Management Committee is chaired by Rajendra Shah with 4 of 6 seats held by promoters — independence is weak on risk oversight specifically.
Compliance hygiene. No SEBI penalties or strictures in FY2025. Statutory auditor Pankaj R. Shah & Associates (FRN:107361W) issued an unmodified opinion. Secretarial audit by Chirag Shah & Associates, also clean. Credit rating CARE AA−/A1+ reaffirmed. Two shareholder complaints received and resolved during FY2025. Postal ballot on Priyanka Chopra's appointment passed with 99.998% in favour.
5. The Verdict
Governance grade: B−
The honest read on Harsha is that economic alignment is excellent and behavioural red flags are minor — the founders haven't sold, haven't diluted, haven't pledged, and have bought modestly. But the governance machinery — the board's ability to challenge the families, the Audit Committee's independence from a ₹15-crore RPT, the variability of pay around earnings — is weaker than a clean-on-paper compliance summary would suggest. This is a B−, not a B, because the AIA cross-directorship plus the FY25 pay-performance gap are unforced errors that better governance would have avoided.
What would upgrade to B / B+: Rotate the Audit Committee chair off Kunal Shah; bring a senior CFO-level independent director onto the audit committee; introduce a clawback or formula tied to consolidated ROCE to break the pay/PAT divergence; disclose the next-gen succession plan formally.
What would downgrade to C: Any new material RPT with AIA or another Shah-family-linked entity without explicit minority-shareholder vote; promoter pledging; replacement of independent directors with promoter-affiliated candidates; another foreign-subsidiary impairment without a corresponding pay reset.
The single most likely thing to move the grade in either direction is what management does about the Romania subsidiary in FY2026–27: continued losses with no plan would be a clear downgrade; a clean exit or turnaround with the FY25 impairment behind them would be a clear upgrade. The skin-in-the-game ceiling is already in place at 75% — alignment can only deteriorate from here, not improve.