Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Timken India Limited Q3 FY 2026 Post Results Earnings Call. As a reminder, all participants' lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Annamalai Jayaraj. Thank you, and over to you.
Thanks, Leena. Welcome all the participants to Timken India Limited 3Q FY 2026 Post Results Conference Call. From Timken India Management, we have with us today Mr. Sanjay Koul, Chairman and Managing Director, and Mr. Sujit Kumar Pattanaik , Business Controller India, CFO and Whole-Time Director. I will now hand over the call to the management for the opening remarks to be followed by question-and-answer session. Over to you, sir.
Thank you, Mr. Annamalai. As stated, I'm in the car. My schedule of flight was changed, so I'm asking my CFO to carry on and do the opening remarks. A lot of data is in the opening remarks. Go ahead, Sujit, please.
Yeah. Thank you, sir. One second. Good evening, and thank you for joining us today. We appreciate your continued interest and support in Timken India. During the period before I go to the numbers, during the period, we continue to focus on executing our strategic priorities, including the capacity expansion and strengthening our operational capabilities to support the long-term growth. I will briefly walk you through about the quarter and nine-month performance, after which we will open up floor for the questions. Quickly, on quarter three of the financial year 2025/26, the revenue for the operations was INR 764 crore, INR 7,644 million, which is a 13.8% increase over the same period last year. While sequentially, we were down very close to 1% primarily driven by the seasonality of the Rail business. The profit before tax, there's a lot of one-time transitional impact that came in during the quarter.
So the profit before tax during the quarter was INR 719 million. It was lower year-over-year and sequentially as well on account of a few one-time transitional impacts. One was the Labour Code-related impact, which came in during the quarter. The second is the other income reduced during the quarter because of reduction in the investable capital. The third is the new plant Bharuch ramp-up cost. If I take out these exceptional items, this one-time transitional impact, we would have ended the profit before tax very close to 13%, which is primarily because of unfavorable mix versus last year's same quarter. So now moving on to the nine months for the quarter three of financial year 2026. So the revenues stood at INR 2,346 crores, reflecting almost close to 6% year-over-year growth. And across all the individual segments, we grew our revenues.
Profit before tax stands at 13.8% versus last year of 15.9%. Again, the similar impact for this YTD, primarily driven by the Labour Code impact, the transitional impact on account of the ramp-up cost, and of course, the lower other incomes. So without that, the profit would have been flattish to 30 basis points lower compared to the same period of last year. So now, as we know, the recent global trade developments, particularly the ongoing trade engagements between India and the United States and the European Union, are expected to create favorable opportunities for the Indian manufacturing in general. So progress towards deeper trade partnerships, supply chain diversification, and global OEMs and increasing localization requirements are supporting India's position as a preferred manufacturing destination.
These developments, which have come in over the last couple of weeks, are expected to strengthen the export opportunities for engineering and industrial product companies, which includes the bearing and the related components as well over the medium to long term. As the new capacities and stabilization and utilization improves for our new manufacturing plant, ramp-up costs are expected to moderate, which is going to support the gradual margin normalization. We remain focused on disciplined capital allocations, operational productivity, and capturing growth opportunities across various individual segments. Now, I will move to the front-end-wise segment-wide sales, after which we will open up the floor for the questions. During the quarter, the Rail front-ends, we did INR 128.6 crores. Mobile Others is INR 157.1 crores. The Distribution business, we did INR 138 crores. Process, INR 167 crores.
Export inter-company, we did close to INR 159 crores, and the small amount that came in in the export incentives of INR 4.4 crores. Total revenue is INR 764.4 crores, 13.8% favorable compared to last year's same period, 1% down sequentially compared to the last quarter of this financial year. So that's a quick summary of the opening remarks from our side. So with that, we will open up for questions.
Thank you very much. So we'll now begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handset while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. A reminder to all the participants that you may press star and one to ask a question. The first question comes from the line of Nikhil Rao. An individual investor, please go ahead.
Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity. Could you help us understand how demand from the commercial vehicle segment is shaping up both OEM and aftermarket? Roughly, how much of CV offtake is driven by replacement demand versus OEM production?
Sujit, you can compare the quarter-quarter numbers of mobiles.
Yeah. So as I talked about, for the commercial vehicles, primarily, which includes both on-highway and off-highway , put together, we did for the quarter, is INR 167 crores, which is almost 9% quarter-over-quarter and almost 20% year-over-year. So as we have discussed in the last quarter, we see a little acceleration in the commercial vehicle segments, and that's something which is reflecting in our revenue as well. From a distribution standpoint, if you look at it, which of course we report the numbers both auto distribution as well as the industrial distribution piece of it. So we did INR 138 crores for the quarter, which is again very flattish compared to the sequential quarter of last quarter, 1.5% off. But year-over-year, we have grown by 8.5%.
So in both the segments you talked about, we have seen a steady growth, and we expect probably the momentum to continue given that it is the last quarter of the financial year, and most of the OEs are going to kind of build up the stock and do their exercise.
Okay. Okay. Is this purely volume increase, or are you also seeing an increase in kit value or content per vehicle contribution with the series?
I would say it would be more of the volume increase at this stage, not in terms of the content values from a bearing industry perspective. I would say it's more of a volume increase.
Also, adding to what Sujit said, as we speak, as we all know, commercial vehicles are picking up. And whether it is now a long-term demand or it is just the last quarter of the financial year, but the CV market is currently for sure pulling more bearings. So we see steady growth in volumes.
Okay. Thank you. That's all from me.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Mukesh Saraf from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.
Yes. Good evening, and thank you for the opportunity. My first question is regarding the Bharuch facility. So could you kind of give an update on the FRC line commissioning and also our targets in terms of revenues from this plant, say, this year and probably next year based on the utilization rates we want to hit?
Yeah. So as far as the Bharuch facility is concerned, all our lines are capitalized as we speak so that we have taken all the decreases and impact in this quarter. So both the SRB lines, both the small and large, as well as the CRB lines are capitalized. So now, as the Chairman explained in the previous meetings, of course, in the manufacturing of bearings, it goes through multiple steps before we do the commercial sales, so starting with the customer PPAPs, the approval from the customers, so on and so forth. So we are currently in the process of ramping up for doing the PPAPs, doing the pulling up of the parts as quickly as possible. So now, as we speak, for the quarter, we had a moderated sales figure of very close to INR 12 crore-INR 15 crore.
But as we are ramping up significantly and we are pulling up the parts as much as possible, so we would expect in the near future, we are going to ramp it up quickly. And with the recent developments of the trade deals, which got signed off between Europe and the U.S., so we expect some kind of favorability in terms of loading up the plant. But again, we need to wait and watch for the fine prints of those printouts. So we are yet to look at the overall impact. But again, that may accelerate a little bit in terms of the loading of the plants. But again, it comes back to the executions, how quickly we are pulling up the parts. The entire team is working to kind of ramp it up as fast as possible in terms of PPAPs and pulling up the parts.
Right. Right. So I mean, we have a target of, say, exiting the year at 45% utilization. I mean, in conjunction to that, I mean, where will we stand?
It's difficult to tell the exact percentage in terms of the capacity utilization. If you look at it at a high level, I would say we are not definitely 45%. I would say some 30% level. But our expectation is to ramp it up as quickly as possible during the first quarter and sorry, the last quarter of this financial year and the first quarter of the next financial year so that at least we are in a sizable percentage, a little more than 50% utilization by then.
Sure. Sure. Understood. And you did allude to the fact that even the European trade deal now kind of opens up new opportunities. I think when you initially announced the investment into this plant, I think you had said that the opportunity size for SRB was, say, around INR 17 billion and for CRB, INR 20 billion based on the current imports, etc. Any update, any change to that number? Do you see a higher opportunity now for localized SRB, CRB, obviously, import substitution plus exports? Anything that you could share there?
Again, as I said, though the trade deals have been announced with both European Union and the U.S., but I think the fine print are yet to be evaluated. So we are in continuous evaluation. So as we speak, we do not have a ready-made numbers to talk about. But to answer your question, I think the Chairman also explained in the last meeting as well, our whole objective is to find out the overall capacity expansion as quickly as possible, the utilization for the plant. And definitely, these additional activities which have happened over the last two weeks, so that's going to accelerate that process.
Got it. Got it. Thank you. And just lastly, the GGB, the plain bearings line that we are kind of setting up, could you give some more color on that in terms of the immediate opportunity? Because I understand that I think it's entirely imports right now into the country. So now that you're setting up a line here, when would that be ready in terms of commercial manufacturing, and what kind of opportunity could that give us?
Yeah. So if you are referring to the FRC line, which we talked about in the last call, so that project is a timeline. So the original plan was to install all the equipment by end of Q1 and beginning of Q2 of this financial year, next financial year, 2026, 2027. And we are on track. And that's an investment for FRC line very close to INR 35 crore. So we are on track in terms of that investment, in terms of that project. And I'm sure once that gets executed, we will get the appropriate payback, which was considered in the assumption.
Got it. Got it. Great. Thank you so much. I can write in the queue.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Shubham Batra from Ambit AMC. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. Thanks for taking my question. Firstly, wanted to understand, largely, our top line was strong this quarter. However, we saw 400 basis points margin compression, QoQ. So what was the reason for the sale?
Yeah. So again, as I explained, broadly, that's driven by three major items. One is the one-time Labour Code impact. As all of you know, the Labour Codes came into effect on November 21st, which has got an impact on the way your actuary values in terms of the gratuity, in terms of the.
Sir, I am talking about the gross margin, the gross margin impact.
Yeah. So gross margin is primarily if you are excluding the Labour Code, you are taking only the material margin piece of it. So that's primarily because of the unfavorable mix and the incremental cost that we got on our Bharuch plant. So these are primarily two drives. Yeah.
Okay. That's exactly the indicator. Yeah. Sure. Sure. Go ahead.
Sorry. Go ahead. No, I was just referring to so since December is a typical quarter where our product mix is unfavorable, as you know, as the sales number I have given, the rail sales were lower compared to the earlier quarters, so as the other profitable segments, I would say. So the unfavorable mix played a role in terms of that margin.
Got it. Secondly, we indicated INR 120 crore CapEx coming up in Jamshedpur. I wanted to understand what kind of asset turns are we looking at in that plant, and when do we see that ramping up?
Again, we do not refer to asset turns. But if you look at it, the asset turn what we have given to our existing portfolios in the past, we follow the similar kind of asset turns. So as the Chairman explained in the previous meeting as well, so Rail business cannot be hockey stick. Okay? It's a slow and steady business, but it will give you a clear capacity utilization as far as that capacity is concerned. So in terms of the asset turn, so if you look at it, the overall company, the asset turn whatever is given, it's going to give further new investment as well in a similar way.
Okay. How do we expect the plant?
Yeah. Yeah. So that project, we are expecting to go live towards the end of this calendar year, which will be Q3 of financial year 2026, 2027.
Okay. Got it. So we can aim at around 30% utilization by end run rate of FY 2027?
Yeah. That's a fair assumption, I would say, at this stage. As I talked about, so these recent trade deal announcements are going to have some acceleration in a few of these projects. So yes. So that's a fair assumption, I would say, at this stage. But again, we need to wait and watch what's the fine print about those trade deals.
Got it, sir. If I can squeeze in one last question, can you also share the revenue breakup for the last quarter?
Yeah. I'll just repeat what I explained. The rail was INR 128.6 crores. Mobile Others was INR 167.1 crores.
Sir, last quarter. Just for Q2. Q2.
Oh, you mean Q2. Okay. So rail was INR 178.2 crores. Mobile Others was INR 153.2 crores. The Distribution business was INR 135.9 crores. Process was INR 141.5 crores. Export was INR 161.2 crores, and we had a small export incentive, which was INR 3.2 crores. Total INR 773 crores.
Sure, sir. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Rakesh from Axis AMC. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. So I have two questions pertaining to margin. Firstly, if you can quantify what was the absolute impact of Bharuch plant versus the INR 12 crore-INR 13 crore revenue impact which we had. And second one is a little if you can give some color as to how we see the margin from the perspective of, let's say, auto versus non-auto. And on top of that, the Bharuch ramp up taking its own time. So where should we I can understand the Labour Code impact. We exclude that. And if you see how should the mix play out for us in terms of margin and whether we can look at 17%-18% margin, is it sometime away from now, or it can come back very quickly?
Yeah. So I think there are multiple questions. So let me give an attempt one by one. So the first one am I audible? There are a lot of background noise I'm hearing. Yeah. So the first one is in terms of the Bharuch. So as I said, the roughly sales was very close to INR 15 crore for the quarter. But we had the depreciation full impact because we have capitalized all the lines. And as we know, INR 750 crore of investment, the depreciation will be anywhere between INR 9 crore-INR 10 crore a quarter, approximately. So that has impacted in terms of the basis points very close to 170 basis points impact because of the ramp-up cost for the quarter. Then on top of that, we had the Labour Code impact, which was very close to 60-odd basis points.
Then if you're taking other income as part of your PBT calculation, so that has got another impact of 120 basis points given that we did a significant capital allocation in terms of the dividend payment and the GGB acquisitions in the last two quarters. So these three put together, if you look at it, that's primarily the transitional impact for this quarter in our PBT. Now, if I exclude these three aspects of it, so we had a little bit of unfavorable mix, which has impacted the gross margin per se. But again, to a great extent, that got offset with the improved operating leverage. So the net impact of the gross margin because of the unfavorable mix and the improved leverage is very close to 1.5%. So that's the broad answer to your margin questions.
Now, coming to the Bharuch auto versus non-auto margin, of course, we have just one segment overall. But again, we don't give the segment-wise margin per se or the frontend-wise margin. But generally, as you know, probably from the OE side of it, so you'll always see the margin portfolios are margin portfolios are different from an auto and non-auto. So the same thing, you can take it for here. We don't give any specific margin percentage for auto and non-autos. Now, coming to your margin expansion, so are we in the range of 17%-18%, or that's going to probably take a little bit more time? So as I said, so everything is dependent on how quickly we are ramping off the Bharuch plant. And historically, we have seen given the fixed cost categories for the manufacturing plants here in India.
So the moment we start ramping it off, so our leverage that comes to the bottom line is significantly higher compared to many other industries. So that is what our expectation is. So our expectations and the work what we are currently doing by the entire team is the execution in the fast mode, ramping up the parts, doing the quick pickups, and these external factors like the trade agreements, if that's going to accelerate a bit in terms of the loading of the plants. So that's going to help us. And once these three things happen, so we will definitely see the margin at a very close to what the numbers you are referring to. And that's what historically, we have been doing that over the last several quarters, several years, even pre-COVID as well. So that's all I would say at this stage.
Did I answer all your questions, or anything I left out?
Yeah. Actually, just one last thing. Is the GGB consolidated, and under which head of the subsegment it is consolidated right now?
Yeah. So GGB, if you look at it, of course, for the first time, we have published two results, consolidated financials and the standalone financials. Again, GGB has got they are more into the plain bearings, the bushing bearings. So they are into multiple segments. But I would say most of their sales would be in distribution and the process industries. And some components go to mobile OEMs. But most of them will be in distribution and process.
Got it. Thanks, Sujit. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Sabyasachi Mukherjee from Bajaj Finserv AMC. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Two questions from my side. First is I see good, strong growth in both mobile and process. Mobile, as I understand, CV outlook, CV growth is strong. My question is, what is the outlook on rail and the export segment now that the India-U.S. BTA is done? So what is the kind of outlook for Q4 as well as FY 2027?
Yeah. So again, formally, we don't give any future guidance per se. But since you have asked the questions on rail, so again, we keep repeating this every quarter. So Rail business per se is not going to be a hockey stick. It will have a slow and steady. So if you would have seen this recent budget, so the allocation of the capital from the government is going to be a slight improvement compared to last year, so which effectively means the infrastructure around the rail are going to come up exactly in the similar range what we have seen in the past. Now, if we look at it, the rail per se for this quarter was the lower quarter, so INR 128 crore we did.
Historically, if we look at it, the rail per se, the quarter four of the financial year is always going to be a strong quarter. That's what historically we see. Year-over-year, if we look at it, there is a growth of rail of very close to 10.5%. That is INR 128 crore of this quarter versus the last year, same quarter, we did INR 116 crore. From your perspective, we will always see Rail business is a steady growth. Definitely, there won't be any decline unless until we see a significant impact of government spending diversification to other segments. As of now, we don't see. With the recent budget what the Honorable Finance Minister has announced, so we see the capital allocation to the rail, of course, growing for the next year as well. That with respect to the rail.
Coming to the export piece of it, as I said, we are still evaluating detailed fine prints of the trade agreements that get out soon. Our expectation is the European trade agreement what we saw so again, by the time it gets signed off by the European Union with all the members of the European Union, so that may happen anytime towards the end of the year. So that's why I would see probably that will be effective sometime beginning of next year. And the U.S. trade deal, with the recent announcement that came out with the interim press release, so that, of course, we need to look at it, the details of the chapter ID and the HS code, all those stuff. But that's definitely going to be helpful in some way to our industries per se. So again, we need to wait and watch.
So, there is no kind of concrete answers whether that's something which is going to have a direct impact on our export. But these are all the directions in the positive way. We definitely can expect to the industry like us will have beneficial out of those agreements.
Just a follow-up here. With tariffs, U.S. tariffs going down from 50%-18%, I mean, what happens to the shipments? I mean, is there anything material that is happening because our parent is U.S. parent, right? So anything on that front in terms of shipments, in terms of orders? Are we seeing any pickup, anything on that?
No. So even before the tariff announcement, if you look at it, our exports, okay. So technically, it has not gone down significantly because we closed the quarter exports with INR 159 crore. And it was INR 152 crore same year, same quarter, and INR 161 crore equivalent sales. So it was almost plant-based. Now, to your question, again, as I said, so still the fine prints are being looked at it. So that 50%-18% is a headline tariff reduction. But we need to go into the details of the engineered goods, so on and so forth, which is most likely going to be reduced from 50%-18%. And as it reduces, of course, the movement of the supply chain, the other piece, it's not only for Timken Company. We need to look at it other aspects as well what's going to happen.
So again, we need to wait and watch. It's very early to come to a conclusion that's going to significantly improve the numbers. We need to wait and watch. I'm sure in coming days, we will have a better visibility to give a numbers on that aspect.
Got it. My second question on GGB. Effectively, we saw just one month of revenue in this quarter. And probably the cost, fixed cost was, I mean, full, the absorption. I'm just correct if my understanding is right here.
So there is a slight comment there. So we have also given the note number five in our consolidation financials. It is not just 1 month revenue. So since it's a group company acquisition, so as for the Indian accounting standard, we need to do the pooling of interests, so which effectively means the consolidation will look like as if it has happened from 1st of April 2024. Okay? So for this quarter, what you are seeing, the revenue numbers are 3 months revenue for GGB. It is not 1 month revenue. And you would have seen if you reduce the consolidated financials minus the standalone financials, that's very close to INR 15 crore revenue for 3 months.
Okay. So the annual run rate for this entity is close to that INR 60 crores mark. I mean, that sounds interesting.
Yeah. I would say somewhere close to 50-55. They will also have their seasonalities. So I would say somewhere close to INR 50-55 crores. Yep.
Got it. Okay. That's all I have. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Viraj from SiMPL. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Just a couple of questions. First is on the railway. Can you give some more granular color in terms of the tendering activity in different subsegments, freight, passenger, metro? And a related question is, how are you seeing the pricing? So this question is also in relation to the competition intensity. Do you see any major change in terms of the competitive intensity in railways?
Yeah. So again, subsegment-wise, the numbers I have already spoken about. So rail, if you start with those five broad individuals, a segment we talk about. So rail, again, it's a typical lower quarter for the Rail business per se. And we always see historically, the quarter four of the financial year always picks up given the wagon builds, the government spend allocation, so on and so forth. So for this quarter, it was down sequentially for rail. But if you look at it year-over-year, still we had a best December quarter. So that's rail. And as a future perspective, as we discussed, again, we don't give the future guidance per se for the company. But overall, if you look at it with the recent budget announcement, so we have not seen a significant reallocation of the capital as far as the Rail segment is concerned.
So which effectively means the infrastructure around the rail ecosystem are going to probably sustain. And that's going to happen for any developing countries like India, at least for the medium to long term. So now on the Mobile Other s piece of it, as the Chairman explained, the commercial vehicles, both on highway and off highway, so we see a slight acceleration than the earlier years. So that's something which we closed with INR 167 crore. And again, traditionally, we have seen the quarter four of the financial years is always a great year for majority of the OEs. And since we supply to majority of the OEs, so we also foresee probably this quarter four of the financial year will accelerate to a great extent. Now, is it a sustainable increase in the demand, or it is more of a stock correction?
So that's something which we need to wait and watch. But as we speak for this quarter and what we see as we speak in January, so we see probably an acceleration in terms of big exports. Now, distribution, again, both auto and industrial distribution, so there also, we see a year-over-year growth. What we have seen for this quarter is 8.5%. And we see a steady momentum for most of the stationary equipment OEs and the steel plants. So same thing is for the process as well. And export, we talked about. So despite those tariff issues, what we had, the geopolitical dynamics, what we had, we have not seen a significant drop in our export. If we look at it, the numbers, we closed INR 159 crore, which was 4% year-over-year growth, a slight decline sequentially.
With this trade sign-off that's been happening over the last two weeks, so we see probably that's something which is going to be favorable for most of the industrial manufacturers. That's broadly.
Sorry to interrupt. My question was on competitive intensity in railways. If you can give any color, is there any change in market share on a number of players in this?
So competition is always there, be it rail or be it any other segment. So competition is always there. And then obviously, Timken has the ability to innovate relentlessly. So we are not afraid of the competition. What we are really looking at is to the market with more innovation. So that is why we are the leaders in rail for the last so many decades, not only in India but globally also, the parent as well.
Okay. Second question was on the distribution side. Post the GST cut, do you see any material change? So there used to be a very large market for counterfeits and spurious in bearings per se in distribution. So post the GST cuts, do you think there's a trend of unorganized to organized? Has that seen any acceleration or any color you can give on that?
You are talking about GST on Distribution business?
Yeah. Distribution. Yeah.
You mean you are referring to there is a change in GST recently?
Yeah. And the impact in terms of the unorganized to organized, I mean, especially the large counterfeit and spurious market, which was there in bearing.
Yeah. So again, so if you look at it per se, there is no change apart from the administrative changes which have been brought in in the GST Council meeting of the quarter four of last calendar year plus the current budget. So now from a rate perspective, if you look at it, so still, majority of our product falls under that 18% categories. And of course, GST has got its own facilities in terms of the e-invoicing, the cascading impact of credit, so on and so forth. It was there since the inception of GST. So now the changes which you are talking about from unstructured business to structured, in non-organized business to organized business, so again, that's an evolving step. That's something which is not going to have a significant impact in terms of our sales the way we were doing it.
Now, if you look at it, our Distribution business per se, so majority of our distributors were the tax compliant from the beginning of the GST implementations. And Timken being a good-governed company, so we always do business with any of those distributors or the OEs who have the good governance system with them. So per se, the changes what you are referring to in the GST that has come in, so that's primarily the administrative piece of it, whether it is invoicing, whether it is investment management sorry, invoice management system, so on and so forth, so which is going to help probably many other unorganized sectors to come into the organized sector per se. But majority of the profiles what we are looking at with whom we do the business, they were all compliant much before these changes that came in.
Okay. Thank you.
Just to add to that, in railways, unless and until you are not certified by the certifying body where the norms are pretty tough because it is a safety item. So just by changing a little bit of a norm here and there cannot lead to a lot of people obviously; people can try and should try. But the entry bar is very high because of this criteria of the safety, especially for rails.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Nikhil Chintamani Kale from Invesco. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for taking my question. Just had a couple of questions. Firstly, just on the SRB, the new plant at Bharuch, you talked about the kind of revenues that you had in this quarter. What were the fixed costs? So I'm talking about at the breakeven level, you would have probably seen a loss. So if you could maybe just highlight that number to help us understand what is the core profitability, core business profitability.
Yeah. So again, we do not monitor profitability at the plant level. But as I said in my previous questions as well, so overall, from a PBT perspective, if you look at it, because of this plant ramp-up cost, which is nothing but the fixed cost over the revenue that we have generated, that has impacted very close to 1.7% approximately for the quarter.
Okay. Understood. And just to double-click on the unfavorable mix part of it, so yeah, I think Y-o-Y, if you look at it, the segmental mix is not too different. So just wanted to understand, I mean, is the gross margin reduction also a function of, say, traded goods kind of higher mix of traded goods in the revenues?
Again, when we use the word mix, it is also trading versus manufacturing. It is also mix between the front-end units per se. So this is combination of both.
Okay. Understood. Understood. That's it for me. Thank you.
Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Rishi Vora from Kotak Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. I just have a follow-up again on this gross margins, right? Even if I look at from a sequential basis, the cost of traded goods has gone up significantly. So is there any change in the traded goods agreement with the parent, some tariff impact which we are bearing? Anything of that sort has happened on a sequential basis or on a Y-o-Y basis which explains such a sharp drop in gross margins?
No. So again, to answer your question, of course, so any transaction that happens through the group companies, so we follow the transfer pricing policies. And we all know probably the regulations that surrounds the transfer pricing. So to answer your question, there was no changes done during the quarter when it comes to the pricing mechanisms of the group companies. So it followed exactly the same pricing mechanism which is being followed in the previous quarters. So the gross margin impact, what you see, as I explained before, so this is two mix. One. Is approach the content-wise sales and the profitability mix. The second is also for your traded product. You import from multiple countries. So every country will have the transfer pricing mechanisms. So the pricing methodologies between that countries and the mix of that will have an impact as well.
So, to answer your question, there was no change which has done during the quarter in terms of the pricing mechanism. It followed exactly the same pricing mechanism, but it was followed in the earlier years. So, it's primarily the unfavorable mix which I would say a transitional impact which has impacted for this quarter.
Understood. My second question is just pertaining to when we are importing the finished goods from USA, do we pay any duty at this point in time? If US and India deal happens and if that duty comes down to 0%, then is there some benefit which we could accrue once that happens?
Yeah. So answer to your first question, do we pay any duty as of now? Answer to that is yes. So most of our products that falls under the industrial bearings, which is Chapter 84 HS, I think the duty which is applicable very close to 8% + certain cess, so on and so forth. Now, with the trade deal that is happening, so far, again, we have not seen a detailed fine print of the trade deal. So we need to wait and watch for the HS code. So now, if I take hypothetically, if that's going down from the existing rate, definitely, that's going to be beneficial from a profitability standpoint. But again, as we speak, there are no details HSN code-wise released in terms of the duty. We need to wait and watch what that percentage is going to be.
Understood. But this 8% currently is bound by us, right? It's not shared between us and the parent?
Yeah. It's part of the landing cost, right? So same thing is applicable for our export as well because when we export bearings, there is a cost. And the importing country always takes the cost. So that means parent takes that cost for our export side. The same thing is applicable for import side.
Understood. Understood. And just last question on the you said that India-US deal also would be at least over the medium term beneficial to us. And just wanted to understand my understanding was the import duty today from India of any auto and part including the industrial bearings is anywhere between 2%-5%, right? And that essentially goes down to zero, right? So do you think that that 3% price cuts is good enough for us to be competitive in that market?
Answer to that, again, whether it is competitive or not, that future will say. But again, at the end of the day, if you look at it, the economics piece of it so if today you have a market share of X and that cost is going down, let's say, 3%, 4%, whatever that number be, so definitely, you'll be in an advantage position to gain some market share, right? So that's how the economics will work. Now, to your point, whether that is today 2%-5%, that's going to come to zero all of a sudden or gradually, that's going to zero, that we need to wait and watch. But to your point, if there is a reduction and what the trade deal headlines talk about, so eventually, that's coming to come to very close to nearly at least 98%-99% of the products.
We need to wait. What is the timeline of that? Is it something is going to happen from day one or probably gradually, they are going to bring it down? We need to wait and watch. Anything that's getting reduced from your existing base, and that's how the economics works. We will always have the advantage positions in that particular market.
Understood. And so just last question, if I may squeeze in. Just on the SRB, CRB, is there any order book number, at least in terms of domestic export, where are we seeing incremental direction, which end segments, if you could share some details around it, that would be helpful.
Maybe the order book we don't give per se. But as I said, so there are two, three aspects which to be considered as far as this new plant is concerned. And that is true for any greenfield investment that happens. One, specifically in industry like us, the decision period will be slightly higher in the sense that it has to go through the PPAP, the customer approvals, then the plant loading. So our whole objective, the entire team, is working to do that as quickly as possible. Now, having said that, with the last two weeks, the favorable comments that's coming in both for India, U.S., and European deal, so that's going to bring in some kind of acceleration to this entire program. So again, as we speak, there is no order in mind. We don't disclose the open order numbers per se.
I can tell that definitely, we are in a much better position in terms of the visibility, what we are seeing now versus what we saw probably three months down the line.
This INR 15 crore, how is it split between domestic and exports?
Which INR 15 crore?
The quarterly revenue which we did for SRB, CRB. What is the split between domestic and exports?
Yeah. So that's roughly around INR 12 crore. I would say maybe 20%-25% is domestic and 75% would be export at this stage. But again, that should not be taken as an indication of the future business. So that will be the weight first one.
Understood. Okay. Thank you so much, sir, for your time. All the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Vipulk umar Anupchand Shah from Sumangal Investments. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. So what was the profitability for this GGB Technology Pvt. Ltd., which we have acquired for the last financial year in terms of EBITDA?
Yeah. So again, this is there in the consolidated financials. If we look at it, the last financial year, they had a revenue of INR 50 crores with a profit before tax of very close to INR 19.5 crores.
Profit before tax of INR 19.5 crore?
Yeah.
Okay. Thank you, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Shishir Saha from Saha Securities. Please go ahead.
Chairman, sir, when you took up these capital expenses towards the CRB and SRB plant, it was indicated that the top line growth will be around 3 times the capital, which is around INR 1,800 crores. In the last conference call, Sanjay told that we would be achieving this number a little earlier because we are already an established bearing. So in general, a bearing company would take 4-5 years to achieve this. But Timken India will achieve this within maybe 2-3 years. So my first question is that how much will be there in the top line for the next year? And second thing, why you are depending so much on the trade deal? Because there was no question of any trade deal and all this bearing so that we actually import successfully.
There was nothing of that trade deal sort of thing when this plan was conceived. Will you kindly tell me that whether we are depending on the trade deal to a great extent for this plant?
Yeah. So two aspects to it. As you explained, the Chairman explained about three years versus the industry average of five years. I think still that holds good in a way that the way acceleration of demand we are seeing and the way team is working and putting their efforts in speeding up the PPAPs and all those pulling up, I think that is still achievable as we speak. So now, to the second part of your question, we are definitely not dependent because trade deal is something where we do not have control to. So we are not dependent on trade deal per se. So the comments what I gave is with this favorable geopolitical situation, whenever that happens, that's going to only be advantage and favorable to us. So to your point, when the assumptions were taken, the tariff was not 50% during those stages.
When we took the approval about this plant, to your point, it was not 50%. It was below 50%. This tariff of 50% came in over the last 3-4 quarters. But to answer your question, definitely, we are not dependent on the trade deal because that's something where the government has to negotiate and close to. We have very limited controls on that. We focus on where we can control, which is the execution piece of it. And the team is on the job to execute it as fast as possible in terms of the pulling of the parts, the PPAPs, interacting with the customers, and getting the plant loaded. So I would say the assumptions what Chairman told in the earlier meeting still holds good. And we are in a better shape.
As we speak, I would say the visibility is slightly better than we had 2, 3 months before.
Sir, on a lighter side, I will just ask one question. When can we be excited after seeing the result? Because every quarter, we are very excited to wait for your publishing the result. And when the result comes out, it was a damp squib . This time, when can we be once again excited seeing the team's results?
No. Again.
On this, Janish, Sujit, the answer is that hope sustains life on the lighter side.
Yeah. That is okay. Yeah. For next year, we can expect some good things, sir, out of the new plant and the new acquisition and all that?
I can only tell you one thing, sir, and Sujit can quantify in terms of numbers and everything. I have worked in the industry for 30 years. I know the bearing market, I can say, among the best in India. This certainly is among the best companies where one can grow business and see better results for all the stakeholders. That much I can tell you. Over to Sujit for more numerical answer.
No. I think you have covered it well. But just to give a perspective, if you do the historical analysis of Timken India Ltd. since from 2010 to today, so you would have seen a marked improvement in the profitability. Now, all those things were possible because we look at it long term, whether the investment which we have made in Bharuch, whether the acquisitions and the merger which we are talking about of the GGB, whether the investment that's happening in FRC product of GGB, whether the expansion of a rail portfolio that's happening in Jamshedpur, all those things by keeping an eye in the long term. And historically, if you look at it, we used to be the operating margin somewhere close to 10%-12% range in 2014, 2013. Now, that has moved to 18%-19% range.
All those things were possible because the investments which were being made by keeping an eye of the long term and which we are getting the return now. So the same thing, you can take it. Of course, we don't give the future guidance. So the investment which we have made in the Bharuch, these are not bad investments. These are good investments, the world-class plant that's coming up. So that's going to compete with a lot of our competitors in India in terms of the product quality, in terms of the cost positioning, in terms of the price positioning. So the rail expansion that's going to happen in Jamshedpur, so that's going to help in a big way. So all those things are good investments which are definitely going to pay back us at some point in time. Now, when is that time?
The team is working on flawless execution to see that the time comes as soon as possible.
Good. Great sales on this company, sir. Thank you very much.
Thank you, sir.
Sujit, take a last question.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Chandrakant Kanase, an individual investor. Please go ahead.
Sir, I have two small questions. One is regarding the ceramic line coming at Bharuch. What is happening on ceramic part of bearings for electric vehicles? That was one. And second question was regarding, do we have plans for linear motion products to be manufactured in India?
So the line which is coming in Bharuch is not ceramic per se. It is a different alternate material called FRC. It is not ceramic. And so we are not producing yet ceramic in India. This is a little bit different. And obviously, it can be used in EVs and other applications in process industry as such. So that is not actually pure ceramic if you are referring to ceramic ball bearings. And what was the other question, Sujit?
Yeah. Regarding linear motion products.
Linear motio n, yes. Linear motion certainly is a low-hanging fruit for both Timken India Limited here and for the parent company as well. So debates and discussions are very actively going on. As you know, our global CEO also recently, new CEO, has taken over. He's very bullish on industrial motion products. So hopefully, some good things would come up shortly.
Okay. Thank you, sir.
Okay.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question for today. I would now like to hand the conference over to management for closing remarks.
So thank you very much for the support. We relentlessly work hard to improve shareholders' return. That is the dharma and karma for us. Obviously, last quarter, we know the challenges both in terms of labor, taking those provisions, and also the mix and things like that. As I see, the future of this year looks to be pretty good. We should be all happy in coming days. Sujit, any comments?
No. I think you have covered well. Again, we work on the long-term value creation. And I'm sure the investments which are being made, which we had the transitional impact during the quarter, are going to come up at some point in time. So once again, thank you, everyone, for joining us today and all your interest in Timken India Ltd. Thank you.
Thank you. On behalf of B&K Securities, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.
Yes. Thank you.