...So good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to the Q3 results call of AIA Engineering. I'm Sanjay Majmudar, and as usual, myself and Kunal, we will be taking this call. Unfortunately, Kunal is slightly stuck in traffic, and he will be joining in now next two to three minutes. So in the interest of the time, I will just, as usual, give a little overview of the Q3 numbers. I'm assuming that you all would have a chance to have a look at the numbers. As you will see, in this quarter, we have done around 67,896 tons of production and 64,500 tons of sales. Cumulatively, therefore, till for the nine-month period, this comes to almost 187,000 tons of production and almost a similar tonnage of sales.
The overall top line, in terms of the operating revenue, stood at about INR 1,066 crores, and including other non-operating income, we have reported about INR 1,200 crores as the top line. The reported EBITDA is about INR 425 crores, which comes to almost 40%, and the operating EBITDA is around 28% after knocking off the other non-operating income. We have reported a PAT of about 8,800, uh, uh, uh... We have reported a PAT of about INR 294 crores, uh, after deducting the minority interest. Correspondingly, for the nine-month period, the EBITDA stood at about INR 1,093 crores, and the PAT stood at about INR 775 crores. Now, if I look at the numbers in retrospect, Kunal has just joined.
So, Kunal, we were just giving the overview of the numbers for the Q3 and nine-month period.
Yes. Good, good afternoon, good evening, everyone. I also have a bad throat, so you're going to hear more of Sanjay than I have. I will, you will hear of me. This quarter has been relatively an uneventful period. I think, we continue to do more of what we are doing. Very little in terms of market or, business updates. I think, it looks to be a year when, or rather a period where there is a tremendous amount of instability, you know, around us, and, possibly the best course of action is to, you know, fasten one's seatbelt and make sure that, you know, we survive this period, and we consolidate ourselves and to make sure that we thrive, you know, with everything else that we're doing.
Just a small correction. The nine months PAT stood at INR 876 crore, and the EBITDA stood at INR 1,241 crore. On the top line of about 3,153 crore, and the total income of 3,495 crore. You may continue.
Exactly. So for the quarter, we've done about INR 294 crore PAT and 425 crore of EBITDA. So the numbers, you know, continue to reflect, you know, all the value that we bring to the customers and, and all of which, you know, forms a basis for, you know, what we're doing for new customers within the, you know, the mining environment, mining customer base. Moving on, as far as other income is concerned, the total, you know, stood at INR 135 crore. There is a reasonable amount of foreign exchange gain as the currency, as we all know, has moved beyond 90. So there's INR 50 crore of foreign exchange gain. The rest is standard and customary.
There's an INR 18 crore export benefit, and there's a treasury income of INR 83 crore, a total of about 135 crore of other income. We are assuming that foreign exchange and export benefits are operational in the nature that, you know, they'll the next year the foreign exchange gain will move into a revenue line item, assuming, you know, all our invoicing. It looks like currency may not appreciate much from here. We continue to slide, you know, as we all know, with the Indian rupee vis-à-vis the dollar situation is concerned. That stood at in the. There was about INR 67 crore, so there is a market increase in other income compared to the third quarter last year. I think everything else continues. Working capital is at, is in line.
From volume standpoint, you know, volume still reflect a little bit of, you know, issues that we've discussed, you know, over this period. So third quarter is at par with the third quarter last year, and, nine months is also similar. So we are all absolutely, you know, having, absolutely similar numbers in both these periods. We did 187,800 tons for nine months, and about 64,500 in this quarter. Otherwise, you know, numbers are comparable within mining and non-mining. We, while Sanjay will speak a little more about, you know, how this forms, you know, what are the basis and things that we are looking at. Broadly, you know, broadly, business is as is from everything that we mentioned. You know, our realization is similar.
Our cash levels continue to be around INR 4,200 crore. We're not looking at significant CapEx beyond maintenance and some bits of remaining CapEx from our casting plant. One highlight was the fact that we've closed the plant of our subsidiary in Bangalore called Welcast Steels. That reflected 24,000 tons of capacity. So we were at 460,000 tons, which was 340,000 tons of grinding media, 120,000 tons of non-grinding media. The grinding media now stands reduced by 24,000 tons, so 314,000 tons and 120,000 tons of castings, taking our total capacity from to 436,000 tons. This year, we'll do a current run rate about 250,000-260,000 tons.
So we are still, you know, operating reasonably below full capacity utilization. And our facilities in Ahmedabad, you know, we can look at more, you know, capacity as brownfield, plus our plans to go build things outside of AIA, as we discussed in China and Ghana. So with that said, even after the plant, even after that capacity going off stream, it looks to be that we are okay as far as serving our customer base and serving our growth needs are concerned. As far as market is concerned, like I said, you know, just serious amount of uncertainty across the board. Every country is doing, you know, things in its own, you know, trying to protect its own interest.
There is lots of uncertainty around geopolitics, with wars being waged in several regions, something that's going on with Iran right now, the Southeast. So shipping lanes continue to be fragile and, you know, haywire. So that's also a risk in terms of container availability, shipping line availability, shipping time, and of course, the volatility in shipping costs. So having said that, you know, reflecting back on what are we doing with the customers. So the world is continuing to go put borders, duties, protectionist measures. How does a company like AIA, you know, thrive and grow? What is the mindset? So we are saying that if that is the world that we live in, which is protectionist in nature, so how do we look at our strength, you know, vis-à-vis incumbents or competition?
And one of the fact is that India remains an extraordinary location for our type of products, you know, which is not just production or hands-on the factory, but it is the whole value chain, which is design, pattern-making, production, you know, customer interfacing, the whole service and metallurgy aspect, and of course, our production. I mean, the ecosystem that exists in India for these type of products overall and the solutions that we have built on top, you know, give us the confidence that despite what may happen, despite these turbulences that we are seeing on the ground, you know, we all are seeing the serious surge in metals, precious metals, gold and silver, and there is a significant talk about what happens to copper.
We were reading about how the world has mined X amount of copper in last, you know, from till the time where humanity came started mining. That amount of copper will be needed to be mined in next 20 years just to continue a 3% growth rate. So there is just unreal amount of stuff happening. Copper looks to be in a structural bull run. The world will run out of copper in with the way it's projected to be, and copper production is reducing in tonnage, you know, standpoint every year, every month, just because of the great condition. And looks like we are one of the only game in town addressing this serious problem.
So we are very excited of all our solution interface and engineering that we are doing in terms of solving those issues, you know, those critical challenges for our mining clients, especially gold and copper. With that said, we have to, that does not, you know, absolve us of, overcoming these duties and shipping-related issues or the general overall conservatism that we see with our customers in having to try out different solutions. All we can do is continue to reinforce our efforts, ensure that our solutions become, you know, more and more deeper and bring more value addition to the client, and we are hoping that unlock happens. We announced our first chrome customer in South America, and that's the first chrome consumer in the mining space.
A lot of people then asked us, "Will that mean 100,000 tons coming up?" I think our guidance, we'll continue to abstain from a guidance, and we've explained, you know, that's because of the lack of clear signaling from the customers on what means, you know, liking the product or getting the proof of concept to moving to full commercial, you know, engagement. There is a whole lot of steps involved, and we don't want to be in a situation where we go ahead of ourselves. So we'll do the work, we'll see the tonnages coming on, and we keep sharing as much as we can, but... And share as much about the business, but you will have to pardon us for not being able to share volume guidance at this time.
So, you know, besides the developments, you know, within the win that we had last quarter, we do several trials. You know, we are working on several trials. A lot of some important trials which we were to get trial results of last quarter look to have moved to, you know, this quarter, the March quarter, and that's just the way, you know, things are at mining end. You know, there is just lot of unpredictable out, you know, variables that we work with. So trying to say, will we see clarity in three months, six months or, you know, two years, is not also a question that, unfortunately, we'll be able to help.
We are hoping that the numbers that we have presented, you know, and everything else about the business, reflects the kind of effort that we are making to bring value. That's, I think, the singular mission of our work, where there is disproportionate value that we try and bring our customers, and that's one of the, you know, outcomes there is the financial numbers, you know, that we just presented, and hopefully, that will translate into sustainable growth going forward. With that, I'll have Sanjay -bhai, or maybe we can just go onto Q&A.
... Yeah, just to add very quickly, as Kunal mentioned, in the last call, we had indicated that some new solution, package solution-oriented trials are going on. I want to say that the trials are progressing positively. Only thing is, it is taking a little more time, given the complexity and the technicalities involved, for us to get the results, but we are positively and quite excitedly working towards it, and that is the reason why, in terms of opportunity, it remains the same. I think our uniqueness remains absolutely intact. The trials are going on satisfactorily, so let us hopefully wait and watch till we get the final outcome. With that, I would request the moderator to open the house open for Q&A.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question -and- answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask question may press star and one on the touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets for asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Rita Fernandez from Neo Asset Management. Please go ahead. Yes, Mr. Fernandez, go with the question, please. As there is no response, we'll move to the next. The next question is from the line of Varun Jain from Dolat Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, good evening, sir. Am I audible?
Yes, sir.
Yeah. Yes, Mr. Jain.
Yeah. So, sir, I wanted to ask you, in your mining volumes, which are close to 40,000 MT per quarter, how much of it is in India, and how much of that is to, approximately how much is, of that is to Hindustan Copper?
Sir, we, Mr. Jain, we don't give, client-wise details, but broadly, you can say that, if you look at the mining volumes, on an average, around, 3,000-4,000 tons maximum would be from India. Rest all will be from outside India, but we'll come back to you. Just give me a moment, and I will look at the numbers, but most of the mining volume is from outside India.
Yeah, yeah. No, I, I understand that. So, sir, since, in the initial remarks, you were saying that, you know, there's a lot of geopolitical uncertainty,
Indian, I would say that annually, the Indian mining run rate would not be more than 10,000-12,000 tons a year.
Yes, but, sir, like Hindustan Copper, they have said that they will increase their capacity from 3.5 million metric ton to 12 million metric ton by FY 2031. So that represents a big opportunity for AI. How do you see, like, will, will that give us 30, 40, 50 thousand metric ton structural volume increase over the next five, six years?
Sir, if I have been very honest with you, our fundamental focus in mining is actually in the opportunity outside India. The reason is, we are looking at very large, much, much bigger markets, like Latin, where, you know, between copper and gold, we are talking of at least a 500,000-ton kind of an opportunity on which we are working. Similarly, you look at Australia, similarly, you look at some of the other markets, the key other markets being Africa, CIS, et cetera. So my point is that, if you look at your, sales, coming back to your specific question, mining volume in the domestic market in the third quarter was about 5,000 tons, and, nine months period, the mining volume... One second. Where's the nine months? Okay. Yeah.
On that run rate basis, you can say that in nine months, the volume was about 18,000 tons in mining in India.
So, sir, my question was that only, so then for, like, 3.5 million MT of Hindustan Copper, if this is, like, 20,000, so that's a big number, right? For if they, like, quadruple in the next five years, so if you can also 3x or 4x these volumes, specifically, I'm asking for-
No, no. So let me, let me give you a very simple perspective. As I said, over the previous calls also, we are currently focused on all these markets where the opportunity is significantly large. That doesn't mean that we are not looking at India, so wherever in India there's an opportunity. Hindustan Copper, doubling or tripling the production of copper is something that, as and when we move ahead, we will have- we will definitely evaluate and see what best we can do. But as I said, from a growth driver perspective, it is the mining opportunity outside India is where our maximum efforts are concentrated. In fact, for that matter, even iron ore production is going to go up.
So I'm not saying that India is not really a country of focus. But from a global perspective, the opportunity-wise, we are focused on markets which offer much, much bigger opportunity at this point in time, where we are already being engaged and we are working very aggressively over last, you know, several quarters. We are working in India. We have taken a lot of trials in India. We are supplying in India. That's why if you see my volumes have grown from, you know, quarter to quarter. We are currently in the run rate. In India also, as I have shared the numbers, this number—But I'm very clear, the focus is outside India.
Okay, sir. My second question was on CapEx. So FY 2026, I think you guided close to INR 180 crore, out of which INR 105 crore is done.
Right.
Will balance 75 be done in Q4? What about this China and Ghana, like, any timeline on that?
I'll, I'll tell you. Balance 75-80 may around INR 30 crore is for our new solar hybrid capacity, which is committed and which is 100% going to happen in Q4, plus certain CapEx. I would say a realistic number is in the range of about 50-55. But let us see, we are working on it for Q4.
Sir, China and Ghana?
China and Ghana, see, we are in the process, so land is procured in Ghana. We are awaiting for certain clearances from the government. So that work, but that is not going to be significant in Q4.
No, no, sir, not... I was not asking for Q4. I was asking what is the outlook, like, when is the plant, by when will the plants come up? That was the question.
In Ghana, we have currently procured the land, done the site development, and are awaiting for certain clearances from the government, which I'm expecting to happen in this quarter. If that happens, then over next 1.5 years, we should have the Ghana CapEx in place. China, we have initiated the process. We have set up a small lab also in China, and we are in the process of evaluating and finalizing the plans. But you can say, over next 1.5-2 years, we should have both the facilities in place.
Okay, sir, and this is my last question. So, last call, you said, like, two large mines were in advanced stages and 10-12 others-
Yes.
We were in medium stages. So what is, like, what is the conversion, and is this mill liner driven approach working? And what is the mill liner capacity utilization for nine months and Q3?
See, mill liner-based approach is the focus on which we are working right now. As I mentioned, Kunal mentioned, and myself also, I mentioned in the initial opening remarks on the call, that the progress is happening satisfactorily, but it is taking a little time. So we are waiting. There are certain technical matters which we have resolved, and then again, those trials are progressing quite satisfactorily. The process has taken maybe, maybe two, three more months. So let us wait. There is nothing more that I have to add, but it is continuing.
Sir, capacity utilization of mill liner?
Capacity, mill liners also, capacity utilization currently are working at around 50%.
Okay. Okay. Is this for nine months or Q3?
9 months, 9 months.
Okay, sir. Thank you, and all the best.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Priyanka Biswas from JM Financial. Please go ahead.
Hi, yeah. Hi, hi, Kunal bhai, and Sanjay bhai. So quite a steady quarter, I would say. And so my first question is regarding, again, coming back to the trials. So essentially, like, for the sort of the large 2 mines that we were on very advanced stages, so we should be expecting the results in the coming 2-3 months, is what you are saying, right? If I understood it correctly.
Correct.
Okay. And, one, the thing is I wanted-
To be very clear, at least one mine in next 2-3 months, the second mine could be maybe 4-5 months.
Okay, that's even clearer. Okay. And I also wanted to understand, let's say, how the Forex effect works here. So, just for my understanding, so how much, let's say, of your sales currently, like a ball, ballpark amount will also do, like, is, USD denominated? The reason I am asking is, like, a lot of your costs are INR denominated here. So eventually, because there is a sharp depreciation, so how should we see the realizations, let's say, in a rupee term going forward, like, in that sense?
Hi, Priyanka, Kunal here. I think, three, four aspects to this, and I think we've shared this, you know, over currency conversation in the past.
Mm.
We are not an Indian exporter who benefits or loses on account of, you know, the dollar change, because generally, our you know. So first of all, our transactional currency is U.S. dollars. We are not dealing with-
Mm-hmm.
You know, we are selling to 140 countries, but we are at best dealing with a Canadian dollar or a euro or a Australian dollar and a US dollar. So it's, you know, most of it is US dollar. So most of our exports-
... transaction currency is US dollar, but the importing country generally would have seen a similar change like India has. When you sell to Australia, when you sell to Brazil, when you sell to all these countries, and by and large, if the rupee—so if I'm, if my cost is 1,000, my selling price is 1,000 rupees, at 80, I was selling it, let's say, you know, $1,200. At 92, I'm selling at $1,150 or $1,100 whatever, you know, whatever the math is. So yes, we do get to keep some, you know, difference. When it's weakening, we do see a, you know, we, we do keep to get to keep, some part of that, right? But by and large, it's a pass-through.
So currency for us is a pass-through because it allows us to be more competitive, allows us to be at our optimal best. You get it? So when it appreciates or it depreciates, like with raw material, there will be a lead lag effect before it all passes on. But in a way, I don't think you, you can take our numbers and say currency has gone up 5%, so my margin will go up 5%. Basically, that's what I'm saying.
Yes, yes.
There'll be some remnant of a lead lag that will be there for next two or three quarters. Our endeavor is to make sure that it becomes a cost mode rather than a margin conversation.
Okay, so maybe like, what is the relative performance of the other local currencies also comes into the picture. That's what I understand. Also, like, since you... I think I heard during the call when you were making your opening remarks, so if I heard it correct, like almost INR 4,200 crore of cash you have. Now, I believe even this cash, it would also be largely USD denominated, or is it like a domestic currency?
No, no. Outside of India, we only have transactional operating cash, which is less than 10% or 5% of the money there. Most of our investments are in Indian rupees in India, most of it.
Okay. And, just one more question, if I may squeeze in. Recently, you, recently we are hearing talks about the EU FTA, that has happened, quoted like the mother of all it is. So can you highlight, like, what sort of, tariffs that you, or, or duties that you're facing in Europe at present, and so if that deal translates, like, over a period of time?
Currently, I don't-
Would there be any benefit?
We don't sell to, we don't sell to Hermès or European luxury houses. Our customers are mines and cement plants, and generally, Europe is not, you know, a very active, you know, player in these fields. So Europe FTA, by and large, we're neutral to it. It does not change anything materially for us.
Okay. That's very clear. That's all from my side.
All right. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Devansh from DD Enterprise. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, good afternoon. Am I audible?
Good afternoon. Yeah, yeah.
Yeah. So the main question is, currently, if I'm not wrong, we are utilizing the CapEx utilization, the capacity utilization is around 75%, right?
No, Devansh, overall, if you see around 60%-62%. See, plant-wide, it will differ, but, around you can say average 60%-65%.
Okay. So, now, sir, the thing is, like, if the global markets, the mining business is boosting up, currently what we can see from last two quarters, the mining business is the commodities are selling very good at the prices. So is it any, like, further, can you remark us, like, if the capacity utilization grows up by 75% or 80% or 85%, the EBITDA level, what we are posting currently is 27%, so that will also increase or any plan, like the capacity, capacity utilization to expand more?
So, Devansh, there are two, different types of questions that you have posed. The first part is, are we linked directly to the fortunes of mining industry? So currently, you said that the prices of commodities are on the rise. Does it create a separate set of an opportunity for us? Very honestly, we are a little agnostic to the mining industry cycles. What we are focused on is this conversion opportunity. So just to recap, you know, on the gold, copper, and iron, these are the three main, metals on which we are focused worldwide. Market is huge. Market for consumables is maybe more than 3 million tons, but the addressable market for me on which I'm focused right now is maybe 1.5 to maximum 2 million tons. Usme the penetration is 25, 30, 35%. Penetration of high chrome-based solutions.
So it is this sweet spot of 1-1.5 million tons on which I'm focused for conversion. Now, therefore, when I'm talking to the mines for conversion, I'm talking on three aspects. One, I'm saying a very simplistic thing, that if you are consuming currently 8%-10% of your total conversion cost is your, consumable wear parts that I'm supplying, because my wear rates are very lower, I will reduce this consumption by 20%-30%, so that your cost comes down to that extent. That is point number one. More importantly, it is the entire grinding and crushing efficiency in the mining on which I'm focused. Therefore, I'm working on two aspects. One improvement of throughputs. This is very complicated. We started off with SAG mills.
We are currently focused on some very unique ball mill-centric solutions on which we have been talking about over the last two quarters, and we are still very excited about it in terms of, though progress is slightly slow, opportunity is very positive and it remains in that trajectory. Only thing is a little uncertainty as to what exactly, when exactly we can start talking about the volume growth, et cetera. That's why we are quiet about it. That is one. Second is significant reduction in the other operating costs, like power, et cetera. So you improve your throughput, you save power costs, and you also incidentally save on certain other consumable costs associated with beneficiation process, like, you know, cyanide, et cetera. Our entire focus, therefore, is now a combination of unique liner plus our unique high chrome grinding media going as a package.
So my point here is that whether a mining industry cycle is an upside or a downside, the benefit that I'm offering is much, much materially different than anything linked to cycle. So this is the first leg of your question, and the second part of your question was that whether I will get the benefit of operating leverage. You see, currently, we are doing a very decent EBITDA even at the operating level, because of very favorable product mix and a very controlled side of a cost. At this point in time, we haven't done any major exercise, but if theoretically volumes double, then, of course, there could be some improvement. Having said that, whatever volumes are driving this growth, if it is more of a grinding media, it could be a different issue.
So I would say we are refraining from giving any guidance on the margins. We are saying that we are operating at a decent margin, and we want to continue operate at that level. Of course, our guidance per se, on an operating side, at a much higher volume, is actually lower. We are talking of 23%-24% and not even 27%. But that is actually not a function of operating leverage. It's a function of product mix.
Okay. So, it's possibly for next 3, 4 quarters, the capacity utilization will also not increase drastically?
I would not want to comment on that, honestly. Because if the way I'm working on, if suddenly I get opportunity, I can increase my capacity utilization.
Okay. That, that's all from my side. Thank you very much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Bhavin from SBI Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Good evening, Kunal bhai. Good evening, Sanjay bhai.
Yes, good evening.
Could you give us a bit more flavor on the non-grinding media piece, which is the liners out there, especially if you could give us some... What was the output on the metal liners, and what was the output on the hybrid liners that we've kind of expanded? Where are we in that journey? And what's the kind of growth we are seeing in that segment of the business?
Got it, got it. So, Bhavin bhai, I think, clear, the strategy seems to be reasonably clear now on what we are targeting and how we are going about it. As part of that, which is the whole gamut of lining solutions, which becomes an interface so that gold and copper miners can see increased throughput, all of that. That requires us to go through a whole trial journey, right? Where we don't have case studies. There is resistance to doing a grinding media upgrade from forged to chrome, because, you know, where there is zero process change, there is zero equipment change, it just needs a forge process.
Then the liner conversation becomes a little more, you know, the challenge quotient, you know, increases a little more than, you know, just the grinding media conversation. And the good part is there is a whole trial journey, right? So where customers are where we are finding customers who are the most, you know, at risk from these issues, which is throughput, you know, drop and other things. And so we are at various phases of trials, you know, and like you go into a trial, these are all uncharted projects. There is learning, there is one more iteration. It could be a design iteration, it could be an alloy interface, or it could be the whole solution that we have put together, which includes a few other elements, right?
All three put together is what makes it a little uncertain as far as timelines are concerned. So the answer—short answer is that our lining, the whole lining solution that we have now put together, and which we are hoping allows us the breakthrough to sell linings plus grinding media together as a solution, is going through very serious, you know, trial journey. This is in addition to doing work on the grinding media and the conversion, right? Where we are saying... So liners, we are trying to—Well, it's easy to fill the factory and say, "I've got 30,000 tons more of linings." But if that is not part of the solution and I'm just doing what the incumbent is doing, that does not further my goal, right?
The goal is not to sell 30,000 tons of more liners and make INR 200 crore more profit. The idea is to sell 100,000 tons of liners plus grinding media as a solution and bring disproportionate benefit. All of that happens as part of the solution. So that's the medium-term to long-term strategy, and as part of that, all I have to report is that we are undergoing various trials. We are hoping somewhere which have done well, we are going to stage two, then somewhere we may have a redesign or a reintervention in one of the three things that I said, and the others awaiting either trial timeline or production or supply. So it's within the trial stage as we speak.
I'm sure. And what if you could give us some indication in terms of the percentage of the volumes coming from liners and basically, we have both the metal as well as the hybrid piece.
So, Bhavesh, as I said, in reply to a previous question, that we are currently operating at a little lower than 50% of our rated installed capacity. In fact, if you look at rubber and composite, that is a relatively newer capacity that we have created. This is a blended, in fact, that particular capacity is still available, even at a higher level. What we are trying to say that as soon as this ball mill related trials are over-
Mm.
There could be a significant uptake in the volumes of liners, which will also drive my grinding media. That is the whole story. You get my point? Focus is now on value creation rather than just pushing the volume of grinding media. And grinding media, pushing is an incidental benefit I will get because of the uniqueness of the solution. So we have done this renewed strategy, which, for which we are working very hard. Enough capacity is available. If I have to ramp up, I can easily ramp up further without any difficulty. Today, it is not a question of capacity utilization. Today, it's a question of getting that significant breakthroughs, which once that happens, things can turn around dramatically. That's all I think we will say at this point in time. Let's. Please give us some more time.
Got it. No, so, the other part is, and please correct me if I'm wrong, South America is the larger producer of the copper globally. And then, to our understanding, and please correct me, 40% of the end market for grinding media and liners is the South America market, where we have a negligible presence as we speak, and we have got some breakthrough over there. Now, in case we are successful, which we are, then given that the size of the market that is, we will quickly be running short of the capacity. So is that something that is there at the back of the mind, that maybe some land, et cetera, has already been acquired and we can quickly ramp up? This is the best case while we have...
The last four years has been difficult, we understand. But do we also have the ability to pick up very fast in case the South America goes well for us?
I think so. The thing is that with the work that we have done for China and Ghana, right, which is modular plants, a lot of that is quick setup. As we speak, I think our capacity to set up production facilities, you know, is reasonably there. Plus, we have our plants in Bangalore and Trichy that, you know, we can ramp up and put together. So I don't think capacity is going to be a constraint at all. If you are saying next 50, 70, we will not wait to get to 400 before we start thinking of a new plant, right? In fact, the day we cross 300,000, 330,000 tons, you know, by the time the next 100 comes, we'll have the additional capacity up and about.
So, absolutely, we are. The customers, in fact, want to make sure that we've got the capacity, that any interruption, you know, does not make them suffer around it. So yes, we think about it, and if there is a reasonable plan in place. If that good outcome happens, we will, it will not be because of a lack of capacity that we fall short.
Great. Those were my questions. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you, Bhavesh.
The next question is from the line of Varun Jain from Dolat Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi, sir. So just piggybacking on the previous questioner's question. Sir, who is your biggest competitor in this mill liner business?
Yeah, there are three or four incumbents. There is Elecmetal, there is Bradken, and there's a OEM called Metso, and then there is one more company from Indonesia. There are four incumbents who do mill linings, but these are all conventional, so there, there's no design element. It is just using the design or the spec that came with the mill whenever it must have been installed.
Okay. And, sir, in this, there is no—just like in your grinding media business, you are trying to convert them from, say, you know, forged to high chrome. Here, you know, you are not—you are supplying metal to metal, composite to composite, like that. There is no conversion element in the mill liner business, if I'm understanding it right.
So conversion is not in the alloy side. While that could also be part of the conversation, we are doing our own design. So the conversion, in a way, is where we are moving from whatever is the incumbent design to our design. And when I say our design, it also includes certain other elements that together become a solution. So there is a conversion element, if you will, you know, which is where someone uses a new element from what they are using currently. So, like, well, I don't know if you're going to call that conversion or not, but we are not per se doing incumbent design and just producing them and supplying that. So whatever work that we look to do will be our design product.
But, the metallurgy is not what you are targeting for the mill liner, right?
Generally not. Generally not, no. But it is also part of the conversation, but that's not what we are leading with. You are right, in grinding media, our mainstay is to move from forge to chrome, which is a metallurgy conversation. There are other elements, metallurgy could be one of them.
Got it. Got it. And, sir, just two housekeeping questions. So one is on this USP. So, with the tariffs and all, have you seen any customer drop-off?
It continues as is, but it's a punishing duty. But for now, the customers are paying and importing the product. Not sure what it means going forward.
Oh, and so I mean, it's very commendable that, you know, with such high tariffs also, they are—if there's no customer drop-off, it really shows, you know, that your product is very hard to replace, for them. And just this last question, sir, FY 2027, I think in the last quarter con call, you had said that, you know, you will expect to get back to that 25,000-30,000 MT volume run rate. So for FY 2027-2028, can we build that in, can that much?
I think so at this point in time, but, you know, the bigger issue is not this 25,000-30,000 tons. The bigger issue is how much we can do as a market share, the way we have done in cement, and how we can grow on a medium to long term. So one is, of course, you know, this year looks flat, but over the last couple of years, we have been struggling on various fronts. So now this novel solution and the novel package that we are offering, we are looking at something very, very different, radically different than this run rate of 25-30 that we are talking about. So, I think, yes, that much we are not really worried about that 25,000-30,000. What we are looking at is something very, very radically different. That's what we are trying to say.
Okay. Okay. Okay, sir. That, that's all from me. Thanks. All the best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vaibhav Shah, from Indsec Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thank you very much for the opportunity. My first question is on the Chile order. Could you clarify whether the offtake has already been started or is yet to begin? Also, how should we think about the likelihood of this order converting into recurring basis post the completion of this offtake?
Yeah, yeah. So we have started supply. So Q3 includes supplies to Chile. And, of course, it's over 18 months, so, you know, that way it will continue, and we are pretty confident that it should continue on a recurring basis.
Okay. Second question is on the, since this is only a grinding media order, so, are, are we also, doing trials or discussion with them to expand into package solution going forward? And apart from this, the anticipated two or three orders in the next two quarters, so would they only be grinding media or, or will it be the package solution?
There is no guidance. There is no 2 or 3. I think these are all. It ultimately gets down to some numbers. Unfortunately, you'll have to pardon us. What we are saying is, for liners, we are in various stages of trials, right? And for grinding media, again, similar but a different trial journey that goes along, but that includes other discussions around visibility of shipping, cost of shipping, and overall resistance to what is happening. So the Chilean customer, today, we are focused on the grinding media bit. We are not trying to get into the solution conversation because the grinding media has its own pathway, right? Which is a little different than the solution pathway, right?
Once one becomes successful and becomes tried and tested, then we'll have more strategies depending on, you know, what is the pain area at the customer. For now, I think the input is more on what we are doing from our side than to give any color on one client, two projects, what happens in next six months. We really have very little to say about it, and we'll share as those developments happen.
Understood, sir. Thank you very much for answering my question. I will get back to you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ravi Swaminathan from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.
Hi, Kunal Sir, and Sanjay Sir.
Yeah, hi, Ravi.
My first question is, so, with respect to the current significant rally in gold and copper prices, some of our existing large clients related to gold and copper, are they coming back to you discussing about increasing the mining output, so that, in one way, supply is catching up to the rally in these commodities? Is that happening, something that are you seeing, where the customers are saying, coming back to the drawing board and saying: "We want to increase supply, so therefore, you need to supply more grinding media?" Is that something which is happening?
... Ravi, this conversation, the shortage and the problem is what we are seeing from three years. It's reflected in, you know, this high rally, and it's become public news today, right? This is exactly what we've been saying, is the top issue for a miner, for a copper miner, forget the rally and the financial consequence of it. Like I said in my opening remarks, the world has mined 700 million tons of copper in all its mining history, right? Which is all the wires and other things that we have. If the copper consumption grows only at 3%, which is your normal world growth rate, you will need another 700 million in the next 18 years.
Mm-hmm.
Okay. Now, you add that with AI and your data centers. The amount of copper used in a data center is madness. Then you have, you know, all the transmissions for the renewal that comes in, renewables, and all your electronic device consumption. If all of that is growing, there is no copper coming up. There is limited mines coming up, right?
Mm-hmm.
New mines take 7, 8, 10 years to come along. They are all in ecologically sensitive environments. There are political issues. In that sense, there is a clear and present danger that the world cannot produce enough copper. Now, something else will come along, demand goes down, all of these things we don't understand, but the mine, new mines are not coming up, and the same mine is not able to produce the same volume they did last year.
Mm.
So even before the rally, this was a problem for the miners, because whoever is in the mining space saw the writing on the wall. You get it?
Mm.
So, to that extent, it is a clear and present danger. That does not mean that they are saying, dropping all their, you know, anxiety or the concerns around the new solution and saying, "Let's just try." They will apply their normal, you know, due diligence and protection, you know, measures to contain the risk out of the solution. But whoever we are talking to is absolutely very interested and fearful of making a change, and that's the dichotomy that we'll have to live with, right?
So just to add, Ravi, a very important aspect of our solution is the fact that if you look at the key mines where we are working, some of the major ones, we can't name them. They have a history of the last three years, where, because of the depleting quality of the ore, their output is in fact going down rather than going up. One of our value propositions is that if you use our solution, without incurring major CapEx, we will be able to improve your throughput and therefore allow you to maintain your output. Naturally, so we will be there as a part of the long-term solution. But currently, it is helping them solve this key concern and helping them reduce their costs and improving their throughput is what our focus.
Understood. Understood. And sir, second question with respect to the volumes that we had lost, some close to around 40,000-50,000 tons related to the geographies over the past 5-6 years, that is South Africa, Canada, and Brazil, due to the duties, et cetera. How much of it would we have recovered, and how much more potential is there in terms of recovery?
How much more potential from?
No, no, the volumes that we have lost in South Africa, et cetera.
I mean, listen, these are all protectionist measures. That's not the... It's a little speculative to imagine, you know, regime changes, duty changes. It is what it is. We have to move forward from here and focus on what we can action on. I mean, any recovery is, of volume is linked to changes in duty structures, and, and that's something that I think are here to stay. So I mean, we have stopped agonizing and, you know, speculating on when it will happen. We have to create a solution that will survive even that. I think that's, that's the message that we are internally taking away and working on.
Okay. So out of that 50,000 tons of lost volumes, there, not much would have been recovered, is the way we should look at it?
Not really. No, no, no, no. The total volume lost would be in excess of 75,000-80,000 tons. We would have been. Was there no duty protectionist measures that the world has put up over the last 5-7 years? There's 80,000 tons of volumes overall that we have lost on duty measures, so that's what it is.
Understood, sir.
I'm only happy to report that my profits have grown from INR 600 crores to INR 1,100 crores, despite losing, you know, 30% of my volume.
No, so we have gained it elsewhere, no? There is a replacement, compensation.
Compensation in the sense you are talking about, volumes-
Let me explain. This 60,000-70,000 tons of volume loss is replaced by the new mines or the additional orders that we have got. That is how we have maintained a flat trajectory or a marginal growth. You get my point? That's what I was trying to intend.
Understood. But, the steady cutting duties that we had seen in certain countries like Brazil, et cetera, has this helped in you able to negotiate with the client and tell that, "Please, do back the volumes?" Is that, has that happened?
Not really. I think, like I said, let's, for wherever there is duty, let the country be, right? That's something that there's enough for us to continue where, you know, some of these barriers are lower, and we continue to work with that. Even in duty, impacted areas, if my solution can prevail, but would I rather work on where there is, the duty barrier is lower and there is an opportunity, or should I go to the last bastion, where there is an additional, challenge for a duty cost impact, right?
...Understood, sir. Got it. Yeah, thanks.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of S.P. from ABN AMRO. Please go ahead.
Sir, am I audible?
Yes, sir.
Yeah, yeah, very much.
Okay.
Loud and clear.
Thank you, sir. Sir, we have a subsidiary by the name Welcast Steels. So what is the future of that company, considering that the plant is closed now?
No, so see, we have closed that plant, and we have also made disclosures on the stock exchanges. The reason is, it was a fairly old plant, and we had created significant alternate capacities in our Ahmedabad facility. Correct. So there, it was not viable for us to invest heavily into that plant and to make it operational, and therefore, we have closed it. So closure of that plant at this point in time, there is no plan to reopen it. So you can treat that particular thing as done and dusted. Having said that, today, and if you remember, couple of times we tried to delist Welcast also, it being a listed company, but, you know, it could not be successfully done.
Right now, currently, we have reduced all the operational expenses to the bare minimum, and we will see as we move forward, how to deal with it.
Sir, why was the subsidiary acquired in the first instance? If it was planned for whole-
It was done before 25 years.
Okay.
When we did not have adequate capacity-
Okay.
We had acquired it even before AIA started setting up expansion projects in Moraiya and Kerala. You get my point?
Yes.
This is a history. Welcast was with me even before AIA went public.
Okay. All the best, sir. Yeah.
We severed our relationship, and we severed the JV, and we wanted some capacities quickly for southern markets. We got this opportunity as a listed company, previously owned by Times of India family.
Okay. Thank you, sir, and all the best.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. As there are no further questions from the participants, I would now hand the conference over to the management for the closing comments. Over to you, sir.
Yes, thank you so much. As always, Sanjay and I remain for any follow-on questions offline. Wish you a very good evening, rest of the evening, and look to connect with you at the end of our fourth quarter numbers. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. On behalf of AIA Engineering Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect the lines. Thank you.