Aurionpro Solutions Limited (NSE:AURIONPRO)
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Apr 30, 2026, 3:30 PM IST
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Q3 23/24

Feb 6, 2024

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to the Investors Call for Aurionpro Solutions Limited to discuss the Q3 and nine months FY 2024 results. As a reminder, all participant 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 touchtone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Miss Aashvi Shah from Adfactors PR, Investor Relations. Thank you, and over to you, ma'am.

Aashvi Shah
Account Director of Investor Relations, Adfactors PR

Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. On behalf of the company, I welcome you all to the Earnings Conference Call for Q3 and Nine-month FY 2024. Today, on this call, we have with us from the management, Mr. Ashish Rai, Vice Chairman and CEO, Mr. Vipul Parmar, Chief Financial Officer, and Mr. Ninad Kelkar, Company Secretary. We will begin the call with brief opening remarks from the management, followed by our Q&A session.

Please note that certain statements made during this call may be forward-looking in nature. Such forward-looking statements are subject to certain risks and uncertainties that could cause the actual results or projections to differ materially from those statements. Aurionpro Solutions will not be in any way responsible for any actions taken based on such statements and undertakes no obligation to publicly update these forward-looking statements. I would now like to hand over the call to Mr. Ashish Rai for his opening remarks. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Thanks, Aashvi. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to this Earnings Call for Q3 FY 2024. I'm sure by now you've all received the investor deck, and I hope you've had an opportunity to review it. We're, of course, quite pleased to see the disciplined execution and focus of our teams across the globe in Q3 and right through the year. We have sustained the growth momentum across both our segments and pretty much all the major business lines throughout the nine months ending in Q3 FY 2024. The revenue for nine months, FY 2024, stood at INR 641 crore.

EBITDA is at INR 141 crore, and PAT is at INR 103 crore, which is essentially 37%, 35%, and 37% growth for each of those three numbers, right, compared to the same period last year. Nine months has been pretty solid. These results underscore the robust growth momentum that we are experiencing, slightly exceeding our projections and provides a solid reinforcement for the attainability, the achievability of our performance targets for Vision 2030 that we've outlined before. Allow me to summarize the quarterly financial performance for your quick reference. Revenue for Q3 stood at INR 231 crore, that's a growth of 37% year-on-year. EBITDA for Q3 stood at INR 51 crore, as compared to INR 37 crore in Q3 of FY 2023, which is a growth of 38% on a year-on-year basis.

The EBITDA margin was at slightly above 22%. The PAT for Q3 FY 2024 stood at INR 38 crore, which is a growth of 45% on a year-over-year basis. PAT margins are slightly above 16%, as you have seen. Moving on to the businesses, banking and Fintech grew impressively, and we expect this momentum to continue in the coming quarters with the new order wins that we've announced recently. We also announced two strategic acquisitions for banking and Fintech, Omnifin as well as Interact DX. These have now been fully integrated, and we expect them to also contribute strongly to driving the growth in this segment going forward. The performance of Technology Innovation Group remains steady, with healthy traction and deal activity happening in the transit segment.

We've signed significant strategic partnerships in this segment, which we've announced with, with Mastercard and with Vix, which will help us consolidate our position in the existing markets, as well as allow us to expand in new markets we've not been present in. We've been steadily expanding our presence in markets across the globe for transit, with further wins in Australia, Mexico, as well as incremental additions in, our other existing markets, right? So TIG, again, continues to, deliver and, and execute very, very well. The impressive performance in Q3 and over the previous quarters is really the result of the capability, the focus, and dedication of our product and delivery teams across the globe.

Numbers just don't come close to capturing the sheer effort, persistence, and engineering focus that it takes to solve the really, really hard problems our engineering and delivery teams tackle every day. We are really delighted that we have one of the most talented and dedicated teams in this business today, and with every passing day, we are able to attract more of the best and the brightest in this industry to come and join us in our mission. I feel very, very good about that. We fully expect our growth trend to continue as demand continues to be very buoyant across most of our key segments in the market, whether it's lending, transaction banking, cloud and data centers or transit payments. We are also seeing significant collaboration with other global tech majors in terms of co-engineering solutions.

We've announced that from time to time, and, you know, bringing these solutions to markets across the globe. We are sharply focused, as always, on continuing to enhance our sales channel, our delivery, and as well as R&D capabilities to allow us to capitalize on the significant opportunity in front of us for each of our key business lines. As we approach the end of FY 2024, we feel confident in meeting or exceeding our guided performance targets for the year. Our capability to achieve our goals is driven by strong and disciplined execution in building industry-leading offerings through cutting-edge, ground-up R&D, that we are very good at doing, as well as through proactive M&A and strategic partnerships where it makes sense. Our order book now exceeds INR 900 crores. Demand and deal pipeline is the largest it's ever been.

We have the trust of our clients and our partners, and we are incredibly lucky to have one of the most talented teams in the industry coming into work every day and playing to win. We, of course, can't control every variable that affects us, but looking at the picture as a whole, we feel we are very well positioned to sustain our growth trajectory in the upcoming quarters. Okay, with that, I'll close, and I look forward to an engaging Q&A. To you, Aashvi.

Operator

Thank you very much. We will 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 withdraw 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. We have our first question from the line of Vimal Jamnadas Gohil from Alchemy Capital Management. Please go ahead.

Vimal Jamnadas Gohil
Research Analyst, Alchemy Capital Management

Yeah. Sorry. Yeah, thanks for the opportunity. So my first question, and by the way, congratulations on very good set of numbers. My first question would be on mining existing clients, and this is regarding the Indian banking and financial services. Now, what I want to understand is from the suite of products that we have, what is the penetration of each of our products on a per-client basis? As in, what I want to understand is what is the extent to which we can mine our existing clients? Thanks.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Yeah, hi, Vimal. Thanks. So, good question. Look, in terms of, I'm not quite clear whether you mentioned India specifically, but look, for us, we are building out a fairly broad portfolio, which over time should allow us to go for a fairly wide share of the client's wallet, especially in the banking and financial services space. We continue to add products. As you say, we already do lending, which is useful to a bank. We are strong on the corporate side. We added a pretty strong LMS recently through the Omnifin acquisition that allows us more to sell. We're strong on the transaction banking side. We added Interact DX as well to us.

So we can increasingly service and go after a much bigger share of wallet. The way the software, banking software business works, typically, you know, you drive some level of growth from the existing base. So for us to, probably grow at, on the banking side, only grow at about, let's say, 12%-15%, you don't really need new logos because you're able to, add to the existing base that we have. Typically, to grow at the 35%-37% rate that we are, growing at right now, you do need to, steadily keep on adding new logos.

So for us, we believe there is a huge opportunity for us to, sort of, for example, go after the lending base in Southeast Asia through with Interact DX, with Omnifin, with transaction banking, go with the Indian banks, with a wider portfolio of offerings, pretty much, you know, the full bouquet, as far as India is concerned. It's our home market. We want to play the full portfolio here, right? So that is banking. On the transit side, we have built out what we believe is one of the most integrated end-to-end offering stacks in the space, and we will mine the business that we can get pretty much across the spectrum. Right, so we already, in some cases, provide partial solutions.

We'll expand that out into the full chain, but we have the ability to play for a very, very large share of the wallet, including, you know, payment systems and et cetera, where we've applied for licenses and been receiving some positive feedback, right? So, overall, we will. I think traditionally, it's been a smaller share for us, but increasingly, especially in the Indian space, we work now with pretty much all the large clients, and we are quite significantly expanding our footprint in pretty much most big banks in India. Hope that helps.

Vimal Jamnadas Gohil
Research Analyst, Alchemy Capital Management

Yeah, thanks. And, sir, on the same thing, if you can just give us some highlights on what is, how much does SaaS contribute to in the overall scheme of things? And, how much do licensing revenues contribute to our total revenues?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Yeah, so I'm assuming by SaaS, you mean software. That is, you know, so we kind of specifically declare that as a reportable number across quarters, and it will go up and down depending on the licenses we are selling in the quarter. But that's roughly, I would say, 55%-60% revenue is either software or goes around the software very, very closely tied, tied to it. Right. I mean, SaaS, specifically, I don't like the label because it, in my head, you know, it's just a progression of pricing models. Right? So most large banks for large submissions still continue to prefer term licenses, which we sell. We do sell subscriptions and SaaS where it makes sense, and where it makes sense, we also sell pure consumption-based models, right?

So I would not put a label on the software saying it's you know enterprise license or it's term license or it's SaaS or it's consumption-based. We would, depending on the segment of the client, will choose the pricing that, you know, makes sense to us.

Vimal Jamnadas Gohil
Research Analyst, Alchemy Capital Management

Right. If I may, just one question on profitability. While you guys have come a long way, what is the number that the group is currently comfortable with, where you know we can balance out growth as well as you know margins? Any sense that you can give us there? Thank you.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Yeah. So, Vimal, I have mentioned this in the previous earnings calls. So at the moment, our planning number for EBITDA is 21%-22%, and our planning number for PAT is 15%-16%, right? I think in the previous calls, I said it's 20%-22% on the EBITDA end and 15%-16% on PAT. We feel very comfortable with those numbers right now. At 20%+ EBITDA, we are already probably among the top few most profitable players in Indian tech. We've been clocking that pretty effectively for the last, I would say, three, four years, and we intend to keep EBITDA around those levels. Our intention is not to grow the EBITDA beyond 22% in the short to mid-term, and there is a logic for it.

Why we say that is the following: As the software business grows, the economics keeps on improving, and we see that in our profitability as it comes in. But we are a very, very R&D-driven company. To a very large extent, with some very minor small exceptions, we have a policy not to capitalize the R&D expense. And what is happening is, as the business grows in size and as the economics improve, we pull the excess back into R&D. So the R&D number, for example, has climbed up from 4.5% of the top line three years back to almost about 8%+ of the top line right now, right? So the goal would be keep the EBITDA steady and between 20%-22%.

We believe that gives us a good, profitable model and pull the excess as the economics increase back into the R&D. The logic being very simple, we are going for leadership in large global segments. These segments have very, very large demand that we can go after, but it needs us to continue spending on R&D to keep spinning off new products. You don't see the value of those assets in any accounting report because we don't capitalize, but we believe that is what adds the most value to Aurionpro shareholder as we go forward, right? So to summarize, 20%-22% on the EBITDA, 15%-16% on the PAT, short to medium term, that's the plan.

Vimal Jamnadas Gohil
Research Analyst, Alchemy Capital Management

Understood. And that is well appreciated, sir. Thank you so much, and all the very best.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to address questions from all participants in the conference, please limit your questions to two per participant. Should you have a follow-up question, we request you to rejoin the question queue. We have our next question from the line of Mr. Ahan from Vimana Capital. Please go ahead.

Ahan Rajgor
Consultant, Vimana Capital

Hey, Ashish. Congrats on a fantastic set of results. Just had a couple of questions around the order book that you mentioned. You mentioned you have an order book over INR 900 crore. What's the division between the banking side and the TIG side? And going forward, I think you just mentioned on the, you know, growing R&D. So do you plan to invest in R&D? If so, do you plan to expand the R&D there? Just these two questions. Thanks.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay, good. Hi, Ahan. Thanks. So, the order book, the split INR 900 crore is roughly split 40% for banking and Fintech and 60% for TIG. It's been roughly the same split over the quarter the last few times. Obviously, the overall order book number has changed, but the mix has actually not changed much, and that's, I think, primarily got to do with the due to project durations and the size of banking is primarily software driven and shorter duration contracts, while TIG is more execution, consumption driven and hence the change. So, that's roughly the mix, 40% for banking and 60% for TIG.

R&D, just to flesh that out a little bit more, we are extremely, extremely R&D driven, as an organization, right? So we have been building out the products. Where we are on banking software, by and large, the core products, we went through a fresh build over the last three years. So the core build is more or less done, but we will continue to spend on incremental R&D, especially as we go after newer markets, and there is always a little bit of development to be done around making the product fit to purpose, for a specific market. On the transit side, we've invested a lot in terms of R&D, both on the software side as well as on the hardware side. Right.

So, for example, a few months back, we announced we built out our own EMV-certified card reader and the associated devices, along with a ground-up fresh R&D. It took us 2.5 years to build it. We are the only firm in India to launch an EMV-certified card reader, and it significantly improves the economics of the electronic hardware that we use on the transit side. So we'll continue to spend on R&D to keep being the most efficient player at every single value point when it comes to the transit payment side. So by and large, we will remain R&D focused.

We are pouring in something to the tune of, I would say, 8%, a little bit above or below in terms of the R&D spend in the firm, and that has climbed up over the years, right? So three years back, it was probably, you know, INR 40 crores-INR 45 crores. Now it's probably close to INR 75 crores-INR 80 crores, right? So there's a significant amount of R&D that will keep pouring in into the enterprise.

Ahan Rajgor
Consultant, Vimana Capital

Okay. Thank you so much. All the best for the future. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you, sir. A reminder to all participants, you may press star and one to ask questions. We have our next question from the line of Deepak Poddar from Sapphire Capital. Please go ahead.

Deepak Poddar
Portfolio Manager, Sapphire Capital

Hello, am I audible?

Operator

Yes, sir, you are audible.

Deepak Poddar
Portfolio Manager, Sapphire Capital

Yep, thank you very much.

Operator

Sir, I will request you to speak a little louder.

Deepak Poddar
Portfolio Manager, Sapphire Capital

Yeah, now it's better?

Operator

Yes, sir, please go ahead.

Deepak Poddar
Portfolio Manager, Sapphire Capital

Yeah. So thank you very much, sir, for the opportunity. Sir, I, I have got three questions. Now, first of all, what sort of inorganic aspirations we have in terms of growth that we see? Secondly, on the tax rate front, so what sort of tax rate we see? Currently, I think it's in the range of 15%-20%. Why is our tax rate low? Thirdly, on the growth part, how do we see overall company as a whole growing over the next two to three years in terms of CAGR, I would have. Yeah.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay. Hi, so thanks. Inorganic aspiration, we have. So we've sort of always used M&A, as well as some sort of strategic partnerships as a part of the strategy. The way we approach it is the following: we typically, so when we started our pivot into being a global products and platforms player, four years back, or roughly three and a half years back, we chose a few segments. For each of those segments, we had a blueprint in terms of the solution footprint that we want on those segments to be able to capitalize on the demand that comes from it.

Now, these are typically segments, like, for example, closed loop to open loop transformation on the transit side, the digital transformation on the corporate loan books, on the lending side, et cetera, right? So we said, "Okay, this is where the demand is, and this is where I want to be in terms of the solution and the ability to compete and go after the leadership, globally in that, in that specific space." We obviously did not have the full footprint that we want in the space to begin with, nor do we have the full footprint right now. So where it makes sense, we always, we will always, at every point where you need to do something, there is always a choice, whether you want to build or you want to buy, right?

In some cases, it will make sense for us in terms of just the return on capital that we can drive, the time to market that we have and the window that we have for the opportunity. It would make sense for us to go and do M&A, and we will go and do that M&A. We announced, we announced a couple of those, in the past two quarters, and we will continue to. Every single value point that we want to expand on, we'll continue to keep asking ourselves, "Is this something we want to build, or is there an opportunity for us to go and partner with some other firm and go and acquire that capability?" So that is, that is one. We've done that in the past. We'll continue to do that.

We've got a fairly strong track record of acquisitions that we've made. Our lending solution came from Integro Technologies, which is a Singapore-based company that we bought. It's done exceptionally well. It's a leader in Asia in that space. Our transit, a large part of our transit stack, or a significant part of our transit stack, came out of SC Soft in Singapore that we acquired, and Toshi out in India recently. Omnifin, Interact DX, again, acquisitions we've announced are doing very, very well for us. So, we've continued to use it. We'll continue to use it where it makes sense for us and the Aurionpro shareholders. The second part, tax rate. Sorry, so, and where we will acquire it also in addition to the solution footprint is, in some cases, market access. Right?

We do want to be a global player. We will expand the solution footprint through acquisitions like the ones we've done and I mentioned. We may also decide to do it for market access at some point, right? So those are the decision points, and we'll continue to play it as we go. Tax rate, we typically plan for something of the order of 17%-18% in terms of tax rate. I think last quarter it was about 15% or thereabout. You know, what really happens is for us, because we are a global firm, and again, Singapore especially, we get a significant amount of tax relief, Dubai as well, you know, we are in a tax-free zone.

So overall, it nets out to, I think, something in the range of 17%-18%, but it will go up and down depending on the mix of the business, one, between global and India, and second, between, you know, various parts of global and Dubai and Singapore. There was a third part. So third part was our growth, right? So you're saying, okay, what do we expect in terms of growth going forward over the next two to three years? So this is how we think about growth. We are so for, let's say, last four odd years, I think we've grown at a CAGR of something of the order of 32% or 33%. We typically use over medium to long-term planning horizons at 25%-30% growth as a benchmark for our planning.

We believe we are going after very, very large segments, where obviously the demand that can be tapped is very significant compared to our current size. I mean, we are playing in mostly double-digit billion-dollar global segments, where, you know, Aurionpro as a whole is slightly over $1 billion. So, you know, you're a very, very small player in very large segments, but we also happen to be one of the most competitive players with big ambitions and with an extremely competitive product stack, and we happen to be one of the most efficient producers around, right? So we will win share. What does that mean in terms of growth in the next two to three years?

I think right now, from what we see, for pretty much most of our business lines, demand, you know, far outstrips what we can do. So we are, I would say we'll continue to plan at, let's say, 25%-30% order growth number, but that doesn't mean every business line will grow at that level for some business lines. So, like, TIG as a whole has been growing at 50%+ for the last three years, right? Because, there's just a significant demand for both transit as well as the cloud and data center business, right? So we'll continue to maximize what we can get. I think the opportunity size for each of the segments is just very, very large. And I would not really guide that far forward, right?

But I would say we'll typically plan over short, medium, long term in 25%-30% odd range. I think the one thing to think about is this, so, you know, if it is a pure services business, it's usually a very simple call of demand and supply, right? If I can find demand to grow at 50%, I'll typically hire to grow at 50%, right? The product business tends to be slightly more complex. There's a lot more moving parts, and there is a risk to pushing the pedal too hard. Because, you know, ultimately, what matters in the business is delivery reputation, which we have, a stellar reputation we intend to keep.

We feel that that 25%-30% is the right level to plan, to be able to continue delivering, client success and continue gaining share. So you, you have to play for the long term in this business and not try to sort of maximize the short term. Hope that makes sense.

Deepak Poddar
Portfolio Manager, Sapphire Capital

Yeah, absolutely. I think it answers all my queries. Thanks. Thank you very much. Thanks for that. All the best.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. A reminder to all participants, you may press star and one to ask questions. We have our next question from the line of Sahil Sharma from Columbus Capital. Please go ahead.

Sahil Sharma
Analyst, Columbus Capital

Congratulations for a wonderful quarter, sir. Also, for the last year or so, our order book was hovering around INR 800 crore, and in this quarter it has expanded to INR 900 crore. So we have, like, added orders around INR 320 crore or so this quarter. And this is, this seems to be a step jump from the last quarter, where we were adding roughly INR 200 crore or so of orders. So just wanted to understand if you can, you know, share what has led to this increase. Any kind of qualitative analysis on geography, vertical, and, if possible, client names?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay. Thanks. Thanks, Sahil. Look, I think you made a very good observation on the order book, so you obviously looked at it very closely. So there are several sort of aspects to this worth totally getting into. One is the way we look at our orders. Typically, most of the order book that we declare is executable. I would say 70% plus of it is executable over the next 12 months. It's just the nature of business that we do, and also we typically don't trap long term, for example, AMC-style numbers in our order books. Right? So we typically add it for the next 12 months and we leave it at that.

So, you know, what that normally does is we are adding and consuming at about the same pace. And you're totally right. For the last few quarters, it's been almost exactly the same, you know, give or take, ± 5% at most. What has been happening to the business, however, is the following: One is our product builds for each of the major pieces of software, as well as a large number of pieces on the hardware side as well. Our product builds are largely done over the last two, three quarters. And we have started selling in sort of a much more significant way than in the past. Second thing, and I've mentioned this in the previous earnings call, we've really expanded our sales channel.

It's a much, much stronger sales channel than, let's say, three quarters back. Typically, when it comes to sales productivity, sales cycles for most part of our business is 12-18 months. So it takes you three or four quarters to actually see the effects of adding on sales team. It doesn't matter what the quality of that sales team is, good or bad, both the results, you start seeing only in three or four quarters, and that's now starting to play out. So, the pipeline that we have today is significantly, significantly larger for, lending, for transaction banking, for transit, and for cloud and data center, right? So those four lines have, a much more significant sales pipeline than, we have had, let's say, four quarters back.

Second, since the product builds are largely done and our products are very competitive now, our win rates have also climbed up, at least on the banking software side, and I think they probably remain steady on transit and DC, which is already pretty good. So, you know, by and large, you've got a bigger pipe, you've got a better conversion, so that adds to the order book. The last aspect I didn't cover was also the size of the orders, especially on the banking side, that we are going after now is significantly larger than what it used to be. And that will also increasingly reflect in the size of the order book on the banking side, especially, right?

Because we just— There were size of deals we were not going after that, you know, we both have the balance sheet now as well as the appetite to go after and the products to go and compete well, right? So we've announced some of those wins in the last quarter. We'll announce some more. So bigger pipe, higher win rates, the products are a lot more competitive than we have. And a lot of the rebuilding we've done now, things are just much more settled, so the machine is sort of firing on cylinders.

Sahil Sharma
Analyst, Columbus Capital

Great, sir. Sir, in my next question, I wanted to understand, sir, we had announced that we might do a fundraise for up to INR 650 crores. Sir, just wanted to get your thoughts on whether it would, you know, significantly dilute existing shareholders. And also, you know, given that this is a large fundraise, what are we planning to do with this amount, and, you know, what kind of utilization are we planning?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

So finally, you're right. Look, board recommended, and we obviously filed the part about the fundraise. We don't yet have the shareholder's approval for it. And as and when, you know, we file the placement document, et cetera, you know, you will get all the details around it. At the moment, we're still pending shareholder approval on that one.

Just a broad picture on the enterprise, what I can paint is, we do see. So while we've been growing strong organically, I think we do see the opportunity to deploy a much larger amount of capital in the enterprise and continue to drive the high return on capital that we've seen over the last, let's say, three and four years, right? So we do see that opportunity. As and when the placement document is out, I think you'll have the details.

Sahil Sharma
Analyst, Columbus Capital

Great, sir. Just the last question from my side, sir. 90% or so of our revenue is coming from Asia-Pacific region, and roughly 8% from U.S.A. So, sir, one thing I was wondering is, basically, whether in FY 2025, 2026, 2027, when can we see the U.S.A. revenue ramping up significantly? And given that, you know, we are building primarily for Indian and Asian clients right now, in the sense of, you know, the costing and all, still we have a 22%, uh, EBITDA margin, despite spending 8% on R&D. So given all of that, when we are cross-selling or selling these products to the American clients, can we expect better economics or better margins, or would they be roughly similar.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Yeah, so, yeah, so there are two parts to that question, right? Look, one is U.S. is less than 10% of the firm's revenue at the moment. And I think the reason for that, apart from the fact that we've not focused on U.S. in the past, in a very organized way, I think the other reason for that is it is very hard for products to break into. So, you know, so obviously, as we all know, the services players are pretty big in U.S., and that's a straightforward arbitrage play. Product really needs a lot more in terms of adapt, you know, self-adaptation to the market, local references, all that stuff. So we are being very measured in how we expand. We are certainly focused on it.

Whether that percentage will change, I don't know, in the near term, right? I think we, we want to, we want it to change. I'm pretty sure in absolute numbers, you'll see the growth. So that, the dollar number, we, we feel positive about being able to grow at a good clip. Whether that percentage itself will change, depends on whether the rest of the world slows down, right? At the moment, I don't see that. So, you know, the India side of the business is also growing rapidly. I've mentioned this in the previous calls. Aim was to. So right now, it's 60% of the business is in India and 40% is outside of India. My aim, that I said in the past, was to at least move it to a 50/50.

You know, at least balance it out. And while that has been the ambition, we've expanded on all fronts, expanded the sales channel, expanded the partnerships, all that stuff. I think the challenge for that is India still continues to grow at a much faster rate, right? So, I, you know, I think the percentage moving is a function of if U.S. grows 40% and the rest of the world, including India, for us also, it grows at 50%, the percentage is not gonna go up, right? But absolute terms, we feel very, very good about it, and we will keep on expanding. The question on the margins is, look, the realizations in U.S. and Europe are certainly higher on an average than realizations in Asia.

But the product business in Asia, as you scale, also is a fairly profitable business. A lot of the economics gets driven not so much from Asia versus Europe. A lot of the economics gets driven by scale. Right? So as a software business scale, its ability to extract margins as well as ability to give capital back to the enterprise will normally improve, and, and that's a lever which we've used for our growth steadily, right? Even while we operate at 90% of Asia. So I think to a large extent, that, that one has to keep that point in mind, with scale comes economics, regardless of the market that you are in, when you're selling software, especially.

U.S., I would expect realizations are typically 50% more, like for like in the U.S. and the developed parts of Europe, but then the cost structure would also go up, right? So you may not, in the year that we make progress or in the first two years that we make progress, you may actually not notice the difference in economics because, you know, the cost structure goes up before the economics kicks in. I mean, that's my thought. You know, I think by and large, short to medium term, I would say expect the firm to hold to its planning guidelines of 20%-22% on EBITDA, and I would not really be looking at improving it.

Sahil Sharma
Analyst, Columbus Capital

Thank you so much. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. A reminder to all participants, you may press star and one to ask questions. We have our next question from the line of Varun Mohanraj from Skaniva Capital . Please go ahead.

Varun Mohanraj
Portfolio Manager, Skaniva Capital

Good afternoon. Thank you for the opportunity. So in the past, we've told that our sales cycle in the banking and financial vertical is close to 18 months. So can you throw some color on the product lifetime in this banking space? And also the split in percentage-wise for the R&D spend, which goes into the newer products and the percent that goes into the improvisation of older products. Thank you.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay. Look, the banking software lifetime, typically, I would expect that to be in the range of 20-odd years. So the software that we sell, right? It's important to understand, one, we sell lending software. That is a core business for any bank. Typically, it's sold to large banks and they would move to it after a lot of thought. Once you've moved into it, it's very. It's highly mission-critical. It's very, very difficult for a bank to move away if they're live and in production with the system. So with most of our customers, we rarely see attrition with live customers in the, let's say, corporate loan origination space. Same thing in the transaction banking software space. These are mission-critical systems.

Once a bank is in, they would typically buy it with a mindset to stay with it for a very long time, and that's been our experience. Typically, banks don't go away, yeah, I would say forever. But you know, if you want to put a number, probably 15-20 years at least. The other question about new product versus incremental improvements. So most of the R&D we are doing is in the offering stacks that we have mentioned, right? So lending, transaction banking, transit, some amount in data center. Now, we are productizing some offerings and payments as well, a little bit of R&D. We typically don't class small improvements as R&D.

So it would normally be a net new product that we are building out. But you can probably consider most of what we do as incremental, sort of additional product inside the same product segment, right? So we're not building out like, in a completely random, net new area. But if we build lending software, we build one more additional module of that software, that is what we'll count as R&D, right? If we were doing minor improvements or bug fixing and stuff like that, that typically would not be R&D. Similarly, on the hardware side, typically it would be a net new product that we're building out, like the card reader I mentioned or the payment devices or things like that. So that's how we really look at R&D.

I'm not sure if I answered the question. Probably I'll go one round. I mean, does that make sense, or were you asking something else?

Varun Mohanraj
Portfolio Manager, Skaniva Capital

No, no, you, I think I got it. So, my second question is regarding the TIG segment. So we've told in the past that we concentrate more on the design aspect of the data centers. And, I think in the last call, we were talking about developing a key product in the data center delivery. So I just wanted to know, like, how are we planning to, you know, expand our offerings in the data center business, or are we sticking to the original design part alone? If you can throw some color on it. And just one follow-up on it. TIG, we've been historically growing at 50%, and this quarter alone, it has softened around 28%-30%. Any one of you can clarify on it. Thank you.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay. Okay, good. So, look, data centers, we intend to continue to build on what we have. We have one of the best data center design teams in the country. We have one of the best program management teams when it comes to program managing the build. And we work with a few strategic partners. I think that side of the business will go as it is. We, we did say Aurionpro being Aurionpro, we are looking at productizing some parts of the business. We're already piloting it with some clients. So I think at some point in time, soon enough, we will announce probably something in that space. And the hope is to improve the economics of the business more by productizing certain aspects of it, right?

And which is, which is our normal preferred approach to, any line of business that we take or any, any particular domain, right? We look at the value chain as a whole. We look at occupying every point on that value chain, then we look at productizing every point, becoming the most efficient producer there, build tier one IP, right? So, I think data center space is no different. We will, we will go down the same path, but, you know, at, at some point in time when we are fully ready, we will probably talk about the productization aspects. I don't want to be giving away our trade secrets on an earnings call. So, so that's that. The, you know, the historical growth for TIG, so TIG, you are totally right.

We did slow down this quarter in terms of growth. For the first nine months of the year, though, I think we're still north of 50% on TIG. So it's, it's still, you know, it's a very strong, strongly growing business for us. What I mentioned in the, either the last earnings call or the call before, is our focus on TIG, is, is gonna be to get more selective around, certain types of business that we want to do. So we'll keep doubling down on the transit side. That's a third of the TIG business. We'll keep doubling down on the data center and cloud side. That's another third.

But then we do a whole bunch of work around smart city and government work, where we will become a bit more selective in terms of the business that we want to do, to focus on high quality deals where we can definitely add value, as well as run the business in the way that we really want to run and deliver value there, right? So I think you'll see some level of that reset. Why now? Why not in the past or in the future? Again, this is something I mentioned in the previous earnings calls. We were, last year. So we always look at a balance between banking, software, and TIG. In the last year, I was fairly clear, we were focusing more on the product build, and it will take time.

So we are slowing down on banking, so we can focus on the product build, so divert capacity there, and it'll take time for banking to come back into strong growth. So last year, for those who studied it, banking as a business grew, I think 15% or 16%, thereabout. TIG as a business grew at 55%. What I had said for this year is we would work on bringing the banking growth up. We will work on bringing the TIG growth down, and our hope will be to try and get the two to converge, you know, something in the middle or, or, or maybe not too far off from there. So that is what we, a nd I think I probably mentioned that two or three quarters back.

So that's been a part of a planned strategy to get more selective on TIG as we feel more confident about growth on banking. So if you have seen the numbers on banking, I think banking this quarter grew at 40%+, right? And this is after quite some blocking and tackling, building out of products, building out channel, et cetera, that we've done over the last four quarters. So now we feel a lot more a lot better about growth on the banking side and hence we'll get more selective on the other side. Overall, TIG would still be a 50%+ business this year, or thereabout. At least first nine months, I think it's 51%.

Varun Mohanraj
Portfolio Manager, Skaniva Capital

Thank you. That's it from my side.

Operator

Thank you, sir. A reminder to all participants, you may press star and one to ask questions. We have our next question from the line of Suryansh from BizX Enterprise. Please go ahead.

Speaker 9

Sir, my question is that last time we in the conference call, we talked about that with the acquisition of hardware capabilities, the company gets opportunities to new businesses. So, what are the developments on those new ventures, sir?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Okay. Yeah, it's a good question. Thanks, Suryansh. Look, hardware for us was always a play into completing the offering so that we can, you know, occupy the whole chain, then go after some larger deals as we scale up the capacity. Although hardware is, you know, it takes a little bit of time to work on a few aspects before you can get very confident around scaling it up. On the electronic hardware side, now we are very, very confident. We have done the requisite R&D in terms of having our own designs for most of the parts. We have put in place, you know, the manufacturing capacity in Malaysia to go out and scale it, the manufacturing capacity in India to go out and scale certain parts of it.

So right now, it takes some time to get the tooling out right. It takes some time to get the designs right. It takes some time to get the capacity in place. We feel very good about where we are, you know, in terms of, especially on the transit side, where we do a bulk of the hardware. I think the only sort of additional input I would put in there is, just because we have every component of what a transit operator would require, it does not mean we walk into every deal with every single one of those components. We will pick and choose depending on where we want to play.

So we even do the transit gates, we even do the validators, we do the card readers. You know, we of course do the AFC software, and we are hoping we will have the payment gateway side fully locked down, and operational as well very soon. So we play a lot of components. We'll pick and choose depending on the deal. Overall, the business is scaling very, very well. We started exporting a lot of the hardware out to a lot of places, U.S., Central America, Latin America as well, most recently to Australia. So I think, yeah, I mean, it's scaling pretty nicely. I mean, we've taken some time to put the pieces in place, but we feel good about where we are.

Speaker 9

Okay. And sir, my next question is like, in transit business, how we get the business? Like, it's tender-driven or capabilities or some relationship or like banking partner. Sir, how we get that, that business?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

So, it really varies. So we are, s o by and large, we are not gonna put, we're not gonna do deals where we have to put a lot of capital. Right? I think so that is pretty, that is pretty clear. So in India, we are getting very, very selective about the business that we do. We obviously are one of the more prominent players in India. We've got a whole bunch of sites live. You know, we've got, you know, Nagpur, Noida, we did transport with AFC, we got UP Transport, Haryana Transport, et cetera. We will selectively keep picking up some deals in India, but we'll be very, very selective on what we take on.

Outside of India, we are where there is a situation in which we can go on our own, which will necessitate that it's not a CapEx deal, and it's a pure technology head-to-head, we will go on our own. Case in point, California, right? That was an open global RFP. We went, we went on our own and we won. Right? Of course, with some partnerships with, you know, Visa helped us out and, and et cetera. But, but we went on our own and we, we competed and we won. Where there is a large deal, especially where CapEx is involved, we will go through a partner. Maldives, for example, Mastercard was fronting us. We, we, we, we are the technology provider, due to Mastercard. Australia as well, the same thing.

Most of the deals in Central America and Latin America are again, through partners. So it really depends on the nature of the deal. It could vary. The pricing models would vary, and we will typically. The only sort of broad guideline I would have is if there is a CapEx deal, we would not put our capital at risk in the deals. We will go through a partner, whether that's a bank, or it's someone like Mastercard. So we announced this, I think two or three months back, this partnership with Mastercard, and we're already in multiple sort of engagements with them. We announced this partnership with Vix, which is another, you know, very large global transit player, and we are going in some select markets together with them. So we'll continue to do that.

Speaker 9

Okay, sir, and one last question is that, sir, when you said that we don't, like, want to do, like, not in that way we don't know, but, like, you leave it on the player to, basically decide, it's, it's SaaS or, like, licensed deal. So, sir, like, what you're trying to say is that, is it nature of the business or, like, we don't have those, power to influence, the customers to get in SaaS or, like, licensing?

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Yeah, look, to me, you know, SaaS is sort of one of those fashionable words which, you know, people try to make out a whole category out of. But ultimately, what is it that the firm makes? The firm makes software, and we sell that software depending on the right side of pricing for the. We typically sell a lot of the lending software to very large banks. These are mission-critical systems for large banks. They are much more comfortable buying it around enterprise license. I haven't seen too many large banks buying a collateral management system or a corporate loan origination system in a SaaS mode. I think the more you go into the small banks and the NBFCs, you'll see that.

So, the way we do it is, we've done SaaS models with the non-banks. We've done SaaS models with some digital lenders. For the large banks, we typically go with enterprise license because that is the nature of the market. Where we see the industry going typically is, we see more and more movement towards consumption-led models. Eventually, at the end of the day, pretty much a large part of what a bank needs to orchestrate its process can become a simple API call, and we can charge for that on a consumption basis. We are, in many ways, we've gone towards it.

I think the reason I don't put down one pricing model is we don't see the point in trying to really straitjacket our clients, and we don't see the industry competing that way. Most of the large enterprise financial technology players use enterprise license models. Most of the small financial software players use SaaS models. We sort of straddle the spectrum. So we will be across enterprise licenses, we'll be across SaaS, we'll be across, as the consumption-based models sort of become more prominent, we'll be across that as well.

Speaker 9

Thanks, it was helpful, and congratulations for the results. Thank you, sir.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question of the day. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Ashish Rai for closing comments. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Ashish Rai
Vice Chairman and CEO, Aurionpro Solutions

Thank you. So thanks, everyone, for joining the call. We continue to execute, the way we, we say we'll execute. We continue to deliver what we said we'll deliver. We'll stay focused on, on trying to capitalize on the demand in front of us. As I said, right now, demand far outstrips, what we can do in the market. So the focus for us would be to keep on increasing our capacity to really be out there in more markets, service the clients, and, as well as continue to scale the organization, for the bigger and bigger scale that we get to. Right? So that's the priority for us. I look forward to seeing you in the next call. Thank you.

Operator

On behalf of Aurionpro Solutions Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.

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