Ladies and gentlemen, good evening and welcome to the Q4 FY 2025 results conference call of Bajaj Auto Limited. My name is Sagar, and I will be your coordinator. 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 initial remarks from the management. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touchstone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Anand Newar, Head Investor Relations from Bajaj Auto Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thanks, Sagar. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining us for the call today. Welcome to Bajaj Auto's Q4 and FY 2025 earnings conference call. On today's call, we have with us Mr. Rakesh Sharma, Executive Director, and Mr. Dinesh Thapar, Chief Financial Officer. We will begin our call with the opening remarks from Rakesh on the business and operational performance for the quarter and for the year, and Dinesh will take you through our financial headlines. We will then open the forum for Q&A. Over to you, sir.
Thank you, Anand. Good evening, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining our call. FY 2025 has again set new benchmarks, with revenue hitting the peak of INR 50,000 crore for the first time, EBITDA crossing the INR 10,000 crore milestone also for the first time, steady margins at 20.2% EBITDA margins for all the four quarters and thus for the year.
Profit after tax crossing INR 8,000 crore also for the first time. The spare parts business also delivered a highest-ever quarter and crossed 18% growth in FY 2025. Since we have been engaging on a quarterly basis, I will focus mostly on the highlights of quarter four FY 2025 instead of the full financial year 2025. With this, let us get into each business unit. I'll start with the exports business unit. The business unit grew volume by 20% in Q4. As exports recovered, our premium brands, Dominar and Pulsar, posted highest-ever volumes in exports, delivering obvious benefits to revenue and EBITDA performance. We monitor the top 30 overseas markets in some detail, as collectively, they account for over 70% of the industry in emerging markets.
Of these top 30 overseas markets, in 26 markets, the industry grew, and collectively, the 30 markets grew by 26% in quarter four, which is signaling a very healthy revival. In these markets, Bajaj outpaced the industry growth of 26% and grew by 31%. Latin America is now the largest emerging market region in the world for motorcycles. Here, Bajaj exports grew by over 18% in Q4, with a very rich mix of over 65% of premium brands of Pulsar and Dominar. Bajaj Brazil recorded its highest-ever retail of 7,000 units or so in quarter four, which is more than the sales in the entire FY 2024. We have commissioned the Brazil plant with an annual capacity of 20,000 units per annum last July.
We have already expanded the capacity to 30,000 units, and there is a plan in place to expand it further to an annual capacity of 50,000 units to be achieved by December this year. Africa and Asian markets are steady, though the uncertain trading environment in Africa means we need to carefully watch these markets and avoid any buildup of stock endangering the exposure of our distribution partners. The global tariff issue has not had any significant direct impact on us, as direct exports to these areas, which could be vulnerable to higher tariffs, are mainly the KTM and Triumph brands, and they constitute less than 1% of our total revenue. The impending startup and revival of KTM Austria will also unlock exports of KTM motorcycles from India to the overseas markets of KTM next quarter onwards.
These used to constitute about 5%-6% of our total exports, and as you know, had dropped to almost nil. Given this performance and revival in the markets, our competitive position in key markets, and the return of KTM exports, we expect overall exports to continue to grow at 15%-20% every quarter. Moving to domestic motorcycle, in quarter four, the motorcycle industry registration indicates a minor decline of 2% or so. However, for FY 2025, the industry delivered an overall growth of 6%, buffeted by a strong performance in Q1 and during the festive days. Industry growth was driven by the 125cc plus segment, which grew by 12% compared to a flat performance in the 100cc segment. As you know, the 125cc plus segment is our growth-focused area in which we continue to hold a solid number two position.
Estimating market share basis Vahan registration, we have noticed erosion during the year. From an estimated market share of 21% in financial year 2023, we went up to 26% in financial year 2024 and have closed at 24% in financial year 2025 in the 125cc plus segment. Our countermeasures to reverse this are already in play from April onwards. Going forward, we will continue to drive towards leadership in this segment through our two brands, and we have three actions outlined for that. First is the rejuvenation of the Pulsar portfolio, which spans from 125cc to 400cc. Six new Pulsar variants have been launched in Q4 to a good reception. These variants are specifically and individually targeting both the sporty and commuter subsegments within the 125cc to 200cc class. Alongside, we have recalibrated prices to adjust for latest competition benchmarking post-OBD2 changes.
We can already see a sequential growth, though marginal, of share between March and April. On the second action, we are steadily expanding the penetration of Freedom, the world's first CNG motorcycle launched in the 125cc segment. It has already retailed 60,000 units basis its key proposition of 50% cut in fuel cost being adopted foremost by long-distance riders in high pump density areas. We are now very specifically and vigorously targeting this cohort, long-distance riders in high pump density areas, to drive up the penetration of Freedom, which has reached even 10%-11% of the 125cc segments in some CNG-dense areas like Kerala and Delhi. Both these brands, Pulsar and Freedom, going forward will be strongly supported by respective marketing campaigns targeted at users in all parts of the buying funnel.
Overall, we anticipate the industry to continue to grow at 5%-6% in FY 2026, again led by the 125cc plus segment, and we will aim for share acquisition based on the above key thrust. In commercial vehicles, the business continues to stand strong in both ICE and now in the electric vehicle segment. It reported its highest-ever volume with a 75% market share in the ICE segment. The e-auto segment of the industry grew at about 60% in FY 2025, and here we have doubled our market share from 17% in FY 2024 to 33% in FY 2025. The momentum continues with Bajaj securing the number one position in electric autos in April and, I'm told, in May 2018. A key highlight has been the launch of the Gogo brand.
We have introduced Gogo as a new brand for our electric portfolio in autos, distinct from our ICE brands of RE and Maxima, to create a unique and memorable identity in the minds of the customers. We will launch an E-RIC by early July. The segment is segmented, operating largely with subpar quality products. We want to change the paradigm for both the drivers and passengers by bringing a well-engineered and reliable solution to an important last-mile mobility challenge. Our pilot vehicles have covered 10,000 kilometers of extensive testing to confirm the highest levels of build and test-in-class performance. I expect the new E-RIC under a new brand to open up a segment of almost 40,000 units, which we will hopefully upgrade over the next few years. Coming to the electric two-wheeler business, CapEx. The arc of CapEx performance has been the steepest in the industry.
From a market share of 13% in Q4 FY 2024, Chetak has plopped a market share of 25% in Q4 FY 2025, a rise of 12 percentage points on the back of the launch of the highly successful 35 series platform in end December. The quarter four market share also placed Chetak as the number one electric two-wheeler brand in India. The 35 series is the best Chetak yet, with a higher range, advanced displays, faster charging, and better boot-class space, combined with the already popular elegant styling and robust build quality. The two 35 series variants have achieved a higher market share in the upper half of the segment, apart from delivering a positive impact on the bottom line.
With the introduction of the third 35 series variant, which is the 3503, in end May 2025, as well as the impending introduction of a new variant in June as an upgrade to the entry-level and large-selling 2903, where we ceased Tamil supplies in April 2025, the CapEx portfolio will become very potent. Further expansion of this portfolio is in reserve in FY 2026 to attack emerging subsegments. The reach of CapEx is delivered through a combination of high-class CapEx experience centers, which now stand at 310 and are continuously increasing, plus over 3,000 points of sale. We expect these initiatives to build a sustainable and profitable leadership position in FY 2026. Having said this, I must point out a dark cloud on the horizon in terms of continued supply of rare earth magnets from China, which are an essential component of high-performance EV motors.
While finally, a process for end-use declaration for non-military users has been defined, which includes certification by the Chinese embassy in India and a couple of authorities finally in China, we have yet to see the completion of the process. Any delay or disruption will start to seriously impact production by July, so we are hoping that in the coming weeks, approvals to ship are secured by exporters from China based on the declarations by our vendors. Let me now move to pro-biking business units with its two main brands, KTM and Triumph. The premium partnership brands put together hit almost 1 lakh units this year, up 12% year-on-year. KTM accelerated growth, particularly in second-half basis targeted interventions around product and pricing of U200 and U50, as well as the very well-received Adventure C90, which is setting a new benchmark of performance in the growing adventure segment.
Triumph doubled its volumes domestically to close the quarter with 11,000 units on the back of a successful addition of Triumph T4 and the upgrade of the Speed 400. We have also nearly doubled our network year-on-year, backed by sharp and focused activation in top-tier two and tier-three cities. We are now in 100 cities with 136 best-in-class stores. The well-accepted models, the high-class stores, and on-ground customer engagements you may have come across at Distinguished Gentleman's Ride are steadily building a differentiated premium franchise for Triumph. I'm sure the development of KTM at KTM AG is being tracked very closely. The Bajaj-KTM Alliance commenced in October 2007.
Since then, the alliance has achieved several milestones: the commencement of exports of KTM from India in 2011, which has subsequently reached over 60 countries. Launch of the India-based business based on joint product in 2012, which is now a substantial franchise in India, as discussed above. The millionth KTM was produced in Chakan in 2023, and it introduced several industry firsts in high-performance biking. KTM AG had a record run, growing top line and bottom line by four times in the period of 2007 to 2023, to hit a revenue of EUR 2.6 billion and EBIT of EUR 160 million in 2023. Besides this, KTM deepened its highly differentiated ready-to-race position, winning over 500 world titles and even a podium finish in MotoGP, and in this process, thrilling its comfortable as well as passionate fan following.
The unfortunate developments of 2024 onwards have their genesis in the downturn of the e-bike business, the sharp rise and fall of demand for extreme sports during and post-COVID, the failure to read the demand volatility leading to increase in stocks and debt, and then the increase in interest costs. The convergence of all these developments put a huge pressure on liquidity and brought KTM to near insolvency. Even in this extremely stressful period, the customer franchise has not eroded due to its deep and niche positioning, and it is ready to be restored. At Bajaj, we have continued with the India business undisturbed, delivering the best year in 2025, though our exports to KTM were compromised. Looking ahead, we have strong belief in the opportunity for KTM and indeed for Bajaj, and this has been the basis for all the support that we have extended.
As you know, Bajaj intends to acquire a controlling stake in PDAG, which is Pierer Bajaj AG. Once the due regulatory clearances are received, perhaps in two to three months, KTM and Bajaj will commence to work very closely and execute a comprehensive turnaround plan. Dinesh will describe this subject in further detail. Finally, a quick word on our 100% subsidiary, BACL, Bajaj Auto Credit Limited, our captive finance arm. It turned PAT positive in Q3 and has now reported a full year profit for the first time, marking a significant milestone in its journey towards sustainable profitability. With 100% pan-India coverage, disbursals across the INR 10,000 crore mark, and BACL is now firmly positioned as a strategic enabler in our ecosystem. In closing, FY 2025 was a year of solid outcomes with record revenues, profitability, and the establishment of new growth platforms.
As we step into FY 2026, we will focus on the following seven key thrusts: a better competitive position in the 125cc plus segment of domestic motorcycles with high shares and firmly on the road towards eventual leadership. A higher-than-market growth in exports, particularly in Latin America, where we will aim to make a quantum shift in our market shares and competitive position. Acceleration and scaling up of new growth platforms of CapEx, Gogo, Freedom, and the Brazilian business, particularly driving for leadership in electric two-wheelers and electric three-wheelers. Working together with KTM, turn it around and put it in a better position than ever before in terms of its operations and market performance. Strengthening the spares business to deliver the best-ever performance in FY 2026. Steadily grow the KTM and Triumph businesses in India based on the fundamentals of brand and customer experience.
Dynamically manage the balance between growth and profitability, recognizing prevalent volatility. These seven trusts should deliver us the goal of delivering another record year in FY 2026 with best-in-class financial performance. With this, let me hand over to Dinesh.
Thank you, Rakesh. Good evening, everyone, and thank you for joining us on the call this evening. Before I dive into the quarterly and annual financial update, let me first address a question that's been asked of me by a few people in the last few weeks as to why we've delayed our results announcement this time around. Now, you might be aware that to complete our consolidated financial results, we add the results of our investment in the KTM business that is done through our government subsidiary.
You'll be aware that the creditors of KTM had accepted the restructuring plan and approved it back in February, where essentially a quota of 30% of the claims had to be paid by 23rd of May 2025. At that point of time, the auditors also needed to see the company demonstrate its ability to remain solvent and as a going concern. To the extent that event wasn't completed, they weren't able to close the audit report and report the auditor financials. With the 23rd May timeline having been met, with the quota having been paid, the auditors were able to finalize the accounts that were published by PMAG earlier this week. Once that was done, we were able to consolidate and close our accounts. Therefore, that's the reason why our results got delayed by this very exceptional event on this instance.
Let me now move quickly to the operating context before getting into the numbers. Rakesh has already spoken to you at length on the business and the view of the industry, so I'll focus my commentary on two aspects: on commodity and currency. On the commodity front in the quarter, it was a mixed bag. Noble metals and precious metals continued to heat up, most specifically for lithium, which saw very steep inflation, and rhodium and platinum firmed up to some extent. However, the broad energy basket and the metals complex, like steel and aluminum, remained relatively soft. Nickel and lead reflected some signs of inflation, but that was largely offset by relief in rubber and ABS, amongst others. Overall, while there were some pockets of inflationary pressure, the broader softness, particularly in the metals and energy complex, helped maintain a relatively stable cost environment for the quarter.
Therefore, I'd say in net terms for this last quarter, quarter four, material inflation was about flattish. On the currency side, we had tailwinds. It was the quarter when USD/INR hit its peak, and therefore, dollar realization for the quarter came in at $86.5 versus $84.3 in the previous quarter and $83 for the same time last year. However, the rupee appreciated towards the end of the quarter, as you'd be aware, and that had a slight impact on our financials as we had to restate our receivables at the closing rate. Now, against this backdrop, our headline revenue from operations stood at INR 12,148 crore, registering a growth of 6% year-on-year.
The reason I use the word headline is because the number that we have reported has been impacted by a conscious decision that we were forced to take to really suspend exports of vehicles to our KTM business in the course of this last quarter. However, on the continuing part of the business, we have grown double-digit revenue. That was aided by a mix of improved volumes, better realization, both on currency and price fronts, but largely the former, and a positive product mix that was led by the revenue-agreed electric portfolio. On KTM, as I just mentioned, it was a conscious decision that we took to temporarily halt shipments given the state of flux and uncertainty on the ongoing restructuring process and essentially not to take any exposure on our receivables.
Having said that, this was a call that was taken in the very short term, and with the restructuring process now done and the 23 May milestone met, we expect to resume exports in the coming months itself. On EBITDA, it came in at INR 2,451 crore. It was up 6% year-on-year. Margins held steady at 22%, marking the sixth consecutive quarter of it being above the 20% threshold. On a year-on-year basis, the benefits arising from currency and operating leverage took care of the drop arising from the profitable KTM exports business and higher discretionary costs, notably on marketing.
On the electric portfolio in its entirety, the benefit arising from cost reduction that we've been speaking about for some time now, along with the accrual of the PALI incentives, which we've been doing quite consistently quarter after quarter that you're quite familiar with, the portfolio now being fully PALI certified, has by and large funded for the actions that have been taken to drive our competitiveness in the market, notably on pricing as the price table across the broader market came off and the introduction of an affordable variant in many ways, which was a key intervention that propelled us into leadership.
Sequentially, margins were flattish, driven by a favorable currency and better economics that we called out at the time of the launch of the new 35 platform, which took care of operating deleverage and higher discretionary spends, this time most notably again on brand investments, analytics, and fixtures as we stepped up the level of innovation CapEx across the list. Tracking the revenue and EBITDA growth, profit after tax for the quarter stood at INR 2,049 crore and was up 6% year-on-year. Looking ahead, I'd say on commodity and currency, the environment continues to remain quite volatile. Currency, which was a tailwind so far, appears to be an emerging headwind in this current quarter, quarter one, as dollar realizations have started to soften.
Given our quarterly dollar-linked sales of approximately $500 million thereabouts, the lower USD/INR realization will weigh down on the margins in this near term. On the material cost front, aluminum prices have surged, and there is some firmness on a few lines like steel, ABS, and rubber. These are expected to be partially offset by declines in precious metals, palladium, rhodium, and platinum. However, I expect that on net terms, we expect in the quarter to see some amount of commodity inflation in net terms. Added to this is the cost impact of the OBD2 norms that have been rolled out from the start of this quarter. Cumulatively put together between material cost inflation and the rollout of the OBD2 norms, we are seeing a material cost impact that could add up to anywhere close to 1 percentage point.
As for pricing, we have been selective in our approach, taking pricing out of parts of the portfolio and dropping prices in parts of the motorcycle business to really revive the competitive growth momentum that we've been seeking. The pricing outlook for the quarter, therefore, could be anywhere between 30%-50% of the overall material cost impact. Now, that's the quarter. Since this is the last quarter of the year, let me also spend a couple of minutes to wrap up the year, and you've seen this detailed in our press release. Let me start by saying it's been another landmark year of performance with financial metrics all setting new benchmarks. Revenue from operations crossed INR 50,000 crore for the very first time, registering a 12% growth year-on-year.
Underpinning this, as you would recognize, is the very versatile nature of our business, and we've been talking about this, and this has been demonstrated yet again. The very versatile nature of our business that has driven the resilience of our results. If you recall, same time last year, we had said that we had delivered a record performance, and that was largely built on the back of a buoyant domestic business while exports remained subdued. This year, we started the year with a strong domestic momentum. Exports were a bit slow in the first half of the year, but then the story flipped in the back half. Domestic demand slowed, and exports accelerated sharply. We have now had another year of record performance, but very differently driven from the previous year.
Building on the strong operating performance, EBITDA for the year crossed the major milestone, exceeding INR 10,000 crore, closing at INR 10,101 crore. Margins held steady right through the year while closing 40 basis points higher on a full year-on-year basis. What you must recognize in this is the fact that the electric vehicle portfolio has moved from being under 10% of our domestic revenue to nearly 20% on a full-year basis in the course of this current year. You are familiar with the fact that the CAPAC business continues to remain significantly margin diluted, although with much better economics that have evolved over the last 18 months.
The fact that we've been able to hold margins through this period of time is a reflection of the strong focus on driving the economics for the new growth engine of electric vehicles and for the very dynamic P&L management that we've been doing at a larger enterprise level. We closed the year with profit after tax at a new record high of over INR 8,000 crore, registering a 9% growth year-on-year. However, it's worth noting that the growth is after absorbing a one-time exception deferred tax provision of INR 211 crore that we had to take in quarter two of this year on account of the withdrawal of indexation benefits on certain asset classes and changes in tax rates, as was announced in the Finance Act of 2024.
If you were to adjust for the one-off impact, profit after tax would have grown by a robust 12% year-on-year, underscoring the quality and sustainability of the key earnings. Now, apart from the key financial measures, there have been a few areas to cheer about across our businesses as new milestones were achieved. On domestic motorcycles revenue, for our strategically important and focused segment of the 125cc, hit a new peak. In commercial vehicles, we registered the highest-ever volumes, and revenue crossed INR 10,000 crore for the first time. Notably, the electric 3-wheelers business, which is under two years old, has rapidly scaled up to being 20% of the commercial vehicle revenue and hearteningly achieved leadership in the course of the current quarter. This was the year in which Chetak hit the leadership in the electric two-wheeler market and ended the last quarter as market leader.
When you add and look at the performance of both electric two-wheelers and electric three-wheelers, we have ended the year with over INR 5,500 crore of electric vehicle revenue, which essentially would make it the country's largest electric two- and three-wheeler company. This has all been delivered in a span of between two and three years. In exports, Latin America continued its strong momentum, registering another high over what was an already record performance in the last year, and the region now accounts for over 30% of our total exports volume. Spain, as you heard from Rakesh, reported a record revenue for this year as well. It has been a year of milestones on multiple counts in addition to the financial benchmark. Moving to consolidated results, and since there is a significant impact, I thought it was right to call it out.
While standalone profits ended at INR 8,151 crore, that was up 9% year-on-year, consolidated profit came in at INR 7,325 crore. It was dragged down by the share of loss that we had to account from our investment in the global KTM business that reported a loss, and that the results of that business flows into our Netherlands subsidiary, which in turn we consolidate. The share of that loss accounted for us between the first half and the second half, added up to about INR 900 crore for the year. You are aware of the context, so I will not get into that at the moment. We closed the year with a closing surplus cash balance of nearly INR 17,000 crore, underscoring the continued strength and resilience of our balance sheet. This was achieved after significant investments done in the year. We invested INR 2,100 crore in our captive financing on BSCM.
We spent INR 700 crore towards CapEx, of which about 60% was towards the electric business and the balance to provide for innovation-related CapEx in the rest of the portfolio. Over INR 2,200 crore was returned to shareholders through dividends pertaining to the previous financial year, reflecting our continued commitment to rewarding shareholders. Free cash flow continued on a strong track record and remained robust at INR 6,500 crore for the year. The Board of Directors at this meeting today also approved a dividend of INR 210 per share today that will total a tag below INR 5,900 crore when we pay this out in a couple of months, which would reflect a 72% payout on our total reported profits after tax.
Now, I know a few of you would have questions on KTM, and hence, before closing, let me just quickly summarize the current announcements that we made to bring everyone onto the same page, and then we'd be happy to take questions that you may have on it. You're familiar with the structures, so I'm not going to spend time on the structures as part of our release as well. There have been a range of stock exchange filings and news that's been floated on the subject over the last few months. Most notably, between the press release that we put out on 22nd of May and the stock exchange intimation the following day, on 23rd, we essentially announced our intent to take control of the KTM business that is headquartered in Austria, subject to necessary regulatory approvals that are currently underway.
Very clearly, what we said was that our Netherlands subsidiary, BAH BV, has arranged a debt funding package of about EUR 800 million to enable the continuity of the KTM business by paying off the approved quota to the creditors. This was quota that was approved by them in the February meeting in furtherance of the debt restructuring with the approval of the Courts of Austria and for infusing funds into the company to revive its operations and the working capital cycle that had choked up. Of this, EUR 200 million cash was infused in multiple tranches in the last financial year between February and March and between April and May to maintain continuity and to revive operations, and EUR 600 million debt was provided in the last week to essentially fund the payment of the creditors' quota and associated costs.
Alongside, our Netherlands subsidiary also entered into a call option agreement on 22nd May itself with Pierer Industries and the parent of Pierer Industries, which I will use as a short form called PECO, for the right to purchase either by itself or by a third party nominated by ourselves from Pierer Industries, the shares that they hold in Pierer Bajaj. Recognize that Pierer Industries holds 50.1% in Pierer Bajaj. We have now entered into a call option agreement that allows us to exercise an option to purchase these shares and therefore take control in Pierer Bajaj AG. Of course, this is subject to regulatory approvals.
Our right to purchase the 50,000 shares, which is essentially the stake that is held by Pierer Industries, either by ourselves or through a nominated third party, can be exercised fully or in installments or in a combination for the next one year, essentially till 31st of May 2026, but has fixed the consideration for such an exercise to be a maximum amount of EUR 50.65 million. Besides this, we will acquire the balance 0.1% stake in PBAG under a separate arrangement, which is also, again, subject to regulatory approval that could take anywhere between two to three months. Thus, upon exercising the call options, Bajaj, through its Netherlands subsidiary, would essentially move from being a current minority investor in PBAG to being a controlling shareholder in keeping with our strategic intent to take charge of rebuilding the KTM business and realizing the synergies that they have with us.
The full exercise of the options will essentially lead BAH BV, our subsidiary, to hold 100% of the shareholding of PBAG and will essentially mark the resultant exit of the Pierer Group from PBAG and the KTM business. I've tried to cover as much as we had announced in those two days, but I'm sure there will be a few follow-up questions which I'll be happy to take. We'll be happy to take as part of the Q&A session. With that, let me hand the call back to Anand and open up the floor for questions. Thank you.
Thank you, Dinesh. Sagar, we can open the question to open the forum for Q&A.
Certainly. Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star, then one on their touchstone phone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star, then two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. Our first question comes from the line of Kapil Singh from Nomura. Please go ahead.
Good evening, sir. My first question is on KTM. Just want to understand, what is your vision of operating this business? Would it largely operate the way it was operating prior to this issue that they faced on account of market turmoil in the sense that the production and the production will continue as it is? Are there any guarantees for manpower to continue as it is? That's one part. The other part is from a capital requirement perspective, how soon do you think KTM will be in a position to service the debts that we have provided them? Is there a need for more capital in terms of working capital or CapEx requirements for the year till they come back?
Thanks, Sagar. I am going to draw a reference again to the press release that we put out because I think we have to be very mindful that there is currently a process of regulatory approvals that is being sought. Therefore, we have to be mindful till those come in place. We cannot give effect to our getting actively involved at the moment. It is very clearly our intent, as regulatory approvals come through and that part of the hoop is crossed, to look at this very, very differently. We have decided that we would take charge, and that is the message that we sent out through the announcement that we put out on the 22nd, looking at control of the enterprise very clearly. We will initiate a revamp of the entire governance framework as to what will happen at that point of time.
There will be a full-fledged workstream that will be put up, which was essentially to leverage the experience and expertise of the Bajaj system and the Bajaj ecosystem that will be aimed at restoring the momentum and competitive growth of the business as well as driving the financial viability, looking for synergies in procurement and component sourcing in production. Right? We will also, at some point of time, look at expanding the remit of the joint development program as a possible opportunity. Today, you are aware that that program only extends up to bikes which are under 400cc. There is clearly an opportunity to be able to expand that all the way up to, let's say, the 990 in the immediate-term horizon.
I think we will continue to look for potential partnerships and collaborations that can help build the KTM business to sustainable competitive and long-term value creation. These are essentially the ways we're looking to do it. I want to hasten to add that we need to wait for the regulatory process to come through, for those approvals to come through. There are essentially three in number. We need to get approval from the takeover commission. We need to get approval from the investment authority. We need to get merger control approvals from key and specific geographies that are relevant to this transaction. That will play out over the next two or three months. It is only after that that we can get involved and comment. I think you will expect that we will comment in greater detail at that point of time.
We just want to jump the gun at this point of time by commenting prematurely. But this is the broad directional intent that we went in with to absolutely run the business differently once those approvals are in place from the way it was run in the past.
Sure, sir. Thanks on that. The second question is on the domestic market. You did allude to the fact that there was a bit of market share pressure, and you have taken some actions. If you could talk about the underlying market conditions, what has caused a bit of a slowdown that we are observing in the market that continues? On the market share front, are there any—what is the number of new products that we are looking to launch in various segments in the coming year? How do we see the evolution of market share in the domestic market?
The market performance, like I said, slowed down in quarter four. We believe that it is largely happening in the smaller urban centers. We feel that the deep rural is slow. The smaller towns and mid-tier towns are doing well. The metros are also okay. The larger towns, that kind of a segment is slowing down. That is under the pressure of the particular inflation which is being experienced by our type of customers, driven particularly by things like rental inflation. We have seen some pressure on purchasing power. We've also seen that the southern markets have been under greater pressure in terms of the industry performance. The northern markets, particularly Uttar Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, these types of banks are doing much better.
I would like to actually wait and see a few more months before trying to extrapolate this performance because it's very hazardous in this up-and-down way of market behavior to take a small segment and then extrapolate for the whole year. That is what happened last year. You saw that quarter one was 11% growth for the industry. Quarter two was 2% growth. Quarter three was, again, just in October, very high growth. Quarter four was minus 2%. Combined, it delivered about 6%. I think it's going to be very, very similar. There will be some high-growth regions, some high-growth periods. We should be sort of at that 5%-6%. What is very, very clear, like I said, is the top half of the industry is certainly growing much faster.
Our erosion of about 1 or 2 percentage points has largely been in the, has obviously been in the 125cc plus in the domestic motorcycles portfolio. It is based on the timing of competitive launches versus ours. There is always a lead lag. Every launch cannot be timed. We gain when we launch new and successful products. By the time competition responds to them, you get a period of a very nice period where you can acquire market share. That works for us as well as against us. We had to do some catching up in terms of making our portfolio more feature-rich, which actually we have responded very quickly because we noticed this erosion by the middle of the year once the dust had settled from the festive. Very quickly, within a quarter, we have responded with feature-rich products.
We will continue this exercise with the introduction of new products in the Pulsar portfolio right through FY2026. We are also looking at entry-level 125cc products. Therefore, it is a full pipeline of products for FY2026. Hopefully, on that basis, we should be able to start increasing market share. There is a solid second position, which is, I think, 1.3 times more than the third and the fourth guy. We are behind the number one position. Our aim is to come as close as possible to the number one position in FY2026.
Thank you, sir. Look forward to that.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Amyn Pirani from JPMorgan . Please go ahead.
Yes, hi. Thanks for the opportunity. First, just a clarification on the comment that you just made that you are looking at an entry-level 125cc. Would this be of the Pulsar brand, or will this be a separate brand? A related question was that you have the Freedom, which has a positioning. You have the Pulsar, which spawns a lot of engine and price points. Is there space or is there a requirement from Bajaj's side to have, say, another brand in the 125cc to, say, 150cc category? Would love to hear your thoughts on that.
That question is still open. As the product sort of acquires its specs and its full form, we will decide on the branding. I can say that the 125cc segment in particular, not the 125cc plus, but just the 125cc segment in particular is almost now equal to the executive 100cc segment. It's like 28% of the Indian motorcycle industry is just the 125cc segment. We can see two or three subsegments emerging over here. Freedom is, of course, an innovation which cuts across, though it's a 125cc, but it cuts across different cc classes and is propositioning the long rider, the long-distance rider who is very keen to save money because of the long-distance riding. Now, whether there is space for one more brand besides Pulsar will be based on careful analysis of how distinct these subsegments are. This work is going on.
We will conclude this closer to and reveal it to you closer to the time when we launch the product.
Sure. Sure. Look forward to that. My second question was on three-wheelers. Broadly, how should we think about the growth potential over the next, say, few quarters for the domestic three-wheeler business? Within that, since you have already talked about the launch of the e-rickshaw, obviously, the addressable market is quite large. I'm guessing that you will start with a particular subcategory within that. Should we look at the way you ramped up the e-auto volumes, and should that be a way of thinking about or a template to think about how you will ramp up the e-rickshaw volume, or should we think about it differently?
I am very, very optimistic about the three-wheeler business. It may have its ups and downs, and it has its peculiarities in terms of parts of it being regulated. There is this whole CNG, the diesel to CNG conversion. Of course, now the entry of the electric, which can sort of override the permit, etc., which opens up the option. Despite all these constraints, let me say, or unique features of this industry, the thing which is driving the three-wheeler business is the enormous requirement for last-mile mobility. That is not getting fulfilled by either the metros or the buses or local trains and stuff like that. The three-wheeler is a very, very important vehicle to satisfy India's hunger for last-mile mobility. I'm including e-rickshaw as a three-wheeler in it. That's 40,000 vehicles per month.
E-auto gives us a very, very good method to access the regulated markets. It opens up things for introducing the e-auto. It may sort of go through its ups and downs. Fundamentally, the three-wheeler business will continue to grow. Its fuel type and shape may change. Now, when it comes to the e-rickshaw, this is a 40,000-per-month segment. Top 10% is lithium-ion. Obviously, we are going to introduce a lithium-ion product because lead acid has its own problems. I draw a parallel to what we did in Africa when we went in and came in with a very high premium to the existing Chinese players there at that time, 10-15 years ago. In recognition of better quality and ownership convenience, over a period of time as people got educated, they shifted. Even today, we are seeing that the e-auto itself is upgrading e-rickshaws.
It has its sources of growth in diesel and in e-rickshaws. We can sort of see one-third of the growth of e-auto is being driven by people who are second-time buyers, end-of-life drivers of e-rickshaws. By placing a good quality e-rickshaw, which has its own unique proposition in terms of size and payback and number of passengers it carries and its access in narrow streets, we feel that we should be able to upgrade the balance 90% also. This obviously will take time. This is not like something to be plucked, right? It will require a brand with our kind of reach, capability, and a very good product to progressively upgrade the entire. Our eyes are set on the entire 40,000. I am not saying that that will happen as soon as we launch.
FY2026 will be a year of observation and a year of building a base. It will not be the year of solid scale-up. We will see quarter and quarter how it goes. Really, our eyes are on the 40,000. It may take some time. We will begin with putting in a good product, observing it, understanding how it is delighting the riders, the drivers, and the passengers, and then going back and seeing whether we need to modify our product and our go-to-market approach appropriately.
Thanks for that. I'll come back to it.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Gunjan Prithyani from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just to follow up on this three-wheeler discussion, I mean, there has been some recovery that we've seen on the export side, right? This did see a lot of drag over the last couple of years. Anything in terms of the rebound of the business that you can talk about? There's an interesting comment that you made that the business saw double-digit revenue growth in quarter four despite the volume growth. I think it was about 4%-5%. I'm just trying to understand if I look at fiscal 2026, is it fair to say, given that EVs are fast-growing within the three-wheeler piece, can revenue growth be double-digit still for fiscal 2026? I mean, both exports plus EVs put together.
You asked lots of questions, and that seems to be a bit there. The rebound or the growth in three-wheelers in exports is largely the result of Asia and little parts of Africa, Europe, etc., coming back. Particularly Asia coming to growth areas, some places like Mexico, etc. It is part of the 30 countries which I talked about. I was telling you that we monitor 30 countries, and 26 of them have grown both in two-wheelers and three-wheelers. As you know, over there also, we have a very good position. Obviously, with the higher component, growing component of the electric business, it buffets up the top line and beyond the volume growth. The overall, how FY2026 pans out in terms of the volume versus value growth depends also a lot on the rise of Africa. Right now, Africa is steady.
Like I told you, it is not going down. It is not going up. We can see that it is still tentative. Were it to suddenly rise, it has an adverse effect on the volume-to-value ratio.
Got it. The second question I had, Dinesh, was on the margins. I think clearly a good gross margin improvement in this quarter. You did call out FX and Chetak profitability. Can you talk a little bit more on how the contribution margins or overall platform profitability of Chetak stacks up now? How should we be directionally thinking about the e-two-wheeler business profitability?
Okay. Yes, Gunjan. I think it's been significant progress. If I just look at it from a 12-15 month horizon of where we were, we did not have at that point of time contribution break-even in sight. We've got to a situation now where, with the launch of the 35 series and everything that's followed ever since from December onwards, I'd say we are now very close to line of sight on being a bit above break-even. Yeah. That is subject to a big if, which is the fact that pricing needs to hold steady at these levels because you know that over this last horizon of the 12-15 months, market-level pricing has come off. Let's for a moment assume that that is the case.
I would say now with the 35 series, we're probably a whisker away from getting to EBITDA-level break-even with the P&I being accounted for the way we have consistently been doing for this last year. That's where we currently stand. What was possibly a very significant bleed, we've now come to line of sight of being nearly break-even. I always, every time I get asked this question, the way we think of it, I think we're also starting to think of it as, once you look at the unit economics from an electric scooter perspective, we also look at it as now how we're doing on the overall profit pool for the electric business.
That has moved from being a few hundred crore INR of a loss about a year ago to a marginal profit situation right now on the back of both improved economics of unit economics of the Chetak scooter, but also the scaling up of the electric three-wheeler, which is now becoming quite material and significant in the overall scheme of the electric business.
How do you see that going forward? How significant can be the improvement from current levels?
Yeah. I think the journey on cost rationalization continues unabated. Therefore, there is already work underway on looking at the next level of savings as well. Directionally, we continue to look for the opportunities to move costs down even further. P&I, I imagine, will be quite consistent in the course of this year because that's not changing as per. I think anyone's guess, but if we make the assumption that pricing is going to hold constant at these levels, it then really comes down to cost savings, which we will continue to do. With the new platform having been launched only in December, I expect the next flush of cost savings to only come towards the later part of this current financial year.
Okay. Got it. Thank you so much.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Chandramouli Muthiah from Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening, and thank you for taking my questions. My first question is just on the prepared remarks. I think you made a comment that you expect 5%-6% industry volume growth in FY2026. I just want to understand how we look at our own volume growth outlook for FY2026. I think we had a good start in the first half of FY2025, and then it was more sort of negative 7% to negative 8% volume declines in the back half. I just want to understand what milestones we need to achieve to get closer to industry volume growth outlook in FY2026 if not exceeded. That's my first question.
Our first strategy is to outpace the industry growth in the 125cc club segment. That is our core focus area. It will remain so. We slipped on that in a few months, not the entire calendar year, not the entire year, but in a few months. For the reasons I explained, we have taken countermeasures that squarely are targets. I cannot tell you exactly how much we will outpace the industry by because, again, the industry, like I said, is going to be like a snake in the tunnel. It is not going to be linear. It is going to be up and down. We will hopefully, over a period of time, not month on month or like that, but let's say every quarter, every four or five months, when we take stock, we should be ahead of the 125cc plus industry growth rate.
Got it. Just related question on volumes. I think in the prepared remarks, you mentioned that you expect a 15%-20% growth visibility on exports. Could you just clarify what time frame you have line of sight on that? Is it sort of six-month period or the full year given where inventory levels are in the export market?
Inventory levels are pretty much in good shape. Maybe there are a few markets here and there. What I said was that every quarter, we expect to be between 15%-20% up over the same quarter in previous year.
Got it. That's helpful. My second question is on the rare earth metal issue. At this stage, it appears that most auto companies in India are reasonably well stocked on inventory up to mid or end July. Beyond that, most companies don't seem to be as sure. I just want to understand what your thinking is based on the latest updates on the processes that are being followed and then the negotiations between the Indian government and Chinese government on rare earth metal supplies, given that China controls almost 90% of supply.
There is no particular negotiation. The process for declaration and certification that the rare earth imports will be not used for military purposes has been now defined. I mean, on 4th of April, an intent was published, but now a process has been defined, which entails self-declaration by the importing company, which would be our vendors, and which is then certified by a couple of ministry agencies of the ministry, and then finally by the Chinese embassy in India. With these, the certified declarations are sent to China, where there were two-level certification or two-level approval, one by the provincial government, which has the exporter to which the exporter belongs. Once that is done, it goes to a desk in their Ministry of Commerce for the final approval.
To my information, suggest that about 30 applications have been made, which have been certified by all the agencies in India, including the Chinese embassy in India, and have been forwarded to PRC. We have to wait to see whether there are any questions, how much time it is going to take, and how smooth it's going to be, etc. We have to wait and see the outcome of these 30 applications to fully understand what this process entails. Like you said, almost 90% of the supplies of these materials are from China. Building options is also not an option in the short term because this will take development work. This will take investment. This will take testing, validation, and integration into the vehicle systems. This would be more of a medium-term option.
At this point, we are keen that the process is smoothly followed and things are expedited both in India and China.
Got it. That's helpful. Lastly, just a bookkeeping question. If you could share the export revenues and the spares revenues for the quarter, please.
Export revenues is $ 470 million.
$470 million.
$470 million.
And spares?
Spares revenue is INR 1,566 crore.
Got it. That's helpful. Thank you very much, and all the best.
Thanks.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Raghu Nandan from Nuvama Research. Please go ahead.
Good evening, sir. Thanks for the opportunity. Firstly, on KTM, you are working towards normalizing the international operations, inventory reduction, and even production commencement in CY 2025. Would you expect things to turn around in CY 2026 with better sales resulting in a positive EBITDA?
Raghu, we have not started working on it as yet. We are still going through a process, and I want to keep calling that out because it is a regulatory process that we are bound by. It is our intention to get started once all those approvals are in place. There is a full turnaround plan. Knowing fully well what the diagnosis of the issue is and where the opportunities lie, that will be put into action. With that happening, I imagine we will be past the middle of this year. It is our intention to try and get at least the first set of results to start showing up in the next calendar year once that plan is put into place. CY 2025 will be a year of bringing back continuity because you know that production had stopped in December.
It came on for a bit and then went off again. It is about reviving the engagement, the partnership with customers and the extended ecosystem. It is about ensuring normalcy in operations setting in. Then, of course, a new way of working, a collaboration kind of setting in once approvals are in place and we can actually get in. Much of this year will be gone, but it will have at least started the process. We should start to see the first set of those results reflect in possibly calendar 2026.
Thank you, Dinesh. Second question to Rakesh. Thanks for sharing the industry growth for exports, which is 26%, very strong. Trying to understand the growth drivers, we keep hearing macro challenges, adverse currency, fall in crude prices. Despite all this, exports are growing strongly. What is supporting this 15%-20% growth expectation? How do you see that? Thanks.
See, the 26% growth, which I said was just to make that point very clear to you, is on the top 30 countries, which accounts for 72% or 75% of the industry. First, I just wanted to get the math right, but yeah, you can assume that 26%. Now, this 26% growth is really on a base which sort of had got hurt first by COVID and then by the extreme volatility of the currency in many countries when the dollar went through a phase of getting stronger. That resulted in devaluation in many emerging markets, leading to retail inflation and depression of demand. As things stabilize, it is not about devaluation or the appreciation. What happens is that most countries seek steadiness, certainty.
There has been a period of steadiness in the currency movement, at least, as also in the macroeconomic condition, which has allowed people to digest the new prices and get back to the normal routines, which goes beyond the motorcycle industry. That is what the secure environment, coupled with the fact that in most countries, the penetration of two-wheelers and three-wheelers is very, very low. Outside of ASEAN, India, and China, Africa, Latin America, Middle East, all these places, the penetration of two-wheelers is very low. That is the fundamental driver for increases. I mean, today, for us, for example, Mexico is a very, very large market. If you look at Mexico 10 years back and look at the two-wheeler industry now, Mexico is the second largest market for two-wheelers after Brazil. That is all being driven by the increasing penetration of two-wheelers per 1,000 population.
What is driving us at 15%-20% is that we took some early steps in Latin America because we realized that Africa is in for a long haul. It may go up and down, and it is considerably weakened as an economy, if I would say. The whole of Africa, we took very early steps in strengthening our branch and platforms, in aligning our partners, and in sharpening our portfolio in each of these countries. Therefore, we have very good competitive positions. In the sports segment, we are number one in Mexico, number one in all five countries of Central America, number one in Colombia, number one in Argentina, number one in Peru. These things come very handy when the markets start to revive.
I would say a large part of this, and I'm also seeing parts of South Asia, for example, Sri Lanka is now experiencing a—you know that we had a very strong position in Sri Lanka. Today, as the Sri Lankan market returns, 80%-85% of that benefit is being reaped by us. I would say that some early anticipation in Latin America, strong positions, and many of these new markets where revival is there. I would say the addition of the return of the KTM exports, as we are expecting in quarter two, hopefully, all combined to make us feel that, yeah, we can aim for a 15% growth in the quarter, 15%-20% growth in quarter-over-quarter.
Thank you, sir. Very helpful.
Thank you. The next question comes from the line of Vipul Agrawal from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Thank you, sir, for taking my question. Also, you highlighted about CNG penetration, basically market share in 125cc, about 10%-11% in certain regions. What would be these regions? And what is basically—is it just the storm sensitivity which is impacting the CNG sales, or there is something else to it, like maybe performance or power performance on the CNG bikes?
The product acceptance is fantastic. 60,000 bikes have been retailed. Obviously, we do surveys. Most of the people have a very high acceptance of the product and actually delight with the product, and particularly the savings it is supposed to deliver. We are encountering two issues in the development, in the scaling up of Freedom. The number one issue is the anxiety of not having enough pumps. Therefore, we are finding a very clear correlation between those—let's say Bihar may be having a lot of pumps, but the density of pumps is what is more important. If the pumps are spread out over a large area, the customer gets obviously anxious about being stranded in an area which does not have a pump. Therefore, we are finding adoption is very slow in these areas.
Kerala, you know, Kerala is a very, in any case, geographically tight, bellied. These places, the pump density is good. We are finding that Freedom is acquiring 6%-10%, 11% penetration in these areas. The second issue which we are encountering is the filling pressure. This is a 2 kg tank, and it is supposed to deliver about 200 kilometers with a full condition. Some of these pumps do not have the right kind of pressure, as a result of which the tank is underfilled. The range gets compromised. That becomes an issue with long-distance riders. It is the quality of the pumps and the thing. That is why we are right now, as I said, focusing on people where we now still experience no—which are the areas which have got the right pump density?
We have started to calibrate our resources in terms of engaging with customers, etc., in this. This has been the learning over the last three or four months that it takes a while to understand this. Now we are using this learning to have very selective targeting in these geographies to these cohorts which are long-distance riders. That is the way we feel that we will steadily build up on Freedom. Whoever is using the product is experiencing a good amount of savings.
Understood. That's all really helpful. My second question is on your BHCL and basically the financing in the rural area. We are seeing incrementally NBFCs are becoming averse to financing of the customers which have weak service scores, which is actually, we think, is impacting the two-wheeler growth overall. Normally, we see that captive NBFCs normally come forward to help in such scenarios. Where are we in terms of—but how is BHCL helping in that? What will be the share of BHCL in total financing in rural and urban?
We are running BHCL in an arm's length. It has got an independent board which the MD of BHCL reports to. We want to run it not as a handmaiden of Bajaj Auto. It has to be run on the sound principles of a financing company. I would not say that just because it is captive, its risk policies and lending policies are influenced by us. They are completely independently done. Where it is very helpful is that they have presence, virtual and physical, at all our counters, which makes access to customers easier and smoother. He comes in to buy a—or she comes in to buy a Bajaj motorcycle or a scooter and gets Bajaj finance. It is a very seamless operation, and it becomes very smooth and friction-free.
In terms of, like I said, the risk policies and the credit assessment of the customers, this is done absolutely independently and by sound principles. I've heard this comment, question being raised by others also, that there is a sudden tightening. We know from our understanding of competition that that has been contributory to sort of hitting the industry a little bit. I must point out that both BFL and BHCL, we never worked with them on any subvention basis. We have not provided any subvention to them to give luder sort of loans. Therefore, there was no need between Q2 and Q3 and Q4 to suddenly pull back. There was no pulling back from Bajaj Auto side opposite BHCL. BHCL continued to follow its own risk assessment process. Therefore, we haven't seen much of a change.
The penetration of Bajaj Auto Credit Limited in motorcycles is about 40% and about 50% in three-wheelers.
Thanks a lot for that. That really helps.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll take the last follow-up question from the line of Amyn Pirani from JPMorgan Chase & Co. Please go ahead.
Thanks for the opportunity again. My question was also related to the financing business. Can you just remind us how much money you have already invested, and is there a broad number that you can share for fiscal year 2026? Also, if you could share the book value or the net worth of the business, if you have it handy.
The total capitalization from the time we started the HD is INR 2,400 crore, of which INR 2,100 crore has gone through the last financial year. Capitalization needs for this business, I expect, will play out for the current financial year to FY 2026. It would be close to about anywhere between INR 1,200-1,400 crore more as we expect at the book window because this is the year in which we will have the full national footprint for the full year. If you recall, last year, we were building up the book. We started the transition for BHCL on 1st of January 2024. It was a staggered build-up of the book. The book ended up with an AUM of about INR 9,500 crore.
Okay. Excellent. Thank you.
Yeah. I think you had a question on net worth. It is just capital of about INR 2,400 crore that we put in. Losses have essentially got recouped because the year has turned a profit of about INR 60 crore, INR 60 crore thereabouts in the first financial year.
Okay. Great. Thanks for that.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, I now hand the conference over to the management for closing comments.
Thank you, everyone, for joining the call so late in the day. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you, everybody.
Thank you. On behalf of Bajaj Auto Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us. You may now disconnect the line.