Container Corporation of India Limited (NSE:CONCOR)
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May 15, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q4 24/25

May 23, 2025

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Container Corporation of India Limited Earnings Call, Q4 FY25, hosted by DAM Capital Advisors Limited. 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 this 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 Ms. Bhoomika Nair from DAM Capital Advisors Limited. Thank you, and over to you, ma'am.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Thanks. Good morning, everyone, and a warm welcome to the Q4 FY25 earnings call of Container Corporation of India. We have the management today being represented by Mr. Sanjay Swarup, Chairman and Managing Director. At this point, I'll hand over the floor to Mr. Swaroop for his initial remarks, post which we'll open up the floor for Q&A. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah, good morning, everybody. I am the presentator . I have with me Mr. Ajit Kumar Panda, Director of Projects and Services, Mr. Mohammad Azhar Shams, Director of Domestic Division, Mr. Vijay Kumar Singh, Director of International Marketing and Operations, Mr. Anurag Kapil, Director of Finance, and Mr. Harish Chandra, ED Finance, Company Secretary and CFO of the company. I would like to give some opening remarks, and then we can proceed with questions. At the outset, I am glad to announce that the Board of Directors has approved the bonus share, one is to four, one share for every four shares, in the meeting concluded yesterday. We have announced a dividend of Rs. 2 per share, that is 40% dividend for this quarter, and it takes the total dividend to Rs. 11.50 at a share value of Rs. 5, that is 230%.

Bonus shares are subject to requisite approvals, which will be coming in due course. As far as the performance of the company is concerned, CONCOR achieved ever-highest throughput of 5.09 million TEUs, crossing the five million TEUs mark for the first time in its history. Throughput growth has been around 8% in the financial year. It includes EXIM growth of 7% and domestic growth of 12%. It's in line with India's international trade. Export has grown by 0.08% to $437.42 billion, and import of India grew by 6.2% to $720.24 billion. In Q4, we had a growth of 8.25% as compared to the corresponding period of last financial year. It includes EXIM growth of 12%, which we are able to sustain in the present quarter also. Domestic, we had a negative growth of 2.6%, primarily because of three reasons.

First is we deliberately did not pick up the low margin traffic that was available, and the second reason was the impact of congestion in the railway network in Eastern India, which impacted our business in domestic, and the third reason is the delay in supply of tank containers by Braithwaite & Co. Ltd., our sister PSU, due to the various severe technical problems that they were having. Because of these three primary reasons, domestic throughput, in fact, declined as compared to the corresponding period of last financial year, but now I will tell you subsequently, we have taken corrective steps, and in the current financial year, we see a very robust growth in domestic. I also want to highlight that in EXIM, we have increased the market share on a pan-India basis by 40 basis points, JNPT only 9 basis points, Mundra Port 127 basis points, Pipavav Port 232 basis points.

And one important thing is we have gained market share, and despite not sacrificing our margins, in fact, our rail freight margin has increased by 55 basis points. So market share has also increased, and rail freight margin has also increased from 25.10% to 25.65%. Operating margin has remained the same year on year. Last year, it was 30.7%, and this year it was 30%, almost the same. EBITDA margin also the same year on year, 25.5% to 25%. So all these performances we were able to achieve because of our strong focus on customer centricity. Customers have reposed faith in our services and operational excellence of Team CONCOR. Despite geopolitical challenges that we were facing, we could achieve operating income growth of 2.7% and PAT growth of 3.35%.

PAT is ever highest in the company's history, and turnover in this financial year is also ever highest in the company's history. And as far as the operations front is concerned, then we have seen a 16% growth in double-stack handling of rakes. This year, we crossed 6,000 rakes. We achieved 6,302 double-stack rakes this year. Last year, it was 5,440. So there was a growth of 16%. We also added infrastructure to meet this demand. We commissioned 11 rakes in this financial year, taking our total rake count to 388. We procured around 9,000 containers, taking our container fleet to more than 53,000 containers. And all this was possible, and we achieved CAPEX of INR 810 crores in FY25. For FY26, Board of Directors have approved CAPEX budget of INR.

860 crores, which will be primarily used for procuring containers, procuring wagons, development of terminals, and for management of management information systems, that is IT equipment. The Company has embarked on massive infrastructure creation after seeing the robust demand. By 2028, we have set a target of 100 terminals, 500 plus rakes, and 70,000 containers of our own. For ESG, we have established CONCOR Technology Center of Excellence for Green and Sustainable Logistics for giving us various consultancy and guiding us how to go for green and sustainable logistics. As far as outlook for FY26 is concerned, we see stability in EXIM business, and with commissioning of WDFC up to JNPT by December 2025, we see a spurt in volumes in Q4 of this financial year. On the domestic front, there is a robust demand. We expect good volumes of bulk cement and tank containers, ceramic tiles, food grains, etc.

In the last financial year, exports basically increased. Ready-made garments saw 84% growth, auto parts saw 22% growth, and plastic goods saw 82% growth. Similarly, imports also increased. Raw cotton increased by 122% and glass by 57%. We have resumed rail services for third country import from Haldia Port to Birgunj. We loaded more than 1,000 TEUs in the last financial year, and for DPD also, we increased by 31% in the last financial year. We have loaded 3,847 TEUs in the last financial year, which was a growth of 31% over the corresponding period of the previous financial year. At this moment, I would like to give guidance for FY26. In EXIM, I am giving guidance of 10% growth, in domestic, 20% growth. Overall, there will be 13% growth in this financial year in overall business, combined EXIM and domestic. How we will achieve this?

There are various factors that we will be working on. First is customer centricity, which remains the focus area of management. Then second is total logistics solution to customers. We have set upon a target of 100% first mile, last mile, that we will be doing in this financial year. Then we will be working on green and sustainable logistics, and bulk cement and tank containers will be a very big driver of growth, and long-term agreements we are going to have with corporate customers and shipping lines, which will help us to give more volumes into our fold, and last but not the least, we will have business at our new terminals also that we are going to commission.

In this financial year, we have set up a target of commissioning four new terminals, and we are actively working with Railways and DFC for getting land for setting up more terminals so that we are able to achieve the target of 100 terminals by 2028. So these are my opening remarks. Now you can start the questions, please.

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 the touchtone phone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and 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. The first question is from the line of Achal Lohade from Nuvama. Please go ahead.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Yeah, good morning, sir. Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, can you help us with the originating volume for the quarter?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes. Originating volume for Q4, for EXIM, it is 5,576,700 TEUs, and for domestic, 1,217,890 TEUs. Total is 6,794,590 TEUs.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Understood. Sir, if you could help us understand with respect to the market share, you did mention about the market share, but if you could give the number specifically, what is our market share? JNPT, Mundra, Pipavav, and aggregate India level, for EXIM?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

At JNPT, we have a market share of 58.44%. Mundra Port, it is 37.7%. Pipavav Port, it is 48.4%. And on pan-India EXIM, we achieved the market share of 55.2%. In EXIM, and 57.6% is domestic. Total is 56%.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

If you could help us with FY24 number as well, sir, in the same fashion, please.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

FY24, JNPT was 58.3%. Mundra Port was 36.4%. Pipavav Port was 46%. Pan-India, EXIM, 54.8%. Domestic, 66.8%. And total is 57.7%.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Understood. Sir, if you could help us explain the drop in terms of the domestic business, specifically for the quarter, like it is appearing to be fairly large, somewhere around 15% YOY in terms of originating volume. What has driven this particular drop in a particular geography, or it's just a cement, bulk cement container, basically what you were saying?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

I already mentioned in my opening remarks, there are basically three reasons. First is there is a lot of traffic available, which is working on very low margin. So purposely, that is a deliberate decision of the management not to pick up that traffic. We have decided not to go for 0% margin or 1% or 2% margin. So that was a decision of the management for not picking up that traffic. And second reason, as I told you, there was a congestion in railway network in Eastern India, and due to various factors, that has impacted our volume in a big way in domestic. Because domestic, if you analyze it deeply, a lot of traffic is moving from Western India to Eastern India. So if there is a congestion, then rakes don't get unloaded, then they don't get loaded. So because of that, the domestic business was severely impacted.

Third was the tank containers that we were banking that it will start in Q4. But somehow, because it is a new product, first time it was being developed in our country. So there was a lot of teething problems, and they could not be delivered, and we could not get any loading of bulk cement in tank containers. So these were the basic three big problems that impacted our drop in domestic.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Understood. And just one more question in terms of the LLF. You've mentioned in the notes it's 370 crores net of 65 crores impact. So I'm just curious, what is the number for fourth quarter? Is it 110 crores, or is it 175 crores? How do we look at it?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

My ED Finance can answer this question. 108 is the fourth quarter. 108. It is INR 108 crores in fourth quarter, I think.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Okay. INR 370 crores is the net number.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

370 crores for the full year. And how do you see it for FY26? That's my last question, sir.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, as I mentioned earlier in one of the interviews today morning, FY26 also, it will be in the same range, even though it will increase by 7%, but we are constantly working on surrendering the terminals that we don't need, or the land within terminals that we don't need. So net impact will be around this number only.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Understood. Thank you, sir. I will call back in the queue for follow-ups. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Okay.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Disha from Ashika Institutional. Please go ahead.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

Good morning, sir. My first question is if you would have any idea by when you would receive the specialized containers from Braithwaite, because it has almost been one quarter, if you have any idea on it?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Actually, we have already received 90 containers from My Home that are sufficient to form a rake. Now, these containers are under trial loading at one of these cement plants, so we are quite hopeful of a breakthrough, so because for the first time, they are being loaded, so you will appreciate that there is a teething issue, so people are working on it. Our officers are also working. My Home officers are also working, and I'm expecting that by first week of June, it should streamline and stabilize, and apart from that, we have published a tender for 500 more containers. For open tender, we have published, so that is a parallel exercise we are doing.

One more thing on bulk cement front. We have signed agreement with two leading cement manufacturers, UltraTech Cement and My Home Industries, where we have given two acres land each to them in our terminal at Dronagiri and Mumbai. They will be setting up silos, and they are procuring bulk tank containers on their own. Even My Home Industries have procured 200 containers already. They are constructing a silo, and then that loading will be parallelly they will be doing.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

All right. So my second question is in terms of if you would have an idea on what is the total containers handled at all India ports and what is CONCOR share in it?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, all India ports, of course, we keep a data, but that may not be very authentic. I will just give you an idea of that. One minute. All India ports, the total handling was around 23 million TEUs.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

Okay.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

23 million TEUs.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

All right. If I may ask one last question, we did see a drop in realization in terms of domestic and EXIM business both. So going forward, do you expect realization increasing in both these segments? I do understand why domestic we are not specifically going into low margin business that would slightly impact our volumes, but in the EXIM business?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, as I told you, we are able to maintain EBITDA level of 24%-25% every year, and despite growing also, which is quite good in logistics business. Normally, it is in single digit. So we will be able to maintain this business going forward. The thing that will help us will be the commissioning of DFC, which will increase the double stacking. It will bring down the empty running. Similarly, domestic also, we will be able to move both way loaded traffic, and a lot of circuits we are working on it. So I think we will be able to improve our EBITDA and maintain at 24%-25% level.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

All right. Thank you. I'll fall back into the queue.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Bhumika Nair from DAM Capital. Please go ahead.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Yes, sir. Sir, just wanted to understand the EXIM segment a little better. This year has been fairly muted in terms of growth, and we're talking about a 10% growth next year. How is the volumes really shaping up in the last two months? Has there been a pickup? And what is the outlook that you're seeing in terms of shipping lines? Is there a balance of trade between EXIM export and import? If you can just talk a little bit about qualitatively in terms of the volume trajectory that we are seeing. Because last year, there was a lot of shipping disruption, which had impacted our volumes.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, in this current financial year, we are able to see a stable volume in EXIM, as I informed earlier, and there is a good business we are getting, and I have had talks with various shipping lines, and they have informed that this year is going to be good because whatever uncertainties remain, but they have sort of overcome that, and it has become stabilized, so export-import is never balanced in our country. Some places, there is more import. Some places, there is more export, so at present, exports are very good as compared to imports. It keeps on happening, but that is not an issue. We are able to overcome that challenge by increasing our double stacking, so EXIM guidance of 10%, I find it quite achievable.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Sure, sir. Sir, the other question was on margins. If we look at EXIM margins for the current quarter for Q, while obviously for the last two quarters, it has been quite healthy, but this particular quarter saw a drop to about 20% versus what we've been doing about 25%. So any particular reason why in this quarter there was a drop in the EXIM EBIT margins?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, this was the final quarter, so there are a lot of adjustments also which we carry forward, and whatever expenses are there. So all these factors are there. Otherwise, there is no particular reason. As far as operationally, we have been able to reduce the empty running. This number I don't have with me right at the moment, but it was quite good. Double stacking was quite good. So this is likely to continue in this financial year also. So margin front, I don't think we have to worry.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Okay, sir. Sir, can I just get the empty running and the distances, please?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes. Empty running in this financial year was EXIM. It is INR 121.3 crore. Domestic, it is INR 286.7 crore, and total was INR 408 crore, and in both EXIM and domestic, it is less than last financial year. EXIM, it is reduced by 6.4%. Domestic, it is reduced by 5%, and there is a total reduction of 5.3% in empty running.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Sure, sir, and the lead distances, sir?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Lead distances for EXIM, it was 701 km. Domestic, it is 1321 km. Total is 801 km.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Okay. Great. I'll come back in the question queue. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Okay.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Krishnendu Saha from Quantum Asset Management. Please go ahead.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. Just quickly, a couple of things on domestic front. We spoke about Eastern India volume was impacted by domestic volume. Could you quantify as to what percentage? Is it a large volume, or is it like lower single-digit volume for us?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, in the last quarter, Q4, there was a drop of 2.6% in domestic volume as compared to the same corresponding period of previous financial year.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

2.6%.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Just on the realization part, the last.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Overall, for the financial year, there was a growth of 12% in domestic volume.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Yes. You're right. I know because we spoke about three reasons why this happened. So I'm just asking this so I can get a number too. On the realization part, on the domestic, for the last 24-25, there's a degrowth of the realization. Do you see any pickup in realization on the domestic front in FY 26 or 27? Because 24, there was a degrowth of 5.2%. 25, there was a degrowth of 9.2%. With new business coming in, tankers for cement and others and tile, do we see the realization being flat, or do you think that the realization will have for the degrowth from there also?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

The realization will be good. As I told you, we are working on various circuits. Like suppose my container is coming empty from point A to point B. I give a very good rate, maybe on very less margin, so that at least I get some money. Instead of getting negative returns, I get some returns. So all these strategies we are working. So it's a detailed subject. It will not be possible to tell in detail at this moment. So we are constantly working, and we are very sure that we will be able to improve domestic margins in this current financial year.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

So that will be largely also by the realization for Q being flattish as compared to 25 also. That can be taken into consideration? The realization for Q for domestic?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. You can say it will be slightly more than 25%. And overall, EBITDA will be 24% to 25% or even more than that.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Sure. And just from our understanding on the EXIM front, just in a hypothetical example, when the shipping line's rate per TEU goes down from suppose $4,000 to $3,000, do you face a pressure on realization front on the EXIM side also likewise? And what will be the quantity and/or how fast?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

We don't feel any such pressure because we maintain excellent relations with our customers. So whenever we go for any rate increase, first thing is we give them sufficient time. Second thing is we inform them that we are going to do that, and there are these reasons, A, B, C. So we have excellent communication with them. So we don't face any such pressure that the shipping lines are reducing ocean freight. Correspondingly, we will also increase or decrease our inland charges. These pressures, we don't face.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

You don't. Because large of the number of contracts will be on long-term with them. That is the understanding, right?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, we are a public sector undertaking, so we are not a private company. So we cannot change our rate on a daily basis, and we cannot be selective that we will charge this thing from person A and another rate from person B. We can't do that. Whatever rates we are notifying, it's a public rate. It's a public domain available on our website. But the only thing what we can do is we can give volume-based incentives. So if some person gives me more volume, he will get more incentive. If some person gives me less volume, he will get less incentive. And that is also very transparent.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Which adjustment happens in Q4, I suppose?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Sorry?

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

That adjustment happens in Q4. That's where the margins take a dip in Q4 on the EXIM front. Is that?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. You are here. You have hit the point. That ultimately in Q4, all these things are because we close our accounts for the year. So all these issues are reflected in Q4.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Just one small question. For this cement tankers and tiles, will they fetch a larger or will they fetch a better margin than the current domestic TEU profile, or will the margin stay the same? Could you just throw some light on that? Thanks. That's the last question.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Actually, per se, you cannot say that only one side loaded will fetch good margins. Margins we should see in overall perspective because in domestic, even for empty container movement, we have to pay to Railways, but we don't get anything. While in EXIM, if we move empty containers, shipping lines pay us. So that is the difference between EXIM and domestic. So domestic, it becomes very challenging because suppose I move tiles from point A to point B. Then in return direction, suppose I bring the empty container. I don't get anything, but I have to pay to Railways. So my endeavor is that for return direction, I should fill some cargo in that. So basically, you cannot say that for tiles, you will get more returns. The key question should be how much empty running you will reduce.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Yes. So I will also ask you about tankers. The cement tankers which you use, will they have what they're getting, what do you call? Getting return cargo will be a little bit difficult. So would they have the same margin profile?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

That's a good question. In empty tankers, we will be bringing them in empty state only, but for that, railway has given one incentive scheme valid for the first five years of the tanker. That first five years, we will avail of that incentive scheme in which for empty movement, they give some incentives, but we have notified our rates in such a manner that we take that cost into consideration, that empty cost also, and parties have agreed for that.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

I see. I see. Splendid. Thank you very much, sir. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

You're welcome.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Anupam Goswami from SUD Life. Please go ahead.

Anupam Goswami
Analyst, SUD Life

Hi, sir. Hello, sir. Sir, my first question: what's our target on the double stack portion? And on the DFC on the eastern front also, are we looking any double stack introduction over there? And also on the EXIM margin, I missed on that front. How do we see the EXIM margin from here onwards?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. See, first question, there is no target on double-stack. We want to increase it as much as possible. But every year, we are getting a good growth. This year, we got a growth of 16%. Before that, also, we got double-digit growth. So as such, there is no target that we have fixed for double-stack, but we want to maximize it. But there is a lot of improvements going on in wagon technology also. Wagons are now coming, which can carry more payload. Now, previously, there were wagons which could carry 68-70 tons payload. Now, we have wagons available which can carry 80 tons of payload. So obviously, these things will increase the double-stacking. So this is helping us a lot. Second question is eastern. Eastern DFC is not fit for double-stack.

It is only catering to bulk and big bulk cargo. Mostly containers are not running. Because overhead equipment height is not that much that it can double stack, train can run on Eastern DFC. It is not possible to run double stack. Third question is about EXIM margin. Yes, EXIM margin. You will see a lot of improvement in the coming weeks, and we will be able to maintain at the top 24%-25%.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay, sir. I'll join right in that view. Thank you so much.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Vikram Suryavanshi from PhillipCapital. Please go ahead.

Vikram Suryavanshi
Analyst, PhillipCapital

Yeah. Good afternoon, sir. Just wanted a clarity on depreciation. So last quarter, we have increased our life for assets, and there was a reduction in our depreciation for last quarter. But again, if you look at this quarter, it has gone up. So can you clarify for that?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. My ED Finance will answer this question. Yeah. Depreciation, like in the last quarter, as you know, we have increased the life of our wagons from 15 years to 30 years. So that had an impact of 79 crores in the December period. And if you see in the March period, the total impact is 92 crores. So the impact in the March quarter is around 13 crores because of that. So that's the main reason. And that has also been reflected or has also impacted our tax provision. If you see, there is a deferred tax provision which has increased, and there is a decline in the current tax provision because we have got the tax benefit for the CapEx, what we have done during the year. So current tax liability has come down.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay. So quarter-on-quarter increases mainly because of the asset addition, what we have done?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes. Yes. Yes.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay. Understood. And in terms of container fleet, we are so used to take a fleet on lease. So what you are mentioning around like 53,000 containers, does it include only our own container, or we have leased fleet also?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Let me, sir. I think it is all owned container. Now, there is no lease container.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay. Understood. And last question is that our revenue share, which you give on every quarter, how much is our revenue share from JNPT, Mundra, Pipavav, Chennai? If you can share that number for full year.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. I will give you. JNPT, our volume share is 33.4%. I am giving for the full year. Mundra Port is at 37.3%, Pipavav 9.5%, Visakhapatnam 5.5%, Chennai 4%, Vallarpadam 4.7%, Tuticorin 1.3%, Ennore 1.75%, Kattupalli 1.72%. Total is 99.41%.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay. Got it. And just to add, since you are talking about end-to-end logistic, are we also looking to come back for coastal any possibility, or will it be more like a surface road-to-road?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

No. We are open for coastal also. We have signed an MoU with Shipping Corporation of India for coastal movement also. But till now, we are not able to achieve any breakthrough because of the various rates that we worked out and we shared with the trade. It was not favorable to them. But we are constantly on the job. As soon as we get, we will inform you.

Krishnendu Saha
Analyst, Quantum Asset Management

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Mukesh Saraf from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Yes, sir. Thank you for the opportunity. My first question is regarding your comment that once DFC will be connecting to Nhava Sheva, we are spotting volumes. Could you help us understand currently what portion of our originating volumes is linked to JNPT, to and fro JNPT?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

33.4%.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

That's of the originating volumes, sir, or that it will include your handling around the port? I'd say, your other MMLPs around JNPT itself?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

This includes imports plus exports both.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Right. But this will include handling revenues as well, sir?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

No. This is not revenue. This is physical volume I'm telling.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Okay. Physical volumes, originating volumes is about 30%, 33%, like you said. Okay. Right. And so just trying to understand, once the DFC connects to Nhava Sheva, the expectation that we'll see a spot in volume, so there should be some shift from road to rail, basically. So what proportion right now of volumes moving between, say, Dadri or NCR region to JNPT are moving by road currently?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, it will not be some shift. It will be a substantial shift from road to rail because I will tell you, because in logistics, the people look for only two things. First is transit time. Second is cost. Dadri will be connected on DFC with Nhava Sheva. Then both the things will be taken care of. Transit time because we will be running timetable trains from Dadri to Nhava Sheva. So there will be predictability in our services, which will be welcomed by the trade as it has been in Dadri to Mundra circuit. Second thing is cost. When we run on train on DFC, all will be double-stack trains. For upper deck, there will be substantial cost saving. So without sacrificing my margins, I will share a part of these savings with my customers.

The light cargo, which is at present not coming to rail, it is moving by road. All this light cargo will come to rail. I am expecting substantial shift because of these two reasons. Predictability and cost, the traffic will be coming to rail. Just to give you an estimate, at present, the rail coefficient at Nhava Sheva is in the range of 17%-18%. As soon as DFC is commissioned, immediately overnight, it will not happen. But at least by one and a half years after that, I am very optimistic that this rail coefficient will double.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Okay. Okay. Understood. So the reason I was asking you.

Operator

Sorry to interrupt, Mr. Saraf. May we request that you return to the question queue for follow-up questions? There are some questions.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Oh, this is just my second question, actually.

Operator

Okay. Go ahead.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Hey, no. I'll just finish this last one. So the reason I was asking this, sir, we haven't seen the rail coefficient go up at Mundra though. So what was, say, around 25% in FY23, even now is around this 25% despite this road-to-rail shift happening. So that's the reason if you could just clarify this last point, then I'll get back with you. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. That's a very good question. See, now this 25%, how it is calculated, it includes transshipment volume also. So if you see originating actual numbers, actual numbers, there is a very good growth at Mundra, import-export. But because we are calculating it on percentage of the overall handling at the port, and there is a sizable chunk there of transshipment volumes. Second reason is the DPD. DPD also plays a very important role as the direct port delivery DPD and direct port entry for exports. So DPD, DPE is primarily moving by road at present also. It's not coming to rail. So because of that, also, it is impacting the rail coefficient. So these two factors are actually primarily responsible for rail coefficient remaining stagnant.

Mukesh Saraf
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Got it. Got it. Great. Thank you so much, sir, for this.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Priyankar Biswas from BNP Paribas. Please go ahead.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

Thanks for the opportunity. Just harping back to the previous participant's question, sir, if you can give me some more color regarding JNPT, like what extent of the volumes that happen at JNPT are relatively, let's say, low lead because that would ideally not shift to a rail. And also, if you can give some idea because the understanding is that most of the DFC, most of the JNPT volumes that occur today at present is more aligned towards Maharashtra and Northern Karnataka. So if you can give an idea is what actually of the DFC volumes that are happening today moves along the, let's say, the north-south axis.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

That's a good question. Now, the thing is that you are right. At present, the JNPT lot of volume, I don't have the numbers with me, but a lot of volume is moving to Maharashtra, Karnataka, as well as to Andhra also because Hyderabad is also being catered primarily by JNPT. But there is a lot of cargo which is moving from JNPT to and fro JNPT and NCR area also. And a lot of this cargo is moving by road. So I am basically targeting this traffic. DFC, of course, will not impact the movement of Karnataka and Maharashtra and Andhra cargo. It will remain like that. But the cargo which is available in North India, which we are not able to handle by rail for Nhava Sheva, these things will come to our fold.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

So sir, does it imply?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Percentage figures? Percentage figures I don't have with me right now.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

So can it be fair to say that at least on the northern leg, the number should be at least higher than 30%-35%? Otherwise, the rail coefficient really cannot move up. So would that be a right assessment, broad ballpark?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. You are right. It should be. No, but this is the number that I'm telling you which is moving by rail. Actually, road figures are much higher. Like 33% that I told, CONCOR volumes coming from JNPT, it is only by rail. Road is not included in that because we are not having road service between JNPT and North India and other places.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

No, no, sir. What I meant is you said that rail coefficient in JNPT is around 17% today. And two years down the line, it can double. So I am saying that around 30-35% where it can go up to, that's what you said. So is it fair to say that the north-south volumes that occur, that is along the WDFC route, would be somewhere in this range? That is what I am asking.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Definitely. It will be in this range.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

Sir, just one last question. If you can share these data points, what are the rail coefficients in the key ports like JNPT, Mundra, and Pipavav, and what it was, let's say, last year? That's my final question.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

JNPT last year, it was 16.6%. This year, it is 15.7%. Mundra last year, it was 25.5%. This year, it is 24%. Pipavav last year, it was 62.4%. This year, it is 57.8%.

Priyankar Biswas
Analyst, BNP Paribas

Thanks so much, sir.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Shrinidhi Karlekar from HSBC. Please go ahead.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Yeah. Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, my first question is, in the just previous answer, you said there has been almost at each of the major ports, there has been a loss of rail coefficient. Could you please elaborate what is really driving this loss of rail coefficient at JNPT, Mundra, and Pipavav ports?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, primary reason is DPD. Are you familiar? What is DPD?

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Yeah. Direct Port Delivery, right?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Direct Port Delivery. So DPD is primarily moving by road. It is not moving by rail. This is first. And second reason is the port volumes include transshipment volumes also. When they give throughput of port, they add transshipment volume also. So because transshipment is increasing, so this percentage figure is coming down.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

But that is more of a phenomenon in Mundra, right? Not much in JNPT and Pipavav. But we see there also is a rail coefficient.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

JNPT, Pipavav is not there, but JNPT, up to some extent, it is there.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Okay.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

And just a second, sir, so you guided for a 10% EXIM volume growth. Can you please help us connecting it? How should one think about what does it imply in terms of originating volume? Because our double stacking is generally growing double digits. And your first mile, last mile, you are also aspiring to make 100%. So given these helps in handling volume, can you help us? What are originating volume growth guidance are you really implying?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, actually, I have given guidance for the handling throughput for EXIM and domestic. So you can work out, or we will help you subsequently. So how to give the how to work out the guidance for originating volume and financial. This we can work out subsequently. I don't think we'll have a lot of time now to discuss these things.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Fair enough.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

This is guidance for EXIM and throughput.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Understood. Sir, you also said that this year we're targeting 100% first mile, last mile. May I ask how much was it last financial year, F25?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

35%.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

35%. Okay. And sir, last one, bookkeeping, if I may. So in one of your answers, you alluded that India level, we handled about 23 million TEUs. May I ask similar number for last year?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. I can tell you. Last year, it was 21 million TEUs.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

21. Yeah. Thank you for answering my questions. And all the very best.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Sumit from Axis Capital. Please go ahead.

Good afternoon. Thanks for the opportunity, sir. My first question is, in your opening remarks, you mentioned the possibility of acceleration in EXIM volume growth in fourth quarter if DFC were to materialize up to JNPT. Given our long-held experience of delays here, another six-month delay can very well happen. So in that event, how would your 10% guidance for EXIM on handling change for the fiscal? Similarly, for domestic tank containers, MS breakthrough rate has been delaying. Let us say delays happen this year also. What would your guidance of domestic volume growth of 20% change to? So I'm just trying to evaluate the risk to your guidance.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, Sumit, I am a very optimistic person. So I don't know what forced you to ask this question. So in one of the TV interviews today morning, one of the anchors asked me that there is a news that DFC will be commissioned to Nhava Sheva by October. And you are telling December. So you are telling six months. Why not three months before December? You should ask me what should be your guidance then.

So sir, we had discussed in February, and you were of the opinion that it may get delayed up to June also. So June 26.

It will not get delayed. It will be on time.

On time. Okay. Sure. Sure. Okay. My second question is then, if you think about the reported EBITDA margin, I'm just trying to understand where the gap is coming. The reported EBITDA margin at standalone level is 21.4%. And this figure in FY24 was 22.4%. So I mean, I'm not including other income in EBITDA margin calculation. So I was just trying to understand when you say stable margins of 24%-25%, I mean, where are we differing in terms of the calculations on EBITDA margins?

See, as per my calculation for FY24, of course, we can check it separately. FY24, EBITDA margin was 25.5%. That is INR 2,300.69 crore rupees. For FY25, it is 24.9%. I take it 25%, which is INR 2,330.4 crore rupees.

Okay. I'll follow up with your team in that case. Thank you so much.

Yeah. That will be better. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Achal Lohade from Nuvama. Please go ahead.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Yeah. Thank you for the follow-up opportunity, sir. Sir, you did mention about the JNPT connection will drive the increase in volume. So in that connection, I wanted to check, A, in terms of what kind of cost reduction or price reduction one can look at. As you said, we'll try and maintain margin and pass on this. And B, what is the break-even lead distance here on the western DFC? If you could talk about these two aspects, please.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, at this moment, we have not worked out our tariff for JNPT. So I cannot tell you how much reduction we will make. But what was the second question? Break-even distance, I did not understand. What do you mean by break-even distance?

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Basically, earlier, we used to say that up to 500 kilometers road is more viable or economical than rail is. In the similar fashion, if for the Western DFC specifically, what would that number be? Because in that case, could the South Gujarat cargo can also move from road to rail on the DFC? I'm more curious to know because our alternative, if you could give us some sense about how much road cargo which is coming from NCR to JNPT.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

I don't have those numbers with me right now. But we used to say that for 500 km, rail faces a stiff competition from road, and only heavy cargo moves by rail. So this was the complete statement we used to make. But in DFC, that constraint will not be there because in DFC, even light cargo will move by rail. Because as I explained earlier, light cargo will move on upper deck, and we will reduce the rate substantially. So it is that light cargo is moving by road at the moment. It will also come on rail. So that constraint will be removed in DFC.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Okay. And one more question, just a bookkeeping question with respect to other expense. If I look at it has increased from INR 258 crores to INR 304 crores for full year FY25. Is there any one-off out here, sir? Because I see for the other expense, fourth quarter, the number looked very large compared to three to FY25.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

I will request my ED Finance. Maybe last quarter, maybe we may have made some adjustments and all.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Right. But for the full year also, sir, 17% looks very large given our cost optimizations in the past.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

No. Other expenses include a lot of expenses which are clubbed here. It has mainly expenses related to the maintenance of our depots and the equipment. There is some increase in the maintenance part of our equipment and this thing. There is some increase in our legal expenses as well. It's overall. There's other.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

No worry for reassuring, sir. There is no one-off. That's what I guess. Is that so?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. Yeah.

Shrinidhi Karlekar
Analyst, HSBC

Okay. Understood. Sir, if you could help us with the port mix for FY24 as well. You have given for FY25. FY24, if you could help us with that.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Sorry, I don't have it with me right now for FY24. It will be more or less the same.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Okay. Understood. And MT's cost for the fourth quarter, if you may, sir, for EXIM and domestic? Only for fourth quarter.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Which cost?

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

MT's.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

MT running cost?

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Yes, sir. MT running cost.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

MT running cost is EXIM is INR 31.6 crore. Domestic INR 65.8 crore. Total is INR 97.4 crore.

Achal Lohade
Analyst, Nuvama

Got it. Thank you so much, sir. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Koundinya from Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Yeah. Hi, sir. Thanks for the opportunity. Three questions from my end. Starting with, sir, on the EXIM side, you did allude to the fact that you spoke you are having some conversations with the shipping lines. So how is the—I mean, how did those shape up post the recent tariffs by the U.S. administration and then waiver on the China side? So what are the things with respect to here on the trade movement or the container availability side? And in that context, how should we look at the growth? I mean, first off, as I say, second off kind of scenario, keeping aside whatever happens on the DFC. That's one, and second question is relatively again on the EXIM side, how should we look at the margins from here?

Because if I were to look at it on an originating volume basis, we saw a sharp decline this quarter. So how should we look at it on a sustainable basis?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, as far as the tariffs and all are concerned, now you must be knowing there is a 90-day pause. So tariff, it is not having much impact on our business in EXIM. So more or less, it is stable now, import-exports. And for second quarter, but our originating volume has increased. You are saying it has come down?

No, sir. I'm looking at the margin, EBIT margin per TEU on an originating basis. So that's why sharp decline in this quarter.

Yeah. As I told you earlier to other person who was asking the question, this was the fourth quarter. This was the final quarter of the financial year. So whatever discounts and all rebates we have to give, everything we settled in fourth quarter. So you can see the perspective, whole perspective for the financial year. Because in fourth quarter, all these things will be there in our expenses. So it appears as if the margins are less in fourth quarter. But in EXIM, margins are maintained in every quarter. So there is no issue, no worries. No concern should be there on your part.

Okay. Sir, again, just a bookkeeping question on the operating expenses side, excluding the LLF. Throughout the year, we saw a sharp increase ahead of your volumes or revenue number. So just trying to understand what has changed here. I'm looking at excluding the LLF.

I don't have numbers with me. Such detailed analysis only you young bright people can do. We will have to work on it and get back to you.

Sure, sir. No worries. Thank you and all the best.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Disha from Ashika Institutional. Please go ahead.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

Thank you. So you had earlier mentioned that we are planning on commissioning four new terminals. So if you could just give some insights on it?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. These terminals are very critical terminals for us. One is a Salawas near Jodhpur, which will be catering to the Jodhpur area. It's very, very crucial. We will be able to run double-stack trains from Mundra Port to this terminal because right now, we are not running any double-stack train to Jodhpur. And when we run double-stack trains, we will divert a lot of business from road to rail. So as I told you, the business at new terminals, this is one of the potential areas where we will get more business. Second terminal is at Pathri near Haridwar. We don't have any presence in that area. And we have had talks with the various stakeholders there. So we are going to get a lot of domestic traffic there. Patanjali has a very big presence there. So this terminal will also give us very good growth.

Then we have targeted at Mandalgarh. Mandalgarh is also a very good place where we can tap the traffic of Bhilwara and other Kota nearby areas. And DOC traffic is also there. Stones are also there. Then fabric, this Bhilwara is there. So we have a lot of business potential at Mandalgarh also. And fourth is at Chunar. Chunar is near Varanasi. There also, there is a lot of carpet industry. So all these four terminals are very crucial for us for future.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

So we are already in talks of commissioning it. So I'm assuming you would have some deadline in mind if you could just mention it.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yes. Of course, we have deadlines, and our people are working. Right now, I don't have those deadlines with me, but they will be commissioned quite quickly.

Disha Giria
Analyst, Ashika Institutional

All right. All right, sir. Thank you.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Next question is from the line of Bhoomika Nair from DAM Capital . Please go ahead.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

I think this may be the last question. I think one hour is over.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Yes, sir. So just before we close out, just one or two small questions. One is on Varnama. December onwards, Varnama had started off. And if you can just talk about the benefits. Obviously, the double-stacking continues to go up. But has it helped us in terms of the margin profile, etc.? If you can talk a little bit about that.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, Varnama per se, we have not calculated separately. But definitely, it has helped us because we have done double-stacking for JNPT, but we have not revised our tariff. So whatever savings, whatever margins are there, we are keeping it with us. We have not shared it with our customers till now. Operationally, of course, benefit is being experienced by our customers, but commercial benefit is only with us. So numbers I don't have, but definitely, it is helping us to have good margins.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Sure. So the other question is in terms of the long-term agreements and volume discounts that shipping lines we are giving or corporate customers. So what percentage of our volumes is these kind of long-term contracts that we would have done in FY25? Or in fourth quarter, any kind of understanding?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

See, as far as EXIM is concerned, almost 20 shipping lines have signed the agreement. So this is a very big volume. They cover almost entire volume. So as far as domestic is concerned, we are in talks with big corporate customers like Vedanta. Already, we have signed agreement. Jindal also, we are going to sign very soon. Then we are in talk with JK Group also. Recently, I had a meeting with their MD. So efforts we are continuing. And Tata also, we are going to approach. SAIL also, Steel Authority we met. So they are also very keen to work with us. So we are going to sign agreements with all of these people very soon. And we'll get good volumes.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

But right now, as we speak today, sir, is it a very meaningful large amount of our volumes? Or largely, all this will kick in in the next year?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

No, no. It will kick in this year only. But in domestic, a lot of volume is fragmented. All is not there with corporate customers. Like the ceramic tiles business at Gujarat, I will give you one example. Ceramic tiles business at Gujarat is a fragmented business. There is no single person who controls the business. But cement plants, cement manufacturers with whom we are tying up, they are very big people. UltraTech, My Home Cement, they are well-known big corporate customers we have. So it's a mix of both.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Okay. So difficult to give a percentage of total volumes which would be more long-term oriented, per se.

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Correct. It is difficult to give a percentage.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

And would the realization drop also be because of these discounts that we are giving to these customers? So which is why we are on a reported basis seeing these discounts and a drop in realizations?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

Yeah. Definitely, in a competitive environment, we have to have some tools, marketing tools by which we attract our customers. So some discounts we have to give.

Bhoomika Nair
Director - Institutional Equities / Research, DAM Capital Advisors Limited

Understood, sir. Understood. Great, sir. This is helpful. Really appreciate you taking time out for all the investors and all the participants on the call and giving us an opportunity to host a call. Wish you all the very best. Any closing comments from your side, sir?

Sanjay Swarup
Chairman and Managing Director, Container Corporation of India Limited

No, no. Nothing. I just want to say that the company is having very strong fundamentals. And we are giving a very strong infrastructure push. And our board of directors was appreciative about the performance of our employees. And the board of directors also wanted to reward the shareholders, which they have done, by bonus shares and good dividends. So I hope we will be doing better in FY26. Thank you very much.

Operator

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

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