Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Gokaldas Exports Limited 3Q FY25 Earnings Conference Call. 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, please signal an operator by pressing * and then 0 on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Binay Sarda from EY. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you, Darwin. Good morning. Before we proceed to the call, let me remind you that the discussion may contain forward-looking statements that may involve known or unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors. It must be viewed in conjunction with the call's future result, performance, or achievement to differentiate such forward-looking statements. Mailed results and the presentation and the same are available. If you cannot receive them, you can write to us.
I'm sorry to interrupt, sir, but your line seems to be breaking up in between.
In case you cannot receive the same, you can write to us, and we'll be happy to send the same over to you. To take us through the results and answer your questions today, we have the top management of Gokaldas Exports Limited, represented by Mr. Sivaramakrishnan Ganapathi, Vice Chairman and Managing Director, and Mr. Sathyamurthy, Chief Financial Officer. We'll start the call with a brief overview of the quarter gone past and then conduct Q&A session. With that said, I'll now hand over the call to Mr. Siva. Over to you, sir.
Thank you, Binay. Good morning, everyone. Happy to have you at our Earnings Call for the Q3 of FY25. In the Q3 of this year, this financial year, Gokaldas Exports reported a significant jump in total income and EBITDA. We have crossed the INR 1,000 crore total income milestone for the first time this quarter. EBITDA margin improved sequentially, indicating a healthy performance. In this quarter, our total income grew by 97% year-on-year and 6% sequentially. The total income for the company, excluding acquired entities, grew by 19% year-on-year. Consolidated EBITDA is up 59% and PAT is up 50% year-on-year. This indicates the resilience of the company.
While there is improvement in the margin in acquired entities, overall margin has been slightly lower due to cost build-up in our Madhya Pradesh unit to meet the steep ramp-up of the facility based on new export orders executed in Q3 and subsequently in Q4 of FY25. U.S. retail apparel sales remain consistent, showing a 3% growth in calendar 2024. U.S. and E.U. apparel imports have picked up momentum since the second half of CY24 on the strength of lower inventory with retailers. We see business volume picking up with sustained stable performance of the company going forward. With this in mind, the company is planning to expand its production capacity with ongoing investments in three facilities. The first one is a new facility in Madhya Pradesh. This will increase the capacity by about 1,100 machines and is under construction.
The second one is an additional unit in Karnataka, which will add about 750 machines, which is also under construction. The third incremental unit is expected in Ranchi and leased premises . All these units are expected to come into operation at different points in FY26. The last factory that we set up in MP is producing at near full capacity utilization. The operating parameters there are now at par with other locations, providing the confidence to expand. The company's order book remains strong, securing robust near-term prospects. Fall/Winter order placements have been good, the production for which happens in Q1 and Q2. Early indications for Spring/Summer are also strong. All of our customers are seeing good business traction, and we are engaging with them. We are working on improving margins by better pricing and stronger operations management.
The longer-term outlook is favorable, supported by continued shift in global sourcing away from China, Vietnam, and Bangladesh, a trend towards supplier consolidation among efficient, well-capitalized players, and ongoing supply-side instabilities in various countries. Our company, Gokaldas Exports, is one of India's largest apparel makers, exporting to over 50 countries. We employ about 50,000 people, a large proportion of whom are women. This is a sector that employs over a crore of people, has the potential to industrialize small towns, create more jobs per unit investment as compared to any other industry, and has a high share of revenue dispersed as wages. In short, a highly desirable industry for social upliftment and for growth in the country. Thank you for listening, and I would be happy to address any questions that you have.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press * and 1 on the touch-tone telephone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press * and 2. Participants are requested to please use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We have the first question from the line of Manish Ostwal from Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited. Please go ahead.
Yes, sir. Thank you for the opportunity, and I have a couple of questions on the macro as well as the company specifics. So first question on your comment on the trade shift from China, Vietnam, and Bangladesh to India. So I just wanted to check with respect to Vietnam because what we are reading in the global newsprint, the China trade is moving more Vietnam than Bangladesh. So we are confused from that comment. And the second is, if I look at your slide number 16, which is showing the share of the various countries in export to the U.S., E.U., and the U.K., the Vietnam share actually increased, whereas India's share is quite stable over all the three regions. So can you explain your comment on how the trade is shifting?
What are the factors that will drive this shift much faster this time than the past? Thank you.
Sure. Thank you so much for your question. See, the costs in China and Vietnam are higher than India. If India is at $200 per month for manpower, for the workers, the cost in Vietnam is in excess of $300. That's point number one. And most of the players in Vietnam are people who have moved their operations from China to Vietnam. So with rising geopolitical tensions, trade sanctions being threatened, etc., there is a fear that it may impact Vietnam also because there is a lot of dependence in Vietnam for fabric from China. So brands take a cautious approach and start diversifying. So these are some of the trends we, in the very early days, and we may see some movement going forward to other regions just so that there is a reasonable amount of diversification there.
Even if you look at the trade balance between the U.S. and some of these countries, it is the trade imbalance with Vietnam is also very high. Vietnam enjoys a very large trade surplus with the U.S. So all of this indicates that there is a little bit of a risk building up, and some amount of diversification can happen, will happen. So there are options that open up for players like us. The other factor is that we, unlike most other apparel manufacturers, also specialize in outerwear manufacturing, which is typically a product which gets produced in China and Vietnam. So we have a natural advantage of taking over some of the businesses from that region as long as we are cost competitive. Of course, we still secure fabrics from Far East, from Taiwan, Korea, Vietnam, etc., but thanks to cost advantage, we are able to compete.
But we will see growing traction from business which were earlier denominated there, which will move to India. So that's as far as Vietnam is concerned, to your specific question. And as far as Bangladesh is concerned, there has been, of course, political instability there, which is resulting in some retailers, or rather many retailers, trying to diversify away from Bangladesh. Not a whole lot, but at least to reduce the dependence or reduce incremental businesses being placed there. And they are seeking other alternative options, and India is very much in the consideration. So overall, I think from a Gokaldas standpoint, we are seeing some tailwind on account of all of these.
Sure, sir. The second question on the overall outlook on the raw material prices. So our gross margin, one of the factors is the acquired entity has some impact of lower margins, and now we are ramping up that thing, and the new facility, there is some cost over there, but so on a medium-term perspective, where do you see our gross margin, EBITDA margin settling down? And your outlook on the yarn, whether the yarn price and the cotton will remain range-bound, and what is your sense on these two commodities?
There is a slight downward pressure on the commodity prices, so that will certainly help the business in terms of being able to reduce the overall price of garments thanks to raw material price reduction. Our business, if I look at only the garmenting business, which is the bulk of our business, is really a conversion business. So we really do not. Our raw material prices are really a pass-through. So if there is a price increase or price decrease, we tend to pass it back through to our customers. Of course, if there is a price decrease, then it allows us some incremental growth and maybe an ability to incrementally improve our margins, which we try to secure. So the way I see cotton prices going forward, it has dropped a bit.
It should remain, this being an agricultural product, there will be some degree of volatility, of course, but then I don't see a rapid spike in those prices, and I think the raw material prices should be range-bound, which helps the business from a longer-term perspective.
Sir, what is the volume growth in nine-month F25 compared to 9M F24 in our business?
One moment. 9M24—I mean, 9M24 is only Gokaldas Exports and FY24. And FY25 is inclusive of the acquired entity. We have been close to almost 50 million pieces in terms of the quantity. As against 9M last year, we have done, if I recall, 23 million.
Okay, sir. Thank you.
9M last year is INR 20.808, and 9M this year is INR 50.395 million.
Okay, sir. Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, to ask a question, you may please press star and one. We have the next question from the line of Dipen Shah, an individual investor. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. I had a couple of questions on the macro side. Sir, you mentioned about improving demand and restocking in the U.S. and Europe. Could you just give us some more color exactly on what actually is happening and whether the summer season, as you said, is picking up, and what should it bode for FY26? That's the first question.
Hello?
From the second half of calendar 2024, we are seeing U.S. imports growing. Now, the reason for that is that most of the brands have reached a reasonable level of inventory destocking. They all were carrying or saddled with excess inventory in 23, and they were continuously getting rid of that. U.S. retail sales have been growing at a consistent clip of about 3%, and with U.S. purchases being down in 23 as well as the first half of calendar 24, the inventory positions have reached an optimal level that now brands have started buying, so there has been a spurt of imports into U.S. across all retailers, and this is also playing out in Europe too, so that is aiding demand bounce back, and obviously, the supply-demand equation is being corrected.
We had a situation where there was an excess supply over demand till the middle of the 2024 calendar year, and now that's changing. This is also helping us from a business growth standpoint, apart from the fact that we are seeing some business movement from the Far East as well as Bangladesh to India. There is a double movement in favor of India, and we seem to get that tailwind in our business. I think this tailwind is here to sustain. If there are any tariff-related moves which the U.S. imposes, I don't see any discriminatory tariff relative to other countries over India. Overall, I think we should be fine, and we should see some incremental business growth from demand from those primary importing countries for us.
Okay. And sir, any geographical diversification or new markets which you are targeting post-acquisitions which we made last year?
See, we have enough opportunities to expand in other territories, so we are focusing a little more into Europe, though I would still say that the U.S. market is far more resilient and robust than the European market. We have increased our share into the U.K. by a few percentage points and are expanding our relationship there, but it's not that significant. The U.S. still continues to be dominant with over 75% of our exports into that region, while we continue to export to about 50 countries.
Right, sir. Thank you very much, and all the very best to you.
Thank you. Thank you. The next question is from the line of Bhavya Gandhi from the Dalal & Broacha Stock Broking. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Hope I'm audible.
Yes, you are.
Yeah. Yeah. So sir, I just wanted to understand on the macro level, globally, polyester is a major market, and India largely being a dominant cotton market. So how do we intend to grow in the polyester? Because I think we don't have a back-end ecosystem for polyester. So what is our thought process on this?
See, polyester is about 50% of global fiber, but as far as you say, about 25%-30%. So polyester is about double that of cotton. And India's strength is in cotton thanks to the raw material being available in the country. People like us who also export a lot of outerwear and sportswear tend to export a lot of garments which have got a polyester content in it. And the fact that we have operations in Africa where we enjoy a duty-free access to the U.S., and duties in synthetic being extraordinarily high in the U.S., we tend to have a little dominant product mix in favor of polyester. So most of the polyester or synthetic fabric that we buy as raw material comes from the Far East, from various sources, various countries.
And since we have some of those technical capabilities and cost-efficient production, we are seeing a reasonable amount of traction in those spaces. Both athleisure is growing. Some segments in outerwear also, we are seeing now some growth after a lull for some time, primarily because there was an excess inventory in the system for the last two years. So, we are now seeing that traction coming back too. So, we are seeing traction in the polyester segment, but fabric dependency is still on imports.
Right. Got it. And unit economics-wise, we are cost competitive, right, when it comes to polyester as a product?
Because we focus on highly technical products, yes, we are cost competitive.
Okay. Got it. And I just wanted to understand what would be the total capacity in terms of pieces post all this MP, Karnataka, Ranchi expansion?
Total capacity in pieces?
Pieces. Million pieces.
We really do not measure our capacity in pieces because it's very product-type dependent. Ranchi, we are expanding for knits in Madhya Pradesh, and Karnataka, we are expanding for wovens. In wovens, we do garments which may take anywhere from 18 minutes to 45-50 minutes. In the South, we make even garments which take 200 minutes to make. Really, denominating capacity in pieces is hard. Let me give you revenue-wise, because at the end of the day, that's probably what you're trying to look for. The incremental capacity in MP should net in about INR 175 crores when it is fully ramped up. I'm talking of the incremental new capacity. The one in Karnataka would yield about INR 125-130 crores, and the one in Ranchi would yield about INR 55-60 crores. Overall, I would say it's about INR 300 crores.
Got it. And have you got any firm commitment for the incremental capacity that we are putting in? I mean, any visibility from the customer side?
So at the moment, all our existing capacities are fully utilized, and there is a fair amount of demand traction that we are seeing. Some of these capacities will come up towards the start of Q3. So we are seeing a fair amount of demand traction building up in anticipation. So we don't foresee a big challenge. In fact, we have enough of inquiries, and we are turning down demand because we don't have enough capacity to serve. So I'm not so worried about the ability to fill up these incremental capacities.
Got it and on the cost level, can you guide on the EBITDA margins?
I'm sorry? Say that again.
On the consol level, can you guide on the EBITDA margins post the capacity expansion and the Atraco and Matrix merger, I mean, on a full-scale basis?
Keep in mind that whenever new capacity comes for a year, year and a half, the incremental capacities have a tendency to depress the earnings. In fact, our Madhya Pradesh unit had a tendency of reducing our EBITDA margin because it was on a serious ramp-up. We have now reached a manpower count of almost 2,200 there. And while we were ramping them up, training them, etc., we had far more people in training than we had people in production, so causing an overall cost being in excess of revenue. So it takes a while before that normalizes. So keeping all of this in mind, we are still aiming for a percent improvement in EBITDA margin going forward at the consolidated level in the year ahead, year, year and a half ahead.
Got it. And just wanted to understand what would be the total depreciation for the next two years, if you can provide some number on that?
On the current year, it is about INR 125 crores. There's got two components. One is the India's depreciation and regular depreciation. Going forward for FY26 and FY27, the depreciation will increase by almost around INR 15-17 crores on an average you can take yearly.
Got it. Got it. And if I can squeeze in one more question, just wanted to understand on the Japanese FTA, are we trying to tap into any of the Japanese customers? I believe the stickiness is much higher on the Japanese side. If you can throw some light on that as well.
So we do have inquiries from that region, but at the moment, since our capacities are full, we are unable to open up any capacity for a new customer. So that's one of the reasons why we have not been able to bring in any customer from other regions for now.
Got it. Got it. Are we trying Australia or any other region for that matter? Because I believe, again, we've signed an FTA with Australia as well.
Not really, because the volumes there aren't that large. And there are a few customers where the pricing may be very sharp. So we are not that aggressively looking at that region.
Got it. Fair enough. That's it from mine. Thank you so much.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sundar from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.
Hello, sir. Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity. The first question is on the margins of the acquired entities. So there's been a remarkable turnaround from what we had last quarter to this quarter. So can we assume that all the problems that we had in Atraco are behind us? And what is the impact of that 10% shilling position to value add in terms of margins?
So I wouldn't say everything is behind us. It's a work in progress. And I think this work in progress will continue into Q4 as well, and maybe even early Q1. The way we are combating that 10% shilling appreciation is by focusing on operational improvements. So there's a considerable movement in operational efficiencies in our African units, thanks to good work done by the team there. And secondly, there has also been some amount of price increases that we managed to secure on the basis of an appreciating shilling. So this has helped us. I would say that some of these newer orders, which are at better pricing, actually came in from Q1. So in Q4, there is some blended impact. So the real benefits will start flowing in the next financial year.
In the meanwhile, we are trying to explore all avenues to improve the performance of that unit.
I'm coming back to this because you had earlier guided that 10% is a sort of margin that we should look for Atraco. I believe, given the blended number that you've disclosed, you're far above that particular number. So do you want to revise the guidance as to what we can look in terms of margins for the acquired entities?
So I would say Atraco, if I get about 10% EBITDA margin in the next year, I will be happy. We are working towards that, for sure, and we will hopefully even achieve it. For the other unit of Matrix, I think they will be at par or a notch above Gokaldas Exports, primarily because we are not adding too much of new capacities there. So there is no drag on the P&L on account of new capacities in that entity.
So if we can just help with the current quarter split between Atraco and Matrix and ballpark number in terms of margins?
I think Matrix is at about 40-odd%, and Atraco is proportionately I think 7% or thereabouts.
Right. So Atraco 10% movements would be the trigger by Q1 is what we can expect?
We're trying. I don't know whether it will be by Q1 or by Q2, but the effort is gone. Again, as I said, incremental orders will slowly nudge up the pricing and hence the margins. It takes time to build up. Overnight, we may not be able to move that much. Maybe if not Q1, by Q2, we are trying to do that.
But my assumption is that by now, all the order booking is being done by you only. So there's no erstwhile orders to be executed as of today.
That is by and large correct. Though in Africa, we tend to book a little longer-term orders, and there are repeat orders, etc. So sometimes you may not be able to secure all the price increases in one go. But you're right. All the incremental orders are being secured by us now.
Perfect. So just coming back to the standard business here, you indicated that there is some cost built up on account of Madhya Pradesh. So are we referring this to phase II build-up that we're trying to do for that INR 175 crores incremental revenues next year? Or is it referring to the phase I cost that we didn't cut?
phase I cost, because what happened was we suddenly shot up to full capacity utilization in phase I, and bulk of that capacity ramp-up happened in Q3. So we went to full complement of workforce. Now the entire unit is working chock-a-block from a capacity utilization standpoint. So that massive ramp-up, which we did in Q3, also caused a faster cost increase than revenue realization.
But on a standalone basis, if we were to just look at MP on a standalone basis, what would be the standalone margins of that unit, sir?
Standalone margin which we will achieve in the future or standalone margin in Q3?
What is the potential of that MP unit, given that that is also a PLI-approved unit?
My assessment is at least 2.5%-3% over the Gokaldas standalone achievement.
Yeah. But this should be after phase II also stabilizes.
That's correct. Because while phase I will stabilize starting Q1 onward, I think phase II will start having that impact. That phase II, we are expecting the construction to be over in May. So somewhere in June, July, we will start the manpower ramp-up.
So the incremental training, you would have already started for phase II?
We will be starting not now. We'll be starting soon. I mean, we'll be starting closer to end of Q1.
Right. Perfect. And the Ranchi unit that you had mentioned will be under Matrix, or is it under Gokaldas standalone?
So now, the integration of Matrix is strongly underway, operational integration, I'm saying. So there is hardly any difference between Matrix and Gokaldas. Yeah. As far as the legal entity is concerned, it will be under the Matrix subsidiary, the expansion in Ranchi.
Right. Fair enough. And one last question here is that I presume that you gave up the margin or the potential margins of MP without the inclusion of PLI or the DBT that we were entitled to. Now, what is the status update on both of that, sir?
MP PLI. So the PLI is dependent on a product type. And the product type that we are currently manufacturing in MP does not qualify for PLI. PLI is restricted only to 40 specific HS codes. And those HS codes, the order flow into India is not very high. So we are really, at the end of the day, PLI is something where if you're able to secure, it's great. But our focus is to make sure that the business runs with or without PLI, right?
On the DBT part, sir?
DBT?
The direct benefit transfer that you had promised in the state government in Madhya Pradesh?
That's continuing. So that is available in MP.
Okay. So that number that started flowing is what I'm trying to understand.
In terms of accounting, we are taking. We were told by the MP government that it will start going strongly for the forthcoming financial year, and we should start seeing that. We are on track for it.
All right. So perfect. But can there be a lever to margin beyond the 250 basis points because of DBT coming through, or is it already accounted for?
So I think there is a lever to margin improving over that 250 basis points. Yes, there is.
Perfect. And one last one, if I may squeeze as to the current status on BRFL, given the additional investment or the stake that you're beginning to procure, what is the status now? Is that are we still going to go with that INR 250 crore investment, or where are we in that particular journey, sir?
Till this quarter, that is quarter ending December, we have invested 110 crores in BRFL, BTPL. And subsequently, we have invested another 65 crores. So it amounts to about 175 crores of investment till date. The unit is currently from nearly no orders. It has reached about 40%-45% capacity utilization. Incrementally, we will not be able to pull up the capacity utilization until all the CapEx which are underway are seen through to its fruition. So there is a lot of work going on, which will continue through till April in terms of de-bottlenecking capacity, repairs of machines, upgrade of the machines, etc., etc. So in that sense, we have taken up the capacity utilization pretty quickly and handsomely. So obviously, this meant that the losses have started coming down. There's been significant improvement in production quality also. So for example, reprocess rates have come down.
The quality of production has started improving. We are starting to nominate this mill with various brands, so a lot of activities are going on as we speak, and it's been only since July that we took over, and realistically, we took when we say took over, we started engaging with it, so realistically, the activity started only in August, so the progress that we have made in the last six months has been pretty significant, and that gives us the confidence and the encouragement to seriously consider merging this asset with us going forward at the opportune time.
Does the timeline change from what we had initially indicated in terms of when this entity would be consolidated within this timeline?
No. I think at the moment, the thought process is to initiate this sometime in the month of June 2025 and go through an NCLT process for merger, and hopefully, that will take another nine months or 12 months, depending on how long that process takes.
Sorry to come back into this, but what would be the total quantum of money that would be required from here to June 2025 for the acquisition of this entire entity? Beyond the 175 crores?
Apart from the INR 175 crores, I think it will be about we had earlier on indicated about INR 588 crores to acquire 100% of the asset. So it will be that amount adjusted for certain working capital. And there are some financial terms and conditions in the agreement. So that's the amount that will be required as and when this event gets triggered.
Perfect. Sure. So thank you and all the best, sir.
You're welcome.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Prerna Jhunjhunwala from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity. So just taking forward BRFL discussion only, one last question on that front. At INR 175 crores, our stake is 13%. Is my understanding correct?
INR 175 crore is invested only through OCD. So this is an investment into BTPL for its CapEx plans for performance improvement and so on and so forth, working capital, some amount of loss funding, etc. So it's only that. The 13% stake is in addition when we intend to buy some shareholders out in a process to kickstart the consolidation of that entity with us.
Okay. So INR 175 crore doesn't include the 13% purchase cash consideration that you have mentioned in the last release.
That is correct.
Okay. Understood. So second question on Atraco, is any expansion in Atraco as well?
As we speak, the 500 machine expansion has been initiated, and we have spent about INR 35 crore for that.
What will be the revenue potential for the same?
The revenue potential will be about, in my opinion, about INR 125-130 crores.
Okay. And I missed the Ranchi machine number. Can you just help me with that as well?
So Ranchi, it's a leased facility. We have taken a 200 machine facility, but it will work in two shifts. So equivalent, it is 400 machines.
Understood. So sir, if I total your total revenue would be around INR 4,000 crores approx, annualizing the nine months numbers. And your total revenue potential that is getting added 300 plus 100 for Atraco, 130, so around INR 500 crores. So in the next two years, should we assume this INR 500 crores additional revenue, or how it should flow? And how will growth pan out for the company to utilize the benefit from shift in supply chain? Shouldn't we be growing a little higher growth rate? I mean, if I'm missing anything somewhere, you can clarify. Thank you.
Sure. So these are units and expansions which are underway as we speak. This doesn't stop us from adding more capacity as we go along. So at any point in time, we are planning a lot of incremental capacities as well. This is point number one. So in the next two years, we'll be adding more factories. And we're not going to stop at the factories that are work in progress as we speak. Secondly, the existing units also do get de-bottlenecked, and we are continuously investing in automation and productivity improvement. So a 3% improvement in existing units per annum itself on a, let's say, a 4,000 crores revenue yields additional how much? About 120 crores, right?
So those kinds of growth will also happen. And as I said, we will also look at newer facilities for growth.
Okay. So should 10% plus growth rate, 10%-15%, should be a decent assumption for assuming over a longer term, like two to three years timeframe, medium-term period?
I think it's a very decent assumption. I would say the top end of that range will be a more reasonable, decent assumption.
Oh, that's great. And consolidated margins should be around 12% on expanded capacities?
That is correct. Though we are trying to improve our margins also as we speak. As I said, some of these growth in newer regions do tend to take longer before it stabilizes as we don't get access to trained manpower. So we have to work harder to train them and bring them up to speed in terms of productivity and quality, etc. But now that we have achieved it, incremental factories in some of these newer regions like Madhya Pradesh and all will reach productivity and profitability sooner. So yeah, despite all of that, in the first year, there will be a negative impact of new capacities. But we are looking to offset that and improve the EBITDA margin in the coming financial year.
Okay, so thank you and all the best, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Heet Vora from Guardian Capital Partners. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good morning and congratulations on the set of numbers. I just had one question, and that's with respect to the tariffs. If we are going to see an increase in tariffs, would Atraco be benefiting given it goes tax-free to the U.S.?
So we don't know what is happening with tariff, right? There is so much of news coming from the United States that it's hard to keep up. One doesn't know what exactly are the tariffs planned. But the feeling one gets is that Africa maybe spared tariffs, and currently, it enjoys an AGOA benefit of zero tariffs. So unless for some strange reason it's pulled out, which I don't see any reason, and there is no competitive situation between U.S. and African countries, nor do they enjoy trade surplus. So we don't believe that will change. And if there is a tariff increase from the regular exporting nation, then the tariff delta will widen, which will only make Africa more attractive. And that's one of the reasons why customers who are here too also not very keen on Africa.
So there are some customers who are also talking about it, saying that maybe we should explore. At least we are having some conversations around it. So I feel that it's going to be beneficial for us from an African standpoint in the longer run if tariff goes up in other regions.
Got it. That was it. Thank you so much.
Welcome.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Mithun Aswath from Kiva Advisors. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. I think you've answered a lot of the questions I had. You mentioned about 15% kind of overall top line growth. I just wanted to understand you embarked on M&A as a strategy to grow. In the next couple of years, will you continue on that path? Are you seeing more opportunities to consolidate? That was the first question. And the second question was more on the BRFL acquisition. How would that kind of change the contours for you in terms of size because utilization is still low? What kind of revenues and profitability could that add to the company?
So would we look at acquisition? Probably in the short term, no. In the long term, yes. We are open to growth in any form, and again, we will not acquire a company just to bulk up or add revenue. Our intention is to acquire to get access to a low-cost geography, access to a new customer, or access to a new product type, and it has to make strategic sense in addition to simply a revenue adder, so that's the strategy, but in the short term, we are not looking at an acquisition. We want to consolidate what we have. Remember, we have only taken up some of these acquisitions nine months ago, and there is tons of work required to be done to bring them to where we would like to see them.
So next year also will be consumed in bringing those units up to speed with Gokaldas's operation. So we won't be indulging in any acquisitions in the meanwhile. That's point number one. As your next question, work on BTPL or the fabric unit. See, the fabric unit is strategic. It helps us secure raw materials. It helps us turn things around much faster for our customers from a lead time standpoint and also improves our negotiating position with brands because the number of fabric mills are far fewer than the number of garment companies. So at the end of the day, if you do control fabric, you do have a better handle over specific orders and product types. So with all of that in mind, we went acquiring this asset.
This asset also has a great reputation from a technical capability standpoint, and we need to now bring back that capability to the customer, which is what the work in progress is. So the impact of BTPL, if I look at it on a standalone basis, its peak revenue could be about INR 1,500 crores. But then again, a lot of it could be bought internally. So once it is merged, some of those revenues will get knocked off in consolidation. But then obviously, it may have an EBITDA improvement benefit.
Right. So what kind of impact could it have on the EBITDA from FY27?
So if I look at it as a standalone basis, the EBITDA of this unit should be about 12%-14% going forward. So if it is more or less in line with the garment EBITDA, then again, if the revenue gets knocked off, then obviously there will be some sort of an EBITDA benefit which you can do your math.
Sure. Thank you.
But then I don't see this consolidating before FY26. So effectively, if at all it happens, it happens in FY27 onwards.
Correct. FY27 is what I was asking.
Thank you. Participants who wish to ask questions, may please press * and 1 . We have the next question from the line of Raman KV from Sequent Investments . Please go ahead.
Hello. Can you hear me?
Yes, sir.
Sir, can you again explain the cost buildup in the MP unit which led to lower margins, that particular part of it?
Can you repeat the question? Can you? You're asking the cost buildup in MP unit?
Yeah, yeah, yeah. You said there was a cost buildup in the MP unit which led to lower margins. Can you explain that particular part?
So the point here is that in the Q3 , we started adding people. We almost added about 1,200 people in the Q3 in MP. So now the manpower count has reached about 2,200 people. So most of them were under training during that period. And in the initial phase of production also, since they are trainees who are in the production line, their productivity will be low. So we incur the full complement of labor costs through training as well as early production. And then the corresponding revenue doesn't materialize because it comes to the phase lag. So our incremental cost was about INR 3-4 crores on account of all of this. And it has not manifested in proportionate revenue. So that was the point I was referring to.
Okay. Okay.
Thank you, sir.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Monish Ghodke from HDFC Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, what would be the share of outerwear on an annualized basis in the revenue of each entity that is Gokaldas, Matrix, and Atraco?
So outerwear on a nine-month basis for Gokaldas was about.
So annualized basis would be how much?
Yeah. I mean, it would be around a similar percentage, 35% maybe.
Okay.
Okay? Matrix and Atraco is very less. It would be like low single digit.
Okay, so sir, this margin expansion which we have got in acquired entities of 11.3% since Q3 and Q4 are generally summer-heavy, do you expect this to continue in Q1, Q2 as well, or there will be some reduction?
There could be some reduction. Particularly, Matrix is spring-summer-heavy, so there could be some reduction in Q1 and Q2. But the aim is to offset that somehow by further improvement in Atraco as well. So there's a lot of countervailing forces as well, so we'll try our best.
Okay. And sir, one more question. So in this budget, there was an increase in duty in knit fabric imports. Does it impact us in any way?
No. Most of the knit fabric that we use, we buy domestically, and even let us say we buy fabric for export manufacturing, we buy it under advanced license, so we don't pay duty on those, so we will secure the raw material at mill duty.
Okay. Okay. Thank you, sir.
Thank you. Participants who wish to ask questions, may please press * and 1 at this time. We have the next question from the line of Mohnish Shehgal, an individual investor. Please go ahead.
Hi sir. Thanks for taking my question. Just wanted to understand just purely from a production perspective, Q4 production, as you said, is fully utilized. What would be the production in terms of revenue? And also, if you could give an update on the knitted unit that we had commercialized last year, that would be good, sir.
So we don't give specific numbers of revenue going forward. So suffice to say that even Q3 was working at full capacity utilization. Of course, what happens in Q3 is that towards the end of December, a lot of shipments get bunched up. They don't move out because of work congestion and other things. So typically, some of those revenues tend to spill over. But currently, if you look at revenue standpoint, we are reaching that full capacity utilization across our units. And incremental units will come and de-bottleneck like that and provide additional growth opportunities. As far as the knit fabric unit is concerned, the knit fabric unit is producing. We are getting nominations from quite a few customers. In fact, at the moment, we have two or three customers who have approved that unit for fabric sourcing. We will be ramping it up through Q4 and Q1.
I feel that it will also reach our full capacity utilization somewhere in Q2.
What would be the output there, sir, in terms of revenue? Of course, it will be sourced internally, the fabric, but should add to EBITDA there, right?
Exactly. So output will be about 400 tons a month. That is the expected output. And its revenue will be annually about INR 150-200 crores.
Okay. Sir, you had a stated vision of moving towards a $1 billion revenue, say, down the line in three or four years. What do you feel now, standing where we are, on that vision?
So I think that vision, at the end of the day, that vision is quite attainable. The demand side, I don't see that as a bottleneck at all. There is enough opportunity coming India's way, and there are many customers who are increasingly trying to source more from India. So as long as we can find lower-cost manufacturing locations within India and are able to produce it at a high productivity, achieving that target should not be a problem.
Any stated objective you have on this front? How much time do you want to achieve this?
Two months, I would say, but it will take a few years for sure.
Okay. And lastly, sir, do you expect Q4 margins now, given you have the bookings, to be better than Q3, given the full ramp-up in MP has happened? And it's a seasonally good period for all the acquired entities and such?
Yeah. So Q4 is seasonally good. Directionally, it should happen. And again, let's not speculate on those margin numbers. But yeah, directionally, we will be going in that trajectory.
Lastly, sir, how will INR depreciation help going forward?
So INR depreciation will not benefit in the immediate near future for us, primarily because we hedge most of our near-term receivables. So today, all the way up to Q1 and even partially to Q2, we have hedged all our receivables at old rates. But INR depreciation in the longer run always helps us because it allows us some flexibility to absorb costs and offset some of the inflationary trends on the cost side of the company. So it augurs well for next quarter, and it will augur well for us.
Thank you, sir.
Sure.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vijay Jitendra Shah from RTL Investments. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity and congratulations on the set of numbers. I have two questions. One, we read a lot of news items saying that buyers in the US were increasing their purchases from across the world on account of expected tariffs. So I just want to understand that we have seen strong growth in Gokaldas. Is there an element of preponement of purchase and which should reverse in the due course of time? That's question number one. And question number two is on the Bombay Rayon. Once it is fully operational and once you have done all the CapEx, will it reduce your dependence on imports from Southeast Asia?
Okay. So regarding the first question, is your question on how is tariff going to play? I could not fully understand your question, the first question. I did understand your second one, and I can answer that subsequently. Can you restate the first question?
See, there was expectation that tariffs will come. So to avoid tariffs, there was a lot of news items saying that for buyers in the U.S., U.S. is actually pre-pulling all the imports. So building the inventory, so at least for a few months, they are kind of protected from the tariff which probably Trump could announce. So during the December quarter, probably Q2 also, are you seeing that some of your buyers have actually pre-pulled the purchases or the growth which you have seen is normal?
See, the buying is very seasonal. So if I start advancing too much of my buy, these are all short-term play which you can do for 15 days, 20 days. But every three months, we are buying products. The American customers, the European customers buy products which are very specific to a particular season. So they will not go, and production also happens for that season. So they are not going to go buy excess and then hold the inventory over one year and all of that. So I'm not seeing much of that happen out of here. And also, the worry on tariff is more on the Far East. So there may have been some degree of expediting of deliveries from China, maybe even Vietnam, and all of that. But then as far as India's denominator sourcing is concerned, we have not seen so much of that.
Got it.
As far as your second question on BTPL becoming an import substitute for us, the answer is no. Most of BTPL will still work on domestic fibers, and it will become a substitute for domestic mills, but not really a substitute for imported fabrics. So synthetics, etc., will still continue to be dependent on imports.
Got it. Got it. Thanks a lot and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Avinash Nahata from Parami Financial Services. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Am I audible?
Yes, you are.
Okay. So the first question pertains to across our facilities, everything put together. So where is an opportunity wherein we can add additional shift and increase our production in terms of, I mean, at an aggregate level? And what is the practical difficulties you face when you move from shift one to shift two, if you can speak about it?
All the units except our Ranchi unit currently works on one-shift operations. Particularly, bulk of our units are in the south. Here, getting manpower for an odd shift is extremely difficult simply because people are not available to work those late-night shifts. You have to transport women back to their homes. We don't work on a model where people are housed in the factory campuses or there are no dormitories that we build, etc. We will have to pick up and drop from their homes, which all adds to layers of complexity. We've not been very successful at managing multi-shift operations. However, in Ranchi, we have done that. Of course, it's a smaller unit, and we have done that successfully. In Bhopal, the first-shift operations work very early hours, giving us an opportunity to put in a second shift as and when we reach that phase.
We have reached a full capacity utilization in unit one now. So we will experiment with the second shift, and we will see how the labor market responds to that going forward. But there is a theoretical opportunity there to explore second shift. But in most of our factories, it is not a possibility.
Okay. And if you can provide the, in absolute terms, women working at our facilities?
It's about 78%-80% of our labor force is women. Out of 55,000, almost 40,000 are women employees.
Okay, and one more data point in terms of permanent employee and which are?
All are permanent.
Sorry?
All are permanent.
Okay. Thanks a lot and all the very best.
Thank you.
Thank you. We have no further questions, ladies and gentlemen. I would now like to hand the conference over to the management for closing comments. Over to you, sir.
Thank you so much for asking the questions and giving us an opportunity to explain our position. We continue to focus on growth, and with that intention, we are working with the acquired entities where we have backward integrated. We are setting up new capacities. We are also working with many of our customers to expand our relationships. We are seeing most of our customers experiencing reasonable growth, and they are doing well, which would translate to incremental business if we continue to execute well for them. For us, execution is the key mantra, and if we do execute well, obviously, business will come in a B2B business. We are focused on margin improvement along with revenue growth, and we will continue to focus that.
As newer capacities come on board, it will have a downward pressure on margins, but we intend to offset that and right-size the growth metrics so that we are able to expand and seek improvements in EBITDA margins. We continue to be very focused on all the operational details of the business, and hopefully, we will continue our growth journey. Thank you so much.
Thank you. On behalf of Gokaldas Exports Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you all for joining us. You may now disconnect your lines.