Ladies and gentlemen, good day. Welcome to the Raymond Limited Q3 FY 2026 Earnings Conference Call, hosted by Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Brokers 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 Mr. Manish Valecha from Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Brokers Limited. Thank you, and over to you.
Thank you. I would like to welcome all the participants into Q2 FY 2026 and nine-month FY 2026 Conference Call of Raymond Limited. Today, we have experts from the senior management of Raymond Limited: Mr. S. L. Pokharna, who is the President, Corporate Commercial, he’s a special invitee, Mr. Rakesh Tiwari , Group Chief Financial Officer; Mr. Gautam Maini, MD, Engineering Business; Mr. Naveen Sharma, CFO, Engineering Business; and Mr. Sunny Dias, Head of Investor Relations. Without taking further time, I would like to hand over the call to Mr. Gautam Maini. Over to you, Gautam.
Thank you, Manish. Good evening, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our Q3 FY 2026 Results Conference Call. On behalf of the entire management team, I would like to take a moment to wish you all a very happy Republic Day. We hope you had a meaningful and inspiring celebration. May the spirit of unity and patriotism continue to guide us as we work towards a brighter and more prosperous future. I hope everyone can hear us. I can hear a sort of a buzz in the background, so I hope I'm audible. Can you just confirm that?
Yes, sir.
Yeah. There's a lot of buzz in the background, so I just hope I'm audible. That's all. Wishing you and your families continued peace, progress, and pride in our great nation. Jai Hind. I hope everyone has had an opportunity to go through our financial results and investor presentation, which have been uploaded on the stock exchanges as well as on the company's website. Moving ahead, let me start by talking about the broader macroeconomic landscape that has influenced our performance and strategic decisions. India's economy continued to demonstrate resilience in Q3 of FY 2026, with GDP growth now estimated at 7.3% for the full fiscal year, up from earlier projections of 6.8%. This upward revision reflects a better-than-expected outturn in the third quarter, driven by robust domestic consumption, structural policy reforms, and strong industrial activity.
The manufacturing PMI remained elevated, averaging around 56.9, indicating sustained expansion in factory output and healthy demand conditions. The automotive sector posted a record-setting quarter with festive season tailwinds. GFC 2.0 benefits and the rural economy refueling double-digit growth in two-wheelers, commercial vehicles, and a sharp rebound in passenger vehicles. Export momentum remained strong, particularly in three-wheelers and passenger vehicles, despite ongoing challenges from U.S. tariffs. The aerospace sector also maintained its growth trajectory, supported by defense-led demand, localization efforts, and increased sourcing from Indian suppliers by global OEMs such as Airbus and Boeing. These OEMs ramped up aircraft deliveries amid easing of supply chain constraints. While inflationary pressures in key materials like Inconel persisted, geopolitical tensions added uncertainty, India's aerospace and manufacturing base remained stable and increasingly strategic.
Overall, Q3 FY 2026 underscored India's growing role in global supply chains and its emergence as a hub for precision manufacturing and export-led growth. We come to the performance. Raymond Limited continued its growth momentum, delivering and delivered a robust quarterly performance, reporting a total income of INR 580 crores, reflecting an 18% increase compared to the same quarter of the previous year, while EBITDA stood at INR 83 crores and an EBITDA margin of 14.3% in Q3 FY 2026, with a total income of INR 493 crores in Q3 FY 2025, delivering an EBITDA of INR 65 crores, with an EBITDA margin of 13.3% in Q3 of FY 2025. Building on previous momentum, our performance this quarter continues to be anchored by aerospace and defense and precision technology and auto components divisions. This reflects the deepening integration of Indian suppliers into the global high-tech values supply chain.
We are seeing a sustained trend of domestic vendors transitioning into production of sophisticated subsystems and complex precision components, which has maintained a robust order pipeline for OEM, Tier 1, and Tier 2 export partners. During the nine-month period, total income stood at INR 1,699 crores in nine months FY 2026, which is a 13% year-on-year growth from INR 1,504 crores in the nine months of FY 2025. EBITDA stood at INR 250 crores in nine months of FY 2026, compared to INR 237 crores in nine months of FY 2025. The EBITDA margins stood at 14.7% in the nine months of FY 2026 versus 15.8% in nine months of FY 2025. While operational performance remains strong, EBITDA margins face temporary pressure due to a reduction in non-operating income. Going forward, we continue to remain optimistic about the future growth trajectory, given our expansion strategy in new product categories and new geographies.
Let's come to the segmental performance, and we'll take the aerospace business first, which is short formed as JKMGAL, which is JK Maini Global Aerospace Limited. At the segment level, the aerospace and defense business reported robust performance, with a revenue of INR 105 crores, indicating a 48.9% year-on-year growth, an EBITDA of INR 19 crores, indicating a 39.4% year-on-year growth, and an EBITDA margin of 18.6% in Q3 of FY 2026 versus revenue of INR 70 crores and an EBITDA of INR 14 crores, with an EBITDA margin of 19.8% in Q3 FY 2025.
In the nine months of FY 2026, this segment generated INR 273 crores in revenue, up 33.6% year-on-year growth from INR 204 crores in the nine months of FY 2025. EBITDA also grew by 34.2% year-on-year, reaching INR 57 crores compared to INR 43 crores in nine months of FY 2025. The EBITDA margin stood at 20.9% in nine months FY 2026 versus 20.8% in nine months FY 2025. This performance was anchored by two strategic factors, which increased production requirements from a leading OEM and Tier 1 and the product portfolio expansion. The current demand environment remains favorable, providing a stable foundation for future expansion.
This is evidenced by a steady increase in the request for quotations and active exploration of new collaborative ventures with global partners. While internal growth indicators remain strong, the near-term outlook is currently influenced by external macroeconomic factors, specifically global trade pressures stemming from U.S. tariffs. These have introduced some logistical complexities and result in some temporary scheduling delays across the industry. Let's go on to the precision technology and auto components business, which is short form JKMPTL and stands for JK Maini Precision Technology Limited.
At the segment level here, the precision technology and automotive components reported a revenue of INR 417 crores, which is up 14.9% year-on-year growth, with an EBITDA of INR 57 crores, with a growth of 50.6% year-on-year growth, and an EBITDA margin of 13.7% in Q3 FY 2026 versus revenue of INR 363 crores, with an EBITDA of INR 38 crores, and an EBITDA margin of 10.4% in Q3 FY 2025. In the nine months FY 2026, this segment generated INR 1,225 crores in revenue, up 12.2% year-on-year growth from INR 1,091 crores in nine months of FY 2025. EBITDA also grew by 37.8% year-on-year, reaching INR 156 crores compared to INR 113 crores in nine months of FY 2025. The EBITDA margin stood at 12.7% in the nine months of FY 2026, compared with 10.4% in the nine months of FY 2025.
The EBITDA margin improvement was on account of higher sales volumes, favorable product mix, and includes a one-time gain of INR 13 crore from the land sale in Q2 of FY 2026. We continue with our strategy to expand into new international geographies and industrial sectors. We are observing business momentum across domestic and international markets, supported by China Plus One strategy, integration synergies, and focused operational efficiencies across all segments. Let's talk about the debt and cash position at Raymond Limited. We continue to remain a debt-free business with a net cash surplus of INR 214 crore in December 2025. Looking ahead, Raymond is well-positioned to sustain its growth trajectory in Q4 of FY 2026, building on the strong foundation laid in previous quarters. We anticipate continued momentum in global customer onboarding, with several strategic programs progressing from RFQ to contract finalization.
Successful audit outcomes, consistent FAI, which is the new product development approvals, have reinforced Raymond's reputation as a reliable and quality-driven partner in the aerospace and precision engineering sectors. To meet rising international demand, Raymond is actively expanding its manufacturing footprint. The commissioning of advanced machinery, including high-precision multi-access machines like the Grob machines, is enhancing production capability and enabling the company to take on more complex, high-value projects. These investments are also supporting faster turnaround times and improved quality assurance, critical for aerospace and defense customers. The business is witnessing a surge in RFQ activity, particularly in aero engines, landing gears, and structural component segments. This is complemented by growing interest from global OEMs and Tier 1 suppliers who are increasingly looking to India for supply chain diversification.
Raymond is capitalizing on this trend by entering multi-year strategic supplier agreements that go beyond build-to-print, encompassing co-design and value engineering collaborations. With a strong order pipeline, robust operational readiness, and a clear focus on innovation and customer engagement, Raymond is poised for a strong finish to FY 2026. The company remains committed to scaling exports, deepening global partnerships, and reinforcing its position as a trusted precision manufacturing hub. Thank you again for joining our call, and we'll be happy to take your questions. We may now open the line for questions. Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and 1 on the touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and 2. Participants, you are requested to use the handset while asking a question.
Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue is ready. The first question is from the line of Balasubramanian from Arihant Capital. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, sir. Thank you so much for the opportunities. Sir, my first question. Our 60% of aerospace business comes from Europe, and 30% of auto and precision technologies business comes from Europe. I think currently, Europe and India are some of the deals are in advanced stages. They are talking about a matter of all trade deals. So I just want to understand how we are benefiting for upcoming deals.
Yeah, sure. So we are in strategic, obviously, we can't take names, but we are in strategic discussions with several of our customers in different spheres. We are leading on the engine segment area, so we have several customers there we are discussing with. We're looking at large strategic play with them. But obviously, aerospace is a very long-term business, with agreements ranging from 5 years to 10-year contracts. These also take a long time to rectify. So there's a lot in the pipeline, but we can see that the pipeline has increased, the number of discussions have increased, and therefore, we see a good strategy ahead of us to conclude long-term deals.
Okay, sir. So I need to understand about our expansion as far as working capital side. I think we are talking about the INR 100 crore annual CapEx for aerospace, as well as INR 100 crore annual CapEx for auto and precision technologies. How the funds will be deployed, especially capacity expansion or replacement or capability enhancements. How do you understand the expansion side? And if you could elaborate more on working capital side for aerospace and auto and precision technologies in detail.
Yeah, I mean, in the end, you have a lot of opportunity, and the investments obviously depend on the opportunities that you see. So it is always going to be a combination of investments. It's never going to be one. One will be to enhance our future ability to get more complex parts. There are expansion plans for which you need investments. There is maintenance CapEx because you already have a lot of machines that are there. You have to upgrade your IT software, etc. We're also looking for an expansion process where we need to create more facilities.
So I would say it's a combination of everything. It's not any one thing. Obviously, where we spend and how much we spend will ultimately, again, depend on which contracts we finally get. But yes, we are hopeful that there's a pipeline, and therefore, we will be able to grow the business with those investments. So we are generating enough cash. Debt and other options are also there. So therefore, we will be able to fund ourselves.
It's on the working capital side, sir.
Yeah, I'll ask Naveen to address the working capital as CFO. In terms of working capital also, well, we are making a decent amount of free cash flow, which shall be able to fund our working capital. And then, of course, because we are an export-oriented business, so there are packaging credit lines which are available, which shall be able to help us. And as the operating leverage increases, we are also seeing the impact of the working capital cycle getting reduced.
Okay, sir. So my last question, I think our aerospace US share is 21%, and the precision technology and auto component side are 10% of US share. How US part is hurting us in terms of margins, and how do you look at the business over the medium-term timeframe? And secondly, sir, exceptionally of INR 14 crore, it's related to labor code implementations.
So let me get you the first thing on margins. So clearly, you saw the margins significantly improve on the automotive and precision technology. Clearly, we are improving those margins. There's a lot of activity going on on efficiencies. There's a lot of activity going on on synergies between the companies which we put together. And therefore, you will continuously see that trend that you've seen. So that is one side of the story which you asked. In terms of aerospace, we're growing at a very fast pace, and we're doing a lot of new product development. So there's no percentage margin expansion, but the EBITDAs are increasing significantly simply because we are growing the top line very high, and we write off all development work done on these new products.
So in terms of efficiency and margin expansion, I would say both automotive and aerospace are on a very good track, and there is momentum building up after the companies have now come together. The teams have been formed, and we've adopted SAP HANA is coming into play. So all the systems and the hard work that we did over the last one and a half years are slowly playing out and helping us to increase these margins. On the second aspect, I'll have Naveen answer that.
That INR 14 crore, yes, that's on account of labor code-related one-time impact that we had.
Okay, sir. Thank you. All the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vishal Prasad from VP Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi, good evening. Gautam, I have two questions. I think when I first saw Reva, I thought it was a very small car, and it may not be comfortable at all. What I didn't realize was that Reva was way ahead of its time. Now, this time around, our aerospace business decided to ride trains at the right time. What baffles me is that there was a very roaring bull market going on, and companies without much capability were listing at exorbitant valuations. If it was the fund you needed for sale of the business, listing the company would have provided whatever cash was required for you or the company. Yet you decided to sell it, majority stake at 10x valuation. So could you share your thought process behind not going the IPO way and rather choosing to sell your account to another company?
Yeah, okay. So yes, you're right. We've always been ahead of time. Whether it was Reva or aerospace, we have been first movers. Maybe Reva we were too early, but in aerospace also, it's working to our advantage now. We were very early. We are 22 years in the business now. Of course, we built it step by step. Coming to the question you had is that we had a timeline to exit some of our existing shareholders, and at that time, the market wasn't really at the perfect time.
I felt that now a partnership with a larger company could give us that same growth before we find the right time to list. As far as I'm concerned, the goal is to build a very strong company with very strong credentials and growth and a strong partnership which we can take it to the next level. Then whenever the time is right, we would come to the market. I don't see an issue with that. I think that we'll probably come up even stronger because of the way we are growing and the way the markets are. I'm hoping that we'll come out even stronger.
Right. So I'm sure many would have come forward to partner with you, but still you chose Raymond to partner with. So what was the thought behind partnering with Raymond?
Well, I mean, there were a lot of options on the table, and we felt that there was a complementing partnership with Raymond. And in any partnership, the two partners should complement each other. At Maini, I brought the complete fundamental approach of how to build businesses from scratch. We built aerospace from zero. So we have that experience of fundamental engineering, how to build the companies, how to grow on the global scale with relationships with 25 different OEMs all across the world. So we built a very strong base, which we are very good at doing.
Raymond brought us the bandwidth that we didn't have of understanding listed markets, understanding mergers and acquisitions, and seeing how we can actually scale the business. So in that sense, it was a good partnership approach where I continued to be the managing director to run the business with all the strengths of a smaller company, but with the vision of a large company. So I'm sure something big can come out of that.
Right. Is there a line? Can you hear me?
Yeah.
This is Jatin Khanna from Raymond. So there are lots of considerations which go behind the transaction. I don't think so this is the right forum to get into why we did what we did. There are lots of reasons why what Gautam did, lots of reasons why what Raymond did. Obviously, what we bring to the table clearly is a much larger scale possible for this business. And those are the kind of conversations we are having at this stage. There are lots of doors that have opened for the aerospace business ever since Raymond stepped into it. You will see the fruits of those doors that have been opened over a period of time because fortunately or unfortunately, in the engineering business, nothing happens from today to tomorrow.
As we see 3-5-year journey, we feel very confident about the business prospects. So I think at this stage, we should leave it at that. If you have any specific question, we can do it separately. Sure. So one final question. So I went through all the transcripts that you have of the calls as well as investor deals that we have done. There were different figures about how much is the tick value that goes into each of the aircrafts. It ranges between $20,000-$35,000. So on an average, if I have to look at the tick value, could you please help me with that? Is it 35, is it 20, or something else?
Well, it changes every day. We are developing more than one new part every day, right? So if you have to have a static information, it's going to be a moving target, right? Because every quarter, we would add several products to that game. So at the moment, you can say that on an estimate, it's about 0.2%-0.3%, right? But closer to maybe 35,000 if you look at. But that's in one case, right? We have so many customers and so many cases and so many part numbers.
Aerospace business is not a low-volume, high-mix business. So the ability to transform that business is how many new parts you can make, how you can scale that business. And that's what we're trying to do is to be the market leaders in the number of parts we make and how to transition that and get more business opportunities for ourselves. I hope that I could have answered your question. Yeah, sure. Thank you. So since the share is extremely low, the opportunity is obviously large. Just to conclude.
Right. So this is going to increase with time. In five years, can we double the size of whatever we are supplying to, I mean, each aircraft? Is that the way to look at it?
It can be anything because it depends. In the end, it depends on how you can make parts and how you can develop. But yes, there's a huge opportunity, a huge potential, and it's up to us to make full use of that potential.
Sure. Thank you very much.
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Sanjeev Zarbade from Antique Stock Broking. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Am I audible?
Yes.
Thank you, sir. And much improved operating performance this time from the participation to the team. Sir, if you could elaborate on the production ramp-ups at aerospace OEMs and Tier 1 customers that we are actually witnessing and what could be the potential from there. How should we do that?
Yeah. I mean, things have been improving globally. Boeing is back, and they are producing at very high levels. So I think the trend is very good, although we've still not reached pre-COVID levels, so which means the potential is even higher. Clearly, the supply chains are getting better, and therefore, the opportunities are improving because as the inventory is being eaten up, the opportunities are opening up. We are seeing also the same effect of schedule changes where suddenly they've increased schedules because the inventories are starting to get depleted.
So I would generally say that inventories are much lower, production is much higher at the OEMs, and this gives us huge opportunities to get more market share and to be able to deliver if we are ready. And therefore, if you have all the raw material and you can turn around your production, which is what we are trying to invest for, then you can take advantage of the current situation and grow faster.
Right, sir. And I believe we have taken some additional expenditure this time to ramp up production in the aerospace division. Would we need to take further expenditure in the coming quarters as the demand ramps up?
Yes. I mean, we will continue to invest as the demand increases. We have a very good visibility because we have a very strong pipeline, and we have a lot of FAIs, which is the new product developments in our pipeline. So depending on the speed at which we are developing these new products, we almost on a monthly basis see what kind of capacities we need, and we plan for those capacities. So this is an ever-changing game, and one has to be dynamic about it and make sure that you're continuously ready to invest in the right equipment and machines and people in a very frugal and quick manner to take advantage of the changing situation.
Because in the end, if there is an engine to be made, there are thousands of parts that go into the engine. Even if one part doesn't reach, the customer can't assemble the engine. So there's always that opportunity that in an emergency, the customer could come to you saying that the other supplier hasn't supplied. Can you supply? So if you are ever ready, your chance of gaining market share temporarily and permanently growing the business is much higher and back to position we want to be in.
Right, sir. And just one or two more questions. Are we seeing an increase in the prices of materials like Inconel and aluminum because of the rising demand from the aerospace sector? And how do we plan to manage that?
Well, first of all, in all of our contracts, the materials are written by the customer contractor, which means if Inconel goes up, the prices go up. If Inconel goes down, the prices go down. Having said that, there is a pressure to localize materials, which will then ultimately come to a lower level in the long run. That will put India on a more competitive edge. It may be a two-year landscape, but which means that the competitive landscape will only get better for India as a country. Until then, as a customer, we really don't see any issue on the material because it is either paid, and if it goes down, we have to pass it back. So it's a complete pass-through both ways.
Yeah, sir. Just last one question from my side. Where do you see the potential EBITDA margins in these two divisions also? And aerospace, we've done around 14% EBITDA margin also now and around 18%-20% in aerospace. Where do you see the margins for these two divisions in the next 2-3 years potentially?
Well, I think there is definitely a margin expansion happening due to efficiencies which will show up. So I think in aero, we could look at 23%-25% in the long run. And in auto, we would definitely break the 15% barrier and aim towards a higher rate on a yearly basis. So I think in both areas, we will see margin expansion due to all the activities that we have done in the last year and a half, taking advantage of all the synergies, taking advantage of scale, taking advantage of operating benefits, and improving efficiency and improving cost.
Thank you very much, sir. And all the best.
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Rupesh Tatiya from Long Equity Partners. Please go ahead.
Sure, sir. Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity and congratulations on a fantastic set of numbers. My first question, sir, on aerospace is, I mean, there was a fantastic growth in this quarter. So what led to this growth? And is it sustainable? Can we assume this is now the run rate going forward? Because aerospace business normally doesn't fluctuate much.
No, you're absolutely right. These are all five-year contracts, ten-year contracts, long-term businesses. And the fact that you develop new products on a daily basis, the fact that you increase your market share from 35 to 65 when you do a good job. So all of these are working in our favor. And the overall market is also growing, as well as there are issues with the supply chains in Europe and in the U.S. The China Plus One is playing out. So I would say overall, the environment is very good for the growth of the aerospace business, and it's up to us to make sure that we take full advantage of it. So we will definitely have to keep a robust trend. The opportunity is there, and we believe we will deliver. The results that are being shown will continue to be in a positive direction.
Okay. And the second question, sir, is this LEAP engine, whatever parts you supply for the LEAP engine, what kind of market share do we have in the parts that we supply?
Just to give you an example, when you start off, you start off with normally a 35% market share because the customer wants to test you. They want to see if your quality is good. They want to see if you're reliable. You have a 100% delivery on time status. And then they generally move you to a 65% market share. So over a period of time, more than 50% of our parts have already moved to a 65% market share, which shows that the customer is happy with us.
They've increased market share, etc. And that comes over a period of time. And I think the expertise over the last many years shows us that if you do a good job, you simply get higher market shares, you get more business, you get more RFQ pipeline. So this is a business where you have to show performance, and that's what we need to keep doing month after month.
Okay. And at what rate LEAP engine production is growing? I read some media articles. Numbers vary between 15%-20%, but that is a fair inference that LEAP engine production by name only once is growing at 15%-20%?
Yeah. I think they're growing at 15%-20%. What is important is that you see the LEAP engine, let's talk about 1A. The LEAP-1A is directly linked to the Airbus programs. That's why it's called 1A, right? So Airbus A320neo and certain other programs are now introducing that. So you can directly link it with the number of those aircraft that's going up, which you can see with Airbus. The Boeing 737 MAX uses 100% of LEAP-1B.
So every plane that Boeing 737 MAX sells, you have two engines of LEAP on it. So there's a direct correlation to the growth in the number of engines. So I would say while LEAP-1A is growing between 10%-15%, LEAP-1B is growing between 15%-20% because Boeing has recovered now to almost a run rate of 42 right now. So that is helping the LEAP-1B. While there are many common parts on LEAP-1A and 1B, there are also certain specific parts. So we get the benefit of being on both those engines.
Okay. And can you talk about some opportunities outside of LEAP engine program? I mean, anything that can become like a INR 100-200 crore kind of revenue source for us in medium term?
Well, I can't name them, but clearly we are discussing those opportunities. Like I said, we have 5-6 strategic partners on the engine side, and we have approvals from them. So therefore, those discussions will carry on. Like I said, aerospace takes time. A lot of things we did two years ago are bearing results now. So therefore, a lot of things we did one year ago still need to bear results. So it's a continuous process, and one must be invested in the process in the long term and in those relationships. And I'm sure you will see that those will pan out over a period of time. So all I can say is that we're very much invested in those relationships. We're invested in those strategic discussions, and things will be going in the right direction for us.
Okay. Okay. And then my final question is, I mean, Raymond Group has done a great job in value unlocking. I think Jatin also is on the call, and you also welcome. So any timelines that we can pencil in for value unlocking in the current Raymond Limited? When can we see the aerospace business listed separately? When can we see the auto automotive parts business listed separately? Any timelines you have in mind?
Jatin, do you want to take this question? Jatin, are you there?
Yeah, I'm there. Can I be heard?
Yes, you can be heard.
Okay. Okay. Yeah. I'm saying that so it's a bit premature at this stage to talk about unlocking these two businesses because both of them have to get to the right scale before we think of unlocking. But clearly, it's something which is very much we've demonstrated and delivered in the past. So to that extent, we should be rest assured that at the right time, this will get done. We are currently in the build-out phase, so have some more patience is all I can say at this stage.
Yeah. But what are the milestones? Can you give me top two milestones in both the businesses that you are looking to achieve before value unlocking?
No, sir. There are a bunch of things you have to be very clear on. I mean, I think the first thing to my mind is that this whole tariff thing, uncertainty, etc., which all of this has to settle down. Businesses have to stabilize because at this stage, business performance tends to be volatile in this ever-changing environment. I guess that's sort of one to my mind, which is very critical. The second milestone to my mind, which is critical, is that we have to realize the benefits from Andhra because that investment that we are making, that has significant cost advantage that brings to us.
Now, whether we pocket that cost advantage into margin expansion or we use that to build more business, so that's another big lever of growth that is available for the business for the future. I guess some of that, so that's there. Then obviously, there has to be critical scale of EBITDA and some of those things. So I mean, it will be too premature at this stage if I get into specifics. So bear with us for a while. I mean, we know that this is something which we've done it before, so needless to say, it will happen at the right time again.
Okay. Okay. Thank you. Thank you for answering my questions.
Yeah. Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management will be able to address all the questions from the participants in the conference call, we request you to kindly limit your questions to 2 per participant. If you have a follow-up question, please rejoin the queue again. We have the next question from the line of Kaustubh Sharma from Equinox Capital Venture Private Limited. Please go ahead.
Hello. Hi, sir. Very good evening. I'm available. Yes, you are. Yeah. So my question is on your CapEx. We are making a huge investment in Andhra around INR 1,000 crores. So what is the split of these CapEx across our key segments and our asset and our revenue potential out of it? And how long will it take to operationalize going ahead?
Yeah. So basically, obviously, we are trying to grow, like Jatin mentioned, the Andhra business too over the next five years. Basically, we are looking at about INR 500 crore in aero and about INR 430 crore in auto. So that's over a five-year period. Clearly, like Jatin said, we're going to expand. We're going to grow in these areas. It's a good cost base for us. So we're looking at more positive business coming into these areas and much more strategic levels of both size and type. So therefore, we are engaged in many conversations, and we hope that we'll be able to make a successful business there.
And so what is the current existing revenue potential from your existing CapEx in both the key segments? And what is CapEx utilization in both the segments?
So basically, capacity utilization varies from plant to plant. We built a new plant in Sinnar in January. We have space there, so that will be filled up. We have some capacity available in different plants. So we are optimizing capacity and building capacity as we speak. The goal is that by the time we use up our capacity, we are able to have Andhra Pradesh ready. So we work backwards from there to make sure that our growth doesn't slow down or doesn't stop, but in fact, can increase. So that is.
Yeah. Sorry to interrupt. In between, your voice is breaking.
Okay. So can you hear us now?
Yes, sir.
Okay. So basically, I guess I would have answered your question.
Yes, sir. And my last question is on your aerospace side. How much we are making a very complex engine part, so how much are you contributing overall engine cost? Are we planning to launch further products which contribute higher cost in this area? What is overall time?
You have to understand, we make parts for although we make a lot of parts for the LEAP engine, but we are probably on at least 15 different engine programs. The sizes vary. The types vary. They are from large engines to small engines. We are on several platforms. We want to make sure that we are on most platforms. Whichever aircraft sells and their engine sells, we need to be on that platform. There are two key attempts. One is continuously increase the number of parts that we have per platform. Secondly, increase the percentage of market share from our side. These are the two things that we will aim to do.
While we have a very diversified portfolio, it helps us to neutralize the market in many ways because if certain large engines suddenly have a boom or a large order, we are part of that. And as long as every part of the aircraft engines is growing, we grow with them. So the goal is to be on several different engines, but focus also on the high-volume engines like the LEAP program and the GTS. So sir, you said is it 15% of overall engine cost that it contributes? No, no. We are hardly 0.1%-0.3%. So that gives us massive potential. We are a very small part of that engine.
Okay. And sir, could you please explain the receivables and inventory cycle in both the segments? What is the sustainable levels by receivables, delivery, and inventory days in both the auto and our aerospace segment?
I'll give you the concept, and maybe Naveen can give you some exact information, whatever is possible. But at a conceptual level, you have to understand in the aerospace business, the raw material is the biggest concern because you do not get raw material at short notice, and all the mills have very long lead times. So if you don't have a very good planning cycle, if you don't have raw material inventory, then it becomes difficult to grow the aerospace business when an opportunity comes by, and we've seen many of those come by. So the first thing is the raw material in aerospace has to be heavy, whereas the finished goods doesn't have to be a lot, although customers mandate that we must have a safety stock of at least 30 days with us, and we must ship from stock.
But the actual delivery time to the customer is only 7-10 days because all of aerospace is sent by air. On the flip side, if you look at the auto component business, we do a lot of business to third-party warehouses. So it takes between 65-90 days to reach the warehouses. Then you need to keep a safety stock of maybe 30 days. Then you send it to your customer. So in automotive, it's the opposite way, where your raw material would be less and work in progress, but your FG would be very high simply because of the model and the time it takes to reach your customers, since 60% of our business is in the export segment. So that's the nature of the beast, and that's why we have low-cost pre-shipment and post-shipment credit to finance that in terms of working capital.
What about receivable days, sir?
Receivable days are also not very different than the average industry receivable days that you see, and there is nothing which is actually crossing 100 days or so. In fact, our revenue and profitability growth is expected to outpace any increase in the working capital. That's how we see it.
Thank you, sir. Thank you very much for answering my question.
Thank you. We will take the last question from the line of from Morgan Capital. Please go ahead.
My question is regarding the order book. What is your forecast regarding the order book for the aerospace?
Sorry, I'm not able to hear you. Can you speak a little louder? You're not audible.
Can you hear me now?
Yes, I can.
I wanted to know regarding the order book for the aerospace. So earlier you had mentioned the aerospace order book is around 2.5x-3x of the revenue. Is it the same right now, or what is it?
Yeah. Typically, like I explained last time, you have 5-year contracts and 10-year contracts. And it depends on which portion of the contract you are. Normally, the contracts are just renewed on expiry because or it grows in market share. But in general, you're averaging a 2.5-year window in most cases, and you can round it up to 3 sometimes depending on your 10-year contracts, right? Because those come up every 10 years.
So I would still say a safe way to look at it is very much a 2.5-year future period finished of our current sales where we have the order book. And the order book continuously is growing based on our growth, like I said, because our pipeline of FAIs, which is new products, is continuously increasing, and we are still averaging more than 1 new part every day. So that will keep growing as well. So yes, the order book keeps improving and keeps increasing as we increase our sales.
Oh, great. Got it. And so the mix keeps a part of LEAP engines. How many LEAP yearly, how many products do we supply for the LEAP engines?
So basically, we supply around between 300-350 part numbers depending on which model of 1A, 1B, and even 1C is being introduced now. So roughly, that is the mix. There are many common products that go to 1A and 1B, but some products are also specific. So depending on that, it slightly varies. But that's the number that we have in terms of what goes onto a LEAP.
Got it. Thank you.
Different types of parts. Obviously, the quantity is depending on the number of engines we supply. This is just different types of parts that go onto the engine.
Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen.
You're welcome.
Ladies and gentlemen, we will take that as a last question, and that concludes the question and answer session. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Gautam Maini for the closing comments. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
So thank you, everybody, for coming on this call, and look forward to better times together. Thank you so much.
Thank you. On behalf of Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Brokers Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining with us today, and you may now disconnect at any time.