Schaeffler India Limited — Q1 CY26 Earnings Conference Call (for quarter ended 31 Mar 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management highlights “robust growth performance” and “double-digit overall growth momentum,” with EBITDA “well on track” and “positive cash flow into the system.”
- They acknowledge headwinds (notably “Middle East crisis… impacted” supply chain), but repeatedly emphasize preparedness and ability to “weather the headwinds.”
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Resilient India macro + automotive upcycle: Core sectors (cement/steel/electricity) show positive growth; automotive production is described as “on a strong trajectory,” supported by government measures (GST 2.0 referenced).
- Strong consolidated financials with earnings quality focus:
- Revenue: INR 2,507 cr (+18.8% YoY)
- EBITDA: INR 483 cr, ~19% margin
- PAT: INR 319.7 cr
- Working capital: ~17.9% of sales
- Sectoral mix divergence + “calibration” actions:
- Automotive and Vehicle Lifetime Solutions show relative strength.
- Bearings & Industrial Solutions saw a Q/Q drop attributed to “liquidity crunch” and “calibration exercises” to align top-line vs bottom-line.
- Supply chain disruption management: Daily “crisis management team meetings” to keep supply chain intact amid West Asia/Middle East disruptions.
- Pipeline / business development momentum:
- Automotive: new wins in transmission/heavy-duty clutches/hydraulic cam phasers
- Aftermarket: BS-VI compliant product expansion
- Industrial: wins in spherical roller bearings, housings, TRBs/CRBs
- Localization progress as a strategic lever: Localization levels stated at up to 80%, framed as supporting competitiveness and capital efficiency.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Industrial (Bearings & Industrial Solutions) outlook + what’s driving weakness
- Core questions
- Outlook for CY26 in industrial categories (wind, railways, off-road, etc.)
- Why industrial bearings have been flattish/declining recently—demand slowdown vs competitive intensity vs calibration
- Which end markets saw demand offtake slowdown
- Management response
- Supply chain headwinds acknowledged, but management says they’re “prepared” and see no major concerns for delivering CY26 numbers.
- Weakness attributed to multiple factors:
- Liquidity crunch impacting aftermarket distributor cash flows
- Competitive intensification and pricing pressure
- Calibration/recalibration of portfolios done early in the year to sustain profitability
- Some sectors are project/tender timing-driven (railways/wind), causing quarter-to-quarter volatility
- Specific demand color:
- Mining: “not seen much traction”
- Infrastructure-linked: cement/steel traction via infrastructure
- Renewables: “renewable energy still going strong”
- Notable / evasive / partial
- When asked for specific end markets for demand slowdown, they replied it was “a general comment” (partial specificity).
- Competitive share gains/losses: management refused to say “which competitor is taking it” (“not my quota”).
Theme B: Automotive outperformance drivers + sustainability
- Core questions
- Why Automotive Technologies grew ~31% vs industry ~15%—what drives wallet share/content gains?
- What should investors expect for CY26 continuation?
- Any contribution from Vitesco integration?
- Management response
- Broad-based strength across ICE/hybrid/e-mobility platforms; “almost all the product portfolios have done very strong.”
- They are “optimistic” on automotive demand continuation.
- Vitesco benefits: explicitly stated as not yet accruing in India—“benefits… yet to come”; India still “two separate legal entities.”
- Notable / unusually strong
- They directly separate growth drivers: “purely our own ICE technology products” (clutch/engine systems) for the outperformance in this quarter.
Theme C: Exports outlook + what changed vs prior expectations
- Core questions
- Exports grew ~30% YoY in Q1; prior expectation was more moderate (5–10%). Is this improving or surprising?
- Full-year export outlook and end-market/geography risks (APAC, SE Asia, crude price impacts, etc.)
- Management response
- Q4-to-Q1 normalization: growth is 6.6% Q/Q; full-year run-rate guided to ~10% to 12%.
- Exports are largely intercompany/group-driven; better order book from group demand.
- Geography: they claim no demand dip; order book shows ~10%+ growth minimum.
- Notable / partial
- They did not provide granular end-market demand metrics beyond broad regions (Europe/China/SE Asia/Americas).
- Export “strategy” is framed as capacity utilization dependent, not a direct end-customer export push.
Theme D: Cost pass-through / commodity inflation and margin risk
- Core questions
- Commodity cost increases: is there indexation/pass-through?
- Any other cost increases (power, freight, insurance) that could pressure margins?
- Management response
- West Asia disruption increased prices of imported fuel-related items (LPG/propane/fuel items).
- They are exploring alternate sourcing, stocking, and “possibility of looking at compensations coming from our customers,” but called it “early days.”
- Price recovery timeline: “six months to 18 months” for full recovery; first batch realized from Q2 onwards, full realization “close to six quarters.”
- Notable
- Clear admission of uncertainty: compensation success is not guaranteed (“time will tell”).
Theme E: E-axle / e-mobility localization and integration details
- Core questions
- BMS controller wins: stand-alone vs bundled; content per vehicle
- Phase 2 localization: how far can localization go in 3–4 years? 100% possible?
- Which child parts remain imported (risk categories)
- Any timeline for ramp-up / local value added
- Management response
- BMS is currently stand-alone; integration into e-axle “probably” later.
- Localization intent: “source as many child parts as possible”; supplier development in full swing.
- 100% localization: explicitly “It can never be 100%, in my opinion” due to evolving technologies and low initial volumes.
- Imported child parts example: magnets (still reliant on outside India).
- Notable / unusually strong
- They provided a firm stance on localization ceiling (“never 100%”), which is more definitive than typical.
Theme F: Guidance policy
- Core questions
- Do they issue guidance? Any revenue/margin color for CY27/28?
- Management response
- “No… We do not issue a guidance as such.”
- They reiterated commitment to deliver numbers they “want to deliver” (qualitative only).
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- Exports (full-year CY26): “close to 10% to 12%” (run-rate framing).
- Capex (CY26): “INR 400 crores to INR 500 crores” (range reiterated; “picking up” toward ~500 cr).
- Order book / exports visibility: “10% growth, minimum 10%” (qualitative-to-quantitative hybrid, but stated as a number).
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- Industrial supply chain risk: management is actively managing Middle East disruption; “prepared… well prepared,” but “crystal ball question” for future quarters.
- Industrial demand: liquidity crunch described as potentially seasonal and “gets corrected the next quarter” (Ankur Sharma question).
- Automotive demand: “robust going forward” and “optimistic.”
- Margin recovery: input price pass-through expected over 6–18 months; full recovery “close to six quarters.”
- No formal CY27/CY28 guidance; reliance on execution and “committed to deliver the numbers.”
5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)
- On supply chain risk management: “We started off a crisis management team meetings on a daily basis to secure the supply chain continues to stay intact.”
- On industrial weakness drivers: “liquidity crunch… demand offtake came down” and “calibration exercises” to align top line vs bottom line.
- On export normalization: “if we go run rate of the full year, we will be close to 10% to 12%.”
- On cost pass-through uncertainty: “it’s early days… time will tell us how successful we will get” on compensations.
- On Vitesco integration timing: “benefits… yet to come” and “no legal integration on cards as yet.”
- On localization ceiling: “It can never be 100%, in my opinion.”
- On guidance policy: “No… We do not issue a guidance as such.”
- On industrial liquidity seasonality: “It is seasonal… gets corrected the next quarter.”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
– Uncertainty on cost compensation: compensation from customers is not assured (“early days… time will tell”).
– Industrial segment narrative is mixed: admits liquidity crunch + calibration + competitive intensity, but provides limited end-market specificity.
– Export dependence on intercompany/group demand: reduces visibility on true end-market demand (exports “mainly to our group companies”).
– No formal guidance: limits investor ability to underwrite CY27/28.
Positive signals
– Earnings quality emphasis: gross margin improvement cited as a key EBITDA driver.
– Working capital improvement: working capital at ~17.9% with continued focus on inventory health.
– Localization momentum: localization “up to 80%” and Phase 2 supplier development underway.
– Order book confidence for exports: “solid… 10% growth minimum.”
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Current (Q1 CY26): Optimistic—strong emphasis on resilience, awards, and delivery.
- Prior calls:
- Q4 CY25 (Feb 25, 2026): optimistic, with strong Q/Q improvement and “enter 2026… sustained growth.”
- Q3 CY25 (Nov 3, 2025): optimistic but more about GST reforms and timing; industrial weakness framed as timing.
- Q2 CY25 (Jul 25, 2025): optimistic, focusing on new plant commissioning and double-digit growth.
- Shift classification: No Change / Slightly More Optimistic
- Q1 CY26 adds more explicit “preparedness” for geopolitical supply chain disruption and gives a clearer export run-rate (10–12%), but still avoids hard CY27 guidance.
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes (from earlier calls)
- Capex ramp-up expectation (from Q3 CY25 / earlier):
- Prior: capex moderated in 2025; expected to step up in 2026 (Q3 CY25: “pickup will come from 2027 onwards” and capex scaling).
- Current: capex guided INR 400–500 cr for 2026 and “picking up.”
- Assessment: ✅ Delivered / On track (2026 capex range aligns with “not drastically lower” and ramping).
- Export outlook moderation (from Q4 CY25 / earlier):
- Prior: exports expected more moderate (Q4 CY25 call had more moderate expectations; Q1 CY26 question references prior 5–10%).
- Current: exports run-rate 10–12% (higher than 5–10% but explained by base/Q4 normalization).
- Assessment: ⏳ Partially delivered (direction improved; management attributes to base + order book).
- Industrial weakness as “timing” (Q3 CY25):
- Prior: industrial up/down due to project/tender timing; no structural concern.
- Current: still timing-driven, but adds liquidity crunch and competitive intensification plus “calibration.”
- Assessment: ⏳ Evolved explanation (less purely timing; now includes demand/liquidity and competitive pricing pressure).
c. Narrative Shifts
- Industrial story broadened: moved from “timing differences” (Q3 CY25) to a more complex mix including liquidity crunch, pricing pressure, and portfolio recalibration (Q1 CY26).
- Exports story clarified: exports are explicitly intercompany/group-driven, and management uses order book and capacity utilization logic rather than end-market demand.
- Vitesco integration framing tightened: earlier calls suggested integration benefits could accrue; now management says benefits are yet to come in India and India remains two legal entities.
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Credibility: Medium
- Positives: management provides timelines for price recovery (6–18 months; full realization ~six quarters) and gives export run-rate.
- Concerns: repeated reliance on “timing” explanations for industrial volatility, but now adds liquidity/competition—still plausible, but it increases the number of moving parts.
- Guidance remains consistently absent, which is consistent with prior calls (no formal guidance).
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Demand: Automotive demand described as strengthening/robust; industrial demand mixed with liquidity-driven aftermarket slowdown.
- Margins: Still supported by gross margin improvement; cost pass-through remains a risk.
- Localization: steady upward trajectory; now at 80% with Phase 2 supplier development.
- Geopolitics/supply chain: becomes more explicit in Q1 CY26 (Middle East crisis impact) compared with earlier calls.
f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)
- Industrial aftermarket liquidity risk is now explicit (cash flow to distributors impacted). This is a more concrete risk than “tender timing” and could recur if credit conditions tighten again.
- Export visibility is structurally limited because exports are largely to group/intercompany partners; management’s confidence depends on group order book rather than independent end-customer demand.
- Cost inflation risk is being managed operationally, not contractually (alternate sourcing/stocking/possible compensation). The “possible compensation” language suggests margins could remain sensitive in subsequent quarters.
