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Indian Company Investor Calls

Divgi TorqTransfer Targets 20–25% Exports, EV Ramp Hinges on OEM Testing

June 2, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Divgi TorqTransfer Systems Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (May 27, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management frames FY26 as a “turning point” and “strong recovery,” with “delighted” language.
  • Repeated confidence in momentum: “we expect this positive momentum to continue,” “entering the next orbit of growth,” and “firmly believe” fundamentals have strengthened.
  • Even when discussing risks (EV competitiveness, execution), responses emphasize mitigation and upside rather than uncertainty.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Strong financial rebound + operating leverage
  • Highest ever total revenue… crossing INR375 crores” (+~56% YoY), EBITDA margin “nearly 25%,” PAT “over 90%.”
  • Quarter-to-quarter run-rate improvement: revenue run rate “nearly doubled… to over INR110 crores in Q4.”
  • Transfer Case = primary growth engine with export-led visibility
  • Volumes recovered to “close to FY’23 levels” after slowdown.
  • Indonesia export programs: exclusive supplier for Tata Yodha pickup and Mahindra Scorpio pickup; management calls execution “firmly on track.”
  • Japanese OEM nomination: SOP targeted “FY’28–FY’29,” with prototype/POC completed quickly (“record 3 to 4 months”).
  • EV transmission remains constrained by OEM testing cycles, but ramp expected
  • EV segment “relatively subdued” due to “lengthened development cycles” at Tata.
  • New design approvals received; management expects volumes to improve “progressively” with upcoming EV launches and localization.
  • Strategic pivot: use EV transmission portfolio as a “proprietary asset” to expand overseas (US/Europe/China) and into 3-wheeler electrification.
  • Components & exports scaling up and moving up the value chain
  • Components revenue “nearly doubled”; exports rose from ~6% to “nearly 18%” of revenue.
  • Export contribution target maintained: “medium-term target of 20% to 25%.”
  • Growth increasingly driven by engineering/quality/reliability (not just cost competitiveness).
  • Board-approved US subsidiary to deepen North America engagement.
  • Automatic transmission = long-term “mother of all opportunities”
  • Advanced discussions for technology transfer agreement with a global OEM.
  • Timeline: due diligence + proof-of-concept over “next quarter or so,” with localization objective over “3 to 5 years.”
  • Financial discipline / debt-free posture
  • Emphasis on “debt-free balance sheet,” disciplined capital allocation, and maintaining “healthy net cash position” despite growth investments.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Volume disclosure, segment capacity utilization, and ramp timing

  • Core questions
  • Request for segment volumes (Transfer Case, EV transmission/E-gear drive, components) and realization growth.
  • EV capacity utilization and expected ramp.
  • Transfer Case timeline for DCT/other projects (FY28 timing).
  • Management response
  • Transfer Case volumes: “52,000” (FY26), up from “low 30s” in FY25.
  • EV transmission/E-gear drive: “about 24,000.”
  • Components volumes: “over 1 million” (parts); CFO later clarifies “over 13 lakhs.”
  • EV utilization: “still around 25% capacity utilization” (25%–30%).
  • EV ramp: new model production approval; “next month… by July” expected to go into production; management expects “almost a doubling of the EV volumes.”
  • DCT timing: “FY’28” with “first revenue trickle… middle to second half of next year (calendar)” and “big volume… a year after that.”
  • Notable signals
  • Strong specificity on volumes/utilization, but EV ramp is still tied to testing/approvals—suggesting execution dependency.

Theme B: Indonesia order timing + sustainability beyond FY27

  • Core questions
  • Whether Indonesia orders (≈70,000 units) are delayed vs prior expectations (FY27 completion).
  • How to sustain revenue levels after the Indonesia ramp.
  • Management response
  • Delay risk denied: “it is on track for FY ’27.”
  • Sustainability plan: additional Transfer Case opportunities (Tata Sierra 4WD, US Ford application uplift via Tier1, Mahindra global pickup into production with South Africa support).
  • EV utilization improvement from “4 different designs in production.”
  • 3-wheeler prototypes with “at least 2 customers.”
  • Manual transmission opportunity with flexible line design; high-volume potential “60,000 to 100,000.”
  • Indonesia narrative defended: media narrative dismissed as “frivolous”; emphasis on tender competitiveness and execution speed.
  • Evasive/partial elements
  • Sustainability is described qualitatively; no quantified replacement revenue bridge for FY28 beyond listing opportunities.

Theme C: US investment scope and organic vs inorganic growth

  • Core questions
  • INR ~3 crores US investment: does it cover components only or also Transfer Cases/proprietary products?
  • Would they consider inorganic opportunities?
  • Management response
  • US presence as “beachhead” for integrated market understanding + program management.
  • INR3 crores: “initial setting up of offices, infrastructure, maybe a small warehouse.”
  • Preference: “grow… organically” (avoid cultural adaptation risk; “energy is finite”).
  • Notable
  • Clear scope framing; however, no explicit capex/ROI metrics provided.

Theme D: EV onboarding across platforms + utilization target for FY27

  • Core questions
  • Challenges for EV side; target utilization for FY27.
  • Whether onboarding across platforms from H2 FY26 onwards is behind schedule.
  • Management response
  • Root cause: Tata vehicle testing took longer; production approval received.
  • FY27 volumes expected from applications across multiple platforms; EV market competitiveness acknowledged.
  • Overseas strategy reiterated (US office, China representative, Europe opportunities).
  • Red flag within answer
  • Utilization target not explicitly quantified; still anchored to competitive dynamics and ramp assumptions.

Theme E: Revenue upside / segment contribution to incremental revenue

  • Core questions
  • Why revenue run-rate guidance changed (INR1,500+ crores to INR2,000+ crores) and which segment drives the extra INR500 crores.
  • Management response
  • Automatic transmission positioned as cornerstone but not quantified as guidance.
  • Transfer Case upside example: “win a global 4-wheel drive business… opportunity of almost INR800 crores” (framed as “not outside the realm of possible” but not guidance).
  • Conservative stance: “we are a little more conservative” due to “brand perception about India.”
  • Automatic transmission estimate described as “extremely conservative… 80,000 to 100,000 per year.”
  • Notable
  • Management provides scenario-based upside but avoids firm guidance.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Exports contribution target: maintain “20% to 25% export contribution” (medium-term target).
  • Indonesia order execution:on track for FY ’27 completion” (≈70,000 units).
  • EV ramp expectation:almost a doubling of the EV volumes” (qualitative quantification; no exact FY27 utilization %).
  • Transfer Case volumes (FY26 actual):52,000” (used as baseline for ramp narrative).
  • Automatic transmission timeline (qualitative with some milestones):
  • Over the next quarter or so” conclude proof-of-concept demonstration.
  • 3 to 5 years” for first generation assimilation.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Demand/momentum confidence:positive momentum to continue,” “entering next orbit of growth.”
  • EV constraints acknowledged: EV market “extremely competitive,” ramp depends on OEM launches and localization.
  • US expansion intent: beachhead to improve market intelligence + program management; integrated approach to manufacturing/supply chain.
  • Sustainability approach: FY28 growth expected via multiple smaller opportunities rather than one windfall.

5. Standout Statements (directly revealing)

  • Turnaround framing:FY 26 marked… an important turning point” and “strong recovery.”
  • Run-rate acceleration:quarterly revenue run rate has nearly doubled… to over INR110 crores in Q4 FY ’26.”
  • Transfer Case visibility: Indonesia orders are “firmly on track” for FY27 completion.
  • Japanese OEM milestone:prototype development and proof-of-concept validation… in a record 3 to 4 months,” SOP “FY ’28–’29.”
  • EV execution dependency: EV volumes subdued due to “lengthened development cycles” and testing delays; production approval received, “by July” production expected.
  • Components value proposition shift: growth “no longer driven solely by cost competitiveness… driven by… engineering solutions… ‘getting it right first time’.”
  • Automatic transmission ambition:mother of all opportunities” and “cross INR1,000 crores straight away” (still framed as belief/vision, not guidance).
  • Brand perception hedge:we are a little more conservative… ‘brand perception about India’…”
  • Organic preference:preference is to sort of do this organically… cultural adaptation… energy is finite.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
EV ramp still not fully de-risked: utilization remains “25% to 30%,” and ramp depends on OEM testing/launch timing.
Sustainability of FY27-like revenue into FY28 not quantified: management lists opportunities but does not provide a revenue bridge.
Scenario-based upside without firm guidance: multiple “could,” “not outside the realm,” “ambition” statements.
Brand perception caveat used to justify conservatism—implies execution/market acceptance risk.

Positive signals
Concrete operational metrics provided (volumes, utilization range, run-rate).
Execution credibility improving: quarter-to-quarter run-rate doubling and record quarterly revenue.
Diversification reduces single-program risk (Transfer Case + Components + EV + Automatics roadmap).
Debt-free + disciplined capex narrative supports resilience.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY26): More Optimistic
  • Strong “turning point,” “delighted,” “firmly believe,” and “next orbit of growth.”
  • Prior calls
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 13, 2026): optimistic but more “recovery” framing; still emphasized ramp and pipeline visibility.
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 13, 2025): cautious on EV (“muted,” “range bound”), and emphasized gradual ramp.
  • Shift drivers
  • FY26 results now show realized scale (INR375 cr revenue, ~25% EBITDA margin), enabling more confident forward narrative.
  • Less emphasis on “waiting for testing” than earlier, though EV still carries execution dependency.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Indonesia export orders timing
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26, Feb 13, 2026): production expected to commence calendar ’26, “most of it will happen in FY ’27.”
  • Current (Q4 FY26):on track for FY ’27 completion.”
  • Status:Delivered/On track (no delay admitted).
  • EV ramp expectation
  • Past statement (Q2 FY26, Nov 13, 2025): expected “ramp-up in H2 FY ’26” with “about 20% to 25% improvement in volumes.”
  • Current: EV volumes still “relatively subdued,” utilization “25% to 30%,” and ramp tied to delayed testing; “by July” production and “almost a doubling” expected.
  • Status:Delayed / partially realized (improvement now expected, but earlier ramp timing appears to have slipped).
  • US footprint evaluation
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26): feasibility evaluation expected “preliminary logical conclusion by end of Q1 FY ’27.”
  • Current:Board has approved incorporation of a wholly owned subsidiary in the United States.”
  • Status:Delivered (decision/action now taken).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “EV is muted” to “EV is proprietary asset + overseas expansion”:
  • Earlier calls stressed EV volume weakness and gradual ramp.
  • Current call adds a stronger strategic narrative: EV portfolio as “proprietary asset” and expansion into US/Europe/China + 3-wheeler electrification.
  • Transfer Case narrative becomes more execution-heavy:
  • Indonesia order moved from announcement to “on track,” with additional program wins used to argue sustainability.
  • Automatic transmission narrative strengthened:
  • Earlier: roadmap and technology demonstrator timelines.
  • Current: more assertive language (“mother of all opportunities,” “cross INR1,000 crores straight away”) while still not providing firm contract numbers.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium-to-High credibility
  • Management has been consistent about: (1) Transfer Case recovery, (2) Components export strength, (3) EV delays due to OEM testing, and (4) disciplined financial posture.
  • Potential credibility risk
  • EV ramp expectations have shifted (testing delays acknowledged), and current guidance remains qualitative.
  • Automatic transmission upside is repeatedly framed as belief/vision with conservative hedging (“brand perception,” “not guidance”).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/momentum: Improving (run-rate doubling; record revenue).
  • Margins: Stable-to-improving (EBITDA margin ~24.3–24.6% in Q4/FY26; gross margin ~63.5%).
  • Expansion/globalization: Accelerating (US subsidiary approved; export contribution rising; Toyota Tsusho ecosystem leveraged).
  • EV: Deteriorating vs earlier “ramp in H2” expectation, but narrative now pivots to longer-term overseas growth.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Risk build-up masked by optimism earlier: EV was repeatedly “range bound,” but current call still shows low utilization (25–30%), implying the EV ramp is structurally slower than management’s earlier “H2 FY26 ramp” framing.
  • Sustainability argument relies on multiple smaller wins: Indonesia is treated as “tip of iceberg,” but the lack of quantified FY28 bridge suggests management is still converting pipeline into revenue rather than fully de-risking it.
  • Defensiveness in Q&A increased around Indonesia: management pushes back on “media narrative” and emphasizes tender competitiveness—suggesting external skepticism exists and management is actively countering it.