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Indian Company Investor Calls

Tenneco Clean Air India Targets FY2028 Revenue Visibility, Exports Ramp Mid-2028

June 9, 2026 7 mins read Firehose Gupta

Tenneco Clean Air India Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (Quarter ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “best ever year,” “highest ever EBITDA margin,” “strong order booking,” “zero debt,” and “well-positioned to sustain profitable growth.”
  • Even when discussing headwinds (e.g., “geopolitical cost pressures”), responses stress mitigation via “timely commercial actions” and “operational efficiencies.”

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Record financial performance & margin expansion driven by operating model
  • FY26: VAR growth +12.3%; EBITDA +13.5%; EBITDA margin 18.8% (up 21 bps/points vs last year).
  • Attribution: “P3 operating model,” “improved costs absorption,” “timely commercial actions.”
  • Strong order book and visibility into medium-term targets
  • Lifetime order book: INR124,000 million.
  • 100% visibility of our FY 2028 internal revenue target” and “double-digit growth trajectory over the medium term.”
  • Technology-led differentiation in Advanced Ride Technologies (ART)
  • DCx DaVinci (mechanical suspension with shim stacks) adoption by an Indian OEM; “scope… being further expanded with multiple new DCx applications.”
  • Narrative: DaVinci as “a total game changer” vs conventional mechanical dampers dominating >90% of PVs.
  • Clean Air growth via new customer wins and segment expansion
  • Entry into bearings systems with a Japanese passenger vehicle OEM (value not disclosed).
  • Multiple Clean Air wins including Japanese OEM entry into an “untapped segment,” plus European CV program and Euro 7 PoC.
  • Capacity investment to support growth
  • Capex announced: ~INR1,400 million across North India Clean Air expansion and a West India greenfield ART plant.
  • Plant commissioning timing discussed in Q&A (see below).
  • Export scaling as a new growth vector
  • Exports currently “5% to 6%” of sales, but exports order book growth is “coming in way stronger.”
  • Drivers cited: “technology equalization,” “China+1 diversification,” and “labour cost arbitrage.”
  • IPO/listing milestone and governance emphasis
  • IPO oversubscription and post-listing outperformance narrative.
  • Governance “strengthen governance disciplines” (standard but included).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Exports ramp-up, contract structure, and timing

  • Core questions
  • How exports will scale over 2–3 years; whether ramp is front/back-ended.
  • Whether export rights are limited to Tenneco group entities or include third-party OEMs.
  • Currency depreciation impact on export economics and how it is handled in contracts.
  • Management response
  • Exports sales are low now (5–6%), but exports order book is 14–20% and growing faster than current sales.
  • Exports ramp described as “middle-ended”:
    • Exports start hitting ground around 2028, with ramp beginning ’27–’28 and continuing into ’29.
  • Export arrangement: “we are not there to compete” with group; supplies can be to group entities and, with permission, can also reach OEMs.
  • Currency: management frames rupee depreciation as a competitive boon; also notes escalators for direct materials and recovery efforts for indirect costs.
  • Notable/partial or strong points
  • Strong confidence on exports becoming a “very key vector of growth,” but no quantitative export revenue targets provided.
  • Currency discussion includes hedging/qualification: “we don’t know where this currency is going to finally land,” but still asserts an “immediate 15% to 20% improvement” in competitiveness.

Theme B: Plant commissioning timelines and execution risk

  • Core questions
  • When new plants commission; whether orders are back-ended.
  • Timeline for bearings entry and whether it requires a new plant.
  • Management response
  • Work started on North (Clean Air) and West (shock absorbers) plants; West plant board approval received.
  • Commissioning: 6 months to 1 year; peak volumes expected mid-’28 to ’29.
  • Exports ramp is not back-ended; it’s “middle-ended.”
  • Bearings: value not disclosed; “still remains to be seen” whether a new plant is needed—capacity may be accommodated in existing locations.
  • Notable/partial or unusually strong points
  • Clear timeline guidance for plants, but bearings execution remains uncertain (“still remains to be seen”).

Theme C: Clean Air content per vehicle and technology scope (diesel/petrol/CNG/hybrid)

  • Core questions
  • Content per vehicle comparison: car exhaust vs commercial vehicle.
  • Whether systems differ across diesel/petrol/CNG/hybrids; any future OEM discussions.
  • Management response
  • Content varies widely; provided ranges:
    • Passenger vehicle exhaust system: “X
    • Commercial: “3X to 4X
    • Some applications: “X to 10X” (and even “10 to 15X” for certain equipment).
  • Diesel vs petrol: diesel has higher aftertreatment; petrol increasingly needs particulate control due to gas direct injection.
  • Hybrids: content may increase (adaptive/acoustic valve), “X to 1.5 to even 2X.”
  • EV slide-back narrative: US/Europe moving toward “hybrid or range extender,” supporting content durability.
  • Notable/partial or unusually strong points
  • Management avoids exact content numbers (“won’t get into the actual numbers”), but gives directional and multiplier ranges.

Theme D: ART product strategy, competitive edge, and suspension technology

  • Core questions
  • Whether new suspension plant is for new or existing OEMs; what suspension types (passive vs semi-active).
  • Competitive traction in 1.5L category; ramp expectations for passive plus.
  • Packaging/engineering difficulty for OEM upgrades from passive to passive-plus.
  • Management response
  • DaVinci DCx is positioned for mid-to-premium SUVs (up to ~INR35 lakh MSRP); semi-active control valve suspension (CVSA) for higher end.
  • DaVinci described as “frequency dependent damping” using shim stacks; electronics add complexity and cost due to wiring/ECUs.
  • OEM interest: “three to four OEMs already interested,” including Indian, Japanese/Korean, and European OEMs.
  • Ramp expectation: “business… grow pretty exponentially in the coming three to five years.”
  • Notable/partial or unusually strong points
  • Very strong demand/interest claims (“world’s best mechanical suspension,” “hundreds of influencers,” “three to four OEMs”) without disclosed contract values.

Theme E: Margins: sustainability and Clean Air drivers

  • Core questions
  • What drove margin expansion (especially Clean Air) given CV industry growth vs their CV growth.
  • Whether margin improvement is sustainable QoQ/quarterly.
  • Management response
  • Clean Air growth tepid due to OEM mix and vehicle mix shifts, not share loss.
  • Margin sustainability: attributed to P3 operating model; “expect these margins to remain stable.”
  • Additional drivers: export order book (more profitable) and future panel entry into a major PV OEM by 2028.
  • Notable/partial or unusually strong points
  • We have not lost any competitive share” is asserted, but not evidenced with market share metrics in the transcript.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY28 internal revenue target visibility:100% visibility of our FY 2028 internal revenue target.”
  • Capex announced:approximately INR1,400 million” (North Clean Air facility + West greenfield ART plant).
  • Plant commissioning timing:six months to a year to commission”; peak volumes “mid-28 to ’29.”
  • Exports ramp timing:exports start hitting… around 2028,” ramping from “’27–’28” through “’29 onwards.”
  • Addressable market (qualitative-to-quantitative):
  • Clean Air addressable market: “1,300 to 1,400 crores” additional content per vehicle (CAFÉ 3/BS7) over next three to five years.
  • Additional content multipliers: petrol/hybrid content increases (e.g., “X to 1.5/1.3 to 1.5X”).
  • Competitiveness from rupee depreciation: management cites “immediate 15% to 20% improvement” (not a formal guidance, but a forward-looking claim).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Margin outlook: “expect these margins to remain stable.”
  • Growth outlook: “double-digit growth trajectory over the medium term.”
  • Exports: “very key vector of growth.”
  • ART: “exponentially” growing over three to five years.
  • Clean Air: future growth acceleration tied to supplier panel entry for major PV OEM by 2028.

5. Standout Statements (directly revealing)

  • Performance & balance sheet
  • best ever year on a full year basis
  • highest ever EBITDA margin… 18.8%
  • ending the year with a very strong balance sheet and zero debt
  • Order book visibility
  • 100% visibility of our FY 2028 internal revenue target
  • Exports narrative
  • exports is going to be a very key vector of growth
  • Exports ramp: “more middle-ended… peak… mid-28 to ’29
  • Technology disruption
  • DaVinci DCx: “It is a total game changer and disruptive
  • Suspension segmentation: DaVinci covers “mid to the premium range… maybe up to INR35 lakh,” while CVSA covers “INR35 lakh onwards.”
  • Margin sustainability
  • we also expect these margins to remain stable
  • Currency
  • currency depreciation is actually a boon for India” and “immediate 15% to 20% improvement” in competitiveness.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear operational attribution for margin expansion (P3, cost absorption, commercial recoveries).
– Strong balance sheet messaging: “zero debt,” negative net debt-to-equity.
– Specific execution timelines for plants (6 months–1 year; peak mid-’28/’29).
– Export ramp described with a plausible timeline and drivers (technology equalization + China+1 + labor/currency).

Red flags
– Limited disclosure of bearings economics and whether a new plant is required (“still remains to be seen”).
– Several demand claims are qualitative (e.g., “three to four OEMs interested,” “hundreds of influencers”) without contract values or conversion rates.
– Market share assertions are categorical (“not lost any competitive share”) but without supporting metrics in the transcript.
– Currency benefit framed strongly, but management admits uncertainty: “we don’t know where this currency is going to finally land.”


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

Note: No prior earnings call transcripts were provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”), so historical comparison cannot be performed.

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Limited: credibility can only be judged within this call (management provides consistent attribution to P3 and provides timelines), but cross-call consistency cannot be evaluated.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).