Carraro India bets on premium tractors, construction exports to drive next growth phase

Pune-based Carraro India is preparing for its next phase of growth by expanding axle capacity, scaling manufacturing infrastructure and deepening its presence in premium 4WD tractors, construction equipment exports and electric driveline systems, as the company increasingly transitions from a traditional tractor-component supplier into a higher-value off-highway engineering platform.

The company’s investor presentation indicates that Carraro plans to fund much of its next growth cycle through internal accruals, improving return ratios and operating leverage rather than aggressive balance-sheet expansion. Operating cash flow nearly doubled to ₹155.8 crore in FY26 from ₹76.3 crore in FY25, while debt-equity improved to 0.27x from 0.62x in FY22.

“FY26 was a strong and encouraging year for Carraro India, with the Company delivering healthy growth across both domestic and export markets,” said Managing Director Dr. Balaji Gopalan at the company’s investor presentation.

Premiumisation Drive

Carraro India reported a 25 per cent year-on-year rise in FY26 total income to ₹2,284 crore, while profit after tax surged 48 per cent to ₹130.6 crore. EBITDA rose 33 per cent to ₹247.5 crore, with margins improving to 10.8 per cent from 10.2 per cent a year ago. The March quarter remained particularly strong, with revenue climbing 37 per cent year-on-year to ₹614.2 crore and PAT jumping 76 per cent to ₹41.7 crore.

The company is positioning itself around a structural shift underway in India’s tractor market, where demand is increasingly moving toward larger and more technologically advanced four-wheel-drive tractors requiring higher-value driveline systems and transmissions.

According to Carraro India’s investor presentation, India’s 4WD tractor market is projected to grow at a 23 per cent CAGR through 2029, sharply outpacing the expected 2.8 per cent CAGR growth in the traditional 2WD segment. Carraro said the GST-led narrowing of the price gap between 2WD and 4WD tractors accelerated this transition during FY26.



“Demand towards larger axles and transmissions with higher power and higher technological specifications will result into higher volume growth,” the company said in the investor presentation.

Construction Export Push

Construction equipment is also emerging as a major growth engine. Construction vehicle revenue rose 31 per cent year-on-year to ₹983.7 crore in FY26, significantly faster than agricultural equipment revenue growth of 19 per cent. Construction vehicles now account for 43.6 per cent of Carraro India’s revenue mix, nearly matching the 45.2 per centcontribution from agricultural tractors.

Exports rose 37 per cent to ₹812.5 crore during FY26, compared with 19 per cent growth in domestic revenues, with management attributing the momentum largely to Tele Boom Handler axles and Backhoe Loader driveline systems supplied to global OEMs.

“Exports remained a key growth driver, supported by sustained momentum in construction equipment, particularly TBH and BHL exports,” Gopalan said.

FY27 Expansion Blueprint

Carraro is now scaling manufacturing capacity ahead of anticipated demand growth. Management said board-approved expansion plans include increasing axle capacity to 1,54,160 units, alongside new assembly lines, warehouse additions and heat-treatment facilities planned across its Pune operations for FY27 and beyond.

Its driveline plant operated at nearly 80 per cent utilisation during FY26, while gear manufacturing utilisation stood at nearly 76 per cent, indicating relatively high loading levels ahead of the next capex cycle.

Alongside conventional driveline systems, Carraro is also positioning itself in electric off-highway mobility technologies. The company signed a ₹17.5 crore engineering services agreement with Montra Electric for industrialisation and supply of e-transmissions for electric agricultural tractors and has already received prototype orders for field validation.

The company is also increasing localisation and supplier diversification to improve supply-chain resilience. Localisation levels increased to 78.1 per cent in FY26 from 77 per cent a year earlier.

“Carraro India enters its next phase of growth with a stronger business foundation, deeper customer relationships, enhanced engineering capabilities, increasing localisation and a healthy demand outlook across key end markets,” Gopalan said.

Source

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

three × 3 =