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The growing role of private equity in defence: a $150bn rethink for the U.S. Army

Sector Spotlight: Defence & Aerospace in India — A Growing Investment Theme

Sector Spotlight: Defence & Aerospace in India — A Growing Investment Theme

India’s defence production reached an all-time high of ₹1.51 lakh crore in FY 2024–25 and defence exports rose to ₹23,622 crore (about US$2.76 billion), a 12.04% increase over FY 2023–24. These headline figures reflect a structural shift: domestic production is expanding rapidly and export orientation is rising. Private-sector firms now account for a growing share of production and exports, with the private sector contributing roughly ₹15,233 crore of FY25’s export total (≈64.5% of exports). The export-to-production ratio makes the point: ₹23,622 crore in exports against ₹1.51 lakh crore production implies exports are already ~15.6% of output, signalling a meaningful pivot from a pure domestic market to international customers. (Calculation: 23,622 / 151,000 ≈ 0.156 ≈ 15.6%.)

Tata’s helicopter push — a concrete example of capability building
A recent, high-visibility step is the Airbus–Tata initiative: Tata Advanced Systems Limited (TASL) will establish India’s first private-sector helicopter final assembly line (FAL) for the Airbus H125 at Vemagal, Karnataka. The facility is intended to produce “Made in India” H125 helicopters with the first delivery targeted for early 2027, and Airbus/Tata plan to make these helicopters available for export across the South Asian region. This is emblematic: multinational OEMs are now embedding India into their global supply chains via local private partners. That facility matters for investors for three reasons: it demonstrates transfer of production technology and higher value-added assembly work being done in India; the prospect of recurring revenue through local MRO (maintenance, repair & overhaul) and spares; and an export angle that turns domestic capex into foreign-currency earning streams.

Policy tailwinds — why private capacity is scaling fast
The policy architecture since DPrP/Make-in-India reforms and subsequent defence production policies has explicitly incentivised private participation, technology partnerships, and exports. Government measures include liberalised FDI limits in defence manufacturing, faster approvals for transfers of technology, and focused industrial corridors (e.g., Uttar Pradesh Defence Industrial Corridor) that have attracted investment proposals exceeding ₹33,896 crore—evidence of concentrated capex commitments in manufacturing hubs. These policy moves lower barriers for players like Tata, Adani and others to scale production and invest in higher-value segments (airframes, avionics, helicopters). Public investment and clearer procurement roadmaps — together with predictable issuance of indigenisation lists and export targets — improve demand visibility. The Ministry of Defence and Invest India have set medium-term export targets (multi-year goals to increase defence exports to several times FY24 levels by the end of the decade), which encourages private capex with a market-access rationale.

Capital, margins and investment economics
From an investment lens, defence and aerospace manufacturing have these financial characteristics: high up-front capital expenditure (plant, tooling, certification), long inventory and receivable cycles (project timelines, government payment schedules), but attractive long-term margins once certification, ramp and aftermarket services are in place. Companies that capture assembly, spares and MRO chains can move from single-digit to mid-teens operating margins over time (company-specific, depending on product mix and localisation). Export contracts priced in USD also provide an FX hedge for rupee-based manufacturers when global demand is stable.
For investors, key ratios to watch are order-book to revenue (visibility), gross margin trajectory (localisation vs imported content), capex intensity (capex / sales) and free cash-flow conversion post-ramp. Defence firms with steady service revenues (MRO, training, spares) typically show stronger FCF conversion than pure systems integrators dependent on episodic contracts.

Export potential and global positioning
India’s aim to be a global defence supplier is supported by competitive labour costs, a maturing supplier base, and strategic pricing for markets in Asia, Africa and Latin America. Helicopters like the H125 — a versatile, proven platform — can open channels to civil and parapublic buyers (police, coast guard, EMS) in neighbouring markets. If TASL’s Karnataka FAL scales as planned, it can help create a local export hub for light helicopters — a product category with steady demand and recurring aftermarket revenue.

Risks and what investors should monitor
Key risks include payment and certification delays (government procurement cycles), dependence on imported critical subsystems (which affects margin potential), and geopolitical export controls that can limit market access for certain platforms. Investors should monitor order backlog transparency, localisation percentages (import content vs indigenised value), capex schedules, and government procurement guidelines (which materially affect demand timing).

Conclusion
India’s defence and aerospace sector has moved from policy promise to measurable scale: record production and export numbers, large greenfield investments in corridors, and concrete OEM-partner projects such as Tata’s H125 assembly line in Karnataka. For investors, the sector offers long-duration structural growth driven by policy support, export demand and private-sector scale-up — but it demands careful due diligence on order books, margins and execution timelines. The next few years will reveal which companies convert plant capex into sustainable free cash flow and export footprints; those that do are likely to outperform as India deepens its role as a global defence manufacturer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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HAL Set to Benefit from $1 Billion GE Fighter Jet Engine Deal

HAL Q1 FY26 Results: Margin Surge Amid Mixed Profit

HAL Q1 FY26 Results: Margin Surge Amid Mixed Profit

Robust Revenue, Expanding Margins, and a Dynamic Order Book Signal HAL’s Resilience Despite Profit Dip

Introduction: Strong Start to FY26 for HAL
India’s premier aerospace and defence manufacturer, Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL), kicked off FY26 with a quarter that showcased revenue strength and enhanced operational efficiency, offset by marginal decreases in net profit. This performance has underlined HAL’s status as a cornerstone of India’s defence sector while illuminating both opportunities and headwinds in a fast-evolving environment.

Financial Headlines: Revenue Up, Margins Broaden
During Q1 FY26 (April–June 2025), HAL reported:
• Consolidated revenue from operations surging 10.9% year-on-year to ₹4,819 crore, driven by the execution of projects from its substantial ₹1.89 lakh crore order book and strengthened by a higher contribution from repairs and overhauls.
• EBITDA margin climbed significantly to 26.6% (up from 22.8% a year earlier), aided by improved operating leverage.
• Operating profit (EBITDA) soared almost 30% to ₹1,284 crore, surpassing analyst forecasts and reflecting growing scale.
• Consolidated net profit came in at ₹1,377 crore, a 4% dip from the same quarter last year, primarily attributed to higher tax outgo and increased employee expenses.

Order Book and Execution: Building for the Future
HAL’s order book—one of the largest in India’s defence industry—stood at a staggering ₹1.89 lakh crore by the end of Q1 FY26, providing long-term revenue visibility. Management reaffirmed guidance for:
• The company is aiming for an order book of ₹2.5–2.6 lakh crore by FY26, supported by strong execution as indigenous defence contracts gain momentum.
• Delivery of 12 LCA Mk1A fighter aircraft this year—a step-change from past fulfillment rates, thanks to streamlined supply chains and key technology partnerships.

Stock Market Reaction: Bullish Despite Near-Term Dip
• HAL’s shares recovered from initial losses and gained over 2% after the results announcement, outperforming the Nifty index and demonstrating investor confidence in the company’s underlying momentum.
• Brokerages have largely maintained bullish positions. Notably:
o Motilal Oswal, Nomura, and Nuvama have set target prices between ₹5,800 and ₹6,100 per share, projecting an upside potential of up to 38%.
o Stronger margins, execution discipline, and a sizable order pipeline were cited as key drivers behind these optimistic forecasts.

Margins and Capital Efficiency: The Standout Story
While profit slipped marginally, HAL’s margin story took center stage:
• EBITDA margin expanded by nearly 400 basis points, surprising analysts and signalling improved cost efficiency.
• The company managed this margin expansion even as employee benefit costs rose due to higher pension scheme contributions.
• HAL remains almost debt-free, providing further financial flexibility as India steps up defence indigenization and multi-year procurement cycles.

Sectoral and Strategic Context
HAL’s strong revenue and margin performance comes as India seeks self-reliance in military hardware and boosts domestic procurement. The company’s execution on current orders—especially the Tejas fighter program and helicopter fleet upgrades—have increased its strategic importance.
Analysts believe HAL is well-positioned to capture an even larger share of upcoming military aviation contracts, particularly as budget allocations and geopolitical priorities focus on domestic manufacturing and assembly capabilities.

Challenges and Key Watchpoints
Despite its robust performance, HAL faces several challenges:
• Sustaining profit growth amid rising costs, especially with new pension obligations and higher tax outgo in Q1 FY26.
• Delivering complex aircraft and systems on schedule while maintaining quality, given the scale of pending orders.
• Navigating global supply chain headwinds as it ramps up the Tejas Mk1A and other key programs.

Conclusion: HAL Remains a Defence Powerhouse
Q1 FY26 results reinforce HAL’s leadership in India’s defence sector, with revenue and margins hitting record highs despite a dip in net profit. Supported by a massive order book, execution discipline, and strong institutional backing, HAL is primed for further growth and strategic prominence. Most analysts recommend holding or accumulating the stock, anticipating stronger profits as project deliveries accelerate and costs are further optimized.

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Jindal Steel & Power Q1 FY26: Profits Surge on Operational Gains and Strategic Growth