Billionbrains Garage Ventures Ltd (NSE: GROWW) Q3 2026 Earnings Call dated Jan. 14, 2026
Corporate Participants:
Kunalraj Singh Chhabra — Head of Investor Relations
Harsh Jain — Co-Founder and Chief Operating Officer
Ishan Bansal — Co-Founder and Chief Financial Officer
Neeraj Singh — Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer
Analysts:
Nikhil Suresh — Analyst
Supratim Datta — Analyst
Madhavan S — Analyst
Mayank Agawal — Analyst
Prayesh Jain — Analyst
Harshit Toshniwal — Analyst
Nidhesh Jain — Analyst
Dipanjan Ghosh — Analyst
Gaurav Singhal — Analyst
Abhijeet Sakhare — Analyst
Pranuj Shah — Analyst
Rahul Manot — Analyst
Gaurav Jain — Analyst
Madhur Sharma — Analyst
Shweta Sharma — Analyst
Siju Philip — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to Billionbrains Garage Ventures Limited, popularly known as Groww Q3 FY26 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] Additionally, please note that this earnings call is scheduled for a duration of 45 minutes and we will be starting directly with the Q&A session. [Operator Instructions]
I now hand the call over to Nikhil from Kotak Institutional Equities. Thank you and over to you, Nikhil.
Nikhil Suresh — Analyst
Hi. Thanks, Michelle. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the 3Q FY26 earnings conference call for Billionbrains Garage Ventures Limited, best known to investors and users as Groww. We have the senior management with us today who will respond to your questions on the quarter’s financial performance. On behalf of Kotak Institutional Equities, I would like to thank the management for giving us the opportunity to host this call.
Joining us on the call today from Groww are Lalit Keshre, Co-Founder and CEO; Harsh Jain, Co-Founder and COO; Neeraj Singh, Co-Founder and CTO; Ishan Bansal, Co-Founder and CFO; and Lalit Bhimani, Group Head, Finance; and Kunalraj Singh Chhabra, Head of Investor Relations.
As always, the remarks may include forward-looking statements, which should not be interpreted as guarantees of future performance.
With that, let me hand over the conference to Kunal. Thank you, and over to you.
Kunalraj Singh Chhabra — Head of Investor Relations
Thank you, Michelle and Nikhil. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to the call. Our results and shareholder letter have been published on the exchanges and as well as uploaded on the company’s IR website. Before we begin, I would like to remind the attendees that some statements or comments made on the call by the management which reflect the outlook or are deemed as forward-looking may involve risks and are not subject to any review. Such statements or comments are not guarantees of future performance and the actual results may differ.
With that, we can begin with the Q&A. Michelle, please go ahead.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you very much, sir. [Operator Instructions] The first question is from Supratim Datta. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Supratim Datta
Hi, everyone. This is Supratim from Jefferies. Thanks for the opportunity. I have two questions, starting with the partnership or the stake sale to State Street on the AMC side. If you could give us some color around how you see this partnership playing out over the next five years? What’s the roadmap for the AMC business? And while it has scaled up fairly significantly post your acquisition, just wanted to understand how is this State Street partnership going to be an inflection point for this business and where do you see this breakeven and move over the next five years? So that would be helpful.
And moving to my second question, which is on the wealth piece that you are developing. Wanted to understand why is the Fisdom revenue, if I back it out, it seems like it’s only INR29 crores for this quarter. So just wanted to understand the run rate last year was somewhere around INR40 crores per quarter. So has there been any change or is it being reported differently? So if you could give some color on that? And again, there on the wealth piece, how are you seeing that build out over the next five years? What are the — how are you going to differentiate with offerings that are already there in the market, that would be very helpful. Thank you.
Harsh Jain
Yeah. So I’ll take that. Thanks for both the questions. So on the investment that we are making in the asset management business and especially the partnership with the State Street, see, we see that the asset management in general in India is a huge potential and the very, very high growth left in the next few decades. And State Street being one of the world’s largest brings a lot of global practices that helps us build the business in India. It’s very early stage in our asset management also.
We have launched almost two, two and a half years back and we’ve seen very good growth in terms of new customers coming in. And the AUM has also grown steadily. But there’s a lot of capability that we need to build over time and this partnership will help us build that quicker. It’ll help us build with a lot more credibility and also be able to have lot of global access for the Indian investors and likewise for the foreign investors for our products. So this is the thought process with which we want to go ahead with now. And the broad contours, they will get to know more in future and we’ll talk about them.
On the wealth side, again, we just recently October is when we consolidated the acquisition. So there’s a lot of work going on, on the wealth side from a strategy point of view, how we build it, how we are building both for the existing Groww customers and for a lot of affluent customers who want to come in for these services. But very early stage for us to talk about what will be the differentiator and how will it play out. We are working on different, different parameters on that. From a P&L point of view, I think this consolidation will continue. I mean, there’s some time with — still a lot of integrations are happening and we will — it’s a very small both ways as compared to the overall P&L of Groww. So we will start specifying the details and the transitions in the near quarters.
Supratim Datta
Got it. And if I could just squeeze in one more on that wealth piece. What is the kind of synergies on the cost side that you expect, Harsh, now that it’s been integrated and you have seen the business for two, three months now?
Harsh Jain
So see, a lot of synergies in the wealth business in general, but also depends on how the scale up happened. So today, we see a lot of affluent customers on Groww are requiring those services which we are not offering now. With this acquisition, we are able to plan how we will be offering it to them. So customer acquisition cost when it comes to Groww customers using the services becomes almost zero for us. But having said that, it will not be 100% the same customers. There will also be growth coming in from the other channels. So it will evolve over time. And probably sometime once we have done the integration completely and we are able to scale it is when we can talk about the colors of how the cost and like the different kind of cost will look in this business.
Supratim Datta
Sure. That’s helpful. Thank you.
Harsh Jain
Sure.
Operator
Thank you. We’ll take the next question from Sucrit Patil. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your questions. Mr. Patil, please unmute yourself. As there is no response, we will move on to the next question, which is from Madhavan S. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with the question.
Madhavan S
[Indecipherable]
Operator
I’m sorry, sir, we can see two connects connections for you right now. So please, you’ll have to log out from one connection and you may proceed there.
Madhavan S
This quarter, the revenue was increased. Earning per share also increased. Whether you have any — but the expenses also increased. But net profit is lower than last quarter. Revenue increases, net profit reduces, but EPS higher. Is there any plan to distribute interim dividend or final dividend?
Harsh Jain
Sir, just to clarify this, the profit on quarter-to-quarter actually increased. On year-on-year basis, there is a decrease actually and that’s what is primarily because of one-off reversal that happened in the last year. So on a quarter-to-quarter basis, actually, there is an increase.
Madhavan S
Sir, any plan to declare the interim dividend and all because you have not declared any dividend till date.
Harsh Jain
Sir, we have just got listed three months back and we are still in a very high growth phase. We are still building new businesses where we have raised money in IPO also to invest in those businesses. And once our growth is probably letting us give dividend also, we will start giving dividend, but we are not expecting to give dividend in the near future.
Madhavan S
Okay. Thanks so much, sir. Thanks so much.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] The next question is from Mayank Agarwal. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Mayank Agawal
Hey. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Congratulations team for the great set of numbers. Mayank Agarwal from TRUST Mutual Fund. So you started Commodities I think in September and now it’s 4% of our overall top line. Can you just elaborate, sir, how is the number of users there and how is the market share we have achieved in commodities?
Harsh Jain
So, from a user perspective, I think it is already there in the shareholders’ letter that we published. So we have already more than 1 lakh customers on the commodity side. If you look at from a revenue perspective, we are at a 4% of our base, but market share is — still we are figuring out what is the right way of calculating the market share because in equity segment, we get a premium turnover is available from exchanges. But in case of commodities, actually, the premium turnover is not yet available. So hence, our market share we are not able to actually ascertain. But on a notional basis, we will be still at a double-digit number at least.
Mayank Agawal
I think it’s available on daily basis similarly to exchanges. I think yesterday was INR10,500 crores. Okay, got it. [Foreign Speech] I got the answers for commodity. And secondly, on this AMC strategic investor, can you just — you want to increase the number of passive products or just it’s because you want to make the global assets investable for the Indian user? Can you just give more clarity where would be the focus of this strategic and what kind of Board seats would they get and what kind of employee would you be bringing in from them? Can just elaborate some more — throw more color on that?
Harsh Jain
Yeah, sure. So see, it’s not a specific. Lot of these things are part of the strategy to scale. I think as an asset management company, the focus is going to be to scale the AUM and also the user base. So in India, there’s a lot of behavioral changes also happening amongst the retail investors. Some of the passives are becoming important or there is an interest for the global also. So all these are the like products that AMC will keep on building and scaling as and when the users demand. So with the partnership, it gives us an advantage to have those global practices and the knowledge base, which we can share and we can build on the solutions for Indian context per se. So that’s the rationale out there. Sorry, what was your second question?
Mayank Agawal
How many Board seats would they get, the decision making, voting rights, whatever, some more clarity on that?
Ishan Bansal
Yeah. So some of the details I think we’ve uploaded on the — this thing along with the release. The others will keep on sharing because a lot of these things are also subject to the approvals from the regulators. So we’ll have to apply to SEBI with all these contours. Once they approve, then the final discussion points will come out from there.
Mayank Agawal
And any such kind of more strategic initiatives in the other business segment, like wealth?
Harsh Jain
No. So in general, any kind of M&A we look at is to be able to build capability, which we don’t have or which will take longer time for us. So today, we don’t have anything other than this that is going on.
Mayank Agawal
Okay. Thanks. Thanks a lot.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Prayesh Jain. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself, and proceed with the question. Sir?
Prayesh Jain
Yeah. Hi everyone. Can you hear — am I loud and clear enough?
Harsh Jain
Yes, sir, you’re loud and clear. Please proceed.
Prayesh Jain
Hi. Just firstly on the — ask question on this AMC bit. So there are two parts, right? One is fresh money infusion and the other is the stake sale by the parent entity. Now how do you plan to utilize the stake sale cash flows?
Harsh Jain
Yeah. So see, the business right now is in a growth state and it is needing cash and we have spent some investments we’ve already made in the last two years. So the cash that we generate will be requiring to scale the business itself. So that’s the primary use case of that.
Prayesh Jain
So is there any — because this is a pretty decent size of money. So you’re looking at inorganic stuff as well again like we have done in the past?
Harsh Jain
So it does give us an opportunity to do that, and if the right opportunity comes, we’ll have enough cash within the asset management business to be able to scale inorganically also.
Prayesh Jain
Okay. The other question was on the wealth management piece. I know it’s early days, but from an integration perspective, where we are, have we kind of started reaching out to affluent customers — our affluent customer base offering them? We have launched the app, right, but where is the integration? And how do you think that you can scale that up in the near term should we see any traction in the next quarter? Where are we in terms of — in that journey right now?
Harsh Jain
Yes. So still little early in the integration part because this is a full fledged business and we are integrating a lot of these pieces while the app and some of the experiences are built, but they will take time to scale. This is going to be a — this will take some time for the integration, but wealth business will keep on building on the Groww customers also and as well as the existing erstwhile Fisdom business that we had. So both of these businesses will continue scaling and quarter-on-quarter, we should see the scale up and the growth going from them.
Prayesh Jain
Okay. Got that. Ishan, just last question. Ishan, any impact of the new labor laws which is there or which is yet to come on the P&L in any form?
Ishan Bansal
So there is I think already roughly INR2.5 crores to INR3 crores of provisioning that we have already taken for that from a gratuity perspective and this is based on some assumptions. Obviously, as more clarity comes, this number might kind of change in the future as well.
Prayesh Jain
Got that. Thank you, and wish you all the best.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Harshit Toshniwal. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Harshit Toshniwal
Hi, Ishan. I hope I am audible.
Operator
Yes sir. Please proceed.
Harshit Toshniwal
Okay. Hi. I had a few questions. One is the fact that when we look at the order per day in the equity derivative and the stock segment both. So obviously, there has been sharp uptick in the sense that on derivative side I think on an active user base order per day for us now is 5.4 million and at the same point of time on stock also it is more like 2.3 million orders per day. That number is actually now back to the 3Q levels which we had. If you can help us throw some light that on the stock side do you think that — is there any — any specific factors which have been driving this growth on a per day basis and how has the trend been?
And the second point was that when I look at the realization on the stock side, I think we were continuously seeing an improvement. Some back calculation showed INR18 per order on stock side held by the MTF. But if I look at 3Q numbers that number has taken a dip to INR16 per order on the stock side. If I take INR20 per order on derivative now, if MTF book would have increased, the contribution would have increased and our realization is also higher. Then what am I missing in the realization figure?
Ishan Bansal
Sure. So let me take the first one. So if you look at in last quarter, I think these commodities, especially gold and silver also helped in kind of bumping it up. And then IPOs also happened. A lot of IPOs happened in the last quarter, which also helped in the order per day on the stock side.
Harshit Toshniwal
Stock will — commodity also — I thought that the number of stock orders, will it include —
Ishan Bansal
No. So this is talking about ETFs.
Harshit Toshniwal
Okay.
Ishan Bansal
So ETFs are part of stocks revenue or stocks orders effectively because it’s also a part of cash segment. And the second piece that you talked about somewhere, I think we’ll look at it offline, but our estimation is that our yield actually has improved on the stock side also in this quarter.
Harshit Toshniwal
So on a blended basis, I agree that INR19.6 has gone to INR19.9. Just that if probably on the derivative orders, I take it as a INR20 per order, then the balancing figure showed a INR16.2 number versus —
Ishan Bansal
That can’t be possible, right? INR19.9 and assume that INR19.9, it is INR20, then that is also INR20, right? So some calculation error then.
Harshit Toshniwal
Let me just recheck I think then broadly. Got it. That’s it. Thanks a lot guys.
Ishan Bansal
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Nidhesh Jain. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with the question.
Nidhesh Jain
Sir, I am Nidhesh from Investec. My question is on customer acquisition cost. So last quarter, there was an increase in customer acquisition cost. This quarter there is a decline. What is driving that and how do we calculate this CAC? Is it on transacting users or it is on a gross customer basis? These are the two questions.
Harsh Jain
Yeah. So, see, better way to look at CAC because ours is a very seasonal spend. Our acquisition and marketing spends are seasonal across the year spread out and we are a little opportunist in when the time is right then we spend more. And that has always worked for us to reduce and keep the CAC within the guardrails as a annual basis. So the best way to look at CAC number is on an annual basis. So last year, we had some branding spends and this year, we did not. So you will see a difference in the CAC, but at an annual basis, you will see that the overall spends are very consistent from what last year to this year we’ve spent from an absolute number point of view. Yeah, so that’s pretty much on the way we look at the acquisition engine.
Nidhesh Jain
How do we calculate the CAC? What —
Harsh Jain
CAC, yeah, sorry, yeah. CAC is, sir, overall spends that we do for marketing across the different functions, whether it’s a brand or performance or content. That is the total cost and the new customers that we acquired on our platform.
Nidhesh Jain
New transacting users.
Harsh Jain
New transacting users. So the difference between the way we do, I mean, we take — once the user has done one transaction in one of the products, not the Demat, it is one transacting user.
Nidhesh Jain
Sure. Thank you. That’s it for me.
Harsh Jain
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Dipanjan Ghosh. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Dipanjan Ghosh
Hi. Hope I’m audible. Dipanjan Ghosh here from Citi. A few questions from my side. First, if I look at the quarter-on-quarter shift in the broking transacting users versus active users overall on the platform, I think it has fared relatively better compared to the last maybe few quarters. So just wanted to get some sense of the activation ratios of customers. Customers would have probably gone a little soft over the past few quarters or months. What sort of activation levels or reactivation levels are you seeing amongst those existing customers? That’s the first question.
Second, in terms of your product distribution and wealth journey, you’ll probably launch a few more products or kind of integrate the products that Fisdom already has. What would be the top two or three products that you would want to monetize apart from the existing ones over the next, let’s say, two to three years? And any plans to monetize the mutual fund active customer base or captive customer base that you have? So those are the two questions. Two data keeping questions. One, if you could provide the employee data as of December end? And second, this is a follow-up to one of the previous participant’s question. Are you including the broking revenue from Fisdom under your broking revenue head from a classification perspective?
Ishan Bansal
Too many questions, Dipanjan. I think I remember the last ones. I’ll start with the last ones first. This broking revenue from Fisdom as of now is part of Fisdom only. So we haven’t clubbed yet when we are showing the split. That will probably — once the integration is done, we’ll be able to probably do that. Second, on the employee, I think we have to get back. I think it’s not top of our mind. On the other thing like you talked about the activation, I think one way to look at is the broking transacting user number that we publish and if you look at divided by the active users that we published, you will see there is a up trend in that.
So roughly this number was more closer to 60% earlier. Now it’s closer to like 67%, 68% now. And that is primarily because last quarter we talked about like gold, silver was doing well. So some of the customers got activated because of that. Some of the customers got activated — reactivated like you said, right, because of the IPOs and stuff as well. And then there is an acquisition also that we — acquisition of users, which was significant in this quarter compared to the last quarter. That also kind of contributed to that ratio to be slightly better compared to the earlier quarters.
Harsh Jain
I can give the employee data. So previous quarter we had 1,450 approximate employees. This quarter end, we are 1,350. So we’ve reduced it by 100. This doesn’t include the employees on the Fisdom, which is just October onwards is when the consolidation has happened.
Dipanjan Ghosh
Got it. If you could just spell out the product roadmap for the wealth journey and maybe one or two products that you would like to kind of monetize over the next two to three years barring what exists?
Ishan Bansal
Harsh?
Harsh Jain
Yeah. So under the wealth umbrella, there are a lot of products. So there is a mutual fund regular plan itself that they already have good AUM, which is a monetized mutual fund, which is already existing. And then there are PMS, AIF. There are distribution of some private unlisted products and also insurance. So the early days traction is a lot more on the mutual fund side and the AIF and PMS. But there are also other products that will keep on coming up as per the needs and we’ll continue scaling these product ranges based on the user and based on every investors have a different preference.
Dipanjan Ghosh
Got it, Harsh and Ishan. Thanks and all the best.
Harsh Jain
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Gaurav Singhal. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with the question.
Gaurav Singhal
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I’m Gaurav Singhal from WFM Asia.
Operator
I’m sorry sir, your audio is muffled. Can you use — your audio is not clear, sir.
Gaurav Singhal
Hi, can you hear me?
Operator
Yes, please proceed.
Gaurav Singhal
Yeah. Just a couple of questions. So one is since there is a lot of focus on retail losses, has there been any change over the last one year in terms of retail losses on our platform that we have seen? Because in a couple of talks given by SEBI Chairman, I think they did mention they’ll look at how the previous measures have impacted retail losses and the ratio of derivative cash and then decide if anything else is needed. So on our platform, have we seen any change in retail losses on derivative? That’s the first question.
And second is I was looking at EBITDA margin on a like-for-like basis excluding Fisdom that has expanded quite a bit. I think it’s like 63% plus now. So just stylistically when we have to think of opex growth, can you share like what is — how much of our cost is variable versus fixed and roughly how much should the fixed cost grow over a two, three year time frame just to try to understand the margin progression better? Thank you.
Ishan Bansal
Got it. So let me take these questions. So I’ll take the second one first. The EBITDA margin if you look at it is expanding because the revenue has grown significantly and our variable cost is roughly like 10% — or the 10% is roughly the variable cost. Rest all is more on the fixed nature. And that too the growth is primarily comes either through appraisals, which is people is the largest piece in that and appraisals and then second is inflation, basically because on the marketing side that kind of increases that cost. So both of these costs basically you can say it will grow roughly 10% to 20%. If revenue grows faster, we’ll be able to deliver higher EBITDA in the future as well.
Second, on the customer losses side, so the way to look at is it’s as a user on Groww has a — is actually buying multiple products. So it’s a platform where actually customer is investing in mutual fund stocks or some of them are doing derivatives as well. But when we look at the user as a whole, we see majority or when I say majority like 80%, 90% of them actually make profits. There are very few customers who make losses and derivatives as a — like a derivative only customers are probably very similar as industry, where probably similar ratios as what SEBI is also publishing in terms of losses. But that number is like less than 0.3% today. And that is probably even lower in the future because customer keeps on adding more and more products in their portfolio.
Gaurav Singhal
Thank you. Maybe one more question, if I may. So I understand we have several new products that we want to monetize. So our hands seem very full in the next two, three years. But maybe a little bit more medium term, there are a lot of these like products that exist outside India which are not in India like people have payment for order flow, crypto, prediction market, securities lending, if you look at like global brokerage companies. So over medium terms like, of course, like next two, three years, I understand we have — we are handful. But what can be done, what cannot be done over medium term when we comp in like a global broker just over, let’s say, five years?
Ishan Bansal
So I think all the products that he just talked about are not really legal or not in the regulated space as of now. And hence, we have taken a conscious call not to do all of these products with the exception of SLVM, which we think is currently in a very nascent stage. Once SLVM becomes slightly more kind of baked in as a product, probably, we’ll start looking at SLVM as one of those option that you kind of highlighted. And rest I think will depend on when regulator kind of take a call on regulating them. Post that only, we will probably launch it on Groww.
Gaurav Singhal
Got it. Thank you for taking my question.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Abhijeet Sakhare. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Abhijeet Sakhare
Hi, this is Abhijit from Kotak. I hope I’m audible. My first question ties in with Gaurav’s one of question, the questions on EBITDA. Now I’m thinking how to think about EBITDA margin progression given that most of the incremental revenue growth seems to be coming from cross-selling products to the existing customers, right? And given that one of the largest cost is cost to grow and that starts to slow down, right, on the expanded revenue base. So is there like an EBITDA margin beyond which you would want to be more aggressive in marketing or towards some other initiatives?
Ishan Bansal
So again, we don’t look at EBITDA like a metric that we want to drive. This is more of an output. The way we look at is basically that if marketing is giving us enough like a LTV from the customer, then with the kind of a reasonable CAC, we will probably start spending more. But when — if you look at in last like 12 to 18 months, market hasn’t been that great and hence, the new acquisition in the industry level has actually slowed down. So this is not a good time to actually invest more. But this is a good time to actually probably do more optimizations and focus more on cross-sell like you said. But idea is to kind of again launch more products, get more and more customers and having those customers having multiple products on the platform so that over a period of time you build a relationship with the customer and they become like captive to you. The acquisition will always be happening, but it will depend more on the market, less on our EBITDA.
Abhijeet Sakhare
Got it. And one more sort of a number question is that we don’t get to see like what’s the Demat additions at a broker level. But would you have any idea, what would be your current market share in terms of gross Demat additions?
Ishan Bansal
So we don’t actually focus on the Demat number because according to us that is like a vanity metric. We feel looking at NTU number and NSE publishes ATU numbers also which are also a good way to kind of measure publicly available data that how the new users are actually getting added.
Abhijeet Sakhare
Got it. That’s all I had. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Pranuj Shah. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself, and proceed with your question.
Pranuj Shah
Hope I’m audible. Thanks for taking my question. So just a couple of questions over here. One is on like you have seen a very significant rise on the premium ADTO on the FNO segment per active user. So could you give us some color on which cohort of customers, when were these acquired who are contributing to such a massive rise in your premium ADTO per customer? And the second question is on your 915 platform, could you give us some sense on what is the contribution to active users and order flow coming from this platform and how much is the per transacting user order flow higher on this platform versus your mobile app?
Ishan Bansal
Got it. So I think the first one is easier. So basically, if you look at it what happened after the regulations, lot of the customers who were doing smaller transactions actually stopped doing those transactions because number of expiries reduced. The ticket size also went up because the lot size went up. And hence, you look at what happened was the only the customers who were doing larger transaction, larger turnover or more number of transaction actually stayed on the platform and this we have seen across the bucket. So if you do like — I think NSE provides this data where they talk about customers actually doing a turnover of less than INR10,000, INR10,000 to INR1 lakh and so on.
In that what we are seeing is the top cohort which is where customer is doing, let’s say, more than INR10 lakh to INR1 crores or more than INR1 crore. So actually INR10 lakh is the number that we look at. More than INR10 lakh customers actually has significantly increased in terms of absolute amount also versus the customers who were actually doing less than INR10 lakh of turnover actually reduced. But obviously, the absolute quantum below INR10 lakh was more. So the absolute number still looks lower, but the cohort which was doing larger transaction actually increased.
Pranuj Shah
So Ishan, just one follow-up over here, like I meant on when were these cohort acquired. So there’s 1.45 million active customers, like are any of these ones who came into — like what proportion —
Ishan Bansal
[Speech Overlap] So they are both actually.
Pranuj Shah
And beyond — earlier.
Ishan Bansal
So we don’t have a number for it. But it is a good mix of you can say the new as well as the older customers because we already had like almost 2 million customers who were active on FNO side. Today, we have 1.47 million. Large part of that is actually existing customers. There is a roughly you can say probably 20% of them would have been acquired in the last year or so.
Pranuj Shah
Okay. 80% would be 2024 and earlier.
Ishan Bansal
2024 and earlier, correct.
Pranuj Shah
Got it. And the second one on the 915 platform.
Ishan Bansal
So 915 is as of now in a very early stage. So we have very limited set of users and there is a like a cross also. So a lot of people who use 915 also use Groww. So there is a — it’s very difficult for us to attribute at this scale what is the delta that is getting created. But I think with next quarter we’ll have more data and we’ll come back to you on this.
Pranuj Shah
Understood. Thanks a lot, Ishan
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Rahul Manot. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Rahul Manot
Hi. I’m audible?
Operator
Yes, sir. Please proceed.
Rahul Manot
Yeah. Congratulations team for the amazing sets of number. I am Rahul Manoj. So I have one question regarding the AMC business. So we have recently like today we have mentioned that we have got the funding from State Street. So my question is regarding this only that how we plan to utilize this and what is the long-term ambition where the current — the product mix is majorly broking and very like minuscule for AMC? So how does the management plan to utilize this and what is the long term ambition of the AMC business, like where do we look towards it — how do we look towards it?
Harsh Jain
Yeah. Thanks, Rahul, for the question. We had like couple of questions we answered on the same transaction, but just briefly I’ll repeat certain things. See, the asset management is a small business today for us while we see the opportunity in India is pretty huge and it will take a lot of investments to be able to build that and scale there. So that’s the part of the proceeds going to be useful for that. And also if there is some inorganic opportunity that comes at the right time, we’ll be able to use some of the funds. From a ambition point of view, of course, we have the ambition to make the asset management business also really big and to be able to have a significant impact in the overall industry. So with the partnership also gives us some global best practices knowledge, access to different products and tools and we’ll be able to utilize a few of them to be able to build what we set our asset management for.
Rahul Manot
Got it. So one last question. Does management also plan to invest here like in terms of like we have raised it from the State Street, but do we also plan to invest additionally in this business?
Harsh Jain
So no, we continue. We have been investing like from a parent company to the asset management, now the cash which is coming in is coming through primary and secondary. We are also doing primary from our parent company in the asset management. Then the proposed transaction once upon approval from the regulators will have primary and secondary will leave enough capital in the AMC for it to grow and scale. And in future if required, then obviously the parent company will invest more.
Rahul Manot
Got it. Thank you so much.
Harsh Jain
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Gaurav Jain. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Gaurav Jain
Hi. This is Gaurav from ICICI Prudential Mutual Fund. Just one question from my side. We understand there is this 15% open interest limit that a single broker can hold in an exchange. So if you can help us understand what is that limit for us on BSE and NSE and how should we be thinking about the same?
Ishan Bansal
So this limit is actually same for everyone, but we are not hitting this limit. In the last quarter, we haven’t hit this limit and we see that there is a significant gap still because this limit is not applicable at an aggregate. So this is applicable at like a in time basis at a contract level. And on Nifty and on Sensex where large part of the volumes happens, we haven’t yet hit that limit in the last quarter.
Gaurav Jain
So the limit is exchange wise, right, and not specific contract or specific indices wise, right?
Ishan Bansal
No. It is at a contract level because open interest is for the contract.
Gaurav Jain
Got it. And how far would we be if you can help us understand?
Ishan Bansal
I think we’ll be probably half of it.
Gaurav Jain
Okay. Thanks. That’s all from my side.
Operator
Thank you. The next question is from Madhur Sharma. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself, and proceed with your question.
Madhur Sharma
Hi. This is Madhur from BofA Securities. So I just wanted to understand how are we thinking about FDF? I mean, this quarter, it has grown quite well and is already contributing 6% to total revenue. So for next one, two years, how do you think it can further grow? I mean, how much contribution can come from this product?
Ishan Bansal
So, the way I think historically it has grown is roughly INR600 crores we are adding almost every quarter. I think this momentum is continuing from last three quarters and I think we see that momentum to continue in the future as well. This depends a lot on volatility specific to some of the stocks, which are there in MTF approved list. So if any stocks move significantly upwards, this actually increases the kind of book for that particular stock. So if the similar market continues, I think we will probably be doing a similar number. But if the market kind of becomes even started growing faster probably or more broader based, probably we might have a growth which is faster as well. So because the growth in last one year is primarily in some pockets, not like broad based that we have saw like couple of years ago. So if broad-based kind of rally comes, probably it can grow even faster.
Madhur Sharma
Understood. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, please note that we’ll be taking few questions more. The next question is from Shweta Sharma. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Shweta Sharma
Good evening, sir. I hope I’m audible.
Operator
Yes, ma’am. Please proceed.
Shweta Sharma
Yeah. So sir, my first question is what are the plans for business diversification going forward and whether the current growth trajectory is sustainable and also what level of impact is expected from increasing competition?
Ishan Bansal
So the way to look at the diversification piece is that all the new businesses are growing faster than the existing business and hence, the diversification will keep on happening till there is a faster growth for the new businesses. And we see that our market share in all the new businesses is very nascent today. And as we gain market share, their contribution to revenue will also keep on growing. The second piece on the growth level is I think there is a two part of the growth. One is gaining market share and the second is the growth of the market itself. And the third piece actually is us launching more products.
So I think we can control two of them in some ways, but market is what will define how the overall growth happens. But like you said, I think market share is where we are talking about the competition and we’ve been able to gain market share across all matrices in last quarter as well as earlier — since I think probably last few years and we think it can continue in the future as well. We don’t see any — like there is a lot of competition already there, but there is no significant change that is happening in competition assets that will warrant any kind of reaction. And I think that answers your competition question also hopefully.
Shweta Sharma
Okay. So, as we see the competition and HFT and FNO segment is intensifying, so how do you plan to differentiate your tech infrastructure to ensure zero latency and high reliability for pro traders?
Ishan Bansal
Neeraj, you want to take this?
Neeraj Singh
Shweta, so we are not into — I think you talked about HFT. We are not into HFT and all. As of today, the speed that customers are expecting, we are meeting those expectations. And since none of our customers are into HFT or MFT space, I think that is not required. Towards reliability side, I think that’s a very good question because a large part of our bandwidth goes into making sure that we empower our customer in all situations, even if there is some tech glitch. And so for which we have launched Groww Light using which all our customers can — as the name suggests, it’s a very lighter version of Groww. You can’t do many other things, but you can see your positions and you can square them off. So if markets are going not in your favor, you are free to take actions from there. So this empowers them even in those situations. So these are the things we did in this quarter.
Shweta Sharma
Okay. Got it. Thank you so much, sir. That’s all from my side. Yeah, thank you.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, this will be the last question for today from Siju Philip. Please accept the prompt, introduce yourself and proceed with your question.
Siju Philip
Hello. Am I audible?
Operator
Yes, ma’am. Please proceed.
Siju Philip
Yeah. So I just wanted to know what are the broader plans on the wealth management space? As you said, these are still early stages, but just a broader aspect how you plan to grow the business?
Harsh Jain
Yeah, I’ll take that. So, see, we discussed last time also there are a lot of customers on our own platform who have become affluent and they need these products. So our goal on that front is to give them access to both the products, which are for the HNIs and also the service like wealth management and advisory service. So this will continue like once we start building the journey and scaling it up. On the existing business itself, we see a lot of growth potential, which will build by giving very powerful technology and products, which can be used by the wealth partners and also by the HNI customers to track and to kind of consume, and the advisory and the wealth products will be distributed through these two experiences.
Siju Philip
Right. So, at what stage are we now as in when do we expect this revenues to come in from which year or from which quarter? Just to —
Harsh Jain
Yeah. So already the existing business that we acquired is revenue generating. There are a lot of customers which are existing on them. So this will — once the integration is like little ahead in terms of building the right experience for the Groww customers as well as building the right technology and the right products for the existing customers and the existing channels of growth, we’ll start seeing the growth faster than what it is organically. There is still some time. Once it’s meaningful in terms of overall contribution on the Groww P&L, we’ll start separating and sharing the details about it.
Siju Philip
Okay. Thank you so much.
Operator
That was the last question for today. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Kunalraj Singh for closing comments. Thank you and over to you, sir.
Kunalraj Singh Chhabra
Thank you, Michelle. Appreciate everyone for joining the call today. And for any further questions or clarifications, please feel free to reach out to us. Thank you so much.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]