Escorts Limited (NSE:ESCORTS) Q1 FY23 Earnings Concall dated Aug. 01, 2022
Corporate Participants:
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Analysts:
Amyn Pirani — JPMorgan — Analyst
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
Mihir Jhaveri — Avendus Capital — Analyst
Hitesh Goel — CLSA — Analyst
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
Vikram Damani — Damani Securities — Analyst
Sameer Deshpande — Fairdeal Investments — Analyst
Shridhar Kallani — Axis Securities Limited — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome for the Escorts Kubota Limited Q1 FY’23 Earnings Conference Call hosted by DAM Capital Advisors Limited. [Operator Instructions] And there’ll be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. [Operator Instructions]
Before we start, I would like to add that some of the statements that we make in today’s call will be forward looking in nature and are subject to risks as outlined in the annual reports and investor releases of the company.
I now hand the conference over to Mr. Chirag Jain from DAM Capital Advisors Limited. Thank you, and over to you.
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Thank you, Mike. Good evening. And on behalf of DAM Capital Advisors Limited, I welcome you all for Escorts Kubota Limited Q1 FY’23 results earnings conference call. I also take this opportunity to welcome the management team from Escorts Kubota Limited. Today, we have with us Mr. Bharat Madan, President Finance and Group Chief Financial Officer and Corporate Head; Mr. Shenu Agarwal, President Agri Machinery and Construction Equipment Business; and Investor Relation team at Escorts Kubota Limited. We would start the call with a brief opening remarks from the management team followed by an interactive Q&A session.
At this point, I would request Mr. Madan to make his opening remarks. Over to you, sir.
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Thank you, Chirag. Good evening, everyone, and thank you all for joining us on this earning call for the first quarter ended 30 June, 2022. I would like to present few highlights of the company’s stand-alone performance for first quarter ended June 2022 as follows. Turnover up by 20.1% at INR2,014.9 crores as against INR1,677 crores in last year corresponding quarter. Tractor volumes up by 3.3% at 26,797 tractors as against 25,935 tractors in last year corresponding quarter.
Construction equipment volume up by 59.4% at 966 machines as against 606 machines in last year corresponding quarter. EBITDA at INR201.6 crores as against INR238.8 crores in last year corresponding quarter, down by 15.6%. EBITDA margin now stands at 10% as against 14.2% in last year corresponding quarter.
Steep inflation in commodity prices and unfavorable product mix has adversely impacted operating profit for this quarter. PBT at INR147.45 crores as against INR185.2 crores in last year corresponding quarter. Profit before tax was further impacted on account of lower other income, due to temporary mark-to-market losses on treasury investments. Net profit after tax at INR147.5 crores as against INR185.2 crores in last year corresponding quarter. Consolidated EPS stands at INR13.01 as against INR18.13 last year corresponding quarter.
Now moving on the segmental business performance. Starting with the Agri Machinery business, the domestic tractor industry volume for the quarter ended June 2022 went up by 15.8% to 2.66 lakh tractors as compared to 2.29 lakh tractors in last year corresponding quarter. This is on a low base of last year, especially of April, May when the rural part of country was severely impacted due to COVID-19 second wave. This is highest ever industry volume for April to June quarter. We also recorded our highest ever Q1 volume at 24,608 tractors in quarter ended June 2022 as against 24,500 tractors in the last corresponding quarter.
Our growth in volume was lower than industry growth. The market share loss has mainly come from our strong markets and that too from a particular HP segment where industry shift has happened. We are putting in place corrective actions, and we hope to soon catch up with our market share growth trajectory.
On export side, industry was up by 32% to 35,146 tractors as compared to 26,660 tractors in last year corresponding quarter. Our export volumes were even highest — forever highest quarterly volumes and the same went up by 52.5% to 2,189 tractors in quarter ended June ’22 as against 1,435 tractors in last year corresponding quarter. This is driven by our continued focus on product development for export markets and expanding our channel footprint.
Sales through global Kubota network has also been increasing and now constitute more than 20% of our total export volume. We have taken price increases across our business segment to partially offset the impact of inflation on raw material and other costs. We are deeply focused on our cost reduction efforts, both in variable costs as well as in fixed costs.
However, steep inflation in commodity prices, coupled with unfavorable product mix due to industry shift towards lower horsepower segment has adversely impacted operating profit for the quarter ended June 2022. EBIT margin for Agri Machinery business stands at 10.6% as against 14.9% in same period last quarter.
With the expectation of a good monsoon and likely record kharif crop production, we expect tractor industry to perform better in FY ’23 as compared to last fiscal. The growth in our estimate should be in low-to-mid single-digit levels.
Now coming to the Construction Equipment business, in quarter ended June 2022, our served industry volumes of crane, backhoe loaders and compactors went up by 47% as compared to last year corresponding quarter. Backhoe loaders industry grew by 55%. Crane industry grew by 40%, while Compactor industry was almost flat. Our total volumes of manufactured and traded products went up by 59.4% to 966 machines as against 606 machines in last year corresponding quarter. Our crane segment has outperformed the industry resulting in market share gain by almost 10% to 43% level in quarter ended June 2022 as compared to 33% in last year corresponding quarter and 40% in sequential quarter.
Segment revenue for the quarter ended June 2022 went up by 74% at INR246.1 crores as against INR141.1 crore in last year’s corresponding quarter. EBIT margin for the quarter ended June 2022 was up by 332 basis points to 1% as against negative 2.3% in last year corresponding quarter. The margins were adversely impacted due to steep inflation in commodity prices.
With government’s trust on infrastructure, we expect growth momentum to further accelerate in the current fiscal year 2022-’23. We expect Construction Equipment segment to grow in high-teens and margins for the segment to improve gradually owing to our cost reduction initiatives and improvements in other operating matrices.
Now coming to the Railway division, revenue for the quarter ended June 2022 went up by 45.2% to INR173.4 crores as against INR119.4 crores in last year corresponding quarter. Sales from new products now contribute 67% to total division sales as against 63% in last year corresponding quarter. EBIT margin for the quarter ended June 2022 stood at 13.6% as against 14.6% in previous year.
We are working towards indigenization of new products and we are happy to share that indigenously-developed axle mounted disc brake system are dispatched for free trials and expected to go under commercialization as per the approval process. This quarter, we witnessed very good traction in tendering process from wagon builders, and order book for the division at the end of June 2022 stood at a healthy level of more than INR850 crores. For FY ’23, we expect Railway Equipment segment continue to grow in double-digits.
Now, I request the moderator to kindly open the floor for Q&A.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We have the first question from the line of A. Pirani from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Amyn Pirani — JPMorgan — Analyst
My question is actually on the market share performance that you mentioned. So in one of the slides you mentioned that north and central regions for the industry grew by around 22%. But you grew by around 4%. So given that these are our traditionally strong areas, what has driven the significant underperformance in growth?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Hi, this is Shenu. Yes, so we know that we have lost in our strong markets, and we know that we have lost in some particular customer segments, especially the haulage segments or the low-end segments. As you know that we have been under unprecedented inflationary pressures since November 2020, and we have — we were in a situation where we had to just balance out our profitability and our market share goals. So we took some very measured steps balancing the two and in the process it seems that we have lost some market share. The root cause of this loss is quite clear to us. We know exactly in which segments, in which horsepower, in which markets we have lost and to who. And now, since we are seeing some positives in terms of inflationary trends, also in terms of some of the cost savings that we were working on kicking in now, so we think this is the right time to go back to our market share goals. So yes, we hope that in a few months from now, you will see that turnaround in market share.
Amyn Pirani — JPMorgan — Analyst
Okay. Okay. Sir, just as a follow-up, tou have been, to some extent, prioritizing profitability over market share for the last few quarters as well, but in this quarter the profitability has also been impacted. So would it be right to say that if you went for market share, then the financial performance could have been even weaker? Is that what we should understand from this?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, for that if you compare our results with the other companies in our space for which data is publicly available, I think you would get that sense. Yes, it will be very hypothetical to say that if we would have done better on market share, would we have lost more profit. I wouldn’t like to comment on that. But yes, directionally we were trying to balance the two, the market share and the profit.
Amyn Pirani — JPMorgan — Analyst
Okay. And sir, just lastly, would you give any update on the expectation for tractor industry growth for the year? I think the last time when we spoke, you were expecting a mid-to-high single-digit kind of growth on a full-year basis, if there is any update on that. That will be my last question.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, as Bharat had said in his opening comments, right now our expectation is that the tractor industry for FY ’23 should be in low-to-mid single-digit level growth from last year. So a lot depends on how things fare up in the rest of the month, but this is what we think right now.
Amyn Pirani — JPMorgan — Analyst
Sure sir. Thank you. I’ll come back in the queue.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Gunjan from Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
Yeah, hi. Hi, team. Thanks for taking my questions. Just taking on the point from the earlier question, I’m still very perplexed to see this margin performance. It’s almost a 5 percentage point decline. Now when I look at there was no loss of operating leverage as such from a quarter to quarter, we did try to take some price increases or work on balancing the profitability. My sense is you guys wouldn’t have gone too aggressive on discounting given the focus — given you’ve been — from a market share perspective, we haven’t seen that reflect. So if you can help us map this, how much was the cost increase, did we take any price increases? Because 5% just seems a pretty steep decline Q-on-Q. And also on the ASP if you can give some color because that’s also come off sequentially. So what’s happening on the product mix side?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Gunjan, if you look at our profit sequentially, you will see that most of the loss has come from inflation itself, even comparing quarter one of last year to quarter one of this year, that is the key reason. We are not really expecting that inflation would be so high in this last quarter, but really, the commodity prices went up in March and April beyond our expectations.
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
Were there any price increases?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, yes. So coming to price increases, so we took one price increase in quarter one I think to the extent of roughly 2%. So that we took, but the inflation was much more than that.
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
And mix side? Because still 2% price increase, so I’m guessing that there should be some mix deterioration also here.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes. So industry has shifted. Industry has shifted to lower, less profitable segments. You know that FY ’21 the rural economy was going very well, and we saw a very significant shift to more expensive tractors or higher horsepower tractors. So that correction is also now taking place. It took place last year, and it’s taking place now.
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay, got it. The second question is maybe related questions. Market share, Amyn did ask about it, but can you give us more sense on who’s in your strong markets? Is it the price discount which is enabling the share gain for the competitors or it is sheer weaker positioning in certain product segments like you yourself called out haulage? So is that something we should keep in mind when we’re thinking about market share?
And secondly, I think this was also a first quarter after the open offer got concluded. So maybe if you can share your thoughts as to how are the initial conversations in terms of integrating the two brands going on.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, so firstly, Gunjan, on the market share side, yes, we have done our analysis. In fact, we have been continuously looking at it every month since we have been losing market share. And the root cause is quite clear to us. We know what needs to be done, and we know in which segments we have to do better. Now just in terms of timing, as I explained, we think that this is the time to go back to our market share goals because of the factors I described. Inflation pressure is going down. Not that we have no unabsorbed inflation right now. But still there is some softness in the commodity prices, so we hope that will help us in the ensuing quarters.
And also, some of the cost reduction initiatives we took in the previous quarters are now kicking in into good savings. So this is a time to focus back now on market share. It was just a call. Different companies take different calls, and we just wanted to make sure that we balance our market share and profit aspirations. There is nothing fundamentally wrong with our market positioning; that I can say very confidently. So give us a few months and you will see some turnaround in market share.
Now coming to integration part. Yes, we are — in the last few months we have been deliberating over a midterm business plan for FY ’28 and FY ’30 as to how we will use the strengths of Escorts and Kubota, both the partners, to strengthen our market share presence in the country and also overseas. So we are hoping that we will complete this by September sometime and immediately after that we would like to share this with you.
Gunjan Prithyani — Bank of America — Analyst
Okay. I will join back the queue. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Chirag. Please go ahead.
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Yeah, thanks, sir. Sir, just a follow up on the market share thing. You mentioned that you lost market share to some competitors. But would that be more of a local or regional brands or national brands that you would have lost your market share to? Because even national brands would have faced similar headwinds with respect to, let’s say, profitability versus market share, let’s say, whatever dynamics. So maybe some color around that.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes. There are hardly any regional brands really. You know all the players are active nationally. Of course, they have different strengths in different markets. In our case, whoever we lost to, is not like a single player. It depends on the market, the segment, etc. But generally speaking, we lost in more price-sensitive markets, more price-sensitive customer segments. And the answer or the response to this when we run our market share revival story now would not be discounting, and it would be a mix of several things, including positioning the right product or come up with some different variants to appeal to those particular segments, and so on.
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Okay. And second, also, in terms of, let’s say, the way monsoon has been progressing, what we understand is that UP and Bihar they are lagging in terms of the rainfall so far. So any specific comments on those regions’ markets and what could be the implication for the tractor industry, or let’s say the broader rural segment in those regions?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, that is right. Monsoon has been a little bit uneven. UP, Bihar, and some parts of MP have not received as much rainfall. But I think looking at the forecast from the weather agencies, it seems that it will get covered up. If it does not, then, of course, it has a tendency to impact the market. Now you also know that more than the monsoon, it is actually the availability of water in various reservoirs that affects the tractor industry in immediate sense. But that situation is quite positive throughout the country actually. We have plenty of water in the reservoirs. And therefore, even if a fewer areas get a little bit less rainfall, I think it should not affect the industry this year. It may affect it next year, but it may not affect this year.
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Okay. And just last thing, maybe if you can share the channel inventory both for us and for the industry. Thank you so much.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes. We are still within the range of roughly a month of channel entry let us say between 27, 28 to about 35 days. That is where we maintain our channel inventory and have been maintaining at those levels. I think the competition is slightly more than that, maybe a couple of weeks more than that.
Chirag Jain — DAM Capital Advisors Limited — Analyst
Okay. Thank you so much, sir.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Mitul Shah from Reliance Securities. Please go ahead.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Hi, sir. Thank you for taking my question. Sir, again question on margin side. So in terms of product mix HP wise, there seems to be hardly difference of around 100, 200 basis. Earlier we used to have 91% contribution coming from 30 HP onwards. This quarter it is around 89%. So just 200 basis is not explaining pure pressure on the margin because of the product mix. So is there anything to do with the intensified competition earlier, or leader has given discounts in previous quarters to gain market share, so that is creating any pressure? Do you feel that for this quarter? And we also following the similar strategy of slightly higher discount?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Mitul, this is Shenu. I can’t answer that specifically. But yes, there is — we do feel that there is some disparity that has happened in the customer and prices or the transaction prices with the customer, in spite of the fact that most of the industry players have increased their prices in the similar ballpark. So I don’t know how to read that. But when we compare transaction prices, it seems there is some distortion between our prices and competition prices.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
And sir, second question is on, as you indicated, mid-single digit growth for the full year, but can you give more visibility at least for next quarter, that is Q2, given this July number declining by 15%, 20%, and August probably would also decline, but September because of the festival coming early, what could be the expected number for industry for Q2 given the inventory level is still much higher industry-wide?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, for Q2, we are expecting a small growth, maybe in the mid-single digit kind of a growth. And you are right, Mitul, July and August would be drop. July we have already seen is a drop. August would also be a drop it seems. But September, because of the early onset of the festival period, there would be momentum both on the retail side, at least in the last few days of September, and, of course, on the wholesale side to build up stocks for the Dhanteras and Diwali and so on. Yes, there would be some pressure on some of the brands who are sitting on slightly higher stocks — channel stocks. So we will see how that pans out during September and October.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Thanks, sir. Last question on Construction Equipment side, what could be stable margin expectation and what are the levers for that going forward considering commodity softening or pricing power or competitive situation there?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Mitul, in the Construction segment, we participate in three broad segments: one is cranes, the other is compactors, and the third is backhoe loaders. So in the cranes, there are — it’s a duopoly kind of a situation where there are only two big players, and therefore, the pressure on inflation or because of inflation is normally not that high. The compactors is an altogether different story where there are many, many players in the segment.
And, of course, there are intense pressures because of this inflation scenario, because of both the extent of the price increase and the timing of the price increase. Also, compactor is the one segment where individual deals are made with the customers, sometimes directly also, and therefore, the tendency to offer a certain price to capture the deal is actually even more. Backhoe loader, we are a very, very small player. We operate in a niche.
So therefore, we don’t really worry about competition that much because we just operate in a niche within a few customer segments. So overall, I’d say, yes, all the businesses have been affected by inflation, but the impact in Construction business is not as much as in Tractor business because there is a play that is available to us, especially in the cranes segment.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Thank you, sir.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Sonal Gupta from L&T Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
Yes, hi. Good evening, and thanks for taking my question. Sir, just sorry to belabor on the market share point, and one thing was that you would anyway lost market share because of the product short — the component shortages in FY ’21 and then ’22 also we’ve not been able to recover that, in fact, in the second half and in the first quarter we’ve again underperformed. And this is very surprising because you have probably the strongest balance sheet, probably even better than the leader. So I’m just curious that why — I understand, historically, the industry has operated balancing profitability, but I just don’t understand if the others are being more aggressive, why have you not chosen to defend your market share.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, so don’t feel sorry about asking this question. In fact, we are equally worried about the market share story, and we were just waiting for the right time to go back at it. I don’t know how to explain this, but different companies take different calls, especially in tough times like we are going through in the last 1.5 years, mainly because of the inflationary pressures. And right or wrong, hard to say, but we had taken the call that we will balance it maybe a little bit more than what competition has tried to do. You will know that the pressure on profit is a little bit more on Escorts for the reason that we are — our profitability is not at par with many of our peers in the industry. Although we have gained — although we have bridged the gap quite a lot in last seven or eight years, but we are still like 4% to 5% behind some of our peers. So it’s just a judgment call that we had to take from time to time. I would request you to wait for a few months and see how this pans out — the market share story pans out now.
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
No. Sir, why am I asking this question is because what historically we’ve seen is that the market shares tend to be quite sticky, and it’s difficult to recover market share once it’s — you lose ground there. Because now that you’re saying that, okay, commodity prices are coming off, there’s room for potentially being more aggressive, but that’s true for the industry as a whole. That’s not specific to you. So essentially, what gives you the confidence that you will be able to gain back that market share?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, as I explained, we have analyzed this in quite a bit of detail. You are right, I won’t disagree with you that the market shares in our industry are sticky. But we haven’t found any fundamental problem within the loss of this market share. The best thing is that we have lost in our strong markets and not in our weaker or opportunity markets that much, which actually gives us that confidence that we can take it back on the strength of our products, on the strength of our brands, and the strength of our channel. If it would have been the other story where we would have gained in strong or lost more in weaker and opportunity markets, then we would have really worry. But I think the situation — we know the reason, and we know that we have very strong footing in these markets, and we should be able to take it back.
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
Got it. Just a related question. Would financing have a role to play in this? Because clearly what you’re talking about, haulage, etc., and the lower-end segment, which are more price sensitive, some people do have closer relationships with financing companies, so would that have impacted you?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes. So we know that we do not have a captive finance company. And the brands that have a captive finance arrangement do tend to benefit in such times — in tougher times, because when you have to increase prices every quarter, then a finance partner can really step up and help you with better LTVs, etc. We do have that fundamental weakness in our whole story, and we would be working on that maybe in future sometime. But yes, you are right, it’s not so much about the financing relationships, but having a captive finance always helps in tougher times.
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
Got it. And just lastly, could you talk about the corrective actions that you’ve talked about? Have you launched some newer products which you were looking at?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
It would be a 360-degree kind of approach. We would be looking at several things, and it would include repositioning some of the products in terms of variants, features, in terms of price positioning against specific competition or specific customer segments. It would also have some channel actions. It is also very important for us to bring that morale of the channel back up again. So it would be a 360-degree story. It would be lot of market communication that we’ll have to do around some of our new products that we had launched within last two years, and we haven’t been able to make enough noise around them. So yes, it would be a mix of all those actions.
Sonal Gupta — L&T Mutual Fund — Analyst
Got it. Got it, sir. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Mihir Jhaveri from Avendus Capital. Please go ahead.
Mihir Jhaveri — Avendus Capital — Analyst
Yeah, thank you for the opportunity. Sir, just following to what Sonal asked actually in terms of gaining market share going forward and you’re saying that it is low-to-mid single-digit growth for the full year. That means that we’ll have very negligible growth or probably a decline for the rest of the year. On a sequential basis, sir, how we should look at it that, while we will have some commodity easing but the operating leverage will not be coming to us. Secondly, we’ll have this market share gain strategy where, as Sonal mentioned that, everybody will have that advantage and people will — everybody else will also try to be aggressive. So is it fair to assume that the margins would remain in this range for some time before we can gain anything material in the coming quarters? That’s my question, sir.
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So Mihir, margin, obviously, will depend on how the commodities market play now going forward. So there are two actions which were taken in the past: so one is how much the deflation happens now on the commodity side and how much impact you get. So as you know, the last quarter we have actually passed on — this was the peak of the inflation. March and April month actually were the peak. So the price increases which have been given to suppliers are based on those peak levels now. So we’re not seeing those peaks now likely to come back. So only seeing the deflation happening now in the month of May, June, July also we saw there was some softness has happened.
And second is the pricing action which Shenu talked about. So we already took one price increase in this quarter also. But I know whether — if you look at the last call also which we had, we had mentioned there will be 4% to 5% unabsorbed inflation, which will have an effect on the margin, and this was discussed I think quite a bit in the last con call and the last quarter results. So in spite of that, there’s about 2% of price increase which has been taken. So we still have 3%, 3.5% lag on the inflation side, which we’re carrying. Now either you get a deflation on the commodity side to that extent to offset it or you get some further price increase movement happening maybe going forward, which looks difficult looking at the way the last six price increases have been taken by the industry. So the absorption capacity of the customer looks very, very limited. So that may also be one of the reasons why you’re seeing the market shifting towards the lower HP segment because of the price increases.
So I think it will be a balance of the two. So depends if the commodities prices soften quite a bit and you get that advantage, maybe the margins can come back. But definitely next two quarters look quite challenging I think by the time you get to the stable margins. So Q2 I think will be the period where you can look at some normalcy coming back to the margin side.
Mihir Jhaveri — Avendus Capital — Analyst
Got it, sir. Thank you. That’s it from me.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Hitesh Goel from CLSA. Please go ahead, sir.
Hitesh Goel — CLSA — Analyst
Sir, my first question is on if I look at the Vahan registration data, and I think better way to look at the industry will be April to July rather than looking at July month per se. So there has been a growth in UP. Actually, the state which has declined is mostly Gujarat. So UP is doing fairly well, although there is — and correct me if I’m wrong, it depends a lot on water table there because irrigation densities from the ground level is quite high. So that is my first question if you can talk about that.
Second is on the — what Bharat said right now. There’s still 3%, 3.5% cost inflation left. Are we talking from this quarter or are we talking about peak margins — from the peak margins? Because commodity prices have declined significantly from the fourth quarter levels, especially steel, so not able to reconcile this. If you can talk about it.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Hitesh, I’ll talk about the market first. So yes, UP you know has been sitting on a low base because UP hasn’t grown as much as some of the other markets have grown in the last few years. So I think it is time for UP to probably come back, and we should see good momentum in UP in this year and next year probably as well, which should help us because we are quite strong in UP. And you are right, it mostly depends on the water table, and the water table situation is quite good right now even in North India. So even if UP has certain deficiency in rainfall, we are not too much worried. The momentum on the ground is good in UP. Bihar also should catch up it seems maybe after the Vishwakarma Day because the on-ground momentum is quite good even in Bihar now. I’ll pass on to Bharat for the other question.
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Yes, Hitesh, so I think as we mentioned in the last con call, so that time we said there’s a 4% to 5% of unabsorbed inflation which will remain by end of Q1, okay? We were comparing it against the level of margin which was there in Q4, which was roughly 16%. So even the 3%, 3.5% is against that level only, not against this quarter.
Hitesh Goel — CLSA — Analyst
And sorry, just to clarify on that. So basically, does the steel price contract come for renegotiation, because steel is — spot is down like 15% from the fourth quarter levels. So that would be a big jump on margins if the pricing remains stable. So…
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So I think in tractors it’s not just steel. So it’s a combination of castings, forging, steel, and then on the proprietary parts, so all these four play an important part and there are different benchmark used in the industry to get the price changes done in the purchase order. So normally, in the past, we had actually been doing these changes on a quarterly basis, but because this peak happened in March and April due to war situation, so suppliers were under a lot of pressure, and we actually ended up giving them the inflation based on the month average for the March and April.
So that’s why when we look at the data now for the margin, last quarter we’ve given the inflation at a peak level now. So we don’t see any more downside should happen, even though we are hearing that there’s another price movement happened upward, but we expect that should get offset with the decline which we’re looking at in the steel prices now going forward. But still in spite of the pricing action taken in Q2, still there’ll be some unabsorbed inflation which will still be there, unless we see major drastic reduction happening on the prices on the steel side in the next two months.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
And Hitesh, just be a little careful about your inference on Gujarat because, as you might be aware that, sometimes Gujarat has a tendency to — Gujarat customers have a tendency to delay their registrations just because of some subsidy issues.
Hitesh Goel — CLSA — Analyst
Yes, yes, so July-August was very high months and then it normalized. Maybe there’s some registration issues.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, right.
Hitesh Goel — CLSA — Analyst
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We have the next question from the line of Jinesh Gandhi from Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Hi, sir. My question is continuing on the steel price discussion. So based on the current steel prices, should we see a good reversal in the RM cost in 2Q and beyond, that prices remain where they are?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Jinesh, so normally, we follow the benchmarks on the commodity prices. So the leader is who does the settlement with the steel suppliers. So they are players — the large players or there’s a large association who do this closure. So we normally follow them. So yes, if they get the benefit, the industry will get the benefit, then we also follow them. So if they give a deflation benefit, then we’ll also get that benefit.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Okay. And what are the cost increase on account of commodity in 1Q?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So normally — see, in the last quarter, we had almost 5% to 6% increase in the commodity side, and this was again, like you said, based on the peak levels of March and April commodity prices.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Okay. 5% to 6% increase in the RM basket in 1Q. Is that what you’re indicating? Hello?
Operator
[Technical Issues] This is the operator here. The line for the management has dropped. We are reconnecting them.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Sure.
Operator
Over to the management.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Yeah, clarifying on, you said 5% to 6% increase in RM basket over fourth quarter. Is that the right understanding?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Yes. So that is the case in Q1, which is what I think is getting factored in the financials, too. And if you look at the commodity cost, material cost side, even on the overall company level looks like only 2% increase has happened. But effectively because of the higher production volume in this quarter compared to Q4 and also because of some impact on the price increases, so the impact normally would have been about 4%. So that’s something I think, which will clearly get reflected going forward on an exit basis in Q2, which is why I mentioned I think Q2, Q3 is going to be a tough quarter.
So depending on how much benefit we get from deflation and there’s no further pressure on the commodity side, like, we are again hearing on the steel prices side government is going to relax export duty, which can again maybe put some pressure on the price which were earlier coming down, may get again stabilized and they may start moving up slightly from the current level. So it’s very difficult to predict. But whatever happens to those prices, these are something which the industry will follow and we’ll also get the benefit or the disadvantage either way.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Sure. And the price hike taken in second quarter is what, again, 2% or higher than that?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Yes, it’s roughly 2%.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Okay. And lastly, a clarification, when we are saying there is a shift towards lower HP segment, generally, are we indicating there is a recovery in the commercial segment which is now visible in a material way?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Jinesh, it’s actually — like I said, it’s actually kind of a correction. In FY ’21 we had a huge jump in 40 and above HP segment sales at the industry level. And there is some correction happening since FY ’22 itself. Commercial segment is coming up but not very, very strongly so far. But we are expecting that from September or October onwards commercial segment should also play well.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Okay, got it. And Bharat, can you talk about the capex for FY ’23 what we are looking to invest?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So capex for this year, our plan was to do about INR300 crores to INR350 crores of capex. So right now in the first quarter, the cash flow has not been much. So I think it’s only about INR40 crores to INR50 crores which has happened. But going forward, we expect that pace will get picked up. So we’re still maintaining the same guidance practice for this year.
Jinesh Gandhi — Motilal Oswal Financial Services Ltd. — Analyst
Got it. Great. I’ll fall back in queue. Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Chirag Shah from Edelweiss. Please go ahead.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Yeah, thanks for the opportunity, sir. Sir, my first question is again on the commodities, and apologies for harping on it. So if I understood correct that in Q1 your indexation was based on the — for the highest price because you followed a monthly average basis, right? So when the commodity price started falling, the impact should also be in similar fashion for us in Q2. Is it right understanding, first point?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So earlier we used to give it on the quarterly average basis, and this time because of the spike which happened in the month of May and March and April, we had to convert to the monthly one to continue our supplies on the production side. So going forward, the correction which is set to happen obviously will again — this was a one-off thing which happened. So it doesn’t mean that we’re shifting to monthly now. We will continue to follow the quarterly cycle only, so that benefit will come on a quarterly basis. But obviously, that will factor in whatever the reduction has happened in the month of May and June also.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
And, sir, secondly, on castings and forgings and other aggregates, what is the impact of the conversion cost inflation? Is it already there or there is some lag effect pending?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So that is another issue which suppliers are raising, which is why you’re finding it difficult for the industry to really take back the deflation because the process cost was not factored in when the inflation was given. So this is a, I think, struggle with most of the industry players are today dealing with. So it depends on how much process cost gets settled and whether we need to adjust that in the deflation or not. That will define how much benefit we get because of boundary price movement. So that is why we said it is very uncertain as of now because the industry hasn’t settled those prices and suppliers are demanding process costs, too, but there are again the inflation has happened. So that may actually maybe lead to some lower benefit come in because of deflation on the commodity side. But, again, that will be something which the industry will decide, and we’ll also follow the same benchmark what industry does.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Okay. So some lag effect of that could come in Q2. That is the right way of looking at it? And probably Q3 onwards it would be more cleaner quarter on the commodity side, including the aggregates?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Yes, that’s right.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Okay. Sir, secondly, just a follow-up question again. Is the underlying demand turning slightly weak because April-May was certainly very strong months, then June was reasonably okay, not that strong, then suddenly we are seeing this. Can we — is the demand currently relatively weak and hence inventories are slightly higher and OEMs would look at clearing the inventory and bringing it to normalized level? Or this is more of a blip last one month or 45 days?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
No, no, we don’t see any letup in the demand actually on the ground. All the factors are in favor of the tractor industry right now. When we compare month on month or a monthly positives and negatives in the industry, we have to just look at the base effects also. Last two, three years were very, very inconsistent that way. So yes, if July and August are down, then we are really expecting a very good September, October and November. Also, we must remember that FY ’21 was an unusual year where the industry reached its ever highest and that was also abnormal for the industry to grow to that extent just in a single year. Therefore, some correction, of course, is bound to happen. So if we look at like FY ’19, FY ’20 base, then we would get a better sense of how industry is moving.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Then just last one clarification. Generally…
Operator
Operator here. I would request you to kindly get back in the queue for follow-up questions.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Yes, sure.
Operator
We have the next question from the line of Abhinav Chandak from Ratnabali Investment. Please go ahead.
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
Yeah, thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to understand the entire merger process. Where is it right now?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
The merger, still, I think the advisors are working on the valuation side. So obviously, we intend to have this meeting soon. So I think once the agreements are finalized and the valuation is done, we’ll really get it done. So maybe another — I’ll say maybe a month or so.
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
Okay. So the valuation part is being worked out by advisors, but then the management has already indicated 1% to 2% is the maximum valuation which will happen. Even in the last call I had asked the same question. And so how long would be the timeline for you to draw the final parlance for the merger?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So the court process, obviously, may take nine months to 12 months because this will have to go through the stock exchange permissions, SEBI approval…
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
No, I mean finalizing the terms of the merger. The entire regulatory process will take 12 months. That’s okay…
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
That what I said within a month. So we’re indicating about a month’s time so we should be able to close that.
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
And on the cancellation of shares held by the trust, so we have received approval sometime in June, it was mentioned in your press release. So by when do we see the actual cancellation getting reflected in the shareholding pattern?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
So again, this will be a court process. So the shareholders’ postal ballot is on right now. So once the results get over, then we will file the scheme with NCLT for election. And then again that’s a court process. It may take, again, six months’ time by the time it becomes effective.
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
Okay. And on your business plan, by September, do we expect the business plan to be out? Because earlier we were indicated Q1, then it shifted to July, and right now on this call you have indicated September. So by September do we expect…
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
It’s a internal approval process which we’ll follow, and then, obviously, we will make it public to the investors in the third quarter.
Abhinav Chandak — Ratnabali Capital Markets Limited — Analyst
Okay, thank you. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you. [Operator Instructions] We have the next question from the line of Vikram Damani from Damani Securities. Please go ahead.
Vikram Damani — Damani Securities — Analyst
Hi, thanks for your time. I was just — my question was to do with the medium-term business plan what the previous participant asked. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Sameer Deshpande from Fairdeal Investments. Please go ahead.
Sameer Deshpande — Fairdeal Investments — Analyst
Yeah, good afternoon. I would like to know after the cancellation of equity, the equity capital will be around INR110 crores to INR111 crores, and the stake of Kubota would be around 53.5%. And Nandas will be continuing to hold 14%. So is it correct?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Yes, post-reduction, that will be the sort of percentage around that, yes.
Sameer Deshpande — Fairdeal Investments — Analyst
Okay. What is the cash and bank balances position now?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
So liquidity will be close to INR5,000 crores investment which we have on the balance sheet as of end of June.
Sameer Deshpande — Fairdeal Investments — Analyst
Okay. Thank you, and all the best.
Operator
Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Mitul Shah from Reliance Securities. Please go ahead.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Sir, thank you for giving opportunity, again. Sir, one clarification on Q2 tractor industry number again. We expect decline roughly around 15%, 20%, possibly in August, similar decline in July. So even if we assume record high number for September base, it has come to roughly more or less flat volume. So growth seems to be very difficult. So do you expect inventory levels to remain high or do you expect inventory would be correct, but retail sales would be like 130, 140 in the month of September?
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Assuming current inventory level closes to 140,000 now.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
So Mitul, July-August would be low. We are still looking at roughly like 215,000 for Q2. That is what is our ballpark estimate? So that is why I said it could grow into like low or mid-single digit.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
And, sir, secondly, on your strategy in north we are losing market share, and again these northern states, particularly UP, Bihar facing problem in last month of July and probably because of the uneven monsoon. So what could be the strategy here? Because our stronger markets are also declining, and we are losing market share there.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, Mitul, so as I said, we have a completely analyzed it state by state, cluster by cluster, even at the dealership level, and we know in which areas or which tehsils we have lost against which competition and which customer segment. So we are — as I said, we have very, very strong brand perception, with at least one of our brands in these markets. We have a very, very strong channel. In many areas, we have been either Number 1 or Number 2. So using that strength and taking some corrective actions wherever required, especially in the identified segments, we should be able to come back, Mitul.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
And sir, my question is in terms of whether it would be product strategy, pricing, strategy, or are we expecting network expansion in those territories? Anything if you can throw some more light?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
No, no, network expansion, Mitul, we don’t need. We are quite saturated with our network in our stronger markets. There are only like a handful of whitespaces only. That is because of some churning that we see sometimes, but otherwise, there is no need for any network correction. Yes, we are going to work on the product. We are going to work on the right optimal price. We are going to work on introducing some variants that we need to respond to compete with.
And we are also going to work on the dealer profitability side a little bit. Because of the frequent changes in prices, you know there is always a lag effect between our raising the price and the customer giving that increased price. So dealer profitability, etc., has also a little bit weakened. So it is going to be a 360-degree approach.
We are also going to make a lot of noise about some of the new products that we have launched in 1.5, two years, such as the Powerhouse Series, the Nxt series, and Powertrac, and similarly some new series in Compact. So it’s going to be an all-round approach. We don’t think a single lever will work. We’ll have to accelerate on many levers.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Thank you for detailed explanation, sir. Sir, lastly, if you can give some details on the EV tractor side. I think we are selling 50, 60 units monthly to USA. Right, sir?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, yes, that is right. We are selling to US, and we are selling in Europe also a few units. As you are aware, we have not commercially launched it in India yet, although we are making just a handful of supplies to few government agencies in India. Yes, so as I have been saying, we are very cautious to ramp it up because we want it to go through a complete cycle of customer validation or market validation. So yes, there is lot of potential. We have lot of orders that we want to serve, but cautiously we are moving on this front.
Mitul Shah — Reliance Securities — Analyst
Great, sir. All the best sir for EV especially.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Thank you, Mitul.
Operator
We have the next question from the line of Shridhar Kallani from Axis Securities. Please go ahead.
Shridhar Kallani — Axis Securities Limited — Analyst
Thank you for the opportunity. Sir, I have a question regarding exports as to how will the — currency depreciation will it be playing to our advantage and how is the export segment wise, which countries are we exporting mainly to, shed some light on which one on that.
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
Yes, of course, the forex or the exchange rate will have its own bearing. But also remember that some of it gets negated with the inflation, which is also happening on the export products. As far as the markets are concerned, we will tell you a little bit more about which markets we will focus, etc., where we will go direct and where we will use Kubota’s channel strength, so that we will explain to you in the MTBP discussion we will have with you. But largely speaking, you know that we have a subsidy in Poland, so some of the tractors are exported through Poland. Europe is very, very strong for us. We are also supplying to Kubota in Europe through their channel. But we have a lot of other markets where we are regularly supplying, such as Mexico, Sudan, U.K., Chile — ASEAN countries, etc. So let us come back to you. We have huge aspirations on exports. We know there is a huge potential there. So we’ll come back to you during the time of our MTBP discussion.
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
But just on the exchange side, just to further update what Shenu mentioned, this is Bharat Madan. So as you mentioned, so most of the exports right now is happening in the euro denominations, almost 66%, 70% exports are in euro, so where the exchange benefit is not really there. So if you look at dollar-euro are more or less now coming at par. So if it was a dollar invoicing or billing, then obviously you would have got that advantage. So that is happening only on certain volume — 30% of the volume in what we’re exploring today. So on the euro side, we are not going to see any major benefit coming on the exchange front.
Shridhar Kallani — Axis Securities Limited — Analyst
Sure, sir. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you. We have the last question from the line of Chirag Shah from Edelweiss. Please go ahead.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Yes, thanks for the opportunity again, sir. Sir, just a clarification and you’ve partly answered that. You had indicated that there is a reasonable stickiness of brand in the region where you perform, generally for the industry as a whole. So the loss of market share cannot be attributed to the pricing actions adopted by peers. That cannot be the single biggest driver, because the pricing action can never be so distorted that it could change the mathematics by 10%, 15% in one month. So I presume it is more to do with your dealer the way you are trying to restructure the dealer towards the Kubota integration process, is that the driver of some of the market share losses?
Shenu Agarwal — President of Agri and Construction Business
No, no, not at all. We haven’t started even a bit around any kind of channel integrations with Kubota and neither do we want to in the short term or even in the midterm. We are very, very clear that all the three brands have unique strengths, and they cater to different kinds of customers in different segments. And therefore, we would like to maintain a unique channel. Of course, there would be some synergies in channel that we would explore, like if we have a strong dealer and they want to have another dealership of a different brand within EKL, then, of course, we’d be more than happy to explore those kinds of synergies.
So it has got nothing to do with the integration process. I do understand that what you are saying may generally be true. But, see, like I specifically said that these are markets where price sensitivity is very, very high. For example, the haulage market, etc. Generally, you are right the price should not affect so much if the brand is very, very strong. But it depends on the quantum also, which I haven’t described yet. But yes, these are price-sensitive segments.
Chirag Shah — Edelweiss Securities Ltd. — Analyst
Thank you. Thank you very much.
Operator
That was the last question. I now hand it over to the management for closing comments.
Bharat Madan — President Finance, Group Chief Financial Officer & Corporate Head
Thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for being present on this call. For any feedback and/or queries, please feel free to write into us at investorrelation@escorts.co.in. Thank you very much and have a good evening. Stay healthy and stay safe.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]