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The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Akash Podishetti

Can Tata Motors PV business in India offset JLR pressure? Here's what the Q4 could hold

Tata Motors will report its March quarter results on Thursday, with analysts expecting the company’s domestic passenger vehicle business to deliver strong growth on the back of higher volumes, improved product mix and operating leverage benefits.

Brokerages expect the India passenger vehicle segment to remain a key earnings driver during the quarter even as the company’s luxury arm Jaguar Land Rover continues to face margin pressure compared with last year.

According to estimates by Kotak Equities, Tata Motors' domestic passenger vehicle business is likely to report around 47% year-on-year revenue growth in Q4 FY26. The brokerage expects this to be driven by a 37% rise in volumes along with a 7-8% increase in average selling prices due to a richer product mix.

Kotak said EBITDA margin for the India PV business could improve by around 60 basis points sequentially, aided by operating leverage benefits from higher sales volumes. However, the brokerage noted that commodity cost pressures and elevated advertising spends may partially offset margin gains.

The company has continued to benefit from demand momentum in SUVs and electric vehicles, while premiumisation trends in the domestic market are also expected to support realizations during the quarter.

Meanwhile, Motilal Oswal Financial expects Tata Motors’ India passenger vehicle margins to improve by 30 basis points sequentially to around 7%, supported by strong domestic demand and operating leverage.

The brokerage noted that India passenger vehicle volumes rose 37% year-on-year during the quarter, indicating sustained retail and wholesale momentum despite a competitive market environment.

However, investor attention is also likely to remain firmly on Jaguar Land Rover, which has been navigating operational disruptions and softer profitability trends.

Motilal Oswal said JLR volumes recovered 61% sequentially in Q4 following the cyber incident impact seen in the previous quarter. Despite the recovery, volumes were still down about 14.5% year-on-year.

The brokerage expects JLR EBITDA margins to recover sharply to 7.7% from just 0.7% in the December quarter. Even so, profitability is projected to remain significantly below the 15.3% margin reported in the corresponding quarter last year, highlighting continued pressure in the global luxury vehicle business.

Street focus is also likely to remain on management commentary around demand trends in domestic passenger vehicles, electric vehicle penetration, pricing outlook and commodity costs. Analysts will additionally watch for updates on JLR order books, supply chain normalization and the impact of global macroeconomic conditions on luxury vehicle demand.

Tata Motors has seen improving traction in its domestic passenger vehicle portfolio over recent quarters, supported by models across the SUV and EV categories, while JLR continues to remain critical for consolidated profitability and global investor sentiment.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

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