The Kolkata-headquartered
company, which has been making parts of metro rail and supplying these products
to many global customers, is actively looking at both organic and inorganic
opportunities in order to produce passenger coaches.“Currently, we are manufacturing components for passenger coaches. We have
plans to produce passenger coaches going ahead. We are looking at making metro
coaches very soon. In India, there are huge requirements for metro coaches
now,” Texmaco Rail & Engineering Executive Director and Vice Chairman
IndrajitMookerjee told businessline.
“We are looking at both organic and inorganic
opportunities for producing coaches. We would be able to enter this market fast
through any inorganic routes,” Mookerjee pointed out.
Notably, Texmaco Rail
& Engineering last year acquired Saira Asia, which was a 100 per cent
subsidiary of an European company. Saira makes high-end railway interiors.
“We are currently
supplying these interior products to existing coach manufacturers like BEML
Ltd. Ultimately, our plan is to make passenger coaches. We also need to get
some credentials, and for that we are currently talking to many foreign
companies,” Mookerjee said.
Texmaco Rail became
India’s largest wagon maker after it had acquired Jindal Rail Infrastructure in
July last year for a consideration of around ₹615 crore.
The company’s consolidated revenue from operations
stood at ₹1,326 crore in the third quarter this fiscal, registering a 47.9 per
cent year-on-year growth. EBITDA for the quarter stood at ₹139 crore, posting a
51.7 per cent y-o-y increase, with an EBITDA margin of 10.5 per cent.
The company said
higher freight car deliveries drove its strong performance. In the third
quarter this fiscal, the company delivered 2,714 freight cars, a 54.6 per cent
increase from 1,756 in corresponding period last fiscal.