The Single-Customer Stranglehold
What started as a bicycle parts manufacturer in Gujarat evolved into a scaled, stable auto ancillary business. However, that stability rests on an incredibly fragile foundation: over 90% of its standalone revenue is derived from a single buyer.
This dynamic represents a unique corporate anomaly:
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The Nexus: The anchor customer is also a cousin. For over three decades, the business has scaled on absolute trust rather than competitive market tenders.
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The Catch: While this relationship created guaranteed scale, it completely starved the company of operational independence.
[90%+ Revenue Concentration] ──> [Zero Tender Competition] ──> [Extreme Structural Vulnerability]
The ICE vs. EV Divergence
The structural floor is shifting. In FY25, the company’s standalone business declined by approximately 5% as its primary Internal Combustion Engine (ICE) client began shifting its focus toward electric scooters.
This pivot exposes a massive technological gap:
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The Legacy: The supplier built its empire on components specific to traditional ICE vehicles.
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The EV Reality: Electric scooters do not require the majority of the legacy parts this supplier is equipped to manufacture, threatening to turn their primary revenue engine obsolete.
The Non-Automotive Pivot
Fortunately, the consolidated numbers tell a different story. The broader business saw an improvement in performance thanks to a subsidiary that is actively diversifying into high-growth, non-automotive sectors:
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Wind Energy
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Defence Components
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Aerospace Composites
The Investor’s Dilemma: The critical question moving forward is whether this non-automotive subsidiary can scale fast enough to act as a primary earnings engine, successfully decoupling the company’s fate from its cousin’s EV transition.
