Tata Motors Limited's commercial vehicle business told investors on June 23 that it aims to achieve a 40% domestic market share (VAHAN-based), double-digit EBITDA margins through the cycle and margins in the teens during upcycles, and a 30-35% return on capital employed (post-IVECO) by FY28. These targets are built on a record FY26 performance and a pending acquisition of Italy's IVECO Group.
The numbers from FY26, the company's first full year as a standalone listed entity since its October 2025 demerger, give management room for confidence. Wholesale volumes reached 428,000 units, up from 377,000 a year earlier. Revenue rose to Rs 77,399 crore. EBITDA margin improved to 13.2%, from 12.0% in FY25. Free cash flow reached Rs 9,186 crore, about 12% of revenue. Auto ROCE stood at 72%, which Tata says is among the highest in the global industry.
Tata's Fleet Edge and Freight Tiger platforms, now folded into a new entity called AIEQU Mobility, posted tangible growth. Fleet Edge crossed 1 million connected vehicles. The company's stated five-year ambition is to become "the world's first OE-agnostic, AI-native logistics operating system", with 3 million vehicles on the platform.
Management flagged commodity cost volatility, geopolitical supply-chain disruptions and potential interest-rate headwinds in FY27 as near-term risks, though it described all three as cyclical and manageable against what it sees as durable structural tailwinds, including India's 6-7% GDP growth, fleet electrification mandates and recurring digital revenue from its connected vehicle base.