Long-Term Thesis
Long-Term Thesis — 5-to-10-Year View
1. Long-Term Thesis in One Page
The 5-to-10-year thesis is that Bajaj Mobility AG ceases to be priced as a European premium-motorcycle pure-play and migrates a meaningful step toward an Indian premium-motorcycle franchise, by combining the Austrian-built KTM/Husqvarna/GASGAS brand IP with Bajaj Auto's Chakan-built 125-390cc unit-cost engine and emerging-market distribution. That migration requires three things to compound simultaneously over the next decade: Mattighofen utilisation back above 100k units a year so the fixed-cost absorption maths re-engages, a Bajaj-channel small-displacement volume pool that quadruples from the 79k of 2025 to 250-300k by the early 2030s, and an aftersales annuity that stays at 20%+ of revenue and grows in absolute terms. The single most important non-operating variable is whether Bajaj Auto uses its 74.9% control and the €900m of conditional convertible capital authorised until 2030 to compound minority value, or to capture the recovery on cheap terms — that governance question caps the multiple regardless of operating performance.
This is not a long-duration compounder unless the India bridge actually scales against Royal Enfield's 87% incumbency and Honda's Vithalapur expansion. It is also not a value trap unless Mattighofen stalls below 80k units and the conditional capital is drawn at depressed prices. The long-term return is decided by a small number of high-signal multi-year facts, not by the next quarter.
| Thesis Strength | Durability (10y) | Reinvestment Runway | Evidence Confidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Medium | Medium | High | Low–Medium |
The long-term thesis is conditional, not directional. It works if Mattighofen utilisation, Bajaj-channel scaling, and aftersales mix all compound while the parent restrains itself from using the €900m conditional capital. It breaks if any one of those four fails. That conjunctive structure is why both the thesis strength and the durability sit at Medium — not because any single driver is weak, but because the path requires four positives to hold for ten years.
2. The 5-to-10-Year Underwriting Map
The durable drivers are not events; they are the structural conditions under which premium motorcycles compound. Each row below names a condition that must hold for the equity to deliver superior long-term returns from today's price.
The driver that matters most is the India bridge — the only structural growth pool inside the consolidated business. Mattighofen recovery determines whether the European base stops bleeding; aftersales determines how cyclical the franchise is; off-road brand IP is durable but commercially small. None alone moves the multiple from the European 5-6x EV/EBITDA band toward the Indian 19-25x band. The Bajaj-channel small-displacement scaling — taking the 79k units of 2025 to 250-300k by the early 2030s while preserving European brand pricing — is the only mechanism that would justify a structural multiple re-rate. Whether it happens against an 87%-share Royal Enfield fortress is the highest-stakes long-term question on the page.
3. Compounding Path
Long-term value creation here depends on three sequential transformations: rebuild the operating base (2026-2027), prove the India bridge scales (2027-2030), and re-rate the multiple toward Indian premium pure-play economics (2030+). The compounding maths is dominated by operating leverage in the early years and by the India volume pool in the later years.
The pre-2023 picture is a credible premium-OEM franchise: revenue compounding 8% a year, EBITDA margins in the 14-16% band, but FCF chronically below reported earnings because R&D and capex absorbed most of the operating cash. The 2023-25 sequence is the rupture — dealer-channel stuffing, working-capital balloon, court-supervised restructuring. The compounding path from here is not "return to 2022" — it is "rebuild a structurally smaller but cleaner franchise on top of a low-cost India volume engine."
The compounding architecture has three engines. First, operating leverage on Mattighofen — every 10k incremental units adds roughly 200-300bp of clean EBITDA margin against the right-sized fixed base, so the FY2025-to-FY2027 step from 48k to 110-130k Mattighofen units carries most of the early margin recovery. Second, Bajaj-channel volume compounding — asset-light royalty on small-displacement bikes where BMAG books revenue without plant capital; if Chakan-built units triple from 79k to 240k over a decade, even at low-double-digit royalty economics that is a €150-250m incremental revenue line at near-pure margin. Third, aftersales as installed-base annuity — at 22% of revenue on a €2.6bn 2030 base, that is €570m of annuity revenue at 40-60% gross margin, structurally decoupled from cycle.
The reinvestment runway is high precisely because the parent has chosen to under-invest at the trough. Capex ran at 58% of D&A in 2025 and R&D capitalisation dropped from 60% to 36% — there is therefore a backlog of product-cadence and platform investment that becomes accretive as soon as the operating cash flow returns. The balance sheet has been recapitalised (€385m equity from a -€194m hole) and the February 2026 €550m arm's-length refinancing extends the debt maturity wall to 2031. Through-cycle capex of 9-10% of revenue should be funded internally once revenue rebuilds toward €2bn.
The compounding maths is asymmetric on the India side. Mattighofen recovery delivers a one-time step-change in margin (the operating-leverage reversal). The Bajaj-channel scaling, if it works, compounds for a decade because the addressable pool (India + Indonesia + ASEAN 250-650cc premium) is growing high single digits a year on its own. The valuation re-rate to anything closer to Indian premium multiples requires the second engine, not the first.
4. Durability and Moat Tests
The 2024-25 self-administered insolvency was the most informative natural experiment in this company's history — it stress-tested every claimed advantage simultaneously. The relevant long-term durability tests are the ones whose 2024-25 outcome is observable and whose 5-10y trajectory is measurable.
Four of the six tests have measurable signals before 2028; two (India bridge and regulatory) are five-to-ten year tests. The aftersales-annuity test is the highest-confidence one — the 2024-25 stress already produced the answer, and the structural mechanism (installed base × attachment rate × cycle length) does not require executional brilliance to compound. The governance test is the lowest-confidence one, because the parent's incentives and the legal mechanism point in the same direction (use the conditional capital to capture upside at depressed prices) and there is no observable signal yet that restraint is being exercised. A long-term holder is mostly underwriting the moat tests; a long-term thesis works only if the governance test goes the right way.
5. Management and Capital Allocation Over a Cycle
The cycle is long because the company is brand-new in its current form: Bajaj Auto became the controlling shareholder on 18 November 2025; the listed entity was renamed and re-tickered on 13 January 2026; Stefan Pierer (founder, 32-year operator) exited the Vorstand on 30 June 2025; the CFO Petra Preining only joined on 16 September 2025; the Aufsichtsrat was rebuilt three times in 2025. Almost every long-term judgment about capital allocation must therefore be made about Bajaj Auto as a strategic parent rather than about BMAG management itself, because the listed-entity management does not control the capital decisions that determine minority outcomes.
The Bajaj Auto record on its own franchise is reassuring on operating discipline. Bajaj runs ~20% EBITDA margins, ROCE above 30%, has a 75-year-old Indian distribution franchise, and has executed a credible premium pivot (Triumph 400 distribution + KTM small-displacement co-manufacture) over the last decade. The 2007 manufacturing JV with KTM has run for 18 years without obvious dispute, and the 2021 "Uplifting" deal that lifted Bajaj into upstream co-ownership of Pierer Bajaj AG was completed without disputes. None of this is consistent with a parent that destroys minority value through neglect.
What is uncomfortable is the combination of control mechanism and incentive. Bajaj Auto crossed the 30% threshold without a mandatory bid because the Austrian Takeover Commission granted a restructuring exemption — minorities did not get a control premium and have no equal-exit right. The €900m conditional convertible capacity authorised at the 27 January 2025 EGM runs until January 2030, with preemption excluded on cash issues up to 10% of capital. The three Bajaj-executive supervisory-board seats include the audit-committee chair (Dinesh Thapar, who is also Bajaj Auto's CFO). The CEO owns 0.07% of the company and there is no equity-linked pay. A parent with means and incentive to capture upside at depressed prices is not the same as a parent that does it, but the structure is asymmetric: the conditional capital cannot be drawn against minorities' interest unless it is drawn, but neither can it be retired without the parent's consent.
The track record splits cleanly into Pierer-era destruction (2019-2024 multi-brand expansion + channel-stuffing) and Bajaj-era discipline (2025-26 disposals, refinancing, quarterly reporting cadence, divestiture clean-up). What the Bajaj era has not yet done is set a forward number it can be held to: no FY2026 revenue or margin guidance has been issued; CFO Preining declined to put a number on profitability on the Q1 2026 call. The next two AGMs — June 2026 (capital authority renewal) and 2027 (FY2026 earnings + Vorstand compensation report) — will determine whether the Bajaj-era capital allocation discipline extends to minority-protective discipline, not just operating discipline.
The long-term capital-allocation question is not whether Bajaj Auto runs BMAG well — they almost certainly will. It is whether the listed minority captures the upside or whether the parent captures it via the conditional convertible mechanism. Until the June 2026 AGM resolves the conditional capital question — retirement, ringfence, or renewal — the long-term thesis cannot upgrade beyond conditional.
6. Failure Modes
The thesis breaks in specific, observable ways. Each row below is a thesis-breaker, not a generic execution risk.
The two highest-severity failure modes are not operational — they are capital-structure failures (conditional capital + production migration). That is the inversion of how most long-duration theses fail. Bull and bear agree that Mattighofen will probably get back to 80-100k units, that aftersales will hold around 20%, that off-road will keep winning races. The genuine multi-year fork is whether the parent captures the recovery via dilution or transfer pricing, or compounds minority value through arm's-length capital allocation. A long-term holder is therefore disproportionately exposed to a small number of governance decisions that are not publicly forecastable.
7. What To Watch Over Years, Not Just Quarters
The signals below are designed for a holder underwriting a 5-10 year position, not for a quarterly trader. Each one has a long-cycle observation window and a clear validating-versus-weakening outcome.
The 5-to-10 year case is a conditional compounding story, not a structural one. It works if Mattighofen recovers, the India bridge scales, the aftersales annuity compounds, and the parent restrains itself on the conditional capital. Each of those individually has 50-70% probability over a decade; the joint probability is materially lower. The market today is pricing neither the full upside (a structural re-rate toward Indian premium multiples) nor the full downside (a Bajaj-driven dilution that crystallises minority losses). The path that works — Bajaj using BMAG as a global premium-motorcycle platform rather than a financial-engineering vehicle — would offer a credible doubling of the equity over a five-year horizon.
The long-term thesis changes most if the June 2026 AGM resolves the €900m conditional capital question. Retirement or a minority-protective ringfence would let the operating recovery accrue more cleanly to the float; renewal or a first call would crystallise the asymmetric capital-structure risk that today sits over the long-run return profile.