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    Foreword

    Dr. A. Didar Singh

    Secretary General, FICCI

    India has emerged as the worlds largest arms buyer over the last couple of years and is in the process

    of replacing an ageing Soviet-era military hardware with modern military weapons from major defence

    manufacturers such as USA, Israel, Russia, UK and France. The Indian defence sector is set to embark ona significant growth path in the near future as a result of a slew of initiatives taken by the Ministry of

    Defence, such as increase in FDI, delicensing of non-lethal and dual use items and a declared export

    strategy. With the announcement of the Make in India campaign by the government, the

    manufacturing sector is likely to gain momentum to which the defence sector expected to make a

    significant contribution.

    FICCI has been a votary of a vibrant defence manufacturing base with a level playing field for the

    private sector. Ever since the defence sector was officially opened to the private sector in 2001, the

    Indian industry has welcomed the move and has expressed its desire to repeat the success stories of

    the space, atomic energy and automotive sectors in defence. This strategic sector till date hasprogressed slowly and India has taken gradual strides in evolving industry and investor-friendly

    policies. Defence has been accorded the highest priority by the present government with the Honble

    Prime Minister himself emphasizing the commitment and focus on defence on every major occasion.

    The government is further streamlining the acquisition process by simplifying the Defence

    Procurement Procedure to eliminate red tape and facilitate speedier acquisition for meeting the

    operational requirements of our forces.

    FICCI has been at the helm of the policy dialogue with the Ministry of Defence, user and other

    stakeholders towards establishing a modern Defence Industrial Complex and many of its

    suggestions have been built into the policy framework.

    The FICCI-Centrum Report has highlighted the recent initiatives undertaken by the government to

    encourage industry, to come forward to partake of the growth of this strategic sector. I believe that this

    report will help readers to gain a 3600 perspective on the Aerospace & Defence sector and

    opportunities in India. The snapshot of a few selected defence companies (representing Public, Private

    and MSME segment) has given valuable information which can be used by corporates to analyze the

    sector from an investors perspective.

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    Foreword

    Chandir Gidwani

    Founder, Centrum Group

    Indias security environment is defined by a complex interplay of regional and global imperatives and

    challenges. As India seeks to achieve transformative national growth and development internally, we

    have to pursue a robust defence strategy and policies which aim to address the wide spectrum ofconventional and non-conventional security challenges faced by the country.

    We at Centrum believe it is time for Aerospace & Defence Sector to be given its long over-due

    recognition as a core industry as is the case in most developed countries. With the Honorable Prime

    Ministers call for Make in India we believe the national priorities have been set and the Aerospace &

    Defence Sector will meet the challenge in building a vibrant Defence Industrial base in India. This

    would also encourage and attract investments in indigenous strategic Defence programs and the

    Indian Defence industry to be .

    Emphasis should be given on public-private collaboration to bring in an efficient system in place and

    promote competitive environment whichhelp in setting up defence industrial base in the Simultaneously, there is a need to identify areas and critical technologies which are essential

    robust Defence capabilities and to develop such technologies indigenously.

    This is possible only through an investor friendly regulatory regime that provides for technological self-

    reliance in defence systems and encourages investment in developing critical infrastructure for the

    Aerospace and Defence industry. The report is also a ready compendium of the opportunities based on

    the current policy framework and assessing the future demand-supply scenario besides showcasing

    the way forward.

    I am sure stakeholders across the value chain of Aerospace & Defence Sector will find this report useful.

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    About Centrum

    Focused Approach to Defence Sector Advisory

    Centrum Capital Ltd. is a diversified financial services company listed on Bombay Stock Exchangewith market capitalization of Rs8bn1. Centrums primary area of business is:

    Syndication (Debt & Equity)

    Mergers & Acquisition Advisory

    Joint Venture Advisory

    Institutional Broking

    Portfolio Management Services

    Wealth Management

    Money Exchange

    Defence Sector is covered extensively at Centrum as we believe the sector presents a hugeopportunity for Indian players in various segments. This coverage is under the guidance of Brig.Chacko Ipe (Retd) and supported by Sandeep Upadhyay and his team. We have handled advisory

    mandates in the Defence sector for leading players across various products including: India Entry Strategy

    Joint Venture

    Fund Raising

    Some transaction closures in the past across sectors:

    Leading Defence Company of USA India Entry Strategy

    Adlabs Imagica (Theme Park) Debt Syndication of INR Rs14,000 Mn

    Adlabs Imagica (Theme Park) Equity Syndication

    Hindustan Dorr Oliver (EPC) Debt Restructuring

    Dighi Port Limited Debt advisory of INR 15,500 Mn.

    Transpole Logistics Raised PE of ~INR 70 mn from Fidelity

    Hemavathy Power and Light Ltd M&A advisory for 100% sell out to Greenko Group Plc Indrajit Infrastructure Debt advisory for 80 MW power project

    Soham Renewable Energy India Private Equity

    Aqua Logistics Lead Manager for the IPO

    Aegis Logistics Advisor for raising Equity

    Innovative B2B Logistics Raised debt for capital expansion

    1As on 29thJanuary 2015

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    Today India, Tomorrow World Secular Growth SectorAfter growing in line with nominal GDP in the last decade, we believe Indian companies in the defence sector (in

    aggregate) are poised for sustained high growth in the next decade and address an opportunity that could reach$41bn in size by FY22 (7xFY14). We believe this will be driven by both higher domestic and external demand

    unlike in the past when it was entirely by the former. While higher indigenous content (currently at 30%) in the

    Indian defence capital spend will be the near term driver, we expect exports (hitherto negligible) to be a key long

    term factor (offsets to begin with, cost effectiveness driven outsourcing later on). We believe fiscal constraints in

    developed markets over the next 5-10 years will put defence spending under pressure. With intensifying

    competition between US and European systems integrators, price pressures are a certainty. Over the past 4-5

    years we have seen an explosion in partnerships (JVs and MOUs) between Indian and global players (likely due to

    relaxation of controls on export of defence technology by the US and other countries and also by lack of choices

    as China is still on the banned list). These partnerships will exploit offset and indigenization related demand,

    near term. These would also set the stage for India becoming a critical part of the supply chain of global players

    for components and sub-assemblies, driving export growth, long term. There is evidence that such a move is

    already on. We believe India has some of the basic ingredients (large and relatively low cost engineering talent

    pool, comfort of western nations with India from a geo-political perspective) to deliver on this opportunity but

    will have to significantly improve on some others (technology, lack of a defence manufacturing ecosystem, etc).

    Besides, we believe the nature of warfare is becoming more software intensive, which plays into the strength of

    India with IT Sector Growth and its diversified presence. Post 10-15-year learning curve we expect some Indian

    companies to move up the value chain to become independent systems integrators across technology-design-

    system integration value chain in their own right or be part of significant consortia.

    The opportunity has critical mass, good growth and longevity: As it repairs its finances, we expect US to play a less

    active military role in the Asian region in the foreseeable future. This will coincide with the economic and militaryascendancy of China that could lead to greater tensions with India. Already China has widened the lead with India in anumber of areas of defence (3.5x Indias military spend in 2013 vs. 1.5x in 2000). With troubled borders, India will have to

    increase its defence spend/NGDP to 2-2.5% (vs. FY14 spend of 1.79%) to close the gap. This is also required to correctunder spending on capex in the last 20 years. While the revenue part (60%) of the defence spend is largely internal, thecapex (~40%) is largely import focused (70%+, India is among worlds largest arms importers) leading to a relatively

    small domestic defence sector with Defence PSUs (HAL, BEL, BEML, BDL, MDL, GRSE) having a significant share. Privatecompanies, restricted from defence production until 2001, seem to have caught up lately. We believe the low base sets

    the stage for strong growth ahead for private companies. Credible defence initiatives have been taken over two decadesby large industrial groups like Tatas, L&T, and in the past decade by M&M, Bharat Forge, Godrej, Pipavav, Rolta, amongothers.

    Competitive moats are fairly wide: Technology is the key driver of competitiveness. For Indian companies this has to

    be accessed either through DRDO, a foreign JV partner or developed through internal R&D spend. This we believe putslarger Indian companies (both PSU and private) in a significantly better position to be system integrators compared tosmaller ones that will assume tierised roles. The role of MSMEs will be significant as they are houses of innovations andchampions of niche technology and products. These niche technology and products along with system integrators will

    play a critical role in building Indias defence manufacturing base.With homegrown technology developed in a few segments and relatively under-developed in others, credibility andflexibility of foreign partners and their governments on flow of technologies and joint development will be winning

    factors for Indian players. However, in the long term, just as in the pharma, automotive and IT sectors we believe Indiahas the capacity to be an R&D base. Also, with global systems integrators restructuring in the new normal defence

    spending era, and looking to diversify revenue streams, there will be many opportunities to buy assets in the developedworld. Indian companies with deep pockets can potentially hasten their process of becoming systems integrators by

    buying some of these entities (eg: Mahindras bought Gipps Aero Australia and Aerostaff Australia, Piramal boughtBluebird Aero).

    Exports to be a large opportunity; driven by significant cuts in US spending: Of the $1.7trn defence spend (2013

    SIPRI estimate), ~55% comes from the developed world with 37% from the US alone. With pressure to control fiscaldeficits and lower Debt/GDP ratios, we believe defence spending will be a major casualty. Despite the financial crisis in2008, defence spending sustained because of Iraq and Afghanistan wars. Post that, US indicated a cut of $450bn to

    $1.1trn over 10-12 years if other deficit reduction plans do not materialize. Western nations will however not want tocompromise their national security even under these circumstances. This will lead to higher level of outsourcing as

    defence forces world-wide will seek better price from vendors.

    Opportunity for Investors will open up: We believe opportunities will expand both in PSUs (as government divests)and private companies (as conglomerates spin off defence entities, new pure play defence entities execute well andbecome larger) for financial investors. Defence sector has size, steady growth, longevity of opportunity, returns ratios,

    etc which will work in its favor compared to many other sectors in India. We believe large Indian private conglomerateswith varied skill-sets currently housed in multiple unconnected subsidiaries will pounce on the opportunity. Frugalengineering and manufacturing practices, design skills and competence in software, metallurgy, understanding ofexport markets, ability to build relationships with foreign government will be the winners in the long term.

    This sector report Is prepared

    jointly by:

    Federation of Indian Chambers

    of Commerce and Industry

    (FICCI)

    AND

    Centrum Capital Ltd

    6thFeb 2015

    Sector Report

    INDIA

    India: Aerospace & Defence

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    India: Aerospace & Defence

    Executive Summary

    Indian Defence Sector Secular Growth Story

    Indian defence sector is at the cusp of an inflexion point wherein the future growth will be propelled

    by indigenous manufacturing both for domestic & global clients. We believe the sector will witness

    strong growth over the next decade due to its current size, longevity, and competitive advantages.

    Indian defence spend is large when compared to other spends in the economy but is under-represented in terms of market capitalization on listed stock exchanges. The defence spend hasbeen in the 2-2.5% range of the nominal GDP in the past decade while market capitalization ofIndian defence companies has never been above 0.7% of the GDP at any given point in time. Thekey reasons for this are:

    A large part of spend (60% currently) is revenue expenditure which is internal in nature. Unlikein the US where some non-core functions are outsourced, Indian armed forces have always

    relied on doing these functions internally. We see these functions changing over the next 5 - 10years though we believe this area is unlikely to grow as fast as the capex.

    Of the capex (40% of the budgeted spend) about 70% is imported in fact India is among the

    largest importers of weapon systems globally. This is reflected in lower revenues of Indiancorporates.

    Major defence PSUs are HAL, BEL, BEML, Mazagon Docks Limited and Bharat Dynamics Limited.

    Of these, BEL & BEML are listed on Indian stock exchanges BSE & NSE.

    Large private sector firms are all part of listed entities like L&T, Tata Power, Tata Motors, M&M,Bharat Forge, or unlisted unlisted holding companies like Tata Sons.

    However we see this situation changing over the next 10-15 years. Our belief is based on thefollowing:

    We expect defence spend to move closer to 2.25% (from the lowest ever number in FY14 at1.79%) of Nominal GDP as US repairs its financials. This we believe will be accompanied by an

    assertive and high spending China, which India will try to counter by increasing its own level ofspending. While the Indian fiscal may not be in the best shape currently, we believe relativelybetter growth and increase in Tax/GDP ratio post implementation of tax reforms, widening oftax net and removal of exemptions, will give it fiscal firepower.

    We believe the Capex/opex mix will shift towards capex in the coming decade. We expect the

    mix will shift towards 50:50 or higher vs. 60:40 in favor of opex now. We believe the focus willbe on smaller, smarter and a more effective armed force.

    o We believe indigenization will take center stage and gather pace going forward. Government

    took a number of steps in this direction, by opening up defence production to the private sectorand allowing 26% FDI in 2001 and defined categorization hierarchy in favour of indigenousprocurement in 2013. Recently, the FDI limit was further raised from 26 percent to composite

    cap of 49 percent (FDI and FII) through the Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) routewith full Indian management and control. With technology transfers becoming easier in recenttimes, we believe this will gather pace. DPP 2013 furthers the cause of developing domesticdefence sector by prioritizing procurement from Indian companies and buying from globalcompanies as the last resort.

    Under the Make in India initiative introduced by Honble Prime Minister Narendra Modi,simplification of the Make procedure, financial incentives in terms of a tax holiday andincentivizing R&D were announced. GoI has streamlined the offset policy with innovativecomponents by giving thrust to MSME sector and streamlining export procedures. It has alsobeen decided to promote defence and aerospace exports through an export promotion body.We believe that this initiative will incentivize private players to invest more into Aerospace andDefence sector and help exports grow.

    The offset clause (which stipulates that 30-50% of the armament purchase value should bespent on buying Indian components, sub-systems and products) introduced in capital purchaseagreements with foreign defence players will ensure that an ecosystem of suppliers is built

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    India: Aerospace & Defence

    domestically. Besides helping build domestic capabilities, it will bolster exports in the longterm.

    We also believe India will become a large sourcing base for components and sub-systems in theyears to come for foreign systems integrators. We believe this will happen as these companiesface price pressure in the years ahead as the large arms consumers US and the westerndeveloped world seek cut backs on defence spending to improve their financial position and

    rein in fiscal deficits and debt/GDP ratios. Already a number of JVs have been signed betweenIndian and foreign players. We also see initial signs of global players setting up R&D divisions inIndia and sourcing parts of final products from Indian vendors.

    We believe India has some of the basic ingredients (large and relatively low cost (Frugal)engineering talent pool, comfort of western nations with India from a geo-political perspective)

    to exploit this opportunity but it will have to significantly improve on some others (technology,lack of a defence manufacturing ecosystem, etc). Also, we believe the nature of warfare isbecoming more software intensive, which plays into the strength of India considering IT sector

    growth in the past two decades.

    In the next 5-10 years we expect Indian players to become systems integrators. We believe thisprocess could be hastened by inorganic initiatives by groups with deep pockets (L&T, Tata,

    Mahindra & Mahindra, Reliance Industries, Bharat Forge, etc) who may pick up assets divestedby foreign defence players as they restructure and become trimmer (eg: Piramal boughtBluebird Aero of Israel in 2012).

    While our expectation on defence exports ($17bn by FY22) may seem audacious consideringthe very small base, we have been in similar situation in other sectors too in the past (IT services,Pharma and Auto). Catalysts have brought out inherent strengths of the Indian corporate

    sector.

    a. In the case of IT services it was Y2K phenomenon and the development of theinternet (which made offshore delivery possible in large quantities). Later, it wasthe moving up the value chain from pure IT to IT enabled - Engineering Servicesoffering high-skill high-talent pool for offloading design and engineering servicesto India.

    b. In the case of the Pharma sector it was the genericisation of the space as patentsexpired in the developed world.

    c. In the case of the Auto sector, it began with auto ancillaries and then lowemployee costs combined with an extensive supplier base led India to become theworlds small car hub.

    Recently, during the US President visit, Indo-US ties reached a new high with President BarackObama and Prime Minister Narendra Modis announcing the renewal of the expansive defenseties for another 10 years. India and the US decided to kick off joint manufacturing of fourrelatively modest military products and explore the development of two more high-end

    technologies. The two nations agreed to step up joint combat exercises, maritime securityendeavors, intelligence-sharing mechanisms and military exchanges.

    All these involve active support of the government through appropriate incentives.

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    Financial Investors Should Look Forward to Increased Activity & Stable

    Returns

    Significant wealth creation likely: While current investible universe is very small, we believe

    opportunities exist in both the PSUs (as government divests) and private companies (asconglomerates spin off defence entities, new pure play defence entities execute well and become

    larger). In our opinion, this is a sector where size, steady growth, longevity of opportunity, returnsratios, etc. will work in its favor compared to other sectors in the Indian investible universe. Webelieve large Indian private conglomerates that bring varied skillsets currently housed in multipleunconnected subsidiaries will pounce on the opportunity frugal engineering and manufacturingpractices, design and software skills, expertise in metallurgy, understanding of export markets,ability to build relationships with foreign governments, will be winners in the long term. We seecredible defence initiatives being taken up by large industrial groups like Tatas, Larsen Toubro,Mahindras, Bharat Forge, Rolta, SKIL Infra, among others. Besides these we believe PSU entities likeHAL, BEL, BEML, BDL, MDL will also be significant beneficiaries.

    We believe investors will have to look at the following points when considering investments:

    That the opportunity will move up 7x over the next 8 years; Growing at rates higher than NGDP,this sector could be dubbed a growth sector attracting premium valuations. While some

    amount of competition driven margin pressure is likely, earnings growth should be higher thanNGDP, if not in line with industry growth.

    We believe return ratios of some leaders should be significantly better than those of most othercompanies/sectors in the market.

    Risks of investing in the sector

    Significant slippages on the fiscal front, lengthy procurement and evaluation processes andfrequent changes in procurement organization, controversies related to corruption and disputesover short listing in competitive bids and public private partnerships will delay acquisition plans ofthe armed forces and impact timing of revenues and earnings of companies. With a stablegovernment in place and its commitment on modernization and indigenization of the armed forces,

    we hope acquisition programs will be executed in a time bound manner.

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    Deals in Aerospace & Defence Sector

    Though deals in the defence space are very few, we believe, this sector will witness increasing

    number of deals as regulatory policies are streamlined driving the overall defence sector.

    Exhibit 1: M&A Deals in the Defence Sector

    Target Acquirer Industry Year

    Amt

    (US$

    mn)

    Aviation Software Devlp &

    ConsultTCS IT Products (Aviation) 2004 N.A.

    Spectrum Infotech Larsen & Toubro Defense Electronics 2006

    Avalon Aviation Aptech Aviation Training 2006 N.A.

    AST Security Equipment MKU Defense Products 2008 5

    VISaer IBS Software Services IT Services (Aviation) 2008 4.5Mahindra Aerospace Ltd &

    Kotak Private Equity

    Buyout of Aerostaff Australia

    & GippsAero

    High-precision aircraft components

    and assemblies2009 $35mn

    Indamer European Aviation Hold. Aviation (MRO) 2009 N.A.

    Vaksh Steels Pitti Laminations Manufacturing 2011 -

    GKN Aerospace Engineering

    ServicesQuest Global BPO (Engg. - Aerospace) 2011 N.A.

    3B The Fibreglass Company Binani Industries Mfg- Fibre Glass 2012 360Aurora Integrated Systems Tata Advanced Systems IT & ITES 2012 -

    Bluebird (Israel) Piramal Enterprise Defence (Tactical UAV Systems) 2012 8

    Tesco GO JBM Group Aerospace 2012 N.A.

    BF Elbit Advanced Bharat Forge Aerospace & Defence 2013 N.A.Cambric Corp Tata Tech Aerospace & Defence 2013 N.A.

    Thales Software India L&T Tech Aerospace & Defence 2014 N.A.

    Rangsons Electronics Cyient Elect. & Mfg (ESDM) 2015 NA

    Source: Venture Intelligence

    Exhibit 2: PE Deals in the Defence Sector

    Target Investor Industry Year Amount

    (US$ mn)

    Astra Microwave Frontline Strategy (29%) Microwave 2002 N.A

    Turbotech Precision Eng. Micro-Turbines IFC 2004 0.6Adayana Kubera Partners IT & ITES 2007 20.05Pipavav Defence Citadel, Trinity & 2i Shipping & logistics 2007 77

    Delopt Axis Holdings IT & ITES 2007 1.58

    Air Works GTI Group Aviation MRO 2007 10

    Delopt Axis Holdings IT Services (A&D) 2007 N.A.

    Trusted Aero & Engg. Subhkam Ventures Aerospace & Medical Comp 2007 N.A.MTAR Tech Blackstone Defence Tech 2007 65

    Dynamatic Tech New Vernon, Others IT & ITES 2008 16.2

    Dynaspede Integrated Kotak PE, SIDBI VC Manufacturing 2008 8

    Trident Infosol SIDBI VC IT Products (Defense) 2010 3.3Aero Facility India ME Sovereign Fund Aviation MRO 2011 10

    Air Works NEA & Elephant Capital Aviation MRO 2011 27

    Maini Global Aerospace Pinebridge Aerospace 2011 10

    Air Works KKR Aviation MRO 2012 N.A.

    Source: Venture Intelligence

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    Current Domestic Defence Production is Insufficient

    Although private players were allowed entry into the Indian defence market in 2001, they

    have struggled to gain significant market share until lately. For the better part of the last

    decade, defence PSUs dominated the market and continued to be nominated for almost all

    major orders. Compounding the late entry was lack of access to technology from western

    countries as export of military technology and dual use technology was banned postNuclear Explosion in 1998. This is one of the main reasons behind domestic industrys lack of

    capacity in defence production outside Defence PSUs with a few exceptions in the private

    sector. This is despite the private sectors reasonably well-developed manufacturing

    capabilities. The AVRO case is a glaring example of public sector stalling private sectors effort

    to develop second line of aircraft manufacturing in India. In 2012, to meet the requirement of

    the Indian Air Force, the Defence Ministry tendered out 56 AVRO aircrafts for the IAF. The

    situation has changed with focused indigenization agenda starting with Defence Production

    Policy 2011 and Defence Procurement Procedure of 2013 that mandates hierarchical

    categorization of procurement in favor of indigenous buying. Along with it controls by

    foreign countries and OEMs on export of military technology to India were eased.

    Key Players in Indian Defence Industry

    Historically, the government restricted private sector participation because of inherent security-sensitive nature of the industry. As such, the private sector is relatively young and is behind theDPSUs/OFs in terms of infrastructure and DRDO in terms of R&D capability. However, in recent yearsprivate sector has found favor with government and attracted increased interest from foreignsystems integrators. With this combination of legislative support and capital/expertise inflow,private companies have experienced notable growth. They still have room to increase their marketshare. Exhibit 3 shows the current estimates of the market structure in the domestic defenceindustry.

    Exhibit 3: Breakup of Domestic Defence Market

    Source: Institute for Defence Studies and Analysis

    1) Defence Public Sector Undertakings (DPSUs)

    The Indian government first created the DPSUs in early 1960s to demonstrate their intention topursue self-sufficiency in defence production. Although the liberalization process in the 1990s led toIndia opening up private participation to 100% in the defence industry in 2001, the public sector stilldominated. Currently, the public sector including OFB accounts for 60% of indigenous defence

    manufacturing and around 3/4thof which can be attributed to the 8 DPSUs. DPSUs have significantadvantages over private peers because of their MoD ownership. Critically, they receive the followingbenefits and still enjoy their share of autonomy.

    DPSUs

    37.5%

    SMEs17.5%

    Large enterprises

    32.5%

    OrdnanceFactories

    12.5%

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    Access to latest technologies through DRDO and till recently, exclusive rights to ToT (transfer oftechnology) from Foreign OEMs

    Beneficial tax policies to DPSUs and their foreign partners

    Nomination for / Prioritization for defence contracts

    Favorable Payment terms (advances as well as multiple progress payments) and risk coverage

    by Government for Forex content of nominated contracts

    Indexation for Local Inflation

    Despite these benefits, DPSUs have grown at best in line with the defence spend and have not been

    able to displace foreign systems integrators and have borne the brunt of criticism from the armedservices and government representatives. Problems include lack of emphasis on in-house R&D,technology dependence on Foreign OEMs for successive generation of equipment and systems andfor upgrades, low labor productivity and decreasing value addition as a percentage of production.DPSUs have also been blamed for depending too much on external sources for productionrequirements, thus directly contradicting their main objective of achieving self-sufficiency. Ironically,most of this is outsourced to domestic private companies at prejudicial terms (delivery basedpayment terms) even though DPSUs themselves have been very vocal in their opposition to

    governments continued support of private participation in the defence industry.Exhibit 4: Defence PSUs and their activities

    DPSU Product areas

    Hindustan Aeronautics

    Limited (HAL)

    Design, development, manufacture, repair and overhaul of aircraft, helicopters, engines and their accessories

    Bharat Electronics Limited(BEL)

    Design, development and manufacture of sophisticated state-or-the-art electronic equipment components for the use ofthe defence services, para-military organizations and other government users

    Bharat Earth Movers Ltd

    (BEML)

    Multi-product company engaged in the design and manufacture of a wide range of equipment including specialized

    heavy vehicles for defence and re-engineering solutions in automotive and aeronautics

    Mazagon Dock Limited (MDL) Submarines, Larger Warships - destroyers, frigates and corvettes for the Indian Navy

    Garden Reach Shipbuilders &

    Engineers Ltd (GRSE)

    Builds and repairs smaller warships and auxiliary vessels for the Indian Navy and the Coast Guard

    Bharat Dynamics Limited

    (BDL)

    Missiles, torpedoes, torpedo counter measure system, counter measures dispensing system

    Mishra Dhatu Nigam Limited

    (MIDHANI)

    Special Ferrous and Non ferrous Alloys for Aeronautics, space, armaments, atomic energy, Navy special products like

    maraging steel, molybdenum wires and plates, titanium alloys and stainless steel tubes, alloys etc.

    Goa Shipyard Ltd (GSL) Builds a variety of small size, special purpose ships and auxiliary vessels for the defence, Indian Coast Guard (ICG) and civil

    sectors

    Hindustan Shipyard Ltd (HSL) Acquired from Ministry of Surface transport. Engaged in Ship and Submarine repairs, commercial ships and repairs of

    offshore rigs

    Source: Respective Organization Website

    2) Ordnance Factories

    The Ordnance Factories Board (OFB) is by far the most experienced defence manufacturing entity.First established in 1775, the OFB now operates directly under Ministry of Defence with the primaryobjective of achieving self-sufficiency in equipping the Indian Defence Forces. Currently there are 41factories spread across the country active in the production of military equipment for the Army,Navy, and Air Force. Recent estimates put its contribution to total domestic defence production at10-15%. As with the DPSUs, ordnance factories enjoy government funding and the latest availabletechnology. They are often criticized for very low labour productivity and poor quality andincreasingly subcontract to MSMEs

    3) Defence Research and Development Organization (DRDO)The government established DRDO in 1958 as the research and development wing of the Ministry ofDefence. DRDO receives allocation of 5% of total defence budget. Its primary objective is to developcutting-edge technologies that can be implemented in weapons systems. Although DRDO has

    made good strides, with Rs1 trn worth orders for its systems to date, it has had to do so withouttechnology from foreign sources. Till recently, the lack of transfer of technology provisions inpartnerships with foreign contractors limited the ability of the DRDO to integrate new complextechnologies in their systems.

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    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2013 2014

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    Increasing FDI Limit is Not the Ultimate Remedy for Addressing

    Core Issue of Transfer of Technology

    The Indian government has been taking steps to develop a sophisticated domestic defence

    industry. To truly achieve self-sufficiency in military procurement, it still has some decisions

    to make and reforms to enact. FDI in the defence industry currently has a limit of 49% with anoption to increase it to 100% if the deal involves high-end technology transfer and is

    approved by MoD. Post partial success of opening up the sector to foreign players on 49%

    FDI through automatic route, many stakeholders are seeking further increase in FDI cap up to

    100%.

    We believe mere increase in FDI does not necessarily lead to Technology Transfer.

    FDI limit has the potential to have the largest impact on shaping the industrys future. If we considerthat many other sectors have had their FDI caps lifted (private banking at 49%, non-bankingfinancial companies at 100%, power at 100%, pharma at 100%, real estate at 100%, public

    transportation at 100%) it is not unreasonable to expect the FDI cap in defence to be done awaywith completely.

    Key Issues to be Given Importance While Approving Increased Defence FDI:

    Control in Indian hands: Defence being a strategic sector, the domestic partner shouldmaintain 51% stake and Majority control in the JV all the time.

    OEMs Host Government Must Approve Transfer of Technology Agreement: Itis a majorfactor affecting OEMs capability to share technology despite increase in FDI share. This ismainly because defence technologies are strategic assets and funded through taxpayersmoney limiting the intent to transfer / share with another country. Hence, the OEMs Hostgovernment should approve of the ToT Agreement with the Indian government / partner.

    IPRs to reside within India:The technology developed by the Indian Joint Venture should be

    of global standards and the IPRs should reside with the JV in India.

    Give Priority to Indian nationals in hiring and recruitment: The JVC should hire Indiannationals at operational and supervisory levels wherever possible. Only in situations, where it isimperative to have foreign nationals, such as in technology transfers, training etc, should theybe hired.

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    Technology Development

    MoD revises offset policy to include Transfer of Technology (ToT)

    The governments general stance on ToT was not conducive to domestic industrys developmentuntil two years ago. ToT was not included in the eligible product/service list for discharging offsetobligations. A popular concern cited by the government was that no country, especially the United

    States, will be willing to hand over defence technology regardless of policy. Another reason forabstaining from this revision was the difficulty to quantify the value of technology, and that thiscould lead to foreign contractors misusing the policy to discharge offsets quickly.

    However, MoD has included ToT in offset discharge obligation. In fact, if the technology is deliveredto DRDO or MSME, the multiplier effect also comes in to play.

    India is on a similar trajectory as other countries, and they have all at some stage realized that the

    pros far outweigh the cons. All of them have seen that developing technology is the single, mostimportant step to establishing a sophisticated, self-sufficient defence industry. We believe thisrealization of the government is a positive step.

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    DPP 2013 Provides Priority to Domestic Source of Acquisition

    One of the major changes in DPP 2013 is the change in order of priority for procurement fromindigenous sources. As per DPP 2013, the statement of case (SOC) seeking acceptance of necessity(AON) is required to include detailed justification for recommending categorization as well asreasons why each of the higher preferred categorization was not considered.

    Exhibit 7: Preferred Categorization Of Capital Acquisition in DPP 2013

    Source: Ministry Presentation

    Key Highlights of changes in DPP 2013

    Indigenous content requirement will now extend all the way to lowest tier of sub vendormaking way for opportunities for vendors making components to compete against cheaper

    foreign components Penalties for not achieving stipulated indigenous content levels at each stage with a scope to

    make up for the deficiency at a later stage

    Inclusion of Field Evaluation Trials (FET)stage in maintaining offset requirement

    Reducing validity of AoN from 2 years to one year except Buy and Make (Indian)

    Provision of ToT to Indian Public/Private entity, for providing Maintenance Infrastructure, wouldbe applicable for BUY (Global)

    In a boost to the micro, small and medium enterprises sector, while DPP 2011 had identified settingup of a fund to provide resources for development of defence equipment, the source has beenspecifically identified in DPP 2013. Small Industries Development Bank of India (SIDBI) will earmarkan amount of Rs. 500 crore for providing loans, and further, a fund of Rs. 50 crore for equity supportout of India Opportunities Fund managed by its subsidiary SIDBI Venture Capital Ltd. Union

    Budget has made provisions for Rs1bn Technology Development Fund to support research anddevelopment of defence systems resources. The technology development fund will act like aventure capital fund for SMEs doing R&D in design and development encouraging innovations.

    (ToT is also defined in various categories in DPP 2013, which had not been included in DPP

    2011. This will overcome ambiguity existing at present. There are five categories of ToT with

    the highest involving complete transfer and lowest where there is no transfer.

    Category 1: Complete transfer of technology.Category 2: Complete transfer of technology of sub-vendor.

    Category 3: Partial transfer of technology with non-transfer of technology of sub-vendor.Category 4: Only drawings will be provided.

    Category 5: Proprietary item no transfer of technology.

    Buy (India)

    Buy & Make (Indian)

    Make (Indian)

    Buy & Make

    Buy

    (Global)

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    Major developments for Defence sector in the past year

    Indo US Ties (Early 2015)o Indo US ties reached a new high when President of USA visited India for its Republic

    day celebrations. Renewing their expansive defense ties for another 10 years, India andUS decided to kick off joint manufacturing of four relatively modest military productsand explore the development of two more high-end technologies. The two nationsagreed to step up joint combat exercises, maritime security endeavors, intelligence-sharing mechanisms, military exchanges and the like through the framework, whichhas the key new element of Defence Trade and Technology Initiative (DTTI) to bolsterIndia's fledgling defence-industrial base.

    o The four products to be co-produced are the next-generation Raven unmanned aerialvehicles (UAVs), "roll-on, roll-off" intelligence-gathering and reconnaissance modulesfor C-130J Super Hercules aircraft, mobile electric hybrid power sources and "uniformintegrated protection ensemble increment-2 (chemical, biological warfare protectiongear for soldiers)".

    o The Raven, for instance, is not an advanced spy or combat drone. A hand-launchedmini drone, it is used by soldiers in the battlefield to keep tabs on enemy formations

    within a range of 10km. The two sides, however, plan to extend its range to 18km andflying endurance to six hours from the existing four hours. Similarly, the 12 C-130Jsacquired by India from the US for over $2 billion since 2007 did not have the requisite

    surveillance modules that they will now get. They decided to setup working groups toexplore development of aircraft carrier technologies and jet engines.

    Strong Push for Make in India Initiative for boosting manufacturing sector (Late 2014)o The current focus as envisaged in recent statements and policy initiatives of the

    government has focused on the desire of not just greater indigenisation or India has afavorable manufacturing hub, but also India as exporting defence equipment andsolutions to global market.

    Budget (Early 2014)o Defence budget marginally rose from Rs 2.24trn to Rs 2.29trn, an increase of Rs 50bn.

    o The government has budgeted Rs. 946bn under capital outlay. This amounts to Rs50bnmore than sanctioned in the interim budget of February 2014.

    o This increase of Rs 50bn (capital outlay) includes a sum of Rs 10bn for accelerating thedevelopment of railway system in border areas.

    o FDI limit increased in defence from 26% to composite cap of 49% (FDI and FII) throughthe Foreign Investment Promotion Board (FIPB) route with full Indian management andcontrol.

    o Rs 1bn Technology Development Fund to support research and development indefence systems resources.

    Impact of the Budget announcementso Development of railway system in border areas will help in strategic movement of

    defence forces and heavy defence machinery at a faster pace.o Increase in FDI limit will attract foreign investors and bring defence technologies and

    much needed financial support to capital intensive defence sector.o The technology development fund will act like a venture capital fund for SMEs doing

    R&D in design and development encouraging innovations.

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    India: Aerospace & Defence

    Defence Opportunity has size, growth and longevity going for it

    Indias defence spend has critical mass when compared to sectors of the economy where investorstraditionally have taken exposure. The spend on an average was 2.12% of the nominal GDP in thepast decade. However, a large part of this defence spend is not reflected in revenues of domesticcompanies and therefore has not resulted in larger addressable market for domestic companies,

    because of the following: A large part of it (60% currently) is revenue expenditure which is internal in nature. Unlike in

    the US where some of the peripheral/support functions are outsourced, Indian armed forceshave always relied on doing them internally. We do not see this situation changing over thenext 2 decades though we believe the spend in this area is unlikely to grow as fast as capex.

    Of the capex (43% of the budget) about 70% is imported in fact India has been the largestimporter of weapon systems globally in recent times. This gets reflected in lower revenues ofIndian corporates involved in the sector. This has meant that the industrial base necessary tosupport this capex has not been built up adequately.

    Besides the domestic defence spend there lies the large opportunity of addressing globalmarkets. However, exports have been miniscule. Over the past decade from FY00-12,

    cumulative exports by India were only $172m (going by SIPRI data).We believe the opportunity for Indian companies in the next 8 years (FY14-FY22) will cumulativelybe in the region of $251bn (this is only the arms acquisitions that India is likely to make) withdomestic contribution of $105bn. We believe offsets (which will fall under exports to contribute toas much as $41b cumulatively in the next 8 years.

    Expect solid growth: The opportunity addressed by Indian companies will grow at a higher ratethan Nominal GDP as a) Indias defence spend/GDP ratio inches up to 2.25% on a conservative basisin FY22 from 1.79% of FY14. b) capex (part relevant to Indian corporates) will increase as apercentage of total spend. c) there is going to be greater focus on indigenization. d) offsets are

    going to be a big driver of revenues going forward for the industry. e) outsourcing to Indiancompanies by global systems integrators will gather pace as price pressure emerges in developedmarkets.

    Exhibit 8: Estimation of size of defence opportunity for Indian corporate sector (PSU and Private)

    Source: SIPRI, Indian budget documents

    Indian Defence Spending

    Revenue ExpenditureCapex

    DomesticImport

    Offset

    FY14E:$14bn FY22E:$57bn

    FY14E:$8bn FY22E:$24bn FY14E:$4bn FY22E:$24bn

    FY14E:$19bn FY22E:$56bn

    FY14E:$2.4bn FY22E:$7.3bn

    Global Defence Spend

    Outsourcing

    FY14E:$0.1bn FY22E:$9.7bn

    FY14E:$1.7tr FY22E:$1.5tr

    OutsourcingtoIndiatoincreasedueto:

    Pressureonspending

    Highcompetitiveintensity

    NoaccesstoChinamarket

    India s En ineerin work force

    OpportunitySize Indian

    PSU/Private/SME

    FY14E:$6bn

    FY22E:

    $41bn

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    Estimation of the Size of the Opportunity

    We estimate the market opportunity for Indian companies (PSU + Pvt) will grow 7x from $6bn inFY14 to $41bn by FY22. We believe our numbers are realistic as we have assumed nominal GDPgrowth of 12.3% (~7% real GDP growth and ~5% inflation) during this period, which takes intoaccount slower developed market growth and the impact it will have on Indias growth. Based on

    the estimates worked out in Exhibit 11, $41bn in FY22 will be contributed largely by domestic (60%)and export revenues (40%). Some of the other key assumptions made in this exercise are thatINR/USD rate would be at Rs62 and the imported part of defence acquisitions will fall to 50% from

    current 70%.

    Some of the key conclusions that we arrive at based on this exercise are that the cumulative defencespend over FY14-FY22 will hit close to $620bn. Capex will form half of this. New armament spendwill be $251bn with imported equipment spend at $146bn.

    Exhibit 9: Summary of our estimates

    Summary of the projections FY14-FY17 FY17-FY22 FY14-FY22

    Defence Spend (Rsbn) 10,851 27,617 38,468

    Defence Spend ($bn) 175 445 620

    Capex Spend (Rsbn) 4,805 13,488 18,293

    Capex Spend ($bn) 77 218 295New Armament Spend (Rsbn) 4,084 11,465 15,549

    New Armament Spend ($ bn) 66 185 251

    Of which

    Imported Equipment Spend (Rsbn) 2,707 6,320 9,027

    Imported Equipment Spend ($ bn) 44 102 146

    Domestic Equipment Spend (Rsbn) 1,377 5,144 6,521

    Domestic Equipment Spend ($ bn) 22 83 105

    Offsets

    Addressable Opportunity (Rs bn) 812 1,896 2,708

    Addressable Opportunity ($ bn) 13 31 41

    Source: Centrum

    Exhibit 10: Assumptions made in our projections

    Stage I Stage II FY14

    FY14-FY17 FY17-FY22

    Rs/$ 62 62 62

    Average Real GDP growth 7.5% 6.5% 5%

    Average Inflation 5% 4% 8.0%

    Defense Budget/NGDP 2.00% 2.25% 1.8%

    Capex/Defense BudgetIncreasing by 1%

    every yearIncreasing by

    1% every year42%

    Import/CapexDecreasing by

    1% every year

    Decreasing by

    3% every year70%

    Offset 30% 30% ~35%

    Export Growth (non offset) 120% 100%

    Armament Acquisition/Capex 85% 85%

    Source: Centrum

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    India:Aerospace&Defence

    Exhibit11:Proje

    ctionsofIndia'sdefenceSpend,C

    apex,

    AcquisitionSize,

    DomesticMarketandExportMarket

    (AllnumbersinRsbnunlessstatedotherwise)

    FY11

    FY12

    FY13

    FY14

    FY15

    FY16

    FY17

    FY18

    FY19

    FY20

    FY21

    FY22

    FY14

    -FY17

    CAGR

    FY17-FY22

    CAGR

    FY14-FY22

    CAGR

    NominalGDP

    77

    ,953

    89

    ,749

    1,0

    0,2

    06

    1,1

    3,6

    34

    1,2

    8,8

    61

    1,4

    6,1

    28

    1,6

    5,7

    09

    1,8

    7,9

    14

    2,1

    3,095

    2,4

    1,6

    50

    2,7

    4,0

    31

    3,1

    0,7

    51

    13.4

    %

    13.4

    %

    13.4

    %

    DefenceBudget

    1,4

    73

    1,6

    44

    1,9

    34

    2,0

    37

    2,5

    77

    2,9

    23

    3,3

    14

    4,2

    28

    4,795

    5,4

    37

    6,1

    66

    6,9

    92

    17.6

    %

    16.1

    %

    16.7

    %

    Capex

    600

    691

    796

    867

    1,1

    23

    1,3

    03

    1,5

    11

    1,9

    70

    2,282

    2,6

    42

    3,0

    57

    3,5

    37

    20.3

    %

    18.5

    %

    19.2

    %

    %ofdefencebudget

    41%

    42%

    41%

    43%

    44%

    45%

    46%

    47%

    48

    %

    49%

    50%

    51%

    NewArmsAcquisitionSpend

    510

    588

    676

    737

    955

    1108

    1284

    1674

    1939

    2246

    2599

    3007

    20.3

    %

    18.5

    %

    19.2

    %

    NewArmsAcquisitionSpend

    Imported

    357

    411

    467

    501

    640

    731

    835

    1,0

    38

    1,144

    1,2

    58

    1,3

    77

    1,5

    03

    18.5

    %

    12.5

    %

    14.7

    %

    %ofCapex

    70%

    70%

    69%

    68%

    67%

    66%

    65%

    62%

    59

    %

    56%

    53%

    50%

    NewArmsAcquisitionSpend

    Domestic

    153

    176

    210

    236

    315

    377

    449

    636

    795

    988

    1,2

    21

    1,5

    03

    24.0

    %

    27.3

    %

    26.0

    %

    Export

    Export(relatedtooutsourcing)+thirdpartysales*

    0.4

    0.1

    0.8

    1.8

    4

    9

    19

    38

    76

    151

    302

    604

    120.0

    %

    100.0

    %

    107.3

    %

    Offset**

    107

    123

    140

    150

    192

    219

    250

    311

    3

    43

    377

    413

    451

    18.5

    %

    12.5

    %

    14.7

    %

    TotalExport

    107

    124

    141

    152

    196

    228

    269

    349

    4

    19

    528

    715

    1,0

    55

    21.0

    %

    31.4

    %

    27.4

    %

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity-Domestic

    153

    176

    210

    236

    315

    377

    449

    636

    795

    988

    1,2

    21

    1,5

    03

    24.0

    %

    27.3

    %

    26.0

    %

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity-Domestic($bn)

    2

    3

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    10

    13

    16

    20

    24

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity-Exports

    107

    124

    141

    152

    196

    228

    269

    349

    419

    528

    715

    1,0

    55

    21.0

    %

    31.4

    %

    27.4

    %

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity-Exports($bn)

    2

    2

    2

    2

    3

    4

    4

    6

    7

    9

    12

    17

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity

    260

    300

    351

    388

    511

    605

    719

    985

    1,21

    4

    1,5

    16

    1,9

    37

    2,5

    58

    22.8

    %

    28.9

    %

    26.6

    %

    TotalAddressableO

    pportunity($bn)

    4

    5

    6

    6

    8

    10

    12

    16

    2

    0

    24

    31

    41

    Note

    *=Averageexportnum

    beroverthelast10yearsasthenumberisvery

    volatileSource:SIPRI

    *=AlsoincludesMROnumber

    **=TimingUncertainoftheseflows,Assumedasexportsdeemedexports

    Source:SIPRI,IndianBu

    dgetDocuments,Centrum

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    Domestic revenues to pick up pace

    Domestic revenues (using HAL+ BEL revenues as proxy) grew in line with nominal GDP in the

    last decade. We expect domestic opportunity for Indian companies (from arms acquisitions)

    to grow from $4bn in FY14 to $24bn in FY22 at 23% CAGR. The faster growth predicted is on

    the back of the following:

    Indian defence budgets to grow faster than nominal GDP growth as they have fallen belowhistorical levels. 50% of Indian defence equipment is obsolete.

    The gap between India and China has widened from a military capability perspective with theChinese surging ahead in a number of areas (including stealth weapons, anti-satellite weapons,etc) driven largely by domestic R&D and reverse engineering as western technology has beendenied to it since 1989. The surge in capabilities has been accompanied by a geopoliticallyassertive China. Strong economic growth and high savings rate has helped China deliver onthis. With US likely to be less active in the Asian region as it repairs its financials, we believe Indiawill have to spend more to bridge the widening gap

    Capex to opex ratio will change in favor of Capex. as the latter will be capped. We believe thatIndia will aim at a smaller, smarter and more effective armed force as many other countries have

    done.

    Indigenization will gain momentum. We believe that from 30% indigenous components in newacquisitions the number can go up to 50% in the next 10 years. However, this will still be lowerthan governments aspiration of 70%.

    A freer technology transfer regime may be prompted by better perception of India amongWestern nations. This is likely due to declining sales opportunities in the western world and

    better bargaining power of the buyer (India) under current market conditions.

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    Indian Defence Budgets To Witness Higehr Growth Rates

    We believe Indias defence budget will grow at a CAGR of 15% over FY14-22 slightly ahead of

    expected nominal GDP growth of 12.5%. In the past decade (FY01-FY14) defence budgets

    grew at 12% CAGR and capital expenditure budgets by 14.7% (when Nominal GDP grew by

    14%). We expect India to expand its defence budget 1) as it seeks to maintain a semblance of

    geo-political balance in Asia as US is likely to withdraw to repair its financials and narrow the

    large gap that has developed with China militarily 2) Massive modernization undertaken as50% of current equipment is obsolete due to less than adequate spend on defence in the past

    3) reasonably comfortable funding position on the back of healthy tax revenues and

    comfortable debt/GDP ratio relative to other nations and Indias own history.

    Defence Spend/NGDP ratio to improve after a decade low in FY14

    After clocking a 2%-2.5% over FY01-11, the defence budget/NGDP ratio has fallen to 1.79%-1.93%range with an all-time low of 1.79% in FY14. We believe this is likely revert to the mean of 2.25% bythe second part of the coming decade as much of Indias equipment is obsolete and it has underspent on its defence budget. After withdrawal from Afghanistan and Iraq, US has also lowered itsrole in Asian geopolitics as its defence spending has come under severe scrutiny. Recent budget

    pledges by the US government indicate a cut of $450bn over the next 12 years with the numbergoing up to $1.1trn automatically if no areas of deficit reduction are identified by the Supercommittee.

    Exhibit 12: The Indian domestic corporate sector (largely PSU) has grown in line with NGDP

    Source: Company

    China has significantly increased the gap with India militarilyRelative analysis of key adversaries India and China is given in Exhibit 17. Due to denial of defencetechnology by western powers since the Tiananmen incident in 1989, the Chinese Defence and

    aerospace fraternity got its act together by spending considerable amount of energy and money inindigenous R&D and in reverse engineering some American and Russian equipment. In recent timesit closed the gap with the Americans in specific areas of technology (and naturally increased the gapwith India). To reduce the gap with the Chinese, Indian defence spending will have to increase

    substantially as it cannot always look up to the western powers to maintain the current powerbalance in the Asian region.

    A look at defence spending data collected by SIPRI in 2000 shows, Chinese spends were 1.5x Indias.In 2013 the number went up to ~3.5x. This increased spend was entirely channelized internally asthere was no access to western technology. This will turn out to be the best to happen to China. Thisled to the creation of a large industrial base and significant R&D facilities in the defence sector.

    SIPRI data shows Chinese defence spending grew 11% against Indias 5% between FY02-13.

    16%

    11%

    14%

    0.0%

    2.0%

    4.0%

    6.0%

    8.0%

    10.0%

    12.0%

    14.0%

    16.0%

    18.0%

    HAL BEL CombinedCAGR(FY01-FY13)

    (%)

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    Exhibit 13: Defence Spending by top 10 spenders

    ($m)

    2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    2002-2007

    CAGR

    2007-2013

    CAGR

    USA 4,46,142 5,07,781 5,53,441 5,79,831 5,88,837 6,04,292 6,49,003 7,01,048 7,20,282 7,11,338 6,71,097 6,18,681 6.26% 0.39%

    China, P.

    R.

    52,832 57,390 63,560 71,496 83,928 96,782 1,06,640 1,28,734 1,36,239 1,47,268 1,59,620 1,71,381 12.87% 9.99%

    France 62,840 64,749 66,526 65,123 65,470 65,691 65,037 69,426 66,251 64,633 63,736 62,272 0.89% -0.89%

    UK 53,179 57,005 57,665 58,150 58,527 60,375 63,070 64,297 62,942 60,284 57,717 56,231 2.57% -1.18%

    Russia 37,300 39,100 40,870 46,446 51,404 55,954 61,484 64,504 65,807 70,238 80,995 84,864 8.45% 7.19%

    Japan 60,701 61,460 61,201 61,288 60,892 60,574 59,140 59,735 59,003 60,452 59,571 59,431 -0.04% -0.32%

    Germany 49,920 49,237 47,726 46,983 45,899 45,940 47,259 49,046 49,583 48,164 49,312 49,297 -1.65% 1.18%

    Saudi

    Arabia25,762 25,951 28,850 34,763 39,600 45,617 44,771 46,011 47,881 48,531 54,913 62,760 12.11% 5.46%

    Italy 43,513 43,867 44,011 42,342 40,976 39,736 41,160 40,002 38,876 38,149 35,436 32,663 -1.80% -3.21%

    India 28,528 29,165 33,879 36,054 36,225 36,664 41,585 48,963 49,159 49,634 49,459 49,091 5.15% 4.98%

    Total

    Spending8,60,717 9,35,705 9,97,729 10,42,476 10,71,758 11,11,625 11,79,149 12,71,766 12,96,023 12,98,691 12,81,856 12,46,671 5.25% 1.93%

    Source: SIPRI

    Exhibit 14: Share of Spending among the top 10 spenders

    (%) 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    USA 51.8 54.3 55.5 55.6 54.9 54.4 55.0 55.1 55.6 54.8 52.4 49.6

    China, P. R. 6.1 6.1 6.4 6.9 7.8 8.7 9.0 10.1 10.5 11.3 12.5 13.7

    France 7.3 6.9 6.7 6.2 6.1 5.9 5.5 5.5 5.1 5.0 5.0 5.0

    UK 6.2 6.1 5.8 5.6 5.5 5.4 5.3 5.1 4.9 4.6 4.5 4.5

    Russia 4.3 4.2 4.1 4.5 4.8 5.0 5.2 5.1 5.1 5.4 6.3 6.8

    Japan 7.1 6.6 6.1 5.9 5.7 5.4 5.0 4.7 4.6 4.7 4.6 4.8

    Germany 5.8 5.3 4.8 4.5 4.3 4.1 4.0 3.9 3.8 3.7 3.8 4.0

    Saudi Arabia 3.0 2.8 2.9 3.3 3.7 4.1 3.8 3.6 3.7 3.7 4.3 5.0

    Italy 5.1 4.7 4.4 4.1 3.8 3.6 3.5 3.1 3.0 2.9 2.8 2.6

    India 3.3 3.1 3.4 3.5 3.4 3.3 3.5 3.9 3.8 3.8 3.9 3.9

    Total Spending 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100

    Source: SIPRI

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    Exhibit 15: Comparison: India, China and Pakistan on defence parameters

    India China Pakistan

    Total Population 1,220,800,359 1,349,585,838 193,238,868

    Military Manpower Available 615,201,057 749,610,775 93,351,401

    Fit for Military Service 489,571,520 618,588,627 75,326,989

    Reaching Military Age Yearly 22,896,956 19,538,534 4,342,629

    Active Military Personnel 1,325,000 2,285,000 617,000Active Military Reserves 2,143,000 2,300,000 515,000

    Total Aircraft 1,785 2,788 847

    Total Land-Based Weapons 15,681 23,664 10,244

    Total Naval Units 184 520 74

    Towed Artillery 6,445 6,246 3,263

    Merchant Marine Strength 340 2,030 11

    Major Ports and Terminals 7 15 2

    Aircraft Carriers 2 1 0

    Destroyers 11 24 0

    Frigates 15 45 11

    Submarines 17 69 8

    Patrol Coastal Craft 32 353 12

    Mine Warfare Craft 7 119 3

    Corvettes 24 9 0

    Defense Budget / Expenditure $46,000,000,000 $126,000,000,000 $7,000,000,000

    Foreign Reserves $297,800,000,000 $3,341,000,000,000 $13,800,000,000

    Purchasing Power $4,716,000,000,000 $12,260,000,000,000 $546,700,000,000

    Major Serviceable Airports 346 507 151

    Source: Globafirepower.com (As updated on January 2015)

    Exhibit 16: Size of Indian Defence spend compared to other nations

    Source: SIPRI

    Note: This does not include data on US whose defence spend is almost 4x of Chinas.

    France

    China

    UKGermany

    India*

    0

    20

    40

    60

    80

    100

    120

    140

    160

    180

    200

    (2) (1) 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

    MilitarySpending($bn)

    CAGR (2000-2012)France China UK Germany India*

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    Exhibit 17: Military spend Growth comparison (%)

    Source: SIPRI, LC = Local Currency

    Exhibit 18: Widening gap between India and China

    China's widening gap with India Description

    China's defence spend/GDP Chinas spend has been growing at a much faster clip compared to that of Indiaseven if one were to adjust for local currency. Chinas spend used to be 1.5x Indias in

    2000. In 2012 it was 3.3x. India's. Defence spending to GDP ratio is still much below 3

    per cent level defined as an adequate level of expenditure in Indias first ever

    Strategic Defence Review prepared by the National Security Advisory Board in 2000.

    Military might According to a Pentagon report

    China is pursuing a major military buildup in a "secretive manner" developing

    survivable nuclear delivery system, a 1,500 km range anti-ship missile to hit aircraft

    carriers and has the most active land based ballistic and cruise missile program in the

    world

    Beijing is acquiring 'capabilities' to strike from a distance.

    Beijing has developed missiles capable of striking targets in space and is also

    expanding its fleet of conventional and nuclear submarines

    China has the most active land-based ballistic and cruise missile program in the world

    China is developing and testing several new classes of offensive missiles, qualitatively

    upgrading certain missile systems and developing methods to counter ballisticmissile defenses

    In January 2007, China launched a kinetic kill vehicle (KKV) to smash into its ownaging Fengyun (FY-1C) satellite

    China has at least 53 conventional and seven nuclear attack submarines (SSNs)

    Science and Technology China targets fifth place from current sixth in global innovativeness ranking by 2020.

    By 2040-50, China aims at science and technology (S&T) parity with US

    R&D There has been surging growth in the innovativeness of Chinese defence industry. In

    1998, it filed for 313 patents. In 2008, it filed 11,000 patents. and In 2010, 15,000

    patents.

    Source: Media

    8.0

    3.9

    1.1

    (1.5)

    14.1

    5.4

    9.5

    0.8

    (0.4) (0.6)

    0.6

    11.5

    3.9

    13.4

    3.5

    1.20.1

    (0.2)

    12.5

    4.5

    11.9

    (4)

    (2)

    0

    2

    4

    6

    810

    12

    14

    16

    USA UK France Germany China India India (LC)

    CAGR (2000-2005) CAGR (2005-2013) CAGR (2000-2013)

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    Exhibit 19: India and China Recent points of friction between the two

    Date Anecdotes

    Nov-06 China and India had a verbal spat over the north-east Indian state of Arunachal

    Pradesh. India claimed that China was occupying 38,000 square kilometers of its

    territory in Kashmir, while China claimed the whole of Arunachal Pradesh as its ownMay-07 China denied the application for visa from an Indian Administrative Service officer in

    Arunachal Pradesh. According to China, since Arunachal Pradesh is a territory of

    China, he would not need a visa to visit his own countryJun-09 The People's Daily, a Communist Party mouthpiece that serves as a window to the

    thinking of Beijing's insular leadership, published an exceptional broadside against

    New Delhi on June 11. It described India's "tough posture" as "dangerous," and asked

    India to "consider whether or not it can afford the consequences of a potential

    confrontation with China."

    Dec-07 The Indian Air Force announced it will station two squadrons of advanced Sukhoi-30

    MKI aircraft in Tezpur, in Assam.

    Oct-09 Asian Development Bank formally acknowledging Arunachal Pradesh as part of Indiaapproved a loan to India for a development project there. Earlier China had exercised

    pressure on the bank to cease the loan

    Jan-11 India claimed that armed Chinese soldiers had infiltrated Indian territory and

    threatened construction workers near a disputed border. New Delhi says China isillegally occupying 38,000 square kilometers of its northwestern territory, while

    Beijing claims a 90,000 square-kilometer chunk in northeastern India.

    Sept-14 In one of the many cases of cross-border incursion, Chinese troops infiltrated Indianterritory in Ladakh and broke a camera set up by the Indian Army at the Line of Actual

    Control (LAC). These cameras were of high resolution and had been put up by theIndian soldiers to keep an eye on Chinese soldiers. The Chinese troops also

    demolished the temporary structures built by the Indian Army and threatened the

    Indians living in area to evacuate the place immediately.

    Source: Media

    Under spending across the board leading to obsolescence

    Although defence expenditure budget and actual defence spending have been increasing in line

    with NGDP since FY2001, there has been a trend of under spending by defence forces, particularly incapital expenditure. From FY2001-2013 approximately INR 515 bn, or 13% of the cumulative capital

    expenditure budget, was under-spent

    Exhibit 20: Under spending in absolute terms Exhibit 21: Under spending in % terms

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    A close inspection of each service divisions spending habits also reveals consistent under spending.On average for the past 12 year between 2001-13: the Army underspends by 13%, the Navyunderspends by 5%, and the Air Force underspends by 14%. When you consider 2011 & 2012 as anoutlier for Navy and take it out of the calculation, the Navys average under spending jumps up to

    11.3%.

    (200)

    (150)

    (100)(50)

    0

    50

    100

    150

    200

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    (Rsbn)

    Revenue Capital

    (40)%

    (30)%

    (20)%(10)%

    0%

    10%

    20%

    30%

    40%

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    Revenue Capital

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    Exhibit 22: Under spending has been highest in Air Force

    followed by Army and Navy in absolute terms.

    Exhibit 23: Under spending has been highest in Air Force

    followed by Army and Navy in % terms.

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    However capital expenditure will pick up as Capex to Opex mix will improve from the current level.

    We expect the country to focus on controlling the operating expenditure and focus on capitalacquisitions going forward. The focus would be on a smaller, leaner and a more effective armedforce. We believe about $77bn would be spent on arms capex till FY17 cumulatively and about$295bn till FY22.

    Exhibit 24: Defence spending to GDP ratio - Behavior of various components

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    -60

    -40

    -20

    0

    20

    4060

    80

    2001

    2002

    2003

    2004

    2005

    2006

    2007

    2008

    2009

    2010

    2011

    2012

    2013

    (Rsbn)

    Army Navy Air Force

    (40)%(30)%(20)%(10)%

    0%10%20%30%40%

    50%

    2001

    2002

    2003

    2004

    2005

    2006

    2007

    2008

    2009

    2010

    2011

    2012

    2013

    Army Navy Air Force

    (%)

    0.00%

    0.50%

    1.00%

    1.50%

    2.00%

    2.50%

    3.00%

    1992 1997 2002 2007 2012

    Revenue/GDP Capital/GDP Total/GDP

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    Exhibit 25: Governments Projection of Defence Spending Till FY22

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    124

    796 867

    3,537

    0

    500

    1000

    1500

    2000

    2500

    3000

    3500

    4000

    FY01

    FY02

    FY03

    FY04

    FY05

    FY06

    FY07

    FY08

    FY09

    FY10

    FY11

    FY12

    FY13

    FY14

    FY15

    FY16

    FY17

    FY18

    FY19

    FY20

    FY21

    FY22

    (RsBn)

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    Modernization to be a key driver for Indian defence acquisition

    Currently 50% of the military equipment is estimated to be obsolete and only 15% state-of-the-art.The Ministry of Defence (MoD) aims to reduce the former by 20% and to increase the latter by 15%.

    Exhibit 26: Indian Defence Equipment Profile Current Exhibit 27: Indian Defence Equipment Profile Target

    Source: 2ndIndian Regional Offset Conference Source: 2nd Indian Regional Offset Conference

    MOD has allocated approximately 40% of total Defence spending to capital outlays to support itsmodernization efforts. Capital outlays constitute expenditure on arms procurements, construction,infrastructure and other military equipment.

    The capital expenditure budgets have seen good growth rates (CAGR of 13%

    between 2001-14)

    Over the past decade between 2001 to 2013, the capital expenditure budgets have been increasingat a CAGR of 13% and the total defence expenditure budgets at 10%. The same period has seenIndias GDP grow at 14% in nominal terms. The capital component has been increasing steadily

    increasing as a percentage of the total budget from 31% in FY2001 to 43% in FY2014. Thesenumbers demonstrate Indias appetite for procurement of state-of-the-art military equipment.Statements from MoD indicate that India does not intend to slow down its purchase plan despitealready engaging in a decade of intensive acquisitions.

    Exhibit 28: Indias Defence Budget (FY2001-FY2014)

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    Note: The defence budget consists of two main parts, capital and revenue expenditures. Capital expenditures include the costs of

    the development of infrastructure as well as procurement of military equipment, other armaments, and land. Revenue expenditures

    include everyday operating expenses of the Indian Defence Force such as wages and salaries, which account for about half of therevenue budget. The other components of the operating expenses are Interest payments,

    Payment

    to

    subsidies,

    Pension

    and

    Payment

    to

    police

    by

    central

    govt.

    The key component here is the capital expenditures budget, of which the majority is allocated to

    procuring n ew equipment from foreign or domestic sources. Roughly 75-85% of the capital e xpenditures budget has historically

    gone to arms procurement, and this proportion is not likely to change.

    Obselete

    50.0%

    Matured

    35.0%

    State-of-the-art

    15.0%

    State-of-the-art

    30.0%

    Matured

    40.0%

    Obselete

    30.0%

    0

    200

    400

    600

    800

    1,000

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

    (Rsbn)

    Revenue Capital

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    Exhibit 29: Trend between Opex and Capex in the defence budget

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    Exhibit 30: Capex spend in the overall budget spend has been improving DefenceExpenditure Historical Trend

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    capital expenditures by service division

    On average over the past decade between 2001-2014, the Army accounts for 23% of the capitalexpenditure, the Navy 29%, and the Air Force 48%. The trend over the years indicates that the AirForce has increased its share and cut into the budgets of other forces over the years. All threedivisions expenditures have grown rapidly along with the total defence budget.

    0

    500,000

    1,000,000

    1,500,000

    2,000,000

    2,500,000

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

    Re ve ue Capi tal

    (Rs)

    31% 32% 33% 32%

    43%41% 42%

    44% 45%

    39% 41%

    42% 41% 43%

    0%

    5%

    10%

    15%

    20%

    25%

    30%

    35%

    40%

    45%

    50%

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

    Capexastotal%ofDefexp

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    Exhibit 31: Capital Expenditure Budgets by Service Division, in real terms

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    Exhibit 32: Capital Expenditure Budgets by Service Division, % terms

    Source: Union Budget and Economic Survey

    0

    50

    100

    150

    200

    250300

    350

    400

    450

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

    (Rsbn)

    Army Navy Air Force

    0%

    20%

    40%

    60%

    80%

    100%

    2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

    Army Navy Air Force

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    32India: Aerospace & Defence

    Current acquisition plans indicate significant buying ahead

    The acquisitions plans laid out by the Indian forces indicate that the there is considerable buyingahead over the next 5 years.

    Exhibit 33: Acquisition plans of the various branches of the armed forces

    Segment Category Indicative Items Qnty Size($Bn)

    Air Helicopters Indigenous Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) - Dhruv 159 7.20Medium lift Helicopters 80 1.20

    VVIP helicopters 12 0.83

    Light Utility Helicopter (HAL) 65 1.27

    Combat / Attack Helicopter 22 1.40

    Heavy Lift helicopters 15 0.60

    Missile Systems Short Range Surface to Air Missile System (SRSAM) 5,000 6.00

    Medium Range Surface to Air Missile Systems (MRSAM) -Akash

    2,000 5.00

    Long Range Surface to Air Missile Systems (LRSAM) 1,500 5.00

    Transport and otheraircraft

    C-17 Military transport Aircrafts 10 4.10

    Medium-Lift Transport Aircraft 56 2.45

    PC 7 MK II Basic Trainer Aircraft 181 1.20Hawk Mk 132 Advanced Jet Trainer 143 2.90

    C 130J Hercules aircraft 12 1.20

    AN-32 Upgrade 104 0.40

    Embraer Jets 3 0.21

    Israeli Harop killer UAVs 10 0.10

    Multi-Role Tanker Transport 6 2.00

    Indigenous Airborne Warning and Control System (2 + 4) 6 1.09

    Interaction ongoing

    between IAF andIndustry

    Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft

    LCA - Mark -2

    Unmanned Fighter Aircraft

    Fighter Aircrafts Su-30 MKI 272 12.38

    Medium Multi Role Combat Aircraft (MMRCA) - (126 withan option for 64-74 more)

    126 20.00

    Fifth Generation Fighter Aircraft (FGFA) (India and Russia) 214 30.00

    Mirage 2000 Upgrade 51 2.20

    MiG-29 Upgrade 63 0.70

    LCA (Tejas) - Includes 54 Indian Navy 244 3.36

    Others Airfields for infrastructure upgrade 30

    Land Artillery 155 mm Mounted Howitzer 814 2.00

    155 mm Wheeled Self-Propelled Guns 180 0.60

    155mm ammunition rounds all types 1,50,000

    155mm precision guided munitions 50,000

    Air Mobile Ultra light howitzers (ULH) 145 0.90

    155 mm Towed Howitzer (410 + 1170) 1,580 1.78

    130mm M-46 Upgrade 300Helicopters Light Utility Helicopters 197 0.75

    Missiles ICV-mounted anti -tank guided missiles 1,000

    Tanks and Vehicles Arjun Tank 242 0.38

    Futuristic Infantry Combat Vehicle (FICV) 2,600 10.00

    Futuristic Main Battle Tank (FMBT) 1,000 5.50

    Light Specialist Vehicles (LSVs) 3,000 0.27

    Light Multi utility Recce Vehicles (LAM) 800 0.20

    Air Defence Very Short Range Air Defence Missiles (VSHOARD) 5,175 4.50

    ZU-23-2 anti-aircraft upgrade 468 0.30

    40 mm Anti- aircraft Gun 115 0.30

    Others Battlefield Management System (BMS) 500 7.27

    Multirole Assault Rifles 65,768 0.25

    Tactical Communications System (TCS) 7 1.80Bullet proof jackets 59,000

    Mini Unmanned aerial vehicles 1,000

    FINSAS - Futuristic Infantry Soldier As a System

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    33India: Aerospace & Defence

    Mine field breaching systems 0.25

    Segment Category Indicative Items Qnty Size($Bn)

    Navy Helicopters Advanced Light Helicopters 47 7.20

    Naval Utility Helicopters 56 1.00

    Advanced multi role Naval Helicopters 123 6.80

    Navalised Aircraft MiG-29K 29 2.25

    Fighter Aircrafts for IAC 2

    Long Range Maritime Patrol Aircraft - Boeing P8-I 20 2.07Medium-range Maritime Reconnaissance Aircraft 6 1.00

    Submarines Midget Submarines 5 0.50

    Stealth Submarines - Project 75 India (P-75I) 6 8.00

    Warships Survey Training Vessels 4 0.47

    Project 17 A Frigates 7 8.18

    Landing Platform/dock (LPD) 4 3.50

    Survey vessels 6

    Off-shore Patrol Vessels 9

    Indigenous Aircraft Carriers 2 0.45

    ASW Shallow Water Crafts 16 2.00

    Mid-Life Upgrades of the Kirch Class Corvettes 5

    Sail Training Ship 1

    Others 30 - 40 mm Gun With EOFCS 116 0.27Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV) 10 0.01

    Portable diver detection sonar (PDDS) systems 78 0.07

    Heavy Weight Torpedoes (Surface) 98 0.25

    Surface Surveillance Radars 31 0.30

    20-30 mm Close In Weapon System 25 0.20

    Mobile Missile Coastal Battery 15 0.25

    NTDS 12

    Source: FICCI, Media, and compiled by Centrum

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    Precedents show that developing technology is the key

    Looming threats from neighbors and the reality of its obsolete military equipment have

    forced India to step up its modernization efforts. However, the domestic defence industry is

    unable to keep up with the huge demand and does not possess the technology required to

    manufacture complex military equipment needed by defence forces. Therefore, India has had

    to rely heavily on imports to meet as much as 70% of its procurement needs. Despite this, the

    Ministry of Defence has made it clear that it wants to pursue indigenization in the long termand eventually achieve self-sufficiency in military production. India is not the first nation to

    face such a daunting task. Other countries have succeeded in developing and transforming

    their defence industries. The common catalyst is technology.

    In all of these cases, the key catalyst to the industrys progress was developing technological

    capability in defence systems. Without it, these nations would still largely rely on imports forcomplex military equipment. Each went about this in a different way: Israel worked its way aroundarms embargoes to procure key technologies, Brazil absorbed technology through joint ventures

    with foreign contractors, and South Korea invested heavily in R&D and its infrastructure from thevery start. China has also transformed itself into a largely indigenously equipped military because ofits emphasis on R&D. Due to an official roadmap for science & technology, China jumped from a

    global innovativeness ranking of 24 in 2004 to 6 in 2009. Its defence industrys innovativeness alsosaw vast improvement. In 1998, it had filed for 313 patents whereas in 2013 the same statistic hadgone up to 15000 patents.

    Countries in similar positions to India include Turkey, Peru, Chile, and Korea. Turkey, realizing theimportance of technological capability in long-term self-sufficiency, is investing heavily in R&D. In2012 it invested USD 600 mn, up 32% YoY. This emphasis on R&D is already paying dividends: the

    domestic defence industry accounted for more than half of procurement spending in 2012 ofaround $4bn. Indias R&D spending is dismal compared to Turkeys. It spends roughly the same asTurkey on R&D, but has a procurement budget more than three times larger and a GDP more thantwo times larger. Clearly if India wishes to develop a more sophisticated defence industry, it willhave to focus on advancing technological capability by 1) investing larger amounts in R&D and 2)pushing for ToT in defence procurement deals.

    Israel

    Background on domestic defence industry

    In 1960s, escalating conflicts with its Arab neighbors, combined with arms embargoes and brokenagreements by foreign suppliers forced Israel to begin its initial indigenization efforts. Israel soonrealized that financial and technological constraints made immediate self-sufficiency in military

    equipment impossible. The government then pursued a two-pronged strategy: it continued topurchase whatever it could from foreign sources but also invested heavily in developing its defenceindustry, primarily in R&D and infrastructure. Acquiring the knowledge and technology tomanufacture complex military equipment and systems was crucial. Because of the ongoing arms

    embargoes, Israel had to resort to smuggling, reverse-engineering and global networks to acquirethe expertise needed for the development of these technologies. By the 1980s, Israel had asophisticated defence industry that was able to capture significant revenues through exports toIran, South Africa, China, Singapore, and Chile. Incidentally, these revenues helped finance new R&Ddevelopment during a period of budget cuts that would have otherwise eaten into the R&Dcomponent. India needs an institution like SIBAT, Israel to promote indigenized products in thedefence sector

    Private firms success in Israel

    By the 1990s, private firms were winning a larger share of the Ministry of Defences contracts. Thisresulted in the Mandatory Tender Law, which established a competitive bidding system for all MoD

    contracts. This made the tender process more transparent and subsequently led to greater private

    involvement in government projects. At the beginning of the 21st century, private firms accountedfor 33% of domestic defence production in a country that was once dominated by the public sector.

    The next few years saw the privatization of several public defence companies and the merging ofmany private defence firms. It is important to note that in Israel major cuts in the defence budget

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    forced most private firms to diversify and rely more on foreign clients. They engaged in jointventures and acquisitions to secure footholds in overseas markets, which now account for an

    astonishing 80% of revenues. The Defence Ministry of Israel stated that the sector racked up sales ofUSD 7.4 bn in 2012, (See Exhibit No 55). Most of the sales were by Israel's four biggest Defencecompanies, IAI, Elbit, Rafael and IMI.

    Brazil

    Background on domestic defence industry

    Brazil began focusing on military industrialization in the late 1960s. This was not driven by militarythreats in the traditional sense. Rather, Brazils lea