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AvenuesAI Limited Call Transcript 2026

Feb 16, 2026

63589_rns_2026-02-16_e500be3b-9378-4a2f-bb78-d901c7733b1e.pdf

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February 16, 2026

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BSE Limited National Stock Exchange of India Limited Phiroze Jeejeebhoy Towers, Exchange Plaza, Dalal Street, Fort, Bandra Kurla Complex, Mumbai - 400 001 Bandra (East), Mumbai - 400 051 Company Code No.: 539807 Company Symbol: CCAVENUE

Dear Sir/ Madam,

Sub: Transcript of Earnings Conference Call for the quarter and nine months ended December 31, 2025

In compliance with SEBI (Listing Obligations and Disclosure Requirements) Regulations, 2015, please find enclosed herewith the transcript of the Investor/ Analyst conference call on financial performance of the Company for the quarter and nine months ended December 31, 2025 conducted on Friday, February 13, 2026, after the meeting of Board of Directors, for your information and records.

This transcript is also available on the website of the Company i.e. www.avenuesai.com.

We request you to kindly take the same on your records.

Thanking you,

Yours faithfully,

For, AvenuesAI Limited (Formerly known as Infibeam Avenues Limited)

SHYAMAL Digitally signed by SHYAMAL TRIVEDI TRIVEDI Date: 2026.02.16 14:58:24 +05'30' Shyamal Trivedi Sr. Vice President & Company Secretary

Encl.: As above

AvenuesAI Limited

(Formerly known as Infibeam Avenues Limited)

Regd. Office: 28[th] Floor, GIFT Two Building, Block No. 56, Road-5C, Zone-5, GIFT CITY, Gandhinagar – 382 050, Gujarat, India CIN: L64203GJ2010PLC061366

Tel: +91 79 67772204 | Fax: +91 79 67772205 | Email: [email protected] | Website: www.avenuesai.com

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“AvenuesAI Limited

Q3 FY '26 Earnings Conference Call”

February 13, 2026

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MANAGEMENT: MR. VISHAL MEHTA – CHAIRMAN AND MANAGING DIRECTOR – AVENUESAI LIMITED MR. VISHWAS PATEL – MANAGING DIRECTOR AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER – AVENUESAI LIMITED MR. SUNIL BHAGAT – CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER – AVENUESAI LIMITED MR. B. RAVI – INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT AND ADVISOR CORPORATE AND FINANCIAL STRATEGY – AVENUESAI LIMITED

MODERATOR: MR. RAJAT GUPTA—GO INDIA ADVISORS LLP

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AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026

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Moderator:

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to AvenuesAI Limited Q3 FY '26 Earnings Conference Call hosted by Go India Advisors. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode and there will be an option for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded.

I now hand the conference over to Mr. Rajat Gupta from Go India Advisors. Thank you, and over to you, Mr. Gupta.

Rajat Gupta

Yes. Thank you, Neerav. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to AvenuesAI Limited earnings call to discuss the Q3 FY '26 results. We have on the call with us today, Mr. Vishal Mehta, Chairman and Managing Director; Mr. Vishwas Patel, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer; and Mr. Sunil Bhagat, Chief Financial Officer.

Also joining us on the call today is Mr. B. Ravi, who is advising AvenuesAI on Corporate and Financial Strategy as an Independent Consultant. We must remind you that the discussion on today's call may include certain forward-looking statements and must be therefore viewed in conjunction with the risk that the company faces.

I now request Mr. Vishal Mehta to take us through the company's business outlook and financial highlights, subsequent to which we'll open the floor for Q&A. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Vishal Mehta:

Thank you, Rajat. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Today, I'd like to cover three important themes. First, our quarterly performance and how we think through growth and profitability. Second, I will explain the strategic structural evolution of AvenuesAI into an AI-native transaction infrastructure platform and why this shift materially expands our long-term growth opportunity. And third, I'd like to outline how our integrated ecosystem, which spans across Rediff, RediffOne, CCAvenue and Phronetic AI, how they all work together as a compounding flywheel and what investors should expect from us over the next 2 years.

Let me begin. This quarter represents a genuine inflection point for the company, not just because of strong financial performance, but because the architecture that we have been building over the past several years is now operating at a unified, scalable system. We delivered one of our strongest quarters to date with sustained growth in payment volumes, expanded profitability and accelerating platform integration.

But more importantly, the strategic pillars we committed to scale, regulatory depth and AI integration as well as our ecosystem design are now converging into a visible competitive advantage. During the quarter, we completed our corporate rebranding to AvenuesAI Limited. This is not a cosmetic change. It's a structural evolution.

We are no longer a payment gateway company. We are building an AI-native transaction infrastructure platform, which is full stack regulated, data-rich and compounding. As you all know, artificial intelligence is no longer an overlay for any system. For us, it is embedded across our routing, fraud detection, risk management, reconciliation, orchestration, customer

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engagement and decision automation. The AvenuesAI identity represents what we have

already become an intelligence-driven financial infrastructure company anchored by CCAvenue and increasingly relevant in global markets.

I want to share how we see our self-reinforcing flywheel. AvenuesAI operates as a closed-loop ecosystem where consumers will generate intent, businesses will transact and operate. AI orchestrates the decision, payments monetize every interaction and data will compound into an advantage for us.

Every transaction makes the system smarter and every data point improves automation. Every improvement strengthens our retention. And this is just not a linear revenue model. This is a learning system. At the center of this flywheel sits RediffOne and CCAvenue, the operating system of our ecosystem.

Let me talk about our integrated architecture here. On the consumer side, Rediff integrates identity, intent, engagement and increasingly financial participation. With a very large registered user base, UPI entry through a financial wellness positioning and an evolving AI native content layer, Rediff is becoming a meaningful consumer gateway for us.

On the business side, RediffOne becomes the convergence layer, the AI native back office for SMEs, enterprises and institutions. It integrates communication, workflows, compliances and operational intelligence into a single environment.

At the monetization core sits CCAvenue, the economic engine of our system. Its role is evolving from payment gateway to an AI-optimized financial execution layer, combining compliance, scale, orchestration and intelligence. And powering all of this is Phronetic AI, the invisible orchestrator in our system.

We think of Phronetic not just as a stand-alone AI company. It is the brains of our ecosystem. It converts every data into an action, whether to approve, reject, whether to route or retry, whether to predict or prevent or whether to notify. It deploys agentic workflows across payments, operations, risk and compliance and customer communication.

The outcome is somewhat measurable, which is lower customer acquisition cost, higher processing, improved approval rates, reduced operational friction and over time, structural margin expansion. I want to touch upon how the system compounds over time, consider a small business operating on RediffOne.

It acquires customers using Rediff. It runs operations on RediffOne. It accepts payments via CCAvenue. It uses Phronetic agents to optimize pricing, reduce payment failures and automate reconciliation. As that business grows, payment volumes increase. As volume increases, our data intelligence improves. And as intelligence improves, automation increases.

And we believe as automation increases, margins also expand. The switching cost moved beyond just contractual dependency and they become operationally existential. This, we believe, is the power of integration. Finally, we see a clear 2-year structural outcome. Consumer scale expanding via Rediff, business lock-in depending and deepening through RediffOne, predictable monetization compounding through CCAvenue and margin expansion over time through AI.

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AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026 This is not an incremental feature growth. This is a platform-level operating leverage. And we don't want to build a quarterly story. It's a compounding story. We believe very few companies operate simultaneously across consumers, merchants, regulated payment infrastructure and AI-driven orchestration.

And even fewer still have them integrated into a closed-loop learning architecture, and that is the opportunity in front of us. And this quarter, for the first time, we are seeing the flywheel move as one system.

I will now hand over the call to Vishwas for the operating details. Vishwas, over to you.

Vishwas Patel:

Thank you, Vishal. Good afternoon, everyone. This quarter has been an execution-driven quarter for our payments and platform businesses. While the strategic direction has been clearly articulated earlier, the focus over the last few months has been on converting that strategy into operating scale, regulatory readiness and monetizable infrastructure. Let me walk you through the key business developments.

At the core, CCAvenue continues to scale steadily across merchant segments, supported by strong demand from large enterprises, utilities, telecom, travel, hospitality, etcetera. We are seeing higher share of credit card and large ticket transactions, increased participation from enterprise and institutional merchants, consistent onboarding across SMEs and cooperative banking networks.

As discussed earlier, we are concisely prioritizing volume-led growth and absolute profitability over headline take rates. This approach is already delivering stronger cash flows and operating leverage even in a competitive pricing environment.

This quarter was a particularly important from a regulatory capability perspective. We received our in-principle RBI license for issuing prepaid payment instruments, enabling us to launch wallets, store value products and prepaid solutions in the near future under the CCAvenue ecosystem. We secured the IFSCA approval at GIFT City, which will allow us to participate directly in cross-border payments, escrow services and international merchant acquiring.

We also received the RBI authorization for off-line payment aggregation, extending our presence across physical merchants locations through POS-based networks. Importantly, most of these approvals are close to monetization and not long gestation initiatives. Our international payment business continued to gain traction. In the UAE and Saudi Arabia, the transaction volumes remain strong, supported by enterprise clients and platform integrations.

In Oman, we are now working with multiple leading banks, expanding our role as a technology and payment infrastructure partner. GIFT City will provide us with a strategic base for U.S.-denominated settlements and cross-border flows, which we expect to scale meaningfully over the coming quarters.

We remain confident that the international markets will contribute a growing share of net payment revenue over the medium term. A key focus this quarter was optimization in our AIled payment architecture. With the launch of CCAvenue CommerceAI and PayCentral.ai, we are enabling autonomous transaction initiated by verified AI agents and compliance-ready

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auditable payment execution.

This is not positioned as a consumer feature rollout, but as a foundational infrastructure for enterprises, platforms and financial institutions that are preparing for AI-native workflows. We believe that the architecture will evolve gradually, but has the potential to boost a structural revenue stream over time alongside our traditional payment processing.

On the consumer side, Rediffpay will continue to progress through regulatory and technical readiness. Our approach here is deliberately phased UPI and wallet capabilities will coexist. Focus is on financial wellness, low-cost distribution and brand land engagement. We are avoiding high burn acquisition strategies seen elsewhere in the ecosystem.

The advantage we have in our existing user reach and integrated payment infrastructure, which allows us to scale responsibly. To summarize, this quarter reflects a strong execution in our core payment business, the completion of a broad defensible regulatory stack, the measured progress in AI-driven commerce and consumer platforms and a continued discipline around scale, profitability and risk management.

Our BillAvenue platform continues to gain ground, particularly in semi-urban and rural markets. We processed millions of utilities, mobile recharges and bill payment transactions this quarter with agent-led adoption driving deeper financial inclusion. In parallel, ResAvenue is leveraging our AI-based tools to help hotels implement smart pricing and optimize occupancy rates.

This quarter, our ResAvenue platform enabled hotel room bookings of 768,107 room nights at an average of 8,534 room nights a day, crossing over INR6,050 million for our 3,500-plus hotel properties. This not only strengthens our position in the hospitality sector, but also demonstrates how AI is becoming -- beginning to create tangible value across our merchant ecosystem. Early pilots in fraud detection, risk scoring and dynamic pricing are demonstrating how AI can improve merchant efficiency. Reduce costs and unlock incremental revenues.

We remain focused on building trusted, compliant and intelligent payment infrastructure at scale while selectively investing in platforms that extend our long-term growth runway. With this, now I invite our CFO, Mr. Sunil Bhagat, to take you through the financial performance for this quarter. Over to you, Sunil bhai.

Sunil Bhagat:

Thank you, Vishwas sir. Good afternoon to everyone on the call. This quarter reflects consistent execution across our core payments business, supported by improving scale, stable operating costs and continued discipline on capital allocation. Our consolidated gross revenue for the quarter stood at INR2,381 crores, a growth of 122% year-over-year, driven primarily by higher payment volumes, a stronger contribution from enterprise merchants and continuous expansion across domestic and international markets.

The consolidated net revenue stood at INR149 crores, a growth of 6% year-over-year reflecting steady monetization despite a competitive pricing environment and a higher mix of large ticket transactions. Our focus remains on absolute profitability and cash generation rather than headline take rate metrics.

Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter came in at INR98 crores, an absolute growth of 25% year-

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AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026 over-year, reflecting improved operating leverages as volumes scaled up. The EBITDA as a percentage of net revenue also jumped from 56% to 66% on a year-over-year basis.

Our adjusted PAT stood at INR86 crores, a growth of 59% year-over-year, supported by cost control, stable credit cost and higher contribution from value-added services. Our PAT margin has also jumped from 39% to 58% -- even as we continue to invest in technology, regulatory readiness and platform development, our EBITDA and PAT margins remain healthy, demonstrating the resilience of our underlying business model.

As discussed earlier, the quarter saw a higher share of credit card and enterprise-led volumes, which typically carry over -- carry lower take rates, but significantly higher absolute contribution. Our strategy is very clear that is prioritize volume-led customer acquisition and operating cost.

We believe this approach creates a more durable earnings profile, particularly as scale continues to build across merchant and institutional segments. We continue to maintain a strong balance sheet with healthy cash flows from operations and low leverage.

This financial flexibility allows us to fund investments in AI and platform infrastructure and selectively invest in growth initiatives such as Rediff without stressing returns on or liquidity. Our capital allocation remains measured and return driven. We have revised our full year guidance for financial year '26, as mentioned in Slide number 7.

The upward revision in FY '26 guidance reflects a materially improved business outlook and stronger-than-anticipated operating momentum. Based on current trends in the transaction volumes, enterprise onboarding and international expansion, we remain confident in meeting and potentially exceeding our stated financial objectives while continuing to invest prudently in long-term growth engines.

To conclude, this quarter demonstrates that scale and profitability are growing together. Margins remain resilient despite mix changes and our balance sheet strength positions us well for the next phase of growth. We remain focused on execution, efficiency and reinforcing the financial foundations of the business as we build for the future.

With this, we'll now open the floor for questions.

Moderator:

Mohit Jain:

First question is from the line of Mohit Jain from DRChoksey.

Sir, my first question is on PayCentral's opportunity. So sir, I tried to size PayCentral's opportunity by looking at India's retail digital payment, which is somewhere around INR900 lakh crores. But I try to narrow it down to PG addressable segments like cards, UPI, net banking, B2B vendor, etcetera, which gives me an sizable market of around INR50 lakh crores.

But within Infibeam own INR8 lakh to INR10 lakh crores TPV, I'm estimating 60% or 50% of automatable -- of it being automatable and assuming just a 5% adoption rate, I'm getting a figure of like INR300 crores to INR40,000 crores in terms of market size for PayCentral TPV. So is this the right way to think about PayCentral's addressable market and adoption potential? Over to you sir.

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Vishal Mehta:

AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026 Thanks. Basically, this is Vishal. I'll take this question. So you're right, India is the largest real-time payment market. And the next value layer is intelligence on top of the rail. So what traditional aggregator would do is somewhat route transactions settle payments and manage reconciliations. But this AI payment agent, which is PayCentral, it cuts across all different payment aggregators.

So it integrates within the MCPs of all different payment aggregators and not just CCAvenue. So it auto routes transactions for success probability. It predicts the fraud, it disputes, it optimizes all the checkout flows and it negotiates routing and settlement logic and automates all this merchant reconciliation and collections. So theoretically, the way to think about it is this payment is actually moving to a decision -- infrastructure decision layer.

So in some ways, it becomes like an operating system for all money flows, and it's just not a pipe. Now with that said, the way we think about it internally is that, I mean, through UPI alone, imagine the number of transactions that India processes maybe INR300 lakh crores, whatever that number is. And there's a lot more through other mechanism.

And I mean, in some ways, that intelligence layer will command a few bps of that flow, which is enormous. So I mean, theoretically, what we have seen is that the global pattern in this is somewhere this AI agents monetization, which is the PayCentral piece is somewhat that share of that bps that you would perhaps generate through this particular intelligence layers.

And for that to work and the TAM to play out, you need to have open rays, which UPI does, which is completely interoperable and API-driven. You need to have massive scale with some margins because that is what will force this innovation to come through. And then this whole merchant digitization wave, which already has started, it's usually playing out. So in our thesis, where PayCentral sits is merchants don't manage payments.

AI agents manage money flows end-to-end. And whoever owns this layer will control the merchant financial workflow, their whole credit insights, the transaction intelligence and the ecosystem control. And that is a far bigger price than a gateway margin. And so for us, it is somewhat -- it's competing to become that intelligence layer. And of course, that payment agents have to be adapted across. We believe it's only a matter of time.

The adoption in the Airwave is significantly picking up, and that's what we'd like to play out. But to your point, I think the TAM that you're talking about just on the CCAvenue ecosystem that we think about is also pretty significant. The other good thing just so that you know is that when you use agents, traditionally, you will take a few minutes to close a transaction from intent to closure -- using agents, you can do it in seconds.

So theoretically, when you think about closing a transaction, you will have to look at the product, look at the checkout, figure out how you essentially make that payment and then the payment routing comes back and then the confirmation comes through.

And generally, what you would see is that -- and most companies, they optimize on how many less clicks would you need to make as a human to be able to close a transaction. As an agent, you can do it in a few seconds. It's far more sophisticated and much more controlled and the determinism also is very, very large in that. And a lot of protocols are being set out to be able to handle such a thing.

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So yes, I think -- to your point, I think the TAM is very large, but it will also be a function of adoption by many of the merchants. And we believe that consumer personal agents are any us coming up. So I think transferring that agent-to-agent protocol and using PayCentral as a payment agent becomes very fertile, if you come to think of it.

Mohit Jain:

Just a follow-up on this. So I understand that it's not just a PayCentral, it's not just about the transaction, but it's about controlling the entire merchant financial workflow, which you just mentioned. Again, so I know it is initial stage, but I just wanted to understand how do we monetize it, is it possible for you to tell the blended take rate, which we can get from this opportunity itself? Or it's very initial stage and it's very hard to tell this?

Vishal Mehta:

No, it's not hard to tell. I will tell you, generally, payment gateway as a business is not going to go away. You still require the regulatory approvals and so on and so forth to come in. But when you actually give it to an agent, agent will also start earning bps on transactions.

So theoretically, for someone whose payment -- I mean, I think one can imagine that very low single-digit bps across all the transaction volume is what the opportunity holds out to become. And we believe that, that's significant, if you come to think of it. So it will just add up into the margins and the bps.

Mohit Jain: Okay. Just to clarify this low single digit or whatever it will be, it's an add-on to the earlier this which we were correcting from.

Vishal Mehta:

Correct. That is correct. Absolutely.

Moderator: Next question is from the line of Darshil Pandya from Finterest Capital.

Darshil Pandya: Yes. So, I just wanted to understand one thing. With the offline PI license now in place, like you cover both online and physical payment flows. So should we view offline as a meaningful accelerator to your AI side or through this higher transaction density, which merchant level database will see something better?

Vishal Mehta: So the question is that is offline going to help your AI strategy? Can you kindly repeat your question?

Darshil Pandya:

Yes, yes.

Vishal Mehta: So I think, yes, I mean, we have the online PA license and now we also have the offline PA license. And I mean I don't want to use the word just a pipe because theoretically, offline payments is just a pipe that most offline merchants still have that basic pipe of QR scan, payment done. Less intelligence in pricing, routing, credit. I mean even if you come to think of it, all these collections and automations and cash off flow optimization, all of that is somewhat the missing layer.

And so I mean, where the agent comes in, in the offline payments is that rather than just the merchant receiving money, the agent can actually handle the context of the transaction, which means that it can decide what option to use as a payment routing. It can maximize the success rate, detect fraud, identify all the unusual transaction sizes, personalize the transaction by triggering certain workflows and somewhat automate collections as well.

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So we think that -- I mean, if you come to think of it, India has more than 60 million-plus small merchants and the digital QR and one can create a massive opportunity for a system that sits between the merchant and the payment rail. And you can learn from every off-line transaction and improve the future decision automatically. That's the opportunity.

So we think that -- if you come to think of this offline payment market, I mean, you can think of any influence transaction by the agent times the value which is unlocked is the opportunity somewhere. And that's far bigger than just the share of just the payment fees. So we think that this whole AI payment agent in some ways, turns every off-line payment transaction into a decision engine, effectively becoming somewhat a merchant financial operating system rather than just a pipe that moves money. Does this answer your question?

Darshil Pandya:

It does, it does.

Moderator: Next question is from the line of Pranav Mashruwala from Dolat Capital.

Pranav Mashruwala: One question was regarding the RediffOne. So how many merchants have we onboarded on RediffOne shifted to that platform? And how is the activity in terms of active transaction and adoption? So some color on that would be great.

Vishal Mehta: Sure. So I mean, of course, we have publicly disclosed that somewhere RediffOne is the whole productivity suite of all these enterprise platforms. And they combine communication, commerce, business productivity software suites and in some ways, we target sovereignty by, in some ways, local data hosting advantages and air gapping it out so that you don't have to use any cloud system, if you come to think of it.

And so the strategic performance that we think is what you talk about the installed base is there are more than 20,000-plus merchants already on the RediffOne system. And that -- the number of users of that is magnitude of that number, much, much larger. And so we think that, yes, I mean, it's growing fairly well for us, while we have not divulged the exact numbers. But the way to think of RediffOne's performance is not just as a stand-alone -- it is essentially just the foundational identity and a productivity layer in our ecosystem.

So somewhat -- the strength lies in activating all the existing enterprises and consumer base and deepening the engagement and enabling the entire ecosystem with payments and AI services. And so I mean, for us, RediffOne is less about the short-term revenue and more about building the structural control layer that somewhat underpins our long-term monetization strategy, if that makes sense.

Pranav Mashruwala: Sure, sure. So of course, we have like almost a 10 million-plus merchant base and most of -- I'm sure most of them are mid- to small scale as well. So typically, we -- how much would be the typical time line that you might be looking at in terms of onboarding more larger number of customers? And what kind of opportunity are you looking at in terms of onboarding more customers?

Vishal Mehta:

We think a reasonable number to go after for the next 12 to 18 months is at least high singledigit to double-digit percentage of our base. And that's how we look at the opportunity so far. So we believe that given the touch points and given that they trust us with so many of their other transactions, I think that's a fair estimate to go after. But yes, it would be cool to have 1

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million merchants using RediffOne.

Pranav Mashruwala: Absolutely. Just a few bookkeeping, if I may. What's led to this guidance upgrade? Is there some one-off revenue or something that we are expecting in this segment?

Vishal Mehta:

No, I think we've already reached our -- I mean, you know that we have -- for us, since payments becomes the intelligence layer and intelligence-driven area, we think that we've deliberately made investments in scale and data density. So I mean, payments are increasingly in some ways, intelligent service and maximizing transaction flow. So we -- if you look at our performance, we've reached the guidance that we had given for the last -- for this year in FY '26.

So the upgrade is really a combination of our capacity to actually monetize and somewhat we have prioritized revenue growth and also the depth in our ecosystem. So we are positioning the platform to generally significantly give better value. And so it's -- we don't see this as a oneoff. We think that that's how we potentially look like and it somewhat reflects in terms of if you look at the last 3 quarters and our performance and if you look at the extrapolation of what it means for this quarter, we perhaps come down to our guidance numbers.

Pranav Mashruwala: Just last one on mine. We usually used to share transaction processing value for various of our platforms. Just on the CCAvenues TPV, please, if possible. Vishal Mehta: Yes. If you look at the Slide number 15, you would see that, the value. Moderator: Next question is from the line of Deepesh Sancheti from Maanya Finance. Deepesh Sancheti: Okay. You mentioned AI reduced payment failures by 9% in Q3. How much of this improvement is structural and embedded versus a model-specific gain that could plateau? Vishal Mehta: Go ahead Vishwas. Vishwas Patel: So basically, AI is intelligent routing. So when we get a particular failure from a particular bank, right, and then we have the ability to route it through multiple other banks that we are working at in the back end. So intelligent AI-based system that we have implemented, which gauges on the success rate going down to as back as just the last 5 minutes, which calculates the best success rates, it can be intelligently routed through this thing.

And this is not across just 1 or 2 options, but this is across 200-plus options that is there, right? And even if it's different cards that we have with 8 different banks and different systems, so this kind of -- this kind of -- this thing really helps in boosting success rates. Also, not only on the success rate, a lot of transactions were also being dropped because of the earlier negative databases and frauds and dropship locations and many other things.

Now with AI, we have been able to do a very dynamic and real kind of a thing where we have been able to drop certain transactions where we see a fraud emerging in real time so that it does not go only for the real transaction. So success rates automatically gets improved when these guys are trying through multiple different modes and using different other fraud -- fraudulent numbers and cards, to stop it. So these will all help in boosting real transactions and other things that is there.

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Vishal Mehta:

To answer your question, I'll tell you, structurally, a lot of gains have already been accounted for in the system. For example, all these bank up times and all of that, that's already there. And I'm sure that it's improving by the day. So my expectation is that a lot of what you would see going forward is really this model gains that come through -- through all this -- the whole retry logics and the routings that Vishwas talked about and all this -- how do you handle all these timeouts and how do you essentially improve your somewhat scoring algorithms.

And so I think my expectation is we haven't quantified -- it's a good question. We haven't quantified that yet because we always assume that structural gains are not going to be the largest contributing factor given that India is some of the finest payment rails out there. So -- and those are also -- I mean, whatever that structural gain would happen, they're somewhat slow to appear, but it's very hard to attribute. It's a good question.

Deepesh Sancheti:

So we won't be able to tell what is the direct EBITDA or a net take impact of this reduction?

Vishal Mehta: No, we can. The question was that are you seeing this -- what I understood your question to be is that are you able to get a better success rate based on structural changes or the model changes?

Deepesh Sancheti:

Yes.

Vishal Mehta: And what I was communicating was that, yes, there is an improvement. We can compute the EBITDA. But to quantify how much of that success rate improvement is from structural changes versus model changes is not an exercise we have undertaken. So what I mean by that is that, I mean, did that come because we have a better bank uptime? -- or some enhancements that maybe the payment race has gone through or some latency issues in the network that have been identified and cleaned up or whether it was a better authentication flow for the client.

So those are somewhat more structural, but we think it's somewhat model-driven. That's what I meant. Because what Vishwas said is right, which is we've configured our framework to include with all the AI and optimizations that we have put in that it's much smarter routing and retry logics and all this time out handling and other capabilities that improve and all the fraud scoring improvements that we have made that would have contributed to the largest portion of that improvement in success rate. And that's what we have thought attributed to that improvement.

Deepesh Sancheti: You state that switching costs become existential, not contractual. What percentage of revenue today comes from customers where payment, compliance and workflows are all embedded inside RediffOne, making switching operational in feasible?

Vishal Mehta: I mean, come to think of it, there's a lot of -- RediffOne has many productivity suites. And if you come to think of it, once you offer more than one service, the switching cost somewhat exponentially goes higher. And the moment you are handling a lot more data and data patterns. And then if you're also figuring out how to -- in some ways, that cost of actually moving all that data and being able to serve becomes slightly higher.

So once you have a flywheel framework where you are able to offer to a particular client more than one service, we think that with somewhat -- and especially when you -- in the world of AI where data becomes the moat, and I'm sure one can argue synthetic data can also be produced,

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but we think data is the moat.

And if we have been able to utilize that data and offer those services to that merchant, the switching cost exponentially increases because it won't do everything that any other system, it may be very good, but it won't be able to provide the same level of efficiency that a system that utilizes data and provides all these AI prompts to be able to offer to you with all the learnings. Moderator: Next question is from the line of Dhwani Chanda from Altis Financial Partners. Dhwani Chanda: So you've added multiple layers like agentic payments, offline PPIs, cross-border, UPI and AI orchestration. So how do you prevent organization and product complexity from diluting focus before the flywheel economics fully kick in? Hello? Vishal Mehta: Yes. So the question is that -- I mean, of course, the 2 brands that we have right now is CCAvenue and Rediff. And the core for us is payments. So I mean, if the question is that are you focusing on too many areas? I think these are all related areas. And that somewhat completes our flywheel, the one that we have set out to architect. So we think the focus will continue being that. And we have an orchestration layer using a lot of AI frameworks that can somewhat compound that opportunity for us, we believe. But yes, I mean, the things -- these are nomenclatures, but at the core, it's in some ways, productivity suites and payments, and that will always continue being our focus. Dhwani Chanda: Okay. So there are no set frameworks to prevent the complexity from diluting the focus. Vishal Mehta: No. I mean we think that all of these are somewhat naturally interweaved with each other. And I think that in some ways, it's convenience. So I mean, the focus for us is actually to make the ecosystem flywheel work. And these are important components of that. Dhwani Chanda: All right. And my second question is what internal guardrails exist on the ROI? Vishal Mehta: In terms of our investments? Dhwani Chanda: Yes. Vishal Mehta: So you know that we've been appropriately conservative all the way from the beginning. And we forward invest and we want to know what that investment will end up looking like for us. And so I think we'll continue with the same philosophy, which is how do we make sure that what we are spending for that ROI is measured and managed and we are able to drive it.

But see, our core principle, if you ask us, is that -- I mean, our guardrails is not about stopping investments. We just want to make sure that whatever we spend will help us in terms of advantage or some platform advantage, if not today, tomorrow. So our guardrails for ROI is not short-term thinking. We want to be an AI-first payments business. We want to evaluate what happens in the next 12 months because a lot of things are changing.

And we want to track what is the margin on a transaction and how do we -- much like the success rate and the loss reductions and time reductions. And I mean, if we don't -- we won't take up an initiative, which won't improve our unit economics, if that makes sense. And that's

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AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026 like the very short-term thought process because a lot of things are changing. But from a longterm perspective, we have to think about merchant stickiness, pretty much what we talked about in terms of how do we essentially get the switching cost rather than contractual to make it slightly more existential.

And how do we use data as a moat, which is how do we ensure that you are somewhat reducing the amount of effort. And then the long-term ROI thinking is really about where do we see the nonlinear scale. How do we ensure that we are bringing intelligence because AI is really intelligence? And if we don't have that monetization, it won't work. So for us, I mean, that future monetization is really the strategic ROI test for us.

And we want to make sure that the ecosystem pull should always increase for us, which means that every new feature, everything that we do should increase the dependency of the merchant or the customer or increase the engagement that they have with us. And that's been our philosophy of thinking through ROI. I hope this answers your question.

Moderator:

Amish Kanani:

Next question is from the line of Amish Kanani from Knowise Investment Managers.

Congrats on a good quarter on profitability terms. Sir, this quarter, we have seen quite a bit of interesting gross revenue growth versus a very muted net revenue growth and the net take rate is kind of halved from 11 bps to 6 bps. And I understand you have been saying the last few quarters that we are chasing absolute profitability and not the NPR. But net revenue growth of 6% interestingly in this quarter has driven our EBITDA by 25% and profit at 6%.

So the question is one, sir, if I simply difference the net revenue, it's grown by only INR8 crores to INR9 crores versus EBITDA growing at INR20 crores. So one, if you can explain how this quarter has panned out in terms of operating leverage. And even our EBITDA has actually grown much more than the revenue in absolute terms.

So if you can give us some sense of how is that we could extract more profitability at EBITDA level more than even net revenue. So if you can explain that because it definitely in this quarter, focusing on absolute profitability is burn off. So what kind of expense management that we have done? Or is there any one-off that was there last quarter, which is not this quarter, stuff like that? If you can explain that will be helpful.

And in that context, sir, pardon me for my knowledge of payment system not being full proof. I wanted to understand if and when this UPI payment starts to become chargeable, does it help us or it kind of affects us at a structural level, if you can give us some sense of UPI payment being not charged as of now? -- lots of noise will become chargeable at some stage and some payment providers are saying you can't keep on subsidizing the infrastructure. So can you give us some sense of our business model versus this change if at all that happens, that will be really helpful.

Vishal Mehta:

Vishwas Patel:

Sure. Vishwas, do you want to take the UPI part and then I'll tell Sunil and I'll talk about the -- then take rate and the EBITDA piece. Yes.

So look, if and when UPI becomes chargeable, it's going to be beneficial to all the players, including us. Right now, MDR is at 0 right now for UPI, right? So the whole focus area is on all the other options that we have, other 199 options that we have to get the margins and to

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AvenuesAI Limited February 13, 2026 increase business on that front. But yes, of course, when the UPI becomes chargeable to even our offline and online, both can contribute significant margin if and where if the MDR ever comes in.

So I, as a Chair of PCI also have been working with the finance ministry and other things. And hopefully, we are hopeful that some kind of MDR should come in, at least for large merchants as well as we are hoping that even the money that the Finance Ministry gives out every year to subvent all this UPI transaction also grow significantly. So that can be an additional one. Apart from that, Vishal to you.

Vishal Mehta:

Amish Kanani:

Vishal Mehta:

Sure. So to your point, 2 things. One is net take rate has decreased, but you're saying that EBITDA as a percentage in the slide, it shows up to be a larger number as a percentage. So if I understand your question, why is that particular -- I mean...

But net revenue is not down as much, but go down much more. And that explains...

Yes. So the way to think about -- so for us, see, listen, as far as the net take rate is concerned, in absolute terms, you're right, we've actually -- the net take rate has gone down. But that's a deliberate investment in scale and data density for us because payments are increasingly a gateway to higher-value financial intelligence service. That's the way we want to architect the company and maximizing all these transaction flows today will strengthen what we look like in the long-term monetization.

And so by prioritizing revenue growth that -- and some of the ecosystem depth in terms of usage, we think that positioning the platform to generate significantly higher lifetime value per merchant over time will be the right metrics for us to live with. And so I mean, it's less a position of our competitiveness in the industry and our efficiency and more about a strategic decision on getting to that scale and data density.

Now if you look at the EBITDA numbers, EBITDA is basically a percentage of net revenue. And so as net revenue has increased from, say, about INR140 crores to INR148 crores, that INR8.5 crores, the EBITDA percentage is a percentage of net revenue. And so certain expenses, of course, have been more efficient -- you know that we have redeployed quite a bit in terms of how we want to scale and build out this company. It does not apply to us. It will apply for every company.

There will be hiring freeze on many of the potential areas that can be automated using agents, a lot of manual tasks, reconciliations, onboarding, you would -- there will be -- and we believe that there is a significant shift happening even today because you would -- the kind of workforce that you would require in an AI-first framework is very different than what you would require in the past.

And so you will see a significant change in terms of just the workforce mix. And while some of the large companies, you've been hearing lately in the news that there is a change, we also have a significant opportunity to upgrade and change the kind of opportunities. So the position that we think about is that anything which is manual, which is task-driven, where you just have to keep on doing the same thing over and over again, those -- all those activities will be taken over by task agents, and we're deploying that across all of our companies.

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Second is the orchestration piece where you would want to -- once that task has been defined and identified and you need to actually create workflows, there will be orchestration agents. I think that also is somewhat completely automated going forward. The real trick over here is this decision agents that will perhaps drive decisions. And you will see that over a period of time, you will see many companies become super efficient and leaner.

So we think that, that's actually somewhat a margin expansion opportunity, but rather than thinking of it as reducing the workforce, and we would rather essentially upgrade the entire workforce and make sure that there's a natural transition to where we are versus where we would want to think of being. So you see some of that going on in terms of the overall size and scale of the opportunity. But yes, I mean, I think that from a take rate perspective, yes, since it's a percentage of the net revenue, that's why you see the percentages go in that direction, if that makes sense.

Amish Kanani:

Sure, sir. And sir, about upgrading the guidance, sir, if we do a required run rate for fourth quarter from the 9 months and to take the midpoint of the revised guidance, fourth quarter, we are quite conservative here. So the question one, I understand seasonally, third quarter is the best one. But even if I take the midpoint of our guidance and subtract the 3 quarters, then the run rate for even EBITDA and PAT is not even matching the second quarter, which is a normalized quarter.

So the question is, one, are we conservative here? And should we optimistically at least assume that we should be hopefully on the higher side of the guidance? Or is there some seasonality which we have to keep in mind -- model our projection?

Vishal Mehta:

Yes. I think the midpoint of that guidance range would, of course, be achievable in our opinion. And we have been appropriately conservative. We would like to -- if we are doing -- and if we find that we are doing better and larger, which is reasonable to also assume we'll be investing more in branding, marketing and some of the other activities. So it's reasonable to assume that we'll end up somewhere in the midpoint.

Moderator:

Next question is from the line of Kenil Mehta from Omkara Capital Private Limited. Please go ahead. Kenil, may I request you to unmute your line and proceed with your question, please? The line for the participant dropped. Ladies and gentlemen, due to time constraint, that will be the last question. I now hand the conference over to the management for closing comments.

Vishal Mehta: Thank you all for joining our third quarter earnings call, and we look forward to keeping in touch and looking forward to building out a terrific strategy and a moat going forward using a lot of AI frameworks. So we will keep in touch and keep you updated. Thank you.

Moderator: Thank you very much. On behalf of Go India Advisors, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

Vishwas Patel:

Thank you.

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