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Indian Company Investor Calls

Crisil Sees Operating Leverage as Gen-AI Drives Growth

April 24, 2026 7 mins read Firehose Gupta

CRISIL Limited — Analyst Conference Call (April 20, 2026; FY25 + Q1 FY26)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “growth”, “healthy momentum”, “operating leverage”, and “margin resilience”.
  • Even while discussing macro/geopolitical risks, they frame them as manageable and often offset by diversification and increasing demand for insights (e.g., “essentiality… in these times they want more insights”).
  • Forward-looking language is mostly qualitative and confident (e.g., “we are excited… drive growth while sustaining margins”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Strong financial momentum with operating leverage
  • FY25 revenue growth 11.9%; Q1 FY26 revenue growth 30.1%; Q1 FY26 PBT growth 35.7% with margin expansion.
  • Gen-AI as a core differentiator (not a standalone initiative)
  • “Domain-led AI” + “horizontal AI capabilities” + “workforce AI expertise” + “responsible AI”.
  • Multiple product examples (GenEye Credit, DeepMind, Crisil i360, ICON, Myron AI).
  • Geographic and capability expansion
  • Entry into Canada via acquisition of PriceMetrix to deepen wealth management capabilities.
  • Continued client footprint expansion (including West Asia).
  • Macro/geopolitical risk acknowledged, but demand for risk insights remains
  • West Asia conflict expected to slow GDP growth (India base case vs downside), but management argues uncertainty increases need for credible opinions.
  • Ratings business growth supported by surveillance + best-in-class preference
  • Q1 FY26 ratings growth driven by surveillance fees and new ratings, with investor preference for Crisil.
  • Global Analytical Center / Coalition Greenwich momentum
  • Growth attributed to delegation, contract renewals, and accelerated revenue recognition (timing effects).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Gen-AI impact by business / competitive threats

  • Core questions
  • How AI opportunities/threats differ across Ratings, GAC, Integral IQ, Intelligence, Coalition Greenwich.
  • Whether Gen-AI could cause revenue compression or growth deflation (vs IT services).
  • Use cases with measurable impact and how sustainable the advantage is.
  • Management response
  • AI is positioned as an opportunity to enhance efficiency/effectiveness while relying on trust + proprietary data + human judgment.
  • They claim they are “minimizing” risk of compression by embedding AI into domain-led workflows.
  • Sustainability framed as needing to “run at a much faster pace” and “disrupt ourselves”.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Limited quantification: no measurable KPI like % productivity uplift, adoption rates, or revenue uplift by use case.
  • When asked for “specific use cases” with measurable impact, answers stayed high-level (“leverage Gen-AI across the organization”).

Theme B: Discretionary spending outlook for global banks

  • Core questions
  • Outlook for discretionary spend given geopolitical uncertainty and concerns from peers.
  • Whether decision-making delays translate into cancellations or reduced engagement.
  • Management response
  • They report no decline in engagement in Q1 26; volatility increases demand for insights.
  • They emphasize diversification into private markets and regional banks to offset potential delays at large global banks.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • “Monitorable” language persists; no explicit forward guidance on spend levels.

Theme C: GAC unit economics / margin profile / S&P scope

  • Core questions
  • Unit economics: revenue/margin structure for GAC; fixed margin number.
  • Whether expanded scope changes margin profile.
  • Management response
  • Transfer pricing model with fixed margin on cost, benchmarked; they do not disclose the fixed margin number.
  • Margin profile stated as similar to prior work.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Refusal to disclose numeric economics (fixed margin, sub-business revenue/margins).

Theme D: Ratings growth drivers and sustainability

  • Core questions
  • Why ratings revenue growth is unusually high vs broader macro indicators (mix/pricing/market share?).
  • Bond vs bank-loan dynamics; effect of rate hikes on bond issuance.
  • Medium-term outlook for ratings (BLR vs capital market issuances).
  • Management response
  • Growth attributed to surveillance revenue (driven by prior new issuance), investor preference, and new revenue momentum.
  • They caution against quarter-only interpretation; suggest looking at annual performance.
  • Bond issuance softness tied to hardened yields; bank credit growth improving; structural shift not deemed permanent.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • No direct market-share quantification; pricing remains “disciplined” without numbers.
  • “No forward-looking statements” used to avoid explicit medium-term quantitative guidance.

Theme E: RAS growth visibility, order book, pricing pressure

  • Core questions
  • Directional RAS growth; any pricing pressure; visibility via order book or metrics.
  • Management response
  • No order book disclosure; focus on “consistent growth” and value-based pricing.
  • Pricing pressure acknowledged as normal competitive “pulls and pushes” but framed as manageable via value demonstration.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • No visibility metrics provided; no quantified pricing/mix impact.

Theme F: Headcount / investment pace

  • Core questions
  • Where hiring is occurring (AI/tech vs sales vs other).
  • Management response
  • Hiring continues “evenly spread” across businesses, tied to growth, technology/Gen-AI, and client development.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • None provided for revenue/margins (company policy: no specific quantitative guidance).
  • Macro quantitative outlook (not company guidance, but management commentary):
  • India GDP: 7.1% base case for fiscal; downside to 6.8% if West Asia conflict prolongs.
  • Inflation: 4.5% average in FY27, potential 4.7%.
  • Global growth: 3.2% in 2026; US 2.2%.
  • Ratings industry: bank credit expected around ~13% in fiscal 2027 (qualitative “around”).
  • System gross NPA expected ~2% to 2.5% by Mar 2027.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Normalization of timing effects:
  • Q1 FY26 includes FX gain and accelerated closure of renewals; management expects normalization “over the course of the year.”
  • Demand resilience:
  • Uncertainty increases need for insights; they have not seen engagement decline in Q1 26.
  • Growth strategy remains unchanged:
  • Continue wallet share expansion, adjacencies, geographies; keep investing in Gen-AI, digitalization, talent.
  • Risk posture:
  • West Asia conflict may delay discretionary spend and capex; Gen-AI adoption pace and model evolution are key risks.

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • On demand during uncertainty
  • In these times they want more insights… essentiality…”
  • On Q1 performance being timing-driven
  • Accelerated renewals: “timing effect… expect this to normalize over the rest of the year.”
  • On Gen-AI positioning
  • Gen-AI for us is a way to open more doors… improve competitiveness…”
  • trust, reliability, and ethical responsibility” + “human-in-the-loop governance.”
  • On ratings growth mechanics
  • Surveillance growth explained as reflecting prior new issuance: “driven by the new rating revenues performance in prior year.”
  • On macro risk channel
  • ongoing Middle East situation… can affect the cycle primarily through crude-led inflation…”
  • On margin risk from FX
  • Sharp INR appreciation… will have a negative impact on margins… robust forex hedging process…”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Heavy reliance on timing effects to explain Q1 outperformance (FX gain + accelerated renewals). This can complicate run-rate interpretation.
Limited quantification of Gen-AI productivity/revenue impact (no % workflow AI-assisted, no measurable uplift by use case).
No medium-term quantitative outlook for key segments; repeated “no forward-looking statements” / “monitorable” language.
Potential defensiveness on ratings growth vs macro: they attribute to surveillance/new revenue but do not provide market-share evidence.

Positive signals
Broad-based growth across businesses with margin expansion in Q1 FY26.
Client engagement resilience despite geopolitical uncertainty (“no decline in engagement”).
Clear strategic execution: acquisition integration (PriceMetrix) and Gen-AI productization with governance emphasis.
Ratings industry tailwinds: investor preference for best-in-class; surveillance momentum.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Apr 2026): More Optimistic
  • Stronger emphasis on growth momentum and margin resilience; Q1 FY26 shows sharp acceleration.
  • Prior (May 2025): More cautious / mixed
  • FY24 growth was modest (3.8%) and global discretionary spending was described as curtailed; risks were more prominent.
  • What changed
  • Shift from “resilience amid uncertainty” to “delivered growth amid dynamic macro” with stronger financial outcomes.
  • More confidence around Gen-AI as differentiator and less emphasis on discretionary spend headwinds (though still acknowledged).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Gen-AI adoption / productization
  • Prior call (May 2025) referenced Gen-AI deployment and early-stage evolution; current call shows multiple named products and governance framework—suggests progress/delivery.
  • Delivered (productization expanded materially by Apr 2026 narrative).
  • GAC growth with S&P over multi-year horizon
  • Prior call discussed building engagement with S&P; current call reiterates expanded scope and delegation.
  • Delivered / continuing (momentum and renewals cited).
  • Discretionary spending pressure
  • Prior call: “curtailed discretionary spends… impacted growth and revenue.”
  • Current call: still a risk, but management claims no engagement decline and points to diversification.
  • Partially delivered (headwind not gone, but impact appears reduced in reported results; still “monitorable”).
  • Margin improvement levers
  • Prior call: focus on cost management and margin improvement.
  • Current call: explicit margin expansion in Q1 FY26 and operating leverage.
  • Delivered (at least in near-term results).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “discretionary spend curtailed” to “volatility increases need for insights”
  • The uncertainty narrative flips from potentially negative to supportive for demand.
  • Gen-AI narrative moved from exploration to execution
  • Earlier: “explore ways… early stages.”
  • Now: “launched pioneering Gen-AI products” + governance + workforce training.
  • Ratings growth explanation becomes more mechanics-based
  • Surveillance revenue linkage to prior new issuance is emphasized more clearly.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: consistent themes (domain-led solutions, Gen-AI governance, diversification).
  • Weakness: Q1 outperformance is partly attributed to timing effects; management avoids numeric disclosure on economics and AI productivity.
  • Ratings growth vs macro is explained, but without market-share/pricing quantification—reduces evidentiary strength.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / macro
  • Improving/stable: management increasingly frames uncertainty as driving demand for analytics.
  • Margins
  • Improving: Q1 FY26 margin expansion and operating leverage highlighted more strongly than in FY24.
  • Expansion
  • Increasing: Canada/PriceMetrix and wealth management emphasis.
  • Gen-AI
  • Inflection from “early adoption” to “productized + governed + workforce-enabled.”

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Normalization risk is now explicitly flagged
  • Management calls out that Q1 includes accelerated renewals and FX gains—suggesting the quarter may not be a clean run-rate.
  • AI advantage is asserted, but measurement remains opaque
  • Despite strong confidence, they still do not provide adoption/productivity metrics, which may indicate benefits are real but not yet quantified to investor-grade KPIs.