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Indian Company Investor Calls

IEX Sees 24% YoY Volume Growth Despite Market Coupling Uncertainty

April 30, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Indian Energy Exchange Limited (IEX) — Q4 FY26 Results Conference Call (held Apr 24, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlighted record volumes and strong growth (“highest ever quarterly traded electricity volume of 39.4 billion units… +24.3% YoY”; “FY26 electricity volumes… 141 billion units… +17% YoY”).
  • Narrative emphasizes policy tailwinds and market deepening (VPPAs, CfD pilot, VPPAs/VPP-related REC clarity, BESS adoption, carbon market foundations).
  • Even when discussing risks (market coupling, Middle East gas disruptions), responses are framed as manageable and likely to improve (“situation is fluid… we will have to wait and watch”; “from second quarter onwards, we should be able to achieve growth”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Power market growth led by liquidity + renewables integration
  • Strong electricity volumes in Q4 and FY26; RTM and Green market growth emphasized.
  • Lower DAM/RTM prices attributed to improved supply liquidity from capacity additions and coal/RE availability.
  • Regulatory momentum supporting exchange volumes
  • Draft National Electricity Policy 2026: cost-reflective tariffs, cross-subsidy reduction, TOU peak pricing, and standardized contracts routed via exchanges.
  • CERC/VPPAs and REC framework updates: exchanges recognized as authorized platforms; REC multipliers and RCO fungibility expected to increase clarity and participation.
  • Market coupling remains the key overhang
  • Management repeatedly stresses uncertainty and argues operational/feasibility concerns, especially for RTM.
  • They position IEX’s moat as customer loyalty + technology + product innovation, not just price discovery.
  • Diversification beyond electricity
  • IGX (gas exchange): FY26 growth strong; Q4 impacted by Middle East supply disruptions; expects recovery as geopolitics ease.
  • ICX (carbon exchange): I-REC issuance growth continues; carbon trading “foundation” laid.
  • Coal exchange: board “in principle approval” and detailed discussion of monetization model pending final regulations.
  • BESS / storage arbitrage as a structural demand driver
  • Merchant BESS trades at IEX cited; VGF tender pricing milestones used to support continued adoption.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Coal exchange opportunity + monetization model

  • Core questions
  • TAM/revenue potential for coal exchange given heterogeneity/logistics and coal allocation structure.
  • How exchanges would transact coal (fees, membership, settlement mechanics).
  • Management response
  • Emphasized multi-buyer/multi-seller market structure and that coal is not fully allocated via linkages; buyers still purchase from market.
  • Cited draft regulations requiring e-auction coal to be transacted through the exchange; referenced e-auction volumes ~80 million tonnes as a starting point.
  • Logistics: initially buyers lift coal themselves; later potentially coordinate with Railways.
  • Assessment
  • Partial/evasive on TAM: management explicitly says market size can’t be estimated until final regulations (“we will have to wait for the final regulations”).
  • Strong on directional opportunity but light on quantitative revenue model.

Theme B: Market coupling (DAM/RTM) operational design + competitive impact

  • Core questions
  • Why CERC changed approach (Grid India as MCO vs earlier round-robin concept); feasibility and intent.
  • What happens to IEX’s role in price discovery/clearing; software re-engineering cost.
  • Worst-case scenario: if coupling goes against IEX, would traders shift volumes to competitors and pressure margins?
  • RTM coupling feasibility (tight timelines, 48 sessions/day) and whether coupling exists elsewhere.
  • Management response
  • Fluidity acknowledged: “situation is still fluid… personally… may review… may not go ahead.”
  • Operational skepticism: argues Grid India adds cost and may not add value; for RTM, claims coupling is “very, very difficult” due to tight timelines and risk of missing aggregation causing “jerk in the price and the volume discovery.”
  • Clearing/settlement: exchanges still do physical/financial settlement; only price discovery shifts to Grid India (in the described draft).
  • Cost: stated “No additional costs” for software re-engineering (when asked about forwarding bids to Grid India).
  • Margin protection: cited Term Ahead Market as precedent where margins remain intact despite multi-exchange liquidity.
  • Assessment
  • Unusually strong/defensive: “No additional costs” is categorical despite earlier emphasis that coupling requires significant infrastructure/software changes.
  • Evasive on regulatory outcome: repeatedly avoids firm timelines and final decision (“cannot really say anything… wait and watch”).
  • RTM argument is detailed (timing + aggregation failure risk), which is a stronger technical case than DAM.

Theme C: Financials—other income volatility

  • Core questions
  • Why other income slowed ~29% QoQ/quarterly run-rate.
  • Management response
  • Explained as mark-to-market and one-time treasury gains in December; March had correction due to Iran conflict/rupee impacts.
  • Assessment
  • Clear attribution; no major red flags.

Theme D: IGX gas volumes—geopolitical impact + recovery plan

  • Core questions
  • Q1 FY27 volume outlook given Middle East disruptions; levers to shore up volumes.
  • Whether volumes will be domestic gas vs LNG.
  • Timeline for stake reduction / IPO process.
  • Management response
  • Middle East supply disruption affects volumes; gas prices high; expects Q1 may not grow YoY, but from Q2 onwards growth.
  • LNG from other sources + domestic gas (ONGC/Reliance KG D6 etc.) will support volumes.
  • PNGRB time extension to Dec 31, 2026; IPO “initiated… progressing well.”
  • Assessment
  • Provides a conditional outlook (Q1 flat, Q2 rebound), which is credible given stated drivers.

Theme E: REC / VPPA / product momentum

  • Core questions
  • REC volume change vs prior year; VPPA momentum/interest.
  • Volume growth expectations for FY27.
  • Management response
  • REC: clarified there is no fall; stated “5% increase in REC volume.”
  • VPPA: “Not significant so far… maybe with data centers… something should happen.”
  • FY27 volumes: expects to maintain 15%–20% annual volume growth (directional).
  • Assessment
  • VPPA interest described as still early (weak near-term catalyst).

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 electricity volume growth: “maintain this volume growth of 15% to 20%” (Ketan Jain question).
  • Near-term (gas/IGX) volume expectation: “in the first quarter, we may not get any growthfrom second quarter onwards… achieve growth” (Sumit Kishore).
  • Market coupling impact on margins (qualitative with numbers):
  • Term Ahead Market margin example: “Against INR 0.04… margin is around INR 0.036–0.037” (used to argue no significant margin impact).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Market coupling: management suggests uncertainty and potential regulator reconsideration; repeatedly emphasizes customer loyalty + tech + product suite to retain share.
  • Demand outlook: CEA projection to ~2,500 BUs by 2032 supports medium-term growth.
  • BESS/storage: falling costs + merchant trades + VGF tender discoveries imply continued adoption and exchange liquidity.
  • Coal exchange: opportunity exists but final regulations are the gating item.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Record performance
  • “highest ever quarterly traded electricity volume of 39.4 billion units… +24.3% YoY”
  • “FY26… electricity volumes touched 141 billion units… +17% YoY”
  • Market coupling stance
  • “situation is still fluid… I personally feel… may review their own decision… may not go ahead”
  • RTM coupling skepticism: “very, very difficult… There is no slack time in the process.”
  • RTM risk framing: if one exchange data isn’t aggregated, “you’ll lose significant buy and sell volume… sudden jerk in the price and the volume discovery.”
  • Coal exchange monetization
  • “e-auction coal transaction was about 80 million tonnes… provides a significant opportunity”
  • Logistics sequencing: “Initially… buyer will have to make their own arrangement… subsequently… Railways… provide that service also.”
  • Cost claim on coupling
  • When asked about software re-engineering cost: “No additional costs.”
  • Gas recovery
  • “maybe in the first quarter, we may not get any growth… But from second quarter onwards… achieve growth.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals (Optional)

Red flags
Categorical “No additional costs” for coupling software changes, despite earlier acknowledgement that coupling requires infrastructure/software and Grid India involvement (potential credibility risk).
TAM/revenue modeling for coal exchange remains deferred (“wait for final regulations”), limiting investment-case clarity.
VPPA momentum still “not significant so far”—near-term upside may be less than narrative implies.

Positive signals
– Strong operational metrics (volume records, RTM/Green growth, API adoption: “more than 70% of cleared volume is through the API system”).
– Clear explanation of other income volatility (treasury mark-to-market).
– Detailed technical arguments against RTM coupling feasibility (timing + aggregation failure consequences).


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Shift: More Optimistic
  • Q1/Q2 calls emphasized macro/regulatory optimism and volume growth guidance (15%–20%).
  • Current call adds hard execution proof: record volumes, strong FY26 growth, and more concrete policy milestones (CfD pilot, REC/RCO clarity, BESS merchant trades).
  • Hedging persists mainly around market coupling timelines and regulatory outcomes (“cannot really say,” “wait and watch”), but overall confidence in business momentum is higher.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Market coupling timeline (Jan 2026)
  • Prior (Q1/Q2): management indicated uncertainty and suggested it “may take longer” (Q1: “not like to comment… may take longer”; Q2: “not aware… no contact”).
  • Current: still no implementation certainty; CERC draft now suggests Grid India MCO; management calls it “fluid.”
  • Status:Delayed / unresolved (no clear implementation by Jan 2026; narrative evolved to new draft structure).
  • REC / RPO-related slowdown
  • Q3 call (Jan 30) discussed REC volume slowdown drivers (timeline extension + deposit option).
  • Current call: management asserts “There is no fall… 5% increase.”
  • Status:Improved / corrected narrative (at least for FY26 vs prior year).
  • IGX stake reduction / IPO
  • Q2/Q3: IPO “initiated action” and expected “maybe by… this year” (Jan 30).
  • Current: PNGRB extension to Dec 31, 2026; IPO “progressing well.”
  • Status:Delayed (timeline pushed via extension; IPO still not completed).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “market coupling as main overhang” to “market coupling as fluid but manageable”
  • Earlier calls focused heavily on legal/operational uncertainty and potential customer migration.
  • Now, management leans more on customer loyalty + API + settlement/clearing continuity and uses margin precedent (TAM) to argue resilience.
  • Coal exchange moved from “exploring” to “board in principle approval + detailed model discussion”
  • Q2/Q3: coal exchange discussed as regulatory exploration.
  • Current: management provides more operational sequencing (price discovery vs logistics vs Railways integration).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: consistent volume-growth framing (15%–20% growth maintained as a recurring expectation).
  • Weakness: regulatory timelines remain non-committal, and the “no additional costs” claim on coupling is potentially overstated given the complexity described in earlier periods.
  • Management explanations for financial items (other income) are consistent and specific.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / volumes: Improving/stable (weather-driven volatility acknowledged, but exchange volumes still growing strongly).
  • Margins: Management argues margins are resilient; uses TAM example to support.
  • Renewables integration: Strengthening (more emphasis on RTM/Green, VPPAs, CfD pilot, BESS merchant trades).
  • Regulatory overhang: Persistent (market coupling remains unresolved; RTM coupling doubted).

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • API adoption is accelerating (current: “>70% cleared volume through API”), reinforcing the “switching cost / integration moat” narrative—this is a tangible operational moat that wasn’t quantified earlier.
  • Coal exchange investment case is still “option-like”: management is confident about opportunity directionally but refuses to quantify until final regulations—suggesting uncertainty on economics/feasibility remains high.
  • VPPA is still not a near-term volume driver despite regulatory progress; management explicitly says interest is “not significant so far,” implying the upside from VPPAs may be slower than policy headlines.