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Indian Company Investor Calls

L&T Finance Stands by 20%+ Growth Despite Geopolitical Risks

May 5, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

L&T Finance Limited — Q4 FY26 & FY26 Earnings Call (held Apr 27, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “highest ever annual PAT” and “highest-ever quarterly retail disbursements,” with improving credit metrics (“credit costs moderated to 2.64%”).
  • Forward-looking language is confident: “we remain committed,” “we expect,” “we are reasonably confident,” and “stand by the 20%+ growth guidance.”
  • They acknowledge geopolitical/monsoon risks but repeatedly conclude “as of now, no visible impact” and “we remain vigilant.”

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Risk-calibrated growth powered by AI underwriting (Project Cyclops)
  • Retail disbursements surged; credit costs moderated as Cyclops matured across segments.
  • Project Cyclops has outperformed the industry by a wide margin” (two-wheeler benchmark window).
  • Credit cost trajectory improving; ECL model refresh strengthens coverage
  • Credit costs: “moderated to 2.64%” QoQ.
  • ECL refresh released provisions and increased Stage 1 coverage: Stage 1 PCR “from 0.52% to 0.80%.”
  • Management frames this as “structural consistency and balance sheet resilience.”
  • Operational leverage via productivity + digital architecture
  • NIMs+Fees improved sequentially; opex productivity metrics (throughput per employee/manager/field officer) cited across multiple lines.
  • Continued AI investment: Helios, Nostradamus, “pan-organization tech DNA upgrade.”
  • Strategic roadmap: Lakshya 2031
  • North star: “AI-enabled, risk-first, tech-first, multi-product retail financier.”
  • Measurable targets: Book growth CAGR 20%+, Credit costs ≤2%, RoA 3.0%–3.2%, RoE 16%–18%.
  • Wholesale/SR resolution progress but still a drag
  • Wholesale book and SR book reduced, but SRs remain “stuck” and continue to drag consolidated RoA/earnings.
  • FY27 outlook: sustain momentum with calibrated expansion
  • AUM growth “over 20%,” NIMs+Fees guided stable at 10%–10.5%, credit costs 2%–2.2% by Q4FY27.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Geopolitical/monsoon risk impact on credit (West Asia, El Niño)

  • Core question(s):
  • Any portfolio-specific concerns (SME, personal loans, rural) from West Asia war and potential El Niño/monsoon disruptions?
  • Is the 20%+ AUM growth guidance inclusive of these risks?
  • Management response:
  • No visible impact” on portfolios “as of now,” but “cautious” about second/third-order effects (fertilizer supply; energy shock; industrial gas supply tightening).
  • Guidance: “We have taken everything into concern… we stand by the 20%+ guidance,” but “unseen geopolitical shocks… are not factored.”
  • Assessment (evasive/strong/partial):
  • Partially hedged: they claim no visible impact yet admit guidance excludes “unseen shocks.”

Theme B: Cost ratios / opex outlook and AI’s medium-term economics

  • Core question(s):
  • How AI affects cost-to-income and cost-to-assets over near term and into 2031?
  • Branch expansion plans and whether opex will rise despite credit cost improvement.
  • Management response:
  • FY27 opex planning tied to branch additions: 150–200 micro-loan, 150–200 micro-LAP, 400–500 gold loan branches.
  • Lakshya 2031 opex-to-book guided at 3.75%–4%.
  • They also tightened prior corridor narrative: opex+credit cost corridor moved from “6.5% to 7%” to “6% to 6.5%,” and expects 5.75%–6% over Lakshya period.
  • Assessment:
  • Strong on framework/corridors; less specific on how much of opex improvement is “AI-driven” vs “credit-driven collections cost reduction.”

Theme C: ECL refresh mechanics (Stage 1/2/3, overlays, contingency buffer)

  • Core question(s):
  • Clarify whether Stage 2 release includes PD/LGD changes vs “contingency buffer.”
  • Whether Stage 1 provisioning assumption is permanently increased to 80 bps.
  • Management response:
  • ₹125 Cr macro-prudential provisions “subsumed within the ECL model,” “not gone anywhere.”
  • Stage 1 PCR increased to 0.80%; management says “It will be 80” (i.e., 80 bps).
  • They argue incremental credit cost outlook is not purely from ECL refresh; roll-forwards and collection improvements matter.
  • Assessment:
  • Some complexity/opacity: they emphasize model mechanics and overlays, but do not provide a clean “bridge” from contingency to P&L impact.

Theme D: Fee income vs disbursement growth; NIMs+Fees guidance

  • Core question(s):
  • Why fee income appears “tepid” vs disbursement growth?
  • Will fee income grow in line with AUM/disbursements?
  • Management response:
  • Fee income range is embedded in NIMs+Fees guidance; fee income “in the range of about 1.7% to 1.8%, 1.9%.”
  • NIMs+Fees guided 10%–10.5%; they cite liquidity income/negative carry as drivers of quarter-to-quarter fee movement.
  • Assessment:
  • Direct clarification; consistent with prior guidance philosophy (use NIMs+Fees corridor rather than standalone fee).

Theme E: Security Receipts (SR) drag and RoA/ROE assumptions

  • Core question(s):
  • Does RoA/RoE guidance assume SR gains/provision reversals?
  • Timeline for SR resolution and whether SR drag will unwind materially.
  • Management response:
  • We have not taken into account any gains coming out of SR portfolio.”
  • SR credits are “stuck” until ARC resolution; SR portfolio drag persists.
  • Resolution expected “three to four years” (with a long tail).
  • Assessment:
  • Strong and consistent: they explicitly exclude SR gains from guidance.

Theme F: AI’s impact on credit cost and whether opex play is visible in 4–5 years

  • Core question(s):
  • If credit cost improves structurally, why doesn’t opex play out more visibly after 4–5 years?
  • How will branch expansion overlap and affect opex?
  • Management response:
  • They reiterate confidence in sub-2% credit cost via Cyclops; opex efficiencies are expected via both opex and credit cost/collection cost reduction.
  • Branch deployment rate clarified: gold loan branches at “1 to 1.2 a day.”
  • Assessment:
  • Some narrative blending: they attribute opex corridor improvements to both credit/collections and investments, but do not quantify “AI-only” opex benefit.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 AUM growth:over 20%
  • NIMs + Fees:remain stable in… 10% to 10.5%
  • Credit costs:trend lower… 2% to 2.2% by Q4FY27
  • RoA target:RoA of at least 2.8% by the last quarter of FY27
  • Lakshya 2031 measurable goals:
  • Book growth CAGR:20%+
  • Credit costs:2% or less
  • RoA:3.0% to 3.2%
  • RoE:16% to 18%
  • Opex-to-book (Lakshya 2031):3.75% to 4%
  • Branch additions in FY27 (opex drivers):
  • Micro-loan: 150–200
  • Micro-LAP: 150–200
  • Gold loan: 400–500

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Risk posture:cautious” on urban unsecured lending (SME/personal loans) due to energy/oil and fertilizer supply risks.
  • AI rollout confidence: Nostradamus expected in Personal Loans (Q1FY27), Rural Business Finance (Q2FY27), then SME/Farm later.
  • Collections/roll-forward improvement: management expects slippages/roll-forwards to continue slowing, supporting credit cost decline.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • On credit cost improvement:credit costs moderated to 2.64%… a 19-basis points reduction from the previous quarter.”
  • On ECL refresh strength:Overall, this does not have any P&L impact… strengthens… credit risk framework.”
  • On FY27 guidance commitment with caveat:We have taken everything into concern… we stand by the 20%+ guidance,” but “unseen geopolitical shocks… are not factored into the guidance.”
  • On SR gains exclusion:We have not taken into account any gains coming out of SR portfolio.”
  • On SR drag mechanics: SR credits “does not give me any interest income” and will be redeployed after resolution.
  • On Cyclops confidence: two-wheeler Cyclops portfolio shows “2.8% vs industry average 7.1%” (10-month observation window).
  • On Stage 1 assumption permanence:It will be 80” (80 bps Stage 1 PCR).
  • On credit cost path to sub-2%:we are reasonably confident… reaching that less than 2% trajectory by somewhere in FY28.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Guidance caveat: FY27 growth guidance excludes “unseen geopolitical shocks.”
ECL complexity / overlay opacity: multiple references to overlays, subsuming macro-prudential into ECL, and model mechanics—hard for outsiders to fully bridge to P&L.
SR resolution uncertainty:NCLT… anyone’s guess” and long tail (3–4 years) implies continued earnings drag risk.

Positive signals
Clear corridor discipline: repeated commitment to NIMs+Fees 10%–10.5% and credit costs 2%–2.2% by Q4FY27.
Operational KPIs tied to outcomes: productivity metrics and Cyclops benchmark outperformance cited.
Explicit exclusion of SR gains from guidance increases credibility (no “hidden upside” assumption).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 2025):cautiously optimistic,” focused on early tech dividends; credit normalization framed as conditional.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 2025): still optimistic; emphasized “green shoots,” but acknowledged Karnataka ordinance and macroprudential usage.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 2026): more confident on credit cost trajectory; guided to 2%–2.2% corridor by Q4FY27 and highlighted “NIL utilisation of macro-prudential provisions” in that quarter.
  • Q4 FY26 (Apr 2026): tone becomes more optimistic with “highest ever annual PAT,” “highest-ever quarterly retail disbursements,” and stronger confidence on FY27 execution.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic (confidence increased; more quantitative wins; fewer “wait and watch” statements).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past statement (Q3 FY26, Jan 2026): credit cost trajectory improving; “culminate in achievement of guided 2–2.2% corridor by Q4FY27.”
  • What happened now: credit costs now 2.64% (Q4FY26) and management expects 2%–2.2% by Q4FY27—trajectory is consistent with prior guidance.
  • Flag: ✅ Delivered (directionally on track; not yet at target but moving as guided).
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26): RGL/MFI resilience and collection efficiencies returning toward pre-crisis.
  • Now: management says RGL/MFI collection efficiencies restored to “pre-crisis level of 99.8%+.”
  • Flag: ✅ Delivered (claims restoration; no contradiction in current call).
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26): Project Cyclops rollout completion and early benefits in multiple segments.
  • Now: Cyclops live in Two-wheeler, Farm, SME, Personal Loans; Nostradamus rollout schedule provided.
  • Flag: ✅ Delivered (rollout appears completed/extended as planned).
  • Past statement (earlier calls): macro-prudential rebuild to be funded from SR realizations.
  • Now: ECL refresh subsumed macro-prudential provisions; SR resolution still long tail.
  • Flag: ⏳ Delayed / partially executed (macroprudential rebuild still dependent on SR resolution; SR drag persists).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “microfinance crisis normalization” → “AI-led structural credit improvement + tech-first roadmap.”
  • Earlier calls emphasized Karnataka/MFI stabilization and macroprudential usage.
  • Current call shifts emphasis to Project Nostradamus, AI cross-sell/service engine, and Lakshya 2031 stretch targets.
  • SR narrative remains present but becomes more explicit about “no SR gains in guidance.”
  • This is a credibility improvement vs earlier “resolution progress” framing.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • High credibility on guidance framing: consistent corridors (NIMs+Fees 10%–10.5%, credit costs 2%–2.2% by Q4FY27).
  • Credibility improved by explicit exclusions: “no SR gains” from guidance.
  • However: ECL overlay explanations are detailed but still complex; outsiders may find it hard to verify “structural” vs “timing” effects.
  • Overall credibility: Medium-High (strong discipline on corridors; some model opacity remains).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro: moved from “macro tailwinds” to “resilient domestic demand but geopolitical/El Niño risks.”
  • Margins: NIMs+Fees corridor maintained; sequential improvement cited.
  • Credit quality: from crisis-driven stabilization to “Cyclops-driven sub-2% confidence by FY28.”
  • Expansion: branch growth and gold loan scaling become more central in FY27 plan.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Risk management is increasingly proactive and tool-driven: management repeatedly ties early detection (“Nostradamus pinpointing micro-market risk pockets”) to underwriting changes, implying less reliance on late-stage provisioning.
  • SR drag is now treated as a structural earnings constraint rather than a temporary overhang—management’s explicit “no SR gains” stance suggests they expect SR to remain a headwind longer than bulls might hope.
  • ECL refresh is being used to front-load coverage (Stage 1 PCR 80 bps)—this can stabilize earnings but may cap upside if credit cost improves faster than model assumptions.