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Shree Cement Targets 80 MT by 2029 Amid Volume Rebound

May 11, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Shree Cement Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (Quarter ended 31 Mar 2026) | May 06, 2026

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights strong sequential recovery in volumes and profitability: “Operating EBITDA also increased by 34%EBITDA per ton increasedCapacity utilization… 66% as compared to 56%.”
  • They frame near-term headwinds as temporary/geopolitical: “Middle East conflict… ceasefire… gradually coming back to normal” and “once peace is restored, demand would bounce back.”
  • They reiterate confidence in medium-term demand and execution (capex, expansions, RMC ramp-up), while keeping some hedging on macro: “dynamic situation,” “let us see.”

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Volume rebound + margin support (Q4 and FY26):
  • Domestic cement volume up ~25% QoQ (8.48m tons → 10.56m tons) and +11% YoY.
  • Realizations up ~1.6% QoQ (INR 4,652 → INR 4,725).
  • EBITDA up ~34% QoQ; EBITDA/ton up (INR 1,032 → INR 1,125).
  • “Value over volume” discipline, but now “chasing volumes” after price gap narrowed:
  • Management explicitly says they narrowed the price gap and now aim for market share without “price war”: “we have moved to a more stable pricing platform… and now we will be chasing volumes.”
  • Yet they repeatedly stress profitability remains prime focus.
  • Expansion execution across India + UAE + new geographies:
  • Commissioned integrated clinker/cement capacity at Kodla, Karnataka (3.65m clinker + 3.5m cement).
  • UAE: work progressing; cement mill in Union Cement scheduled by Sep’26.
  • India: Meghalaya integrated plant in pre-project development; Mauritius subsidiary incorporated.
  • RMC business ramp-up as a growth engine:
  • RMC plants: 26 operational at end FY26, with 10 new plants inaugurated in March; total expected 36 plants at start FY27.
  • Sustainability and cost resilience:
  • Green electricity share 61% (up from 59% YoY); green power capacity 666.5 MW.
  • Water positivity index >8x; ZLD across manufacturing.
  • Macro view: resilient India demand, but short-term headwinds:
  • Positive: infrastructure-led growth, Budget thrust on capex.
  • Negative: “geopolitical conflict in Middle East” and “moderate monsoon conditions” as near-term headwinds.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Capex, cash surplus, and capital allocation

  • Core questions
  • What’s next for capex given rising cash surplus?
  • How to think about long-term expansion (80 MT target) and whether it may slip?
  • Management response
  • Capex FY26-27: ~INR 1,500 crores; focus on:
    1) RMC plants expansion,
    2) railway sidings,
    3) Meghalaya expansion (orders placed).
  • Long-term: reiterated target “80 million tons by 2029” but “dynamic situation” and they’ve slowed down capex.
  • Cash: net cash ~INR 6,400 Cr vs borrowing ~INR 1,500 Cr; will reward shareholders and may front-end capex if situation improves.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • Long-term timing is intentionally non-committal (“I can’t say… too early”; “let us see”).
  • They avoid giving a firm schedule for 80 MT despite repeated prior guidance.

Theme B: Demand outlook and pricing strategy

  • Core questions
  • Will demand be impacted by competitor slowing expansion?
  • How should volumes run given Q4 strength?
  • Are price hikes needed / how much cost pass-through?
  • Management response
  • Demand anchored to GDP: cement demand expected around ~7.1%–7.2% (industry) and they expect to grow ~8%–8.5% (company).
  • Pricing: they emphasize dynamic environment; “whatever we can pass on… on a sustainable basis.”
  • They cite a recent hike: “About INR25 a bag.”
  • They also say if Middle East war ends soon, fuel prices may come down (cost relief).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • They avoid quantitative guidance on pricing/EBITDA: “We would not like to hazard a guess.”
  • They acknowledge a short-term slowdown after April/May: “After that little slowdown has come.”

Theme C: Cost drivers (freight, fuel mix, packaging, kcal)

  • Core questions
  • Why freight cost increased?
  • Depreciation guidance for FY27?
  • Fuel mix and kcal cost trajectory; inventory and timing of cost impact.
  • Packaging cost increases and whether fully covered by pricing.
  • Management response
  • Freight: lead distance increased by ~12 km; working to reduce to <440 km/ton.
  • Depreciation: sticking to INR 1,600–1,700 crores for FY27.
  • Fuel: landed cost per kcal at plant ~INR 1.60, expected to rise ~10% in Q1; Q2 not commentable due to “extremely dynamic situation.”
  • Fuel mix Q4: petcoke 54%, coal 32%, alternative 14%.
  • Packaging: incremental cost rise discussed as INR ~150/ton total cost impact; Q4 impact small, Q1 larger; they say pricing hikes have generally covered costs “in today’s date.”
  • Inventory: they clarify cost impact is on weighted average cost, not procurement timing; major impact comes later in the quarter.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • They repeatedly refuse to forecast Q2: “we are not in a position to comment.”
  • Some answers are confusing/conditional (e.g., inventory timing vs weighted average cost; Q2 uncertainty).

Theme D: Capacity utilization and regional performance

  • Core questions
  • Region-wise utilization.
  • Whether 80 MT target could be pushed out given utilization levels.
  • Management response
  • Utilization Q4: North 70%, East 60%, South 61%, company 66% (vs 56% in Dec).
  • 80 MT timing: “I can’t say… too early”; they’ve slowed capex and will ride demand wave.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • They don’t provide a clear utilization-based model for 80 MT; they keep it conditional on demand.

Theme E: Meghalaya expansion specifics (limestone sourcing, incentives)

  • Core questions
  • Limestone mine allocation details, premium paid, incentives, timelines.
  • Why capex looks high.
  • Management response
  • Mines allocated by state laws; three blocks, first block has ~600 million tons limestone in aggregate (prospecting ongoing).
  • Mines are not auctioned”; no confirmed incentive documents yet.
  • Capex high due to brownfield infrastructure front-loading (land, power lines, etc.).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • Incentives remain unconfirmed; timelines are not tightly quantified.

Theme F: RMC business economics and reporting

  • Core questions
  • RMC revenue/EBITDA and whether it can be treated as a separate business line.
  • Management response
  • RMC revenue: INR 90 crores in Q4, INR 246 crores full year.
  • They say RMC is “nascent” and may take “a few more quarters and maybe some years” before reporting independently.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • They don’t provide RMC EBITDA in this call; they defer.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Capex FY26-27: ~INR 1,500 crores (Q&A).
  • Capex FY26 (context): earlier in call: integrated projects commissioned; in Q&A they reference ~INR 1,500 crores completed and ~INR 1,500 crores total estimate for FY26-27.
  • Depreciation guidance (FY27): INR 1,600–1,700 crores (sticking to prior).
  • Volumes / run-rate:
  • They maintain industry-relative guidance: “1% over the average industry growth rate.”
  • Company expects ~40 million tons in this year and ~40 million tons in 26-27 (cement; clinker not meaningful).
  • RMC plants: target ~50–55 RMC plants by end of FY27 (as per capex/cash question response).
  • Utilization: Q4 company utilization 66% (not guidance, but current metric).
  • Freight target: reduce lead distance to sub-440 km/ton.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Price discipline continues after narrowing the gap: “Profitability is the prime focus… not a price war.”
  • Demand recovery expected post Middle East ceasefire: “demand would bounce back due to reconstruction work.”
  • RMC is positioned as a strategic growth lever (geographic reach + logistics optimization + internal cement consumption).
  • They are slowing capex vs earlier aggression; 80 MT timing is conditional.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • On strategy shift:we have moved to a more stable pricing platform… and now we will be chasing volumes.”
  • On profitability-first constraint:Profitability is the prime focus… Price always the market gives. Volume is what we are capable to produce.
  • On demand recovery:once peace is restored, demand would bounce back due to the reconstruction work.
  • On capex conditionality:We have slowed down the capex… We intend to reach 80 million tons by ’29, but let us see.
  • On guidance philosophy:We have never given you any guidance on EBITDA per ton… We would not like to hazard a guess.
  • On cost pass-through:whatever we can pass on, on a sustainable basis… we should be all right.
  • On incentives risk (Meghalaya):No… we have not yet received any confirmed paper document…

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear operational improvement: utilization up to 66% and EBITDA/ton up QoQ.
– Strong sustainability metrics (green power share, ZLD, water positivity) supporting cost resilience and ESG positioning.
– Transparent clarification on cost mechanics (weighted average cost; fuel mix).

Red flags
Guidance is heavily conditional (80 MT timing, demand, pricing, Q2 cost impacts).
Incentives for Meghalaya not confirmed—capex assumptions may face execution/regulatory uncertainty.
– Some answers are non-committal or confusing around inventory timing and cost pass-through coverage.
– They repeatedly avoid giving consolidated UAE economics in detail (“maybe next quarter onwards, we will talk of consol only”).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY26): Optimistic—management highlights recovery and delivery.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): tone was more “value over volume” with emphasis on sacrificing volumes to narrow price gap; also more cautious on utilization and 80 MT timing.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 2025): more upbeat on GST cut and premiumization; still cautious on short-term demand.
  • Q4 FY25 (May 2025): optimistic on demand rebound and premiumization; also more confident on medium-term utilization recovery.

Shift classification: More Optimistic
– They now explicitly say they’ve delivered on prior communications and are moving to volume chasing after price stabilization.
– However, they still hedge on macro and long-term timing (“dynamic situation”).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

1) Price gap narrowing / stable pricing platform
Past statement (Q3 FY26, Feb 2026): focus on narrowing gap from ~INR30 to ~INR15; “value over volume.”
Current outcome (Q4 FY26): management claims delivery: “We have delivered on both these accounts” and reiterates stable pricing platform.
Flag: ✅ Delivered (at least narrative-wise; supported by realization stability and volume rebound).

2) RMC ramp-up
Past (Q3 FY26): RMC from 19 plants to 45 within 6–8 months (by Sep’26).
Current (Q4 FY26): 26 operational at end FY26; with 10 new plants inaugurated in March; total 36 plants at start FY27.
Flag: ⏳ Delayed / behind the “45 by Sep’26” implied pace (unless “45” refers to a later point or includes under-commissioning not counted as operational).

3) 80 MT target timing
Past (Q3 FY26): “80 million tons by FY’29” (and earlier discussions suggested possible deferral based on demand/utilization).
Current:reach 80 million tons by ’29” but “let us see,” and they say capex slowed.
Flag: ⏳ Delayed / not de-risked (no firm path; utilization still only 66% in Q4).

4) Depreciation guidance
Past (Q3 FY26): depreciation guidance around INR 1,600–1,700 crores referenced in Q4 FY26 Q&A.
Current:Yes, we are sticking to that.”
Flag: ✅ Consistent.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “value over volume” to “chasing volumes” after price stabilization:
  • Q3 emphasized volume sacrifice to protect pricing.
  • Q4 explicitly says they are now chasing volumes while maintaining profitability.
  • RMC emphasis increasing:
  • Earlier calls treated RMC as nascent; now it’s central to capex allocation and growth engine narrative.
  • Consolidated reporting intent:
  • Q3/Q2 already hinted at consol focus; Q4 reiterates: “Maybe next quarter onwards, we will talk of consol only.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: management repeatedly provides specific operational metrics (utilization, lead distance, fuel mix, capex quantum).
  • Weakness: long-term targets (80 MT, RMC plant counts) remain conditional and appear to slip vs earlier implied timelines.
  • They avoid hard EBITDA/price guidance, which is prudent, but it reduces accountability.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand & macro: resilient India demand narrative persists; geopolitical risk now more explicitly tied to Middle East reconstruction and short-term headwinds.
  • Margins/cost: still anchored to cost levers (kcal, freight, packaging, green power). Q4 shows cost pressure acknowledged with quantified movement.
  • Expansion: capex remains active but slowed; Meghalaya incentives remain uncertain.
  • Sustainability: consistently emphasized across calls; green power share rising.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s “delivery not proclamation” ethos is reinforced in Q4 by referencing prior public communications (growth 2–3% delivered; pricing platform delivered). This suggests management is more defensive about credibility after prior quarters’ cautiousness.
  • The shift to “chasing volumes” coincides with utilization improvement (56% → 66%), implying they are only comfortable increasing volumes once fixed-cost absorption improves—consistent with their long-standing profitability-first framework.
  • RMC ramp-up appears slower than earlier implied (19 → 45 by Sep’26 vs current 36 at start FY27), suggesting execution ramp may be constrained by commissioning/operational readiness rather than demand.