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Indian Company Investor Calls

Kirloskar Ferrous Targets ~15% Casting Growth, Oliver Merger Soon

May 15, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Kirloskar Ferrous Industries Ltd. — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (8 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly frames the environment as improving and cites “tailwinds” and “optimistic” demand positioning.
  • They highlight operational progress (casting/tube growth, foundry commissioning, Oliver merger) and give multiple forward-looking targets (casting volumes, tube capacity, green power commissioning).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Volume-led recovery in value-added products (Castings):
  • Casting production/sales up; management emphasizes shift toward “intricate/difficult castings” and machining-enabled value addition.
  • Foundry expansion/ramp-up is central: commissioning 6th foundry and planning 7th due to capacity needs.
  • Pig iron/steel still constrained by market realization + disruptions:
  • Pig iron volumes slightly down; major year impact attributed to Hiriyur blast furnace stoppage (~3.5 months) due to “market conditions not being conducive.”
  • They expect pig iron pricing to improve as international prices rise, but acknowledge cost pressure (coal, dollar).
  • Tube business supported by capacity utilization + pricing recovery expectations:
  • Tube volumes grew; management expects 10–11% volumetric growth and some realization improvement as commodity prices reverse.
  • Green power + backward integration as margin/cost levers:
  • Solar/wind commissioning and battery storage planning to improve utilization and reduce CO2.
  • Backward integration roadmap: coke oven/power already in place; mines + beneficiation/pellet plans; blast furnace upgrades for higher capacity and efficiency.
  • Oliver merger as a near-term structural catalyst:
  • Management expects to close merger in “next couple of months” to benefit FY26 itself and improve combined scale.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Castings growth, customer additions, and ramp-up execution

  • Core questions:
  • How is casting “journey” progressing vs expectations and what’s the opportunity?
  • Why are volumes/ramp-ups slower than earlier aspirations?
  • Details on new customers (domestic vs export, end-use, timeline to SOP).
  • Management response:
  • Casting growth target is moderated by realism: “Our effort to grow 20%, 25% are not realistic”; they target ~15% volumetric growth.
  • They cite robust demand (“auto sector as well as tractor sector”) and execution milestones:
    • 6th foundry commissioning for large casting loading.
    • Oliver Engineering ramp-up: from ~13,500 tons last year to ~1,700 tons/month in Jan–Mar; aiming 2,000+ tons/month.
    • Solapur “ticklish” due to foundry process complexity: stabilizing blocks/heads takes time.
  • New customers: 3 added; diesel engine manufacturer (India supply + export), plus customers tied to tractors/earthmoving; they claim “clear-cut volume growth plan and time line for SOP” with fixed deadlines.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements:
  • They provide targets but limited transparency on exact bottleneck root-cause beyond “foundry process and complexities.”
  • Some answers are confident but not fully quantified (e.g., customer contribution timing is affirmed, but without hard volume breakdown per customer).

Theme B: Realization improvement sustainability (castings + pig iron + tubes)

  • Core questions:
  • Is realization jump strategic or quarter-specific?
  • Can realization sustain over 2 years (e.g., INR/kg range)?
  • Pig iron spreads: what’s working/not working; how spreads move vs Q4 given coal/coke changes.
  • Management response:
  • Castings realization: they attribute improvement to mix (complex castings + machining) and export share; also commodity pass-through mechanics.
  • They expect sustainability: “it will definitely go beyond INR130 per kg” (beyond a prior base range).
  • Pig iron: they point to international price strength and timing effects (“spillover into January,” “full benefit has not come into quarter 4”).
  • They explicitly acknowledge cost headwinds: dollar and coal up; spreads depend on coal/coke purchase commitments and production cost.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements:
  • EBITDA margin trajectory question was met with deferral: “I need to come back. I don’t have ready numbers.”

Theme C: Foundry utilization and run-rate targets (Solapur + Oliver)

  • Core questions:
  • Solapur foundry utilization in Q4 and when reaching earlier run-rate plans.
  • FY27 sales volume guidance across segments.
  • Management response:
  • Solapur utilization: ~4,200 tons vs 6,000 minimum expectation (~70%); improvement expected over “3–4 quarters.”
  • Run-rate: they say Solapur should reach ~15,500/month across 3 to get ~45,000–46,000 per quarter; Oliver merger will shift some sourcing.
  • FY27 casting volume: they reaffirm 1.85–1.90 lakh tons target, clarifying it’s production with minor sales rejection.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements:
  • They acknowledge Solapur is “ticklish” and process-driven, but timelines remain somewhat elastic (“very shortly,” “couple of quarters,” “3–4 quarters”).

Theme D: Tube/steel expansion, capex, and order book (ONGC, oil & gas)

  • Core questions:
  • Tube capacity expansion status (Baramati diameter/mill stage) and capex for FY27–FY28.
  • Order book quality and ONGC order contribution.
  • Tube margin trajectory and realization recovery.
  • Management response:
  • Capex: Baramati expansion project design/source study completed; project within ~1.5 years; investment ~INR 500 cr included in INR 600–700 cr/year capex.
  • Orders: they expect oil & gas reconstruction demand and robust domestic/export orders; pending orders from last tenders; no exact pending order figure.
  • Tube realization: expects commodity-driven price increases; they cite recovery of part of prior realization drop (“at least 5% to 6%”).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements:
  • They did not provide a pending order value/volume despite being asked.
  • ONGC order execution timing/volume was not quantified (“I don’t have that much detail”).

Theme E: EBITDA margin trajectory + power cost savings quantification

  • Core questions:
  • EBITDA margin trajectory for current year and next year; one-off items in other expenses.
  • Power cost savings from solar/wind and expected benefits FY26–FY28.
  • Management response:
  • EBITDA margin: they gave a partial directional answer—expect “just above 12.5% of EBITDA” and comfort at “15% EBITDA,” but did not provide a full trajectory.
  • Power savings:
    • Solar benefit FY26: “~INR70 crores
    • FY27 expected: “INR70 crores plus INR45 crores” (management’s expectation)
    • Peak scenario: “INR70 crores plus INR90 crores
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements:
  • EBITDA margin trajectory lacked precision due to “come back” deferral.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Castings (FY27):
  • Target: 1.85–1.90 lakh tons (production; sales slightly lower due to rejection).
  • Castings ramp-up (run-rate):
  • Oliver Engineering: from ~1,700 tons/month (Jan–Mar) toward 2,200–2,300/month by year-end; 24,000–25,000 tons annual.
  • Solapur: ~4,200 tons/month (~70% utilization) in Q4; aiming ~5,000 tons/month average in FY26–FY27 timeframe; “60,000 production” and 55–56k sales.
  • Tube (FY27):
  • Expect 10–11% volumetric growth.
  • They cite tube volume: 1,88,700 vs 1,68,800 last year; growth expected from there.
  • EBITDA (directional):
  • just above 12.5% of EBITDA” expected; comfort at 15%.
  • Capex:
  • Ongoing investment: INR 600–700 crores per year.
  • Baramati tube expansion: ~INR 500 crores (within capex plan).
  • Green power commissioning:
  • Solar/wind: solar 35 MW by July–Aug, wind 25 MW by Sep (and additional solar/wind equivalents discussed).
  • Battery storage preliminary work for utilization improvement.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Commodity cycle turning: management repeatedly suggests pig iron/steel pricing is improving and “pain is over” (or at least easing).
  • Execution confidence but process risk remains: Solapur ramp-up described as “ticklish,” implying execution risk despite demand.
  • Margin recovery depends on spreads: they repeatedly tie profitability to coal/coke costs and realization timing rather than purely operational improvements.

5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)

  • On casting growth realism:Our effort to grow 20%, 25% are not realistic.
  • On casting demand:demand for casting remains robust from auto sector as well as the tractor sector.
  • On capacity constraint logic:Otherwise, we will fall short in terms of our manufacturing capacity over the next 2, 3 years.
  • On pig iron stoppage cause: Hiriyur blast furnace stoppage due to “market conditions not being conducive.”
  • On international pricing tailwind: international pig iron at “$475” and “very, very encouraging.”
  • On EBITDA margin expectation:I expect that we are just above 12.5% of EBITDA.
  • On power savings (explicit): solar benefit “about INR70 crores” in FY26; FY27 “INR70 crores plus INR45 crores.”
  • On Solapur ramp-up difficulty:Solapur is ticklish… to do with the foundry process and complexities of the castings.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear operational progress in castings and tube volumes and concrete ramp-up plans (foundry commissioning, Oliver ramp).
– Quantified power savings and capex envelope.
– Management provides multiple levers for margin improvement: pricing recovery + machining + green energy + productivity.

Red flags
Guidance precision gaps: EBITDA trajectory and some order book details were not provided (“need to come back,” no pending order figures).
Execution risk acknowledged: Solapur ramp-up “ticklish,” and multiple prior targets historically missed (see consistency section).
Commodity dependence remains high: profitability still framed as dependent on pig iron/steel spreads and coal/coke costs.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current call (Q4 FY26): more Optimistic—management emphasizes “tailwinds,” international price encouragement, and expects volume growth “in coming quarters.”
  • Prior calls (Q3 FY26, Q2 FY26, Q1 FY26): tone was more cautious/pressure-focused, especially on pig iron margins and commodity downcycle.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic
  • Evidence: stronger language on improving demand/pricing (“tailwinds,” “optimistic,” “pain is over”).
  • Also, they are more willing to give numerical volume targets for FY27 (casting 1.85–1.90 lakh tons).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes (selected)

  1. Casting ramp-up / volume targets (Solapur + Oliver)
  2. Past statement (Q3 FY26, Feb 2026): expectation to reach higher casting run rates; Solapur ramp-up described with targets (e.g., Solapur to go to ~5,200 then ~6,200 tons/month over time; Oliver to reach ~15,000 tons by end of FY26).
  3. What happened by Q4 FY26: Solapur still at ~4,200 tons/month (~70%); Oliver ramp-up described as ~1,700 tons/month in Jan–Mar, aiming 2,000+.
  4. Flag:Delayed (Solapur utilization still below minimum expectation; ramp-up not fully achieved yet).

  5. Pig iron margin “bottoming out” narrative

  6. Past statement (Q3 FY26):Some light at the end of tunnel; from January, there are price increases… should support improving margins.”
  7. Current call: still acknowledges cost pressure and timing/spillover; EBITDA margin only “just above 12.5%” and comfort at 15%.
  8. Flag:Partially delivered / not fully resolved (improvement narrative exists, but margin recovery not clearly sustained/quantified).

  9. Green power commissioning timeline

  10. Past (Q2 FY26 Nov 2025): solar/wind commissioning plans with expectations of benefits.
  11. Current (Q4 FY26): solar benefit quantified for FY26 (~INR70 cr) and FY27 incremental benefits (INR45 cr expected).
  12. Flag:Delivered (at least solar benefit is now quantified and appears on track).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “commodity pressure” to “tailwinds + pricing reversal”:
  • Earlier calls emphasized deflationary pressure and margin struggle; now they emphasize international price strength and demand pull.
  • Casting bottleneck explanation becomes more process-specific:
  • Solapur described as “ticklish” due to foundry process complexity—more explicit than earlier generic “ramp-up” explanations.
  • Oliver merger becomes a central execution catalyst:
  • Now used to explain run-rate acceleration and combined scale benefits.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: management provides more quantified targets (casting FY27, power savings).
  • Weakness: recurring pattern of timing slippage (Solapur utilization/run-rate) and missing specifics (EBITDA trajectory numbers, order book pending values, ONGC order volume).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: Improving tone; robust casting demand reiterated.
  • Margins: Still commodity/spread dependent; operational levers emphasized but not fully translating into a clear margin trajectory.
  • Expansion: Capex envelope and projects remain consistent (green power, tube expansion, backward integration), but execution timing varies.
  • Green energy: Theme strengthened with quantified savings and commissioning milestones.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s optimism appears increasingly tied to commodity reversal timing (international pig iron price, expected price increases) rather than purely structural margin improvements.
  • Execution risk is concentrated in foundry ramp-up (Solapur)—management has repeatedly framed it as complex and time-consuming, suggesting that even with demand, volume delivery may remain uneven quarter-to-quarter.