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Indian Company Investor Calls

Sambhv Steel’s Q4 margin jump and INR7,500–8,000 outlook

May 15, 2026 7 mins read Firehose Gupta

Sambhv Steel Tubes Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (held May 11, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “landmark year” and strong growth: “growth of total sales volume by 37%, revenue 60%, EBITDA 79% and PAT by 147%.”
  • Forward-looking language is confident: “we remain confident about our long-term growth opportunities” and “well-positioned to deliver sustainable growth.”
  • Even while discussing risks (war/monsoon), they frame them as manageable due to captive power and energy switching.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Strong FY26 performance driven by integrated model & value-added mix
  • Mix shift toward “high margin high value-added offering.”
  • EBITDA margin “remain over 11%” for FY; Q4 margin “improved significantly to 13%.”
  • Capacity expansion execution focus (Kesda greenfield + brownfield debottlenecking)
  • Greenfield: Kesda phases progressing; Phase 1 (3,60,000 tpa stainless steel capacity) on track for commissioning in Q4 FY27.
  • Brownfield: debottlenecking for SS CR coils completed; consent to operate expected “this week.”
  • ERW expansion via DFT: 1,50,000 tpa with capex ~INR50 crores; expected by Q4 FY27.
  • Power/energy resilience as a competitive advantage
  • Captive power: 30 MW at Sarora (100% self-sufficient) and 25 MW at Kesda (self-sufficient for phase 1 rolling mill).
  • LNG/PNG switching and domestic coal reliance used to argue war insulation.
  • Debt prudence narrative
  • Explicit stance against “debt-fuelled growth,” with internal leverage guardrails.
  • Mentions IPO purpose: “to go financial prudent and reduce our debt.”
  • Market/demand optimism tied to India infrastructure & steel consumption
  • Management cites solar, railways, metros, airports, warehousing as long-term demand tailwinds.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Capex plan, funding mix (debt vs internal accrual), and debt levels

  • Core questions
  • Breakdown of total capex plan (prior INR930 cr; spent INR200 cr; now additional INR200 cr), how much completed, and funding (debt vs internal).
  • Peak debt after all capex; debt/EBITDA prudence.
  • Captive power coverage after both plants.
  • Management response
  • Updated capex math:
    • Prior announced capex: INR930 cr
    • Spent: ~INR200 cr last quarter; now increased to ~INR300 cr
    • Balance: ~INR630 cr
  • Planned term loan: ~INR675 cr for Kesda capex (stated as planned).
  • Additional capex this quarter: ~INR200 cr, funded via internal accrual + up to INR150 cr debt.
  • Power plant economics: captive power expected to save INR60–70 cr; DFT unlock INR40–50 cr operating value; total operating boost INR100–120 cr (management’s framing).
  • Captive power:
    • Sarora 30 MW:100% self-sufficient
    • Kesda 25 MW: self-sufficient for phase 1 rolling mill
    • Kuthrel: still imports some power; planned integration later.
  • Peak debt: “peak long-term debt of around INR800 crores at max” plus INR200–300 cr working capital.
  • Debt prudence guardrails: long-term debt not more than 1.5x net worth and 1.5x forward EBITDA.
  • Evasive/partial/unusually strong
  • Some funding details are directional (e.g., “planned to take around INR675 cr term loan”) but not fully reconciled to the balance sheet numbers analysts referenced.
  • Strong confidence on operating value uplift (INR100–120 cr) without detailed sensitivity.

Theme B: EBITDA per ton sustainability, drivers of Q4 spike, and pass-through

  • Core questions
  • Sustainable EBITDA/ton going forward; why EBITDA/ton peaked in Q4.
  • Whether realization increases flow through to EBITDA or are offset by raw material costs.
  • Management response
  • Q1 FY27 EBITDA/ton guidance: INR7,500–8,000.
  • Explanation for Q4 strength:
    • Raw material procurement timing: Q3 procurement used in Q4 at “very bottom price.”
    • HR coil price dynamics: Q4 had pricing improvement due to market conditions; “no extra capacity today” and “they have to give some extra discount.”
    • Use of older stocks and raw material/finished goods price gaps.
  • Pass-through estimate: 50%–60% of realization increase to EBITDA; remainder via credit notes/discounts and cost increases (zinc, energy, war-time costs).
  • Evasive/partial/unusually strong
  • HR coil prices will be fine” and “we will perform even better” are scenario-based and not backed with quantified hedging or contracts.
  • They provide pass-through ranges but not a full bridge from Q4 to Q1.

Theme C: Product mix, utilization, and capacity-to-sales mechanics (SS value chain)

  • Core questions
  • Utilization targets by segment after debottlenecking/DFT.
  • SS production vs sales discrepancy; how 58k capacity relates to higher SS production/sales numbers.
  • ERW/DFT coil sourcing split (in-house vs outside).
  • Management response
  • Utilization targets:
    • SS: 60–65% (after consent to operate)
    • MS pipes/tubes: 65–70%
    • GP: 80–90%
    • ERW: 70–75% at max
  • SS mechanics:
    • Rated SS capacity: 1,16,000 tpa after brownfield expansion.
    • Production includes intermediates (slabs → HR coils → CR coils); saleable end product is CR coils.
    • Conversion: “HR to CR… around 98% recovery.”
  • ERW DFT sourcing:
    • Current: 15–16k in-house coil vs 4–5k outside (for ~20k/month pipe production).
    • Post ramp: 20–25k in-house vs 5–10k outside.
  • Evasive/partial/unusually strong
  • They state product-wise EBITDA/realization breakdown is difficult due to integrated transfer pricing: “system doesn’t allow us to calculate… transfer pricing… not happening the way it should have been happening.”

Theme D: War/monsoon impact and demand outlook

  • Core questions
  • Impact of West Asia war on current quarter and if unresolved.
  • Monsoon expectations and demand implications.
  • Management response
  • War insulation:
    • Captive power reliance first.
    • Energy switching: “switched… from LPG to LNG in January 2026.”
    • PNG supply claims “uninterruptedly being provided.”
    • Domestic coal dependence vs imported coking coal for large plants.
    • They claim adverse pricing impact benefited them.
  • Monsoon:
    • Cites public reports/El Niño: “below normal monsoon” possible; expects “slight demand uptick” or at least cyclic stability.
  • Evasive/partial/unusually strong
  • we are totally… mostly depending” is qualitative; no quantified exposure (e.g., energy cost % of COGS, FX sensitivity).

Theme E: PLI 1.2 extraction and timelines

  • Core questions
  • How much PLI incentive can be extracted; cap and percentage.
  • Management response
  • PLI can be availed till 2030/2031, capped at ~INR200 cr or tonnage production.
  • Expected commissioning: Q4 2027, giving 3–4 financial years to avail.
  • Incentive percentage: 13%–15% depending on thickness/grade.
  • Evasive/partial/unusually strong
  • No explicit confirmation of which grades/thicknesses will be produced to maximize incentive.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY26 results (historical, not guidance):
  • Sales volume +37%, revenue +60%, EBITDA +79%, PAT +147%
  • EBITDA margin >11% (FY), Q4 EBITDA margin 13%
  • Q1 FY27 EBITDA per ton: INR7,500–8,000
  • FY27 EBITDA (average): INR7,000–8,000 (management also reiterates “quite achievable”)
  • Volume growth vs FY26: 10%–15%
  • Commissioning timelines:
  • Kesda SS Phase 1 (3,60,000 tpa): commissioning Q4 FY27; benefit in FY28
  • ERW DFT line (1,50,000 tpa): by Q4 FY27
  • Utilization targets (post expansion / stabilization):
  • SS: 60–65%
  • MS pipes/tubes: 65–70%
  • GP: 80–90%
  • ERW: 70–75% at max
  • Debt outlook (peak):
  • Long-term debt peak: ~INR800 cr
  • Working capital debt: INR200–300 cr
  • PLI 1.2 incentive:
  • Incentive %: 13%–15%
  • Cap: ~INR200 cr or tonnage production
  • Availability window: till 2030/2031

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Management expects HR coil price normalization (“HR coil price will not go very low”) and therefore EBITDA/ton stability.
  • They emphasize captive power + energy switching as key to resilience during geopolitical disruptions.
  • They suggest margins could be 10–12% (or up to 12–12.5%) depending on conditions, and net profit margin bandwidth around ~5% ±1%.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Performance framing:FY26 have been a landmark year” with “revenue 60%, EBITDA 79% and PAT by 147%.”
  • Capex execution confidence:Touchwood no delay is expected yetachieving by Q4 2027.”
  • Debt philosophy:management… are very prudent on raising debt capital” and “debt-fuelled growth is where we are very much sceptical.”
  • Power self-sufficiency:Sarora plant… 100% self-sufficient” and Kesda “self-sufficient for phase one.”
  • EBITDA/ton sustainability:we still believe INR7,500 to INR8,000 for our Q1 is expected.”
  • Pass-through:50% to 60% is actually passed on to the EBITDA level.”
  • SS value chain clarification: saleable SS is only CR coils; intermediates are captively consumed (“saleable out… is only CR coils”).
  • War impact claim:we were totally… mostly depending on our in-house power requirement” and “we weren’t impacted by this war” (with domestic coal argument).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear operational explanations for Q4 margin strength (procurement timing, HR coil dynamics, stock usage).
– Specific commissioning timelines for major projects (Kesda Phase 1; ERW DFT).
– Quantified debt prudence metrics (1.5x net worth / 1.5x forward EBITDA).
– SS production vs sales mechanics explained with conversion/recovery rates.

Red flags
Transfer pricing / product-level profitability transparency: “system doesn’t allow us to calculate” product-wise EBITDA/realization.
– Some claims are assertive but not fully evidenced (e.g., war insulation, HR coil price stability, “no dumping pressure”).
– Capex funding discussion is partly planned (term loan planned; internal accrual mix) without full reconciliation to balance sheet/OCF assumptions.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

Note: Previous 3–4 earnings call transcripts were not provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”), so a true cross-period consistency/commitment check cannot be performed.

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Limited: within this call, management provides multiple quantified ranges and timelines, but credibility vs prior promises cannot be validated.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Not assessable (no prior transcripts available).