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Indian Company Investor Calls

Seshaasai Sees IoT Growth, Holds FY27 Guidance Until Q1

May 26, 2026 7 mins read Firehose Gupta

Seshaasai Technologies Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (held May 19, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly frames FY26 as “landmark” and “resilience” with “healthy margins,” and looks ahead with “cautiously optimistic” language.
  • They highlight momentum in IoT (“growth of 45%”, “momentum build up”) and new capabilities (Navi Mumbai/Kundli operational; GSMA SAS-UP certification; SIM division “started contributing materially”).
  • However, they avoid hard FY27 guidance due to “geopolitical situation and uncertainty,” which tempers the optimism.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Diversification & resilience despite softer demand: FY26 revenue down 1.5% YoY, attributed mainly to “temporary moderation in the Payment Solutions business,” offset by strong Communication & Fulfilment and scaling IoT.
  • Recurring revenue stability: Management claims 97%–98% recurring/annuity-like revenue, driven by card issuance programs, compliance-driven communication, fulfilment cycles, and RFID/IoT repeat ordering.
  • Margin expansion driven by execution + mix + lower finance costs: Q4 EBITDA margin 30.8% (+330 bps YoY) and FY26 EBITDA margin 27.4% (+204 bps YoY), attributed to operating leverage, procurement efficiencies, and post-IPO finance cost reduction.
  • Technology-led platform shift: Transition toward “solutions-oriented and platform-led” organization; continued investment in “innovation, automation, premiumization, and new growth platforms.”
  • IoT as the growth engine: IoT revenue +45% YoY in FY26; traction in RFID/traceability projects; SIM/eSIM capabilities expanding.
  • Capacity & capability build-out: Facilities operational status update (Navi Mumbai & Kundli operational; Nagpur & Bengaluru under construction) and patent pipeline (6 new patents filed in FY26; 19 total applications; 5 granted).
  • Shareholder return: Board recommended dividend INR 2.5 per share.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Margins, FX impact, and cost structure

  • Core question(s):
  • Whether gross margin improvement despite import dependence/rupee depreciation is a concern for Q1.
  • What drives margin expansion and whether FX could reverse benefits.
  • Management response:
  • Gross margin improvement is “consistent trend over the last few quarters.”
  • Cites sourcing optimization: “procurement consolidation, advanced inventory planning… vendor payment…” delivering “about 7% to 8% savings” at material level for the year.
  • For Q4 specifically: FX adverse movement existed, but operating leverage and timing of procurement helped; margin improvement also from lower finance costs and interest income post-IPO.
  • Assessment (evasive/strong/partial):
  • Partial/hedged: acknowledges FX sensitivity (“adverse foreign exchange movement” in Q4) but does not quantify Q1 risk; relies on operational levers and timing.

Theme B: Working capital intensity trend

  • Core question(s):
  • Working capital days/net working capital days rising over two years—will it reverse in FY27?
  • Management response:
  • Explains year-end working capital reflects inventory build to navigate global challenges in Q1/Q4.
  • IPO cash may “lopsided” the picture; inventory and trade receivables are “more or less in line” and monitored.
  • Assessment:
  • Reasonable but non-committal: no explicit target for reversal; frames as temporary/inventory-driven.

Theme C: IoT traction, client wins, and FY27 momentum

  • Core question(s):
  • New client wins and expected traction in FY27 for IoT.
  • Details on eSIM/SIM commercialization timing and approvals.
  • Management response:
  • IoT momentum: projects moving from “on the anvil” to fruition; expansion from apparel to categories (cosmetics/accessories).
  • Localization/inlay manufacturing to reduce import dependence; focus on Tier 2 retailers after ROI proof in Tier 1.
  • eSIM: GSMA SAS-UP audit completed; “one more process… by July, August” before commercialization; SIM already supplying a “leading telecom player.”
  • Assessment:
  • Strong operational specificity on certification timeline (July/Aug) and commercialization gating.
  • Still no quantified revenue ramp for eSIM beyond qualitative “adding traction.”

Theme D: Payment Solutions decline—root cause and outlook

  • Core question(s):
  • Why payment solutions declined FY24→FY25 and continued into FY26—product mix vs structural factors?
  • Whether volumes will bottom out and improve.
  • Management response:
  • Attributes decline mainly to renewal cycle disruption post-COVID and banks rationalizing renewals; timing differences and tighter regulatory/compliance environments.
  • Expects renewal volumes to improve as banking cycles normalize: “trend to probably bottom out… better momentum… upward trajectory.”
  • Mentions premiumization (metal/biometric/secure chip form factors) and transit programs (state government projects, metro cards).
  • Assessment:
  • Clear causal narrative (renewal base + COVID lull + bank policy/risk mitigation).
  • No hard guidance on when volumes recover; relies on “expect” language.

Theme E: Guidance, capex, and margin outlook for FY27

  • Core question(s):
  • Formal guidance for FY27 (segment growth, margins).
  • Capex expectations.
  • Management response:
  • Guidance withheld: “difficult to give guidance for FY ’27… refrain… revisit at the end of Q1.”
  • Capex plan: “INR 160 crores to INR 200-odd crores” across Payment Solutions and IoT plus modernization; some from IPO funds.
  • Margin outlook: wants to “wait and see” FX/input prices; expects “good set of numbers” but no quantification.
  • Assessment:
  • Evasive on quant guidance (consistent with earlier “wait until Q1” stance).
  • Capex range is explicit.

Theme F: Capital allocation philosophy & capacity utilization

  • Core question(s):
  • Underlying theme of capital allocation over 10 years.
  • RFID/SIM/eSIM capacity utilization and installed capacity.
  • Management response:
  • Capital allocation mantra: recurring revenue + technology + scale + “mandatory” products for end customers.
  • RFID utilization: ~70% year; 80–85% in Q4.
  • SIM utilization: ~30% of stated capacity; installed capacity ~7 million SIMs/month.
  • eSIM: not yet commercial; capacity range 2–3 million eSIMs/month depending on form factor; expects eSIM revenues from H2 (subject to compliance/integration).
  • Assessment:
  • Strong operational transparency on utilization/capacity.

Theme G: Patents and competitive exclusivity

  • Core question(s):
  • Does metal card patent grant exclusivity vs peers?
  • Metal card mix and whether patent enables higher growth.
  • Management response:
  • Clarifies patent regime: others can produce if they have their own novelty; patent protects the specific process/novelty.
  • Claims patent filed Oct 2021; “protected from the day you file it,” and grant mainly improves enforcement.
  • Metal cards contribute ~4% of payment solutions; hopes to improve in coming year.
  • Assessment:
  • Good clarification; reduces risk of “false exclusivity” expectations.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Capex (FY27):INR 160 crores to INR 200-odd crores” across Payment Solutions, IoT, and modernization.
  • IoT growth expectation (qual + partial quant):
  • IoT FY27 expected “definitely… better than” FY26.
  • Management also states: “We should be definitely growing upward of 47% in the IoT business” (implies FY27 IoT growth >47% YoY).
  • eSIM commercialization timing (qual with timing window):
  • GSMA process completion by “July, August”; commercialization thereafter; eSIM revenues expected from H2 (as stated earlier in Q&A).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • FY27 guidance will be revisited after Q1 due to “geopolitical situation and uncertainty.”
  • Payment Solutions: management expects volumes to “bottom out” and improve as banking cycles normalize, but no numeric targets.
  • Margins: expects “good set of numbers” but will depend on “foreign exchange currency” and “input prices.”
  • IoT mix/margins: expects IoT contribution to increase and “more meaningfully towards the overall margins.”

5. Standout Statements (directly revealing)

  • Recurring revenue stability:around 97% to 98% of our revenue is recurring in nature.”
  • Payment decline attribution:temporary moderation in the Payment Solutions business due to industry-wide factors.”
  • Margin drivers (mechanics): margin expansion from “gross margin improvement… reduction in the finance cost… and… interest income post IPO funds.”
  • IoT momentum & expansion:projects… started gaining some momentum and they show good promise for the coming year.”
  • eSIM commercialization gating:one more process… by July, August… then we should be starting to commercialize.”
  • No FY27 revenue/margin guidance yet:difficult to give guidance for FY ’27… revisit… at the end of Q1.”
  • IoT growth target direction:upward of 47% in the IoT business.”
  • Metal card contribution:metal card overall… contributes close to about 4% in the payment.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No quantitative FY27 guidance on revenue/margins despite being asked multiple times; repeatedly defers to “end of Q1.”
FX/input price uncertainty explicitly cited as a reason to avoid margin guidance (“wait and see… foreign exchange… input prices”).
Working capital intensity rising over two years—management explains inventory build, but provides no reversal target.

Positive signals
Operational transparency: capacity utilization (RFID 70%→80–85% in Q4), SIM capacity (7m/month), eSIM range (2–3m/month).
Clear commercialization milestones for eSIM (GSMA process by July/Aug; SIM already supplying a telecom player).
Margin improvement credibility: ties EBITDA/PAT expansion to identifiable levers (procurement savings, operating leverage, finance cost reduction, interest income).


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

Note: The prompt indicates no previous transcripts were provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”). Therefore, historical comparison across prior 3–4 calls 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 is consistent in attributing FY26 softness to Payment Solutions renewal-cycle effects and in deferring FY27 guidance due to macro/FX uncertainty. But broader credibility vs prior calls cannot be evaluated.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Not assessable across calls.

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Not assessable without prior call data.

If you share the previous 3–4 call transcripts, I can complete the historical consistency/credibility and “missed expectations” sections precisely.