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Borosil Targets FY27 Solar EBITDA Gain Amid Hydra Headwinds

May 28, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Borosil Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Conference Call (held May 22, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral (leaning Optimistic)

  • Management acknowledges multiple near-term headwinds: “BIS order… supply chain challenges” impacting Hydra “revenue and margins” and “West Asia crisis… LPG… force majeure” affecting Q4 operations.
  • Despite this, they repeatedly emphasize structural growth and continued investment: “we are not stopping our growth and expansion plans” and “fully… long-term growth trajectory… will continue unabated.”
  • Guidance is mostly qualitative, with confidence in medium-term targets (e.g., EBITDA margin), but limited hard near-term commitments.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Hydra category disruption (core drag):
  • Hydra bottle sales pressured due to BIS/QCO implementation and resulting supply chain constraints; management links margin pressure to “lower sales of Hydra without… reverse operating leverage.”
  • They are building in-house vacuum-insulated stainless steel bottle capacity (Stylenest India) to restore compliance and supply.
  • Glassware margin pressure from external cost/competition:
  • Management cites China dumping/overcapacity as a persistent margin irritant.
  • Also cites gas/input cost increases and lagged pricing actions: “price increase… lag impact.”
  • Energy cost optimization via solar + battery:
  • Solar expansion (20 MWp + BESS) expected to reduce power cost; management quantifies EBITDA benefit (see Guidance).
  • Opalware demand is “muted” but capacity is high:
  • Opalware utilization described as ~90–95%, but management expects muted growth for “the next year or so” and is prioritizing debottlenecking over major capex.
  • Ongoing capex pipeline to strengthen Make-in-India and supply resilience:
  • Vacuum-insulated bottle plant (3 lines; 2 by end of Q1 FY27, 3rd by end of Q2 FY27).
  • Additional glass furnace capacity expansion (25 → 32 tonnes/day) and Bharuch outsourced glassware facility (capex ~INR42 cr; by end of Q3 FY27).
  • Medium-term profitability ambition:
  • Reiterates targets for revenue growth and EBITDA margin in the medium term despite FY26 margin softness.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Margin pressure—glassware (gas costs, China dumping, pricing lag)

  • Core question(s):
  • Why did glassware gross/EBITDA margins remain lower vs Q4 FY25 despite ramp-up?
  • Will margins remain under pressure while Indian gas prices stay high?
  • Status/timeline of anti-dumping investigation (borosilicate vs soda-lime)?
  • Management response:
  • China dumping: “China is dumping… in virtually every category.”
  • Input cost shock: “cost of gas… gone up… especially in Q4,” plus pricing lag.
  • Anti-dumping: applies to borosilicate glass only; expected outcome in “6 to 9 months.”
  • On gas differential: acknowledges China also rising but “may not… 2.5x” as in India; rupee depreciation helps imports but costs rose too.
  • Notable signals / strength / evasiveness:
  • Strong attribution to external factors (dumping + gas), but limited quantification of margin bridge.
  • Anti-dumping timeline is relatively specific (6–9 months), which is a clearer commitment than most other near-term items.

Theme B: Cost savings from solar plant

  • Core question(s):
  • Expected FY27 EBITDA cost savings from solar plant.
  • Management response:
  • CFO: “estimated to be about INR28 crores at EBITDA level, for FY27.”
  • Notable signals:
  • Clear quantitative number—one of the few hard FY27 figures provided.

Theme C: Opalware outlook—utilization, capex, demand/margin

  • Core question(s):
  • Opalware utilization, capex plans, market outlook.
  • Competitive intensity/pricing pressure and qualitative FY27 margin outlook.
  • Management response:
  • Utilization: “close to 100%… 90% to 95%.”
  • Demand: “market has slowed down… demand growth has not been as robust.”
  • Capex: no major capex (no third line); focus on debottlenecking and shifting attention to faster-growth categories.
  • Competition: management disagrees with dealer view of aggressive pricing; says competition pressure is not the main issue—cost pressure is.
  • Pricing pass-through: cost increases need “a couple of quarters… 1, maybe 2 quarters.”
  • Notable signals / evasiveness:
  • Provides a clear stance: muted growth for “next year or so,” and capex restraint in opalware.
  • Margin guidance remains qualitative (short-run pressure possible due to gas/cost pass-through).

Theme D: Hydra inventory, working capital, and supply normalization

  • Core question(s):
  • Is Hydra inventory fully depleted after prior QCO/BIS stocking?
  • Will inventory/working capital keep rising given Hydra sales weakness?
  • Management response:
  • Hydra inventory built last year is “more or less all depleted.”
  • Inventory growth this year is driven by appliance inventory due to QCO timelines and by producing more glassware due to furnace efficiency.
  • Expects inventory “stop… hopefully this year itself” and reversal from next year.
  • Notable signals:
  • Acknowledges two consecutive years of inventory growth but frames it as one-off / policy-driven and expects normalization.

Theme E: Capex and funding (FY27 capex, debt stance)

  • Core question(s):
  • FY27 capex numbers; whether additional capex in appliances/glassware.
  • Debt strategy given capex and prior caution.
  • Management response:
  • FY27 capex: “about INR90 plus crores” (earlier stated) and later “INR110 crores… broadly.”
  • Maintenance capex: “INR20–25 crores a year.”
  • Debt: management says they’re “very cautious,” operating cash flow (~INR120 cr) supports funding; short-term debt may rise but “no challenge.”
  • Notable signals / evasiveness:
  • Capex is given as ranges/broad numbers, not a strict guidance.
  • Debt answer is reassuring but still timing-dependent (“if there’s some timing… may go up”).

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 solar savings (EBITDA level):estimated to be about INR28 crores.”
  • FY27 capex (broad):INR110 crores… broadly” (with maintenance capex ~INR20–25 cr/year).
  • Medium-term targets (qualitative but with numbers):
  • Revenue growth: “enhancing the revenue by 15% to 20% year-on-year.”
  • EBITDA margin: “achieving EBITDA of closer to 20-odd percent in the medium term.”

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Hydra: challenges are framed as short-term, with expectation that supply normalization will improve after new plant lines come online (2 lines by end of Q1 FY27; 3rd by end of Q2 FY27).
  • Opalware:muted growth” expected for “the next year or so,” with no major capex beyond debottlenecking.
  • Glassware: growth depends on demand; supply chain capacity is not the constraint due to inventory and planned capacity additions.
  • Margins: near-term margin pressure likely persists due to gas costs and China dumping, with cost pass-through lag of “1–2 quarters.”

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • Hydra as the margin/revenue culprit: operating EBITDA margin down due to “lower sales of Hydra without… reverse operating leverage.”
  • China dumping explicitly blamed for margin pressure:China is dumping on virtually in every category.”
  • Solar savings quantified:estimated to be about INR28 crores at EBITDA level, for FY27.”
  • Opalware growth outlook toned down:for the next year or so, I think we are going to expect to see muted growth.”
  • Anti-dumping timeline:6 to 9 months.”
  • Medium-term commitment despite FY26 being tough:we are fully committed to enhancing the revenue by 15% to 20%… and achieving EBITDA of closer to 20-odd percent in the medium term.”
  • Hydra inventory normalization claim:Hydra inventory… is more or less all depleted.”
  • Glassware demand vs supply framing:growth only from a demand perspective… is what we have to look out for.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Margin pressure drivers are largely external (dumping, gas) → risk that they persist longer than management expects.
Guidance is mostly medium-term; near-term (FY27) is supported by solar savings but no consolidated margin guidance.
Inventory/working capital: management admits “2 years consecutive of inventory growth,” even if they expect reversal.
Opalware narrative softening: “muted growth” and no major capex suggests upside may be limited near-term.

Positive signals
Clear capex execution milestones for vacuum-insulated bottle lines (Q1 FY27 and Q2 FY27).
Quantified FY27 EBITDA benefit from solar (INR28 cr).
Anti-dumping timeline provided (6–9 months).
Debt comfort supported by operating cash flow and internal accruals.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): optimistic medium-term; acknowledged near-term softness; emphasized structural tailwinds (plastic-to-glass, health).
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): still confident; but margin explanations increasingly tied to Made in India transition and Hydra/BIS impacts.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): still resilient; but Hydra supply constraints remained a dominant issue; management guided toward “low-20s” EBITDA margin.
  • Q4 FY26 (May 2026): tone becomes more cautious on margins (EBITDA margin down to 15.1% FY26) and more explicit about external shocks (gas/LPG force majeure + China dumping).
  • Classification shift: More cautious than earlier calls, especially on near-term margin trajectory and opalware growth.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Hydra supply normalization / shelf recovery
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26, Feb 2026): expected to be “over the worst of it” and “Q4 will be better than Q3” from a supply perspective.
  • What happened by Q4 FY26: Hydra still described as substantially pressured; FY26 EBITDA margin fell (16.3% → 15.1%) and Hydra remains the key drag.
  • Flag:Missed / delayed (improvement not enough to prevent margin compression).
  • EBITDA margin path (“low-20s” target)
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26, Feb 2026):we should be in the low-20s… in the very short foreseeable future… this year… closer to 18%…”
  • Outcome in FY26 (Q4 FY26 call): operating EBITDA margin 15.1% for FY26; no evidence that “low-20s” was reached.
  • Flag:Not delivered (timing slipped materially).
  • Opalware capex restraint
  • Past statement (Q1 FY26, Aug 2025): opalware capacity not at 100%; planned de-bottlenecking and later decisions.
  • Current (Q4 FY26): utilization 90–95%, but “not considering any major capex” and expects muted growth.
  • Flag: ✅/⏳ Consistent (no major capex; narrative aligns).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Hydra remains central, but the explanation broadens:
  • Earlier calls focused on BIS compliance + domestic sourcing ecosystem ramp-up.
  • Current call adds West Asia crisis/LPG force majeure and China dumping as additional margin threats.
  • Opalware story shifts from “refresh needed” to “muted growth for next year or so” with explicit capex restraint.
  • Glassware margin story shifts from internal cost optimization to external competitive/cost shocks (dumping + gas).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium-Low
  • Repeated medium-term margin confidence (“low-20s”) did not materialize in FY26.
  • Management provides plausible reasons (Hydra, gas, dumping), but the timing of margin recovery appears to have slipped.
  • However, they do provide more concrete execution milestones (bottle plant lines, solar savings, anti-dumping timeline), which improves credibility on operational execution.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / category mix: Glassware and opalware growth continues, but Hydra disruption dominates overall profitability.
  • Direction: Stable-to-deteriorating for margins; stable growth in glassware/opals.
  • Margins: Deteriorated vs prior year (16.3% → 15.1% FY26).
  • Direction: Deteriorating in FY26.
  • Make in India / compliance capex: Continues to expand.
  • Direction: Improving/stable (more in-house manufacturing to reduce policy risk).
  • External competitive pressure (China dumping): becomes more explicit in Q4 FY26.
  • Direction: Worsening (or at least more acknowledged).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • A risk that was previously framed as “supply constraints improving” (Hydra) appears to have persisted long enough to materially affect FY26 margins—suggesting either:
  • ramp-up took longer than expected, or
  • demand/shelf recovery was weaker than hoped, or
  • cost/competitive pressures offset any operational gains.
  • Management increasingly uses policy + external shock explanations, but provides fewer quantitative bridges for margin recovery—indicating uncertainty around the timing of normalization.