Campus Activewear Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (25 May 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management repeatedly emphasizes “strong performance”, “robust demand”, and “well placed” positioning.
- Forward-looking language is confident: “remain firmly focused”, “should benefit us”, “we are fairly confident”, “good recovery in place” (with caveats on geopolitics).
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Growth led by channel mix + online acceleration
- Q4 FY26: online +18.9% (management), distribution +5.5%.
- FY26: online +9.8%, distribution +10.5%.
- Premiumization supported by sneakers + women/kids mix
- ASP up ~7% YoY to INR 683 (FY26).
- Sneakers described as gaining share: “rising share of total volumes”; sneaker portfolio momentum highlighted as a core growth engine.
- Speed to market / product pipeline
- “accelerated time to market of 80–100 days”
- “nearly 250 new SKUs in FY26”
- Manufacturing capacity expansion underway (Pant Nagar ramp + Paonta Sahib stabilization)
- Paonta Sahib stabilized; Pant Nagar commenced production.
- Current output: ~2 lakh average monthly output, “likely to double by end of FY27.”
- Management also frames capacity as not a constraint for sneakers.
- Margin protection via calibrated pricing despite inflation
- Mentions geopolitical/inflationary pressure and “timely calibrated price actions” to safeguard margins.
- Working capital discipline + strong returns
- ROE 18.1%, ROCE 22.4% (as of March ’26).
- Brand refresh as a strategic evolution
- New logo unveiled; brand identity shift tied to “Move your way” and consumer culture.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Pricing, GST/MRP mechanics, and demand impact
- Core questions
- Why did price pyramid shift (more pairs below INR 1,000)?
- Was pricing increased due to raw material inflation? How much?
- Will pricing hikes be sufficient; any demand shock?
- Management response
- Price pyramid shift attributed to GST revision (12% to 5%) and MRP corrections; clarified that ASP is realization, not MRP.
- On inflation: management avoided exact % hike numbers but said they took “proportionately” across the range and “do not see RM impact going worse”; expects RM peak passed.
- Demand: acknowledged “resistance” when taking strong price across portfolio, but mitigation via better supply and product launches; April start described as positive.
- Notable / evasive elements
- No numeric price hike provided despite direct question.
- Margin/demand outlook framed qualitatively; no quantitative guidance.
Theme B: Online growth quality, marketplace vs outright, and ASP/margin drivers
- Core questions
- What helped online mix improve?
- Why was ASP growth low in Q4 vs expectations?
- How do GT charges/accounting changes affect ASP and revenue?
- D2C definition and margin profile by channel type.
- Management response
- Online growth attributed to marketplace focus over years and improvements across Amazon/Snapdeal/brand.com, plus partners scaling.
- ASP Q4 subdued explained by portal accounting change (from 16th June): freight billed separately by portals; GT charges impact reduced realized revenue/ASP.
- D2C clarified: includes D2C online (portals) and D2C offline (EBOs/franchise/large format); margin threshold approach described.
- Notable / unusually strong answers
- Clear accounting explanation for ASP: “INR 18 towards freight is being billed directly… hence… ASP lower.”
- Management did not provide detailed margin-by-channel numbers, but gave a coherent accounting bridge.
Theme C: Working capital / inventory days and replenishment model
- Core questions
- Inventory days increased—what drives it and is it sustainable?
- How does replenishment work (fresh vs replenishment mix)?
- Management response
- Inventory days increase framed as correction from prior over-tight levels: they had deferred correction earlier; now at “right level” to sustain growth.
- Replenishment described as an operational model using DMS/digital tools and distributor/retailer meets; management said they’re moving toward more “made-to-order” behavior but did not quantify replenishment vs fresh mix.
- Evasive/partial
- Replenishment split question was not answered with a clean %; management emphasized process rather than numbers.
Theme D: Capacity, CAPEX, and sneaker scaling
- Core questions
- Is sneaker growth capacity-constrained?
- CAPEX outlook and whether FY27 CAPEX normalizes after Pant Nagar acquisition.
- Can sneaker output scale to drive large growth?
- Management response
- Capacity: not constrained; Pant Nagar phases target up to 6 lakh pairs/month; HRD2 up to 2 lakh pairs/month; total target 8–9 lakh pairs/month.
- CAPEX: FY27 expected to return to normal range; Pant Nagar acquisition drove higher CAPEX in FY26; expansion over next ~3 years.
- Notable
- Provided specific production targets (8–9 lakh/month) and output ramp logic.
Theme E: Brand refresh effectiveness and marketing spend discipline
- Core questions
- Why refresh logo now; expected benefit?
- Will ad spend increase due to logo change?
- Cost-saving areas—will marketing be cut?
- Management response
- Brand refresh described as long-planned; supported by consumer studies and positive feedback from consumers and trade partners.
- Marketing: explicitly said no compromise; logo spend is “part of regular spend” and more focused on brand building vs performance marketing.
- Ad spend not framed as a cost-cut lever.
- Strong signals
- Management reiterated a long-standing philosophy: “We don’t want to deliver margins just by cutting corners with respect to marketing.”
Theme F: BIS compliance / industry consolidation / competitive landscape
- Core questions
- Any BIS relaxations chatter?
- How much market share gain from BIS-driven disruption?
- Are competitors slowing production?
- Management response
- BIS relaxations: called “just a chatter”; they are fully covered and “hardly any stock of BIS” left; compliant by 31 July.
- Market share: they track industry growth and claim they’re growing faster than industry (industry not beyond 7–8%), implying share gain.
- Competitors: signs of slowing production due to inability to pass on costs and absorb RM.
- Notable
- BIS compliance timeline provided; competitive moat narrative strengthened.
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- Margin guidance (aspiration/range): Management reiterated prior range 17%–19% EBITDA margin.
- CFO: “endeavor to stay within the range… 17% to 19%.”
- No FY27 margin number given; one analyst asked and management said “No guidance, unfortunately.”
- CAPEX direction (qualitative with some numbers)
- FY27: return to normal range; Pant Nagar ramp capex not expected to repeat at FY26 levels.
- (From Q&A context) routine/maintenance CAPEX described as ~INR 40–50 crores (in earlier call context; in this call, they mainly said FY27 won’t see FY26-like capex).
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- Demand
- Management expects RM pricing peak passed and pricing will not change (implies margin support in latter half).
- Demand: “strong start” in Q1; April start positive; but war/geopolitics could affect demand—“anybody’s guess” if it prolongs.
- Capacity
- Sneakers scaling supported by ramping output; management says capacity is not a constraint.
- Marketing
- Marketing spend will remain disciplined but not cut; focus on brand building.
5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)
- Channel + execution
- “12.3% YOY growth driven by 18.9% growth in our online channel and 5.5% growth in our distribution channel.”
- Pricing mechanics
- “This price is the price which the company realizes… movement… reflection of corrections in MRP… post the GST change.”
- “GT charges impact… portals changed their accounting… freight is being billed directly by them… hence… ASP… lower.”
- Inflation stance
- “We do not see the RM impact going worse from here… pricing will not change.”
- Capacity ramp
- “Currently… ~2 lakhs average monthly output, which is likely to double by end of FY27.”
- “I would not say that capacity is a constraint… targeting… 8–9 lakh pair monthly production of sneakers.”
- Marketing discipline
- “We don’t want to deliver margins just by cutting corners with respect to marketing.”
- BIS compliance
- “We are fully covered… hardly any stock of BIS… fully compliant by 31st of July.”
- No margin guidance
- “No guidance, unfortunately. But we will definitely endeavor to stay within… 17% to 19%.”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
– No numeric price hike disclosure despite direct questions (limits ability to assess margin resilience).
– No FY27 quantitative guidance on margins despite repeated margin range aspiration.
– Geopolitics caveat: demand outlook depends on war duration (“anybody’s guess”).
– Inventory days increased (though management claims it’s the “right level”); could indicate working capital risk if demand softens.
Positive signals
– Clear accounting explanation for ASP/margin movements (GT charges/freight accounting).
– Strong operational narrative: time-to-market, SKU pipeline, and manufacturing ramp.
– Marketing stance is consistent and not being cut to chase margins.
– BIS compliance confidence and claim of competitor production slowing.
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls)
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Current (Q4/FY26): More Optimistic
- Stronger emphasis on execution + capacity ramp + “should benefit” language.
- Prior calls
- Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): optimistic but more about festive/GST tailwinds and brand campaign (“You Go, Girl”).
- Q2/H1 FY26 (Nov 2025): optimistic; focused on distribution growth and GST reforms; still navigating online model changes.
- Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): more cautious due to SAP + warehouse transition disrupting online.
- Shift driver
- Management now frames disruptions as behind them and adds harder operational levers (Pant Nagar ramp, time-to-market, SKU cadence).
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes
- Warehouse/SAP disruption recovery (Q1 FY26)
- Past: disruption caused online sales loss; expectation of recovery in subsequent quarters.
- Current: online growth strong in Q4/FY26 (+18.9%) and management no longer highlights warehouse/SAP as a live issue.
- ✅ Delivered (disruption no longer a dominant narrative).
- BIS liquidation timeline
- Past (Q4 FY25 / earlier): BIS cleanup expected to be over by March (in Q4 FY25 call).
- Current: BIS compliance targeted by 31 July; they say they have hardly any BIS stock left.
- ⏳ Delayed (timeline moved from March to July).
- Margin trajectory to 17–19%
- Past: aspiration to return to 17–19% (multiple calls).
- Current: still no quantitative FY27 guidance, only “endeavor” to stay in range.
- ⏳ Partially Delivered / Still Not Fully Committed (FY26 margins improved, but guidance remains non-quantified).
c. Narrative Shifts
- From “transition fixes” → “growth engines”
- Q1 FY26: SAP/warehouse transition and online supply constraints were central.
- Q4/FY26: focus shifts to sneakers scaling, time-to-market, SKU launches, capacity ramp.
- From GST tailwinds → inflation/geopolitics
- Earlier calls leaned on GST rationalization benefits.
- Current call emphasizes raw material inflation + geopolitical developments and calibrated pricing.
- From BIS as a risk → BIS as a competitive advantage
- Early: BIS cleanup and non-BIS liquidation costs.
- Current: BIS compliance confidence and claim of share gain due to competitor constraints.
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Medium credibility
- Strength: accounting explanations (GT charges) and operational specifics (output targets) are consistent and detailed.
- Weakness: repeated reliance on aspiration language without firm guidance (margins, price hikes, demand).
- BIS timeline drift (March → July) slightly reduces confidence.
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Demand
- Improving narrative, but still cautious due to geopolitics.
- Margins
- Improved vs FY25 (FY26 gross margin +120 bps; EBITDA margin +145 bps), but FY27 remains aspirational.
- Expansion
- Manufacturing expansion becomes more concrete (Pant Nagar ramp, output doubling by FY27).
- Regulation (BIS)
- Moves from “cleanup” to “competitive moat” framing.
f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)
- Defensiveness around guidance
- As the company approaches margin range targets, management increasingly avoids numeric guidance (“No guidance, unfortunately”), suggesting uncertainty in translating inflation/pricing into stable margins.
- Working capital/inventory management
- Inventory days increased in FY26 vs prior tight levels; management justifies as “right level,” but this is a subtle shift from earlier “hygiene/optimization” emphasis—could matter if demand softens.
- Online accounting changes are now a recurring analytical factor
- ASP explanations increasingly depend on portal accounting mechanics (freight billed separately), implying reported ASP/margins may be less comparable quarter-to-quarter.
