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Indian Company Investor Calls

Inox Green Confident on FY27 EBITDA, Sold Out 2.5 Years

June 2, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Inox Green Energy Services Limited (IGESL) — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (29 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly uses strong confidence language: “on the cusp of a massive transformation”, “extremely well placed”, “very confident”, “sold out for the next 2.5 years”.
  • They frame FY26 challenges as temporary and “things of the past” and emphasize pivot benefits (equipment supply, group synergies, demergers).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Structural demand tailwinds for wind/renewables: expectation of 8–10 GW annual wind additions driven by RTC/FDRE/hybrid; geopolitical tensions and domestic manufacturing push are cited as tailwinds.
  • Group “ONE INTEGRATED” strategy: virtuous cycle across group entities; execution and revenue certainty via Inox Clean supplying a large share of execution.
  • Pivot from turnkey to equipment supply (working-capital/risk mitigation):
  • Management claims working capital blockage is the “maximum pain” in turnkey/EPC.
  • Order mix shift: from 100% turnkey (24 months ago) to ~75–80% equipment supply now; target to increase equipment supply further.
  • Inox Green growth via O&M scale + acquisitions + demerger benefits:
  • Inox Green Q4 performance strong; portfolio 13+ GWp.
  • NCLT-approved demerger of evacuation infrastructure into Inox Renewable Solutions: elimination of gross block (~INR1,000 cr) and depreciation (~INR50–55 cr), improving profitability/ROE/ROCE.
  • FY27 EBITDA guidance reiterated as upwards of INR600 cr with “multifold” consolidation impact from acquisitions.
  • Execution visibility and selectivity:
  • Inox Wind order book cited at 3.1 GW with >24 months execution visibility.
  • They state they are “very selective” on external orders due to working capital considerations.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Inox Green EBITDA/margin math & acquisition timing

  • Core questions
  • How do acquisitions translate into EBITDA/margin profile?
  • How can FY27 run-rate EBITDA (~INR600 cr) be achieved given NCLT/merger timelines?
  • Management response
  • Acquired entities expected to contribute ~50% EBITDA margin (“roughly contribute a 50% EBITDA margin”).
  • For timing: management claims they control the COC and that revenues/profitability accrue to IGESL over FY27 even if approvals/mergers occur later (“revenues… from 1st April ’26 will be reflected in the consolidated results”).
  • Assessment
  • Strong/committed answer on accounting accrual mechanics, but timeline uncertainty remains (“very difficult to give… specific timeline”).
  • Some answers rely on control/COC and consolidation accounting rather than operational commissioning dates.

Theme B: Why shift from turnkey to equipment supply (impact on margins & EPC capability)

  • Core questions
  • Why move toward equipment supply vs peers shifting to turnkey?
  • Does equipment supply improve margins? How should margins be modeled?
  • Management response
  • They say they are not exiting EPC, but are using equipment supply as risk mitigation and to improve free cash flow / reduce working capital blockage.
  • Margin guidance: they maintain EBITDA margin floor (“only North of around 20% or higher” for Inox Wind consolidated) and argue equipment supply is “more firm” on cash flow and less exposed to EPC execution delays/ROW/land costs.
  • Assessment
  • Unusually direct explanation: “biggest pain point or… working capital blockage happens by doing EPC and turnkey.”
  • They also claim margin impact is limited: “not actually impacting so much on the margin”.

Theme C: Working capital / receivables days and whether improvements are real

  • Core questions
  • Where do working capital days stand at Q4 end vs prior target (200 days / 120–150 days longer run)?
  • Will receivables improve sharply going forward?
  • Management response
  • They cite macro/external causes: ECS delay, ship/port logistics, commodity up, and PSU contract payment delays.
  • They expect improvement: “expect the receivables cycle to see significant improvement going forward” and that the remaining working capital “makeover” will happen in Q1/Q2.
  • Assessment
  • Partial specificity: they don’t provide exact Q4 working capital days in this call (unlike earlier calls where they gave ranges).
  • They attribute issues to external factors, but the persistence risk is not quantified.

Theme D: Order book composition, group contribution, and execution status

  • Core questions
  • How much of the order book is from Inox Clean?
  • Are execution bottlenecks (ROW/grid connectivity) still present?
  • Management response
  • Inox Clean contribution to current order book: “Presently, zero”; but ~500 MW unexecuted from Inox Clean is referenced later (some confusion/clarification).
  • Execution: they say by H1 most EPC projects will be over; EPC backlog largely moving to commissioning/compliance.
  • Assessment
  • Credibility risk / inconsistency: “Presently, zero” vs later “close to 500 megawatts… unexecuted” from Inox Clean. They reconcile, but it signals messy disclosure around what counts as “order book” vs “execution backlog”.

Theme E: Guidance credibility and whether FY27 growth is conservative

  • Core questions
  • Is FY27 75% growth guidance conservative or optimistic given past misses?
  • Why did revenue/realizations fall?
  • Management response
  • They claim conservatism: “we were on the side of conservatism” and blame force majeure/world events for prior shortfalls.
  • Realization decline explained by contract mix and equipment supply vs turnkey and quarterly variability.
  • Assessment
  • They use hedging: “if there’s a world war or if there’s a COVID lockdown…”.
  • They repeatedly defend guidance methodology rather than admitting operational underperformance.

Theme F: Inox Green cash conversion, deployment of cash, dividend/buyback

  • Core questions
  • How much of INR600 cr EBITDA converts to operating cash flow?
  • What will be done with cash (acquisitions vs buyback/dividend)?
  • Dividend policy timing?
  • Management response
  • They claim “broadly everything will be converted into operating cash flow” (no depreciation/finance cost; tax shield).
  • Cash deployment: integrate acquisitions first; then “further acquisition opportunities” but they claim opportunities are limited; board will decide dividend policy after consolidation.
  • Assessment
  • Very strong cash-conversion claim; may be directionally true for O&M accounting, but it’s still a highly optimistic statement without working-capital sensitivity.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Inox Wind consolidated (FY26–27 guidance)
  • consolidated revenue to grow by around 75% over FY26
  • EBITDA margin to be 20% to 20%” (stated as 20% to 20% in transcript; effectively ~20%)
  • Inox Green (FY27)
  • FY27 EBITDA guidance to be upwards of INR600 crores
  • Cash conversion implied: “broadly everything will be converted into operating cash flow” (qualitative framing but tied to INR600 cr)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Order mix shift: equipment supply targeted to 75–80% and potentially higher; EPC reduced to selected projects.
  • Execution visibility: >24 months visibility from order book; EPC projects expected to be largely completed by H1 (with commissioning/compliance lag).
  • Receivables improvement: expect PSU receivable delays to normalize; remaining working capital “makeover” in Q1/Q2.
  • Corporate actions: demerger integration and consolidation expected to materially lift reported profitability.

5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)

  • Working capital / strategy rationale
  • the biggest pain point or the biggest working capital blockage happens by doing EPC and turnkey.”
  • Equipment supply transformation
  • 24 months ago, 100% of our order book was turnkey… now 75% to 80% being equipment supply.”
  • Inox Green profitability uplift from demerger
  • gross block of approximately INR1,000 crores has been eliminated… annual depreciation of approximately INR50 crores to INR55 crores has been eliminated.”
  • FY27 cash flow confidence
  • Out of INR600 crore fees, broadly everything will be converted into the operating cash flow.”
  • Guidance conservatism + force majeure hedge
  • we were on the side of conservatism… ‘if there’s a world war or if there’s a COVID lockdown…’”
  • Order book / visibility
  • execution visibility of more than 24 months.”
  • Cash deployment
  • limited acquisition opportunities now… but… integrated into Inox Green first.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Accounting/timing reliance for FY27 run-rate: multiple answers depend on COC/control and accrual from 1 April even if approvals/mergers occur later.
Disclosure inconsistency on Inox Clean contribution:
– “Presently, zero” vs later “~500 megawatts… unexecuted”.
Very strong cash conversion claim (“everything converts to operating cash flow”) without discussing working-capital swings explicitly.
Hedging guidance with extreme scenarios (world war/COVID) suggests management expects potential volatility but won’t quantify downside.

Positive signals
Clear strategic logic for equipment supply pivot (cash flow + risk mitigation).
Concrete corporate action progress: demerger approved by NCLT; elimination of depreciation/gross block is a tangible lever.
Strong operating metrics for Inox Green: machine availability ~96.5%.
Order book visibility and selective external order intake.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY26, May 29 2026): more Optimistic and transformation-focused (“massive transformation”, “sold out for 2.5 years”).
  • Prior calls (Feb 13 2026, Nov 14 2025, Sep 1 2025): also optimistic, but more grounded in execution ramp and incremental guidance upgrades.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic
  • Current call leans harder on group synergies + demerger + acquisitions as near-term catalysts.
  • More confidence on cash conversion and FY27 run-rate.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Working capital target
  • Prior (Feb 13 2026): guided ~200 days by FY26 end, longer run 120–150.
  • Current (May 29 2026): management says working capital issues were due to external factors and expects improvement in Q1/Q2, but does not restate exact Q4 working capital days.
  • Flag:Partially evidenced (improvement expected, but exact outcome not clearly quantified in this transcript).
  • Inox Green demerger timeline
  • Feb 13 2026: “final stages… in the final stages…” and expected approval within next 2–3 quarters.
  • May 29 2026: demerger approved by NCLT; merger into Inox Renewable Solutions approved; gross block elimination described.
  • Status: ✅ Delivered (at least approval milestone achieved).
  • Turnkey-to-equipment pivot
  • Nov 14 2025 / Feb 13 2026: discussed shift toward equipment supply to reduce working capital risk.
  • May 29 2026: claims completion of pivot to 75–80% equipment supply from 100% turnkey 24 months ago.
  • Status: ✅ Delivered (narrative claims completion; no independent verification provided).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From execution ramp to “financial certainty via group synergies”
  • Earlier calls emphasized execution ramp, factories, and megawatt guidance.
  • Current call emphasizes Inox Clean providing 2/3 of execution and equipment supply mix to ensure revenue certainty.
  • From “guidance methodology” to “run-rate profitability/cash”
  • Earlier: guidance shift (megawatt → revenue) to manage variability.
  • Current: stronger focus on FY27 EBITDA run-rate and cash conversion.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: consistent strategic rationale (working capital pain in turnkey/EPC; equipment supply for cash flow).
  • Weakness: inconsistent quantification (Inox Clean contribution), and high-confidence cash conversion statements without working-capital detail.
  • Management sometimes uses “external factors” broadly (logistics, ECS, commodity, PSU delays) without showing how much is structurally resolved vs temporary.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / policy tailwinds: improving/stable (ALMM, RTC/FDRE/hybrid, domestic manufacturing) — consistently positive.
  • Margins: stable-to-improving narrative (equipment supply + demerger + O&M scale).
  • Working capital: persistent as a theme; current call suggests it’s improving but still not fully quantified.
  • Corporate actions: demerger progress becomes a major driver in the latest call (increasing emphasis).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company increasingly relies on corporate action accounting effects (depreciation elimination, consolidation of acquired O&M assets) to support FY27 profitability/cash narratives.
  • The shift to equipment supply is now presented as “done” (75–80%), but Q&A still shows timing/accumulation uncertainty (acquisition approvals, consolidation dates), suggesting operational realization may lag accounting recognition.