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Inox Wind targets 8–10 GW capacity additions in FY26-27

June 2, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

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

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “strong quarter,” “pivoted… on a much stronger footing,” and being “on the cusp of a massive transformation.”
  • They project “strong annual wind capacity addition of 8 to 10 GW” and “multiyear multifold growth,” with confidence in execution visibility (“more than 24 months”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Industry tailwinds & policy support
  • Wind/renewables demand supported by “RTC, FDRE and hybrid capacity additions,” government push for “domestic manufacturing,” and geopolitical tensions as “tailwinds.”
  • Strategic pivot in Inox Wind execution model (turnkey → equipment supply)
  • Order mix shift: from “largely turnkey” to “50:50 turnkey and equipment supply,” targeting “75% going forward.”
  • Rationale: reduce working-capital blockage and execution risk from customer-side delays; focus on “large free cash flows.”
  • Group “ONE INTEGRATED” strategy / synergies
  • Virtuous cycle” across group entities to secure growth and “insulate from market cycles.”
  • Management claims 2/3 of execution over next 4–5 years from Inox Clean and CESC, remaining 1/3 from marquee customers.
  • Inox Clean as recurring internal order engine
  • Inox Clean targeted “14 GW by FY’29,” adding “almost 3 GW+ annually,” with “20% to 30% wind.”
  • Management expects this to translate into “almost 1/3 of our annual execution targets.”
  • Product roadmap
  • New 4.4 MW turbine: “on-track” and expected approvals + “commercial launch… within this calendar year.”
  • Working capital / receivables issues acknowledged
  • Payment delays” in “PSU contracts,” but management expects improvement due to equipment-supply mix and higher group-company order share.
  • Inox Green growth + demerger benefits
  • Inox Green O&M portfolio: “13+ GWp” (wind ~10.5 GW).
  • NCLT approval for demerger/merger into Inox Renewable Solutions; management highlights elimination of depreciation and improved ROE/ROCE.
  • Quantitative FY27 guidance provided
  • Consolidated revenue growth “around 75%” over FY26; EBITDA margin “20% to 20%” (i.e., ~20%).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Inox Green acquisitions—EBITDA/margin, timing, and consolidation math

  • Core questions
  • What EBITDA/margin profile applies to acquired assets?
  • How does FY27 INR600+ crore EBITDA guidance reconcile with acquisition clearances/timing?
  • When will acquisitions merge into Inox Green and from what date will revenues accrue?
  • Management response
  • Acquired entities expected to contribute ~50% EBITDA margin (“roughly contribute a 50% EBITDA margin”).
  • Guidance reconciliation: management states revenues/profitability accrue from 1 April ’26 in consolidated results even if NCLT/merger timing varies (“effectively over FY27, both these entities will be part of Inox Green… from 1st April ’26”).
  • Timeline: one order reserved “in the next couple of weeks”; another entity expected “over the next 60 to 90 days” with merger “very difficult to give…” exact month.
  • Evasive/partial signals
  • They avoid precise demerger/merger “calendar” clarity but provide accounting-based accrual assurances (strong on accounting intent, lighter on operational timing).

Theme B: Why shift from EPC/turnkey to equipment supply (and impact on margins/working capital)

  • Core questions
  • Why move away from turnkey (peer comparison)?
  • Does equipment supply improve margins?
  • How should investors model margins given 70–80% equipment supply?
  • Management response
  • Not “moving out” of EPC entirely; strategy is risk mitigation and working-capital improvement.
  • Explicit working-capital rationale: “biggest pain point or… working capital blockage happens by doing EPC and turnkey.”
  • Margin stance: equipment supply won’t materially lower margins; guidance remains “north of around 20%.”
  • They argue turnkey can have better pricing but margins erode via ROW/land/substation cost and payment delays; equipment supply is “cash flow up front” and more controllable.
  • Unusually strong/defensive phrasing
  • We have now pivoted… 75% to 80% being equipment supply” and “we basically wanted to ensure that we focus on large free cash flows.”
  • They frame delays as “past” and imply normalization, but do not quantify residual risk.

Theme C: Working capital days—targets vs current status and drivers

  • Core questions
  • Where do working capital days stand at Q4 end vs prior target?
  • Is the shortfall due to external factors, and will it “fall off sharply” next quarter?
  • Management response
  • Prior call target: ~200 days by FY end; now they discuss “guideline of INR5,000 crores” and execution impact.
  • They cite external causes: “supply chain disruption… ECS… got stuck… delayed… then… commodity going up.”
  • They state Q1/Q2 will absorb the “makeover” (INR400 crores) and expect improvement thereafter.
  • Red flag
  • They previously guided for normalization; in this call they again attribute misses to externalities—no hard metrics for receivable days at Q4 end are provided in the transcript excerpt.

Theme D: Execution visibility—EPC vs equipment backlog, grid/ROW issues

  • Core questions
  • Are grid connectivity/ROW issues still affecting execution?
  • How much backlog is equipment supply vs EPC?
  • How much of order book is from Inox Clean?
  • Management response
  • Backlog mix: “50%… with equipment supply” and “maybe going up to even more than 75%.”
  • EPC progress: by H1, “majority of our EPC projects would be over,” with one leading job still in execution.
  • Inox Clean contribution: “Presently, zero” in 3.1 GW order book; “around 500 MW” unexecuted from Inox Clean.
  • Partial answer
  • They provide mix percentages but avoid granular reconciliation of order-book composition and timing.

Theme E: Guidance credibility—75% growth conservatism and prior over/under-delivery

  • Core questions
  • Have they overcommitted/under-delivered historically?
  • Is FY27 75% growth optimistic or conservative?
  • Management response
  • They reject “overcommitting” framing and cite that they “achieved every single target” for 3–4 years, with FY26 issues due to “force majeure… world war kind of a situation.”
  • On FY27: “we were on the side of conservatism,” but “don’t hold us responsible” for extreme scenarios (COVID/world war).
  • Strong but credibility-sensitive
  • They use broad macro excuses while maintaining confidence; no quantified sensitivity analysis is offered.

Theme F: Other income / treasury vs core profitability in Inox Green

  • Core questions
  • Breakdown of Inox Green “other income” (INR60.8 cr in quarter) between acquisition-related income, value-added services, and treasury.
  • Whether excluding acquisition-related income changes “core” margins.
  • Management response
  • Other income mostly from “two strategic acquisitions… pure income net of deferred tax.”
  • Approx breakup for Q4: “INR40 crores… acquisition-related,” “INR10 crores… value addition services,” “INR10 crores… treasury income.”
  • Core EBITDA margin still ~50% annualized; they concede core margin ~45% if excluding acquisition-related items.
  • Positive clarity
  • This is one of the more transparent parts of the call (explicit decomposition and accounting framing).

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY26–27 consolidated guidance
  • FY27 consolidated revenue: “grow by around 75% over FY26
  • FY27 EBITDA margin: “20% to 20%” (stated as 20% to 20% i.e., ~20%)
  • Inox Green
  • FY27 EBITDA guidance: “upwards of INR600 crores
  • Inox Green O&M portfolio: “13+ GWp” (status update, not guidance)
  • Inox Wind
  • New turbine: 4.4 MW “on-track” and expected approvals + “commercial launch… within this calendar year
  • Working capital
  • FY end target referenced earlier in call history: “200 days” (and expectation to improve thereafter)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Equipment supply mix expected to rise toward 75% (implies cash flow/working capital improvement).
  • Receivables expected to improve due to:
  • higher equipment-supply orders
  • higher proportion of group-company orders
  • Execution risk is framed as largely “past” (geopolitical/logistics) with normalization expected in Q1/Q2.

5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)

  • Working capital / EPC rationale
  • the biggest pain point or the biggest working capital blockage happens by doing EPC and turnkey.”
  • Execution model shift
  • we have now pivoted… 75% to 80% being equipment supply.”
  • FY27 guidance conservatism
  • we were on the side of conservatism while doing this” (re FY27 75% growth).
  • Acquisition accounting accrual assurance
  • effectively over FY27, both these entities will be part of Inox Green… from 1st April ’26.”
  • Other income decomposition
  • INR40 crores is pure income net of the deferred tax.”
  • Cash conversion claim
  • Out of INR600 crore… broadly everything will be converted into the operating cash flow” (and “no depreciation, no finance cost” framing).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Guidance vs execution metrics opacity
– They repeatedly avoid megawatt execution disclosure (“not giving any megawatt-specific guidances”), limiting independent verification.
Reliance on “external” explanations
– ECS/logistics/commodity up cited; later they say “these are things of the past” without showing Q4/Q1 receivable-day proof.
Accounting-driven profitability optics
– Acquisition-related “other income” materially boosts reported numbers; they admit core margin ~45% excluding it (potential investor modeling risk).
Cash flow conversion claim is strong
– “everything will be converted into operating cash flow” is a high bar; transcript doesn’t provide working-capital bridge details.

Positive signals
Clear strategic coherence
– Equipment supply pivot + group synergies + Inox Green scaling are consistent across commentary.
More transparent Q4 “other income” breakdown
– Explicit INR40/10/10 split improves credibility vs prior vague explanations.
Order book visibility
– “execution visibility of more than 24 months” and “3.1 GW order book” reiterated.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Sep 2025): very bullish on wind growth and margin guidance; confidence in execution (“well on track,” “strong growth platform”).
  • Q2/H1 FY26 (Nov 2025): optimistic; emphasized best-ever quarter and pipeline; still confident on guidance.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): still optimistic but introduced recalibration and shift to revenue guidance; acknowledged customer site readiness delays.
  • Q4 FY26 (May 2026): more transformation-focused (“pivoted… new avatar,” “massive transformation,” “cusp of multiyear multifold growth”) and more assertive about normalization (“these are things of the past”).
  • Classification shift: More Optimistic (relative to Q3’s more cautious “recalibrating guidance” tone).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Working capital target
  • Past (Q3 FY26 call): target “200 days” by FY end; longer run 120–150 days; Q3 end “200–210 days.”
  • Current (Q4 FY26 call): management attributes working capital disruption to ECS logistics and PSU receivable delays; expects improvement in Q1/Q2, but transcript excerpt does not confirm actual Q4 receivable-day outcome.
  • Flag:Delayed / not fully evidenced in this transcript.
  • FY27 EBITDA guidance
  • Past (Q3 FY26 call): Inox Green FY27 EBITDA “upwards of INR600 crores.”
  • Current: reiterates “upwards of INR600 crores” and provides acquisition accrual logic.
  • Flag:Maintained (no downgrade), but reliance on accounting accrual assumptions remains.
  • Turnkey → equipment supply mix
  • Past (Q3 FY26 call): order book shifted to “50-50 turnkey and equipment supply.”
  • Current: claims “50% backlog today with equipment supply” and “75% going forward.”
  • Flag:In progress (direction consistent; exact realized mix not fully quantified).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From execution volume to financial control
  • Earlier calls emphasized megawatt execution targets (e.g., 1.2 GW FY26, 2 GW FY27).
  • By Q3/Q4, they pivot to revenue/EBITDA guidance and downplay megawatt disclosure.
  • EPC risk framing intensifies
  • Q4 explicitly calls EPC/turnkey the “maximum pain” for working capital.
  • Inox Clean becomes more central
  • Q4 emphasizes 2/3 execution from Inox Clean/CESC over 4–5 years; earlier calls discussed Inox Clean as a visibility engine but with less “execution share” specificity.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: consistent strategic direction (integration, equipment supply, Inox Green scaling).
  • Weakness: repeated reliance on external macro disruptions and accounting effects; limited disclosure of operational KPIs (receivable days at Q4 end, megawatt execution actuals).
  • They defend prior misses as force majeure, but do not provide hard reconciliation in this transcript excerpt.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro: consistently positive; Q4 adds “geopolitical tailwinds” and “8–10 GW annual additions” outlook.
  • Margins: guided ~20% EBITDA margin for FY26–27; Q4 claims strong margins despite logistics; also admits core margin ~45% excluding acquisition-related income.
  • Expansion/integration: increasingly aggressive—power electronics foray, crane/transformer backward integration, and “ONE INTEGRATED” virtuous cycle.
  • Working capital: acknowledged as a recurring pain point; Q4 expects improvement but still cites PSU receivable delays.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Potential hidden risk: equipment-supply pivot reduces working capital blockage, but Q4 still reports PSU receivable payment delays, implying that receivables risk may persist even with equipment-supply mix.
  • Cash flow narrative is strengthening: Q4’s “everything converts to operating cash flow” claim is more assertive than earlier calls; without a working-capital bridge, this increases modeling uncertainty.
  • Acquisition-driven optics: Inox Green profitability is increasingly supported by acquisition-related “other income,” which can create volatility in “core” earnings quality.