Rikhav Securities Limited — H2 & FY26 Earnings Call (May 29, 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral (slightly Optimistic)
- Management acknowledges “challenging and volatile” FY26 conditions and profitability pressure (cash market share loss, market volatility).
- Despite this, they repeatedly emphasize long-term structural tailwinds and confidence in technology/risk systems: “we continue to remain positive on the long-term outlook” and “position us strongly for long-term sustainable growth.”
- Tone is tempered by multiple hedges/qualifiers around realization timing and market dependence (e.g., retail/HNI brokerage improvement only if markets improve).
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Near-term profitability pressure from investments/mark-to-market:
- Loss from cash market shares of ~INR20–23 crores and unrealized SLBM profit (~INR4.33 crores) not recognized yet; expected to realize in coming quarters.
- Technology-led operating model & risk management:
- Low-latency/high-efficiency ecosystem; VaR/algorithm-based risk framework; automation and backend scalability.
- Cybersecurity described as segmented networks, monthly audits, fail-safe/backup systems.
- Business diversification to reduce reliance on broking cycles:
- Focus on proprietary trading (algo/arbitrage/delta hedging), market making, margin trading, and institutional brokerage via empanelment.
- Started ETF market making with Kotak Mutual Fund; plan to add 2–3 more mutual funds.
- Market/industry headwinds acknowledged:
- Heightened volatility, moderation in retail cash participation, tighter liquidity, higher competition, and higher compliance/technology costs.
- Client growth and onboarding infrastructure:
- Digital-first onboarding, Aadhaar/e-KYC, mobile platform; active client base and ARPU discussed.
- Capital allocation shift:
- Plan to reduce cash market share investments (cap around INR50 crores, and reduce further by another INR50 crores) to stabilize income.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Profitability / accounting / drivers of PAT & margin pressure
- Core questions
- What drove PAT and margin pressure?
- Any change in accounting/presentation affecting comparability (revenue jump, valuation treatment)?
- Management response
- PAT pressure attributed mainly to:
- Valuation loss on cash market shares purchased ~1.5 years back: INR18–20 crores (and earlier narrative: ~INR20–23 crores).
- Unrealized SLBM profit: ~INR4–4.5 crores, expected to realize in April / coming quarters.
- Minor items: depreciation (~INR30 lakhs more) and tax adjustment (~INR75–80 lakhs).
- Accounting: they state the policy is “same accounting system” (lower of cost/market), and that the “jump” is turnover of stock, not a change in accounting policy.
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- Some confusion/ambiguity: the analyst asked about revenue recognition/presentation methodology; management’s answer focused on valuation and turnover, not clearly on revenue recognition mechanics.
- They acknowledge accounting system change since Oct 2024 later in the call (stock-in-trade classification), which supports the idea that comparability issues exist.
Theme B: SME IPO / market making risk and exposure
- Core questions
- Is there structural risk to SME IPO ecosystem due to SEBI scrutiny / retail sentiment?
- What are internal filters for SME market making mandates?
- Current SME exposure and strategy to manage liquidity risk post-listing?
- Management response
- Reduced SME exposure due to liquidity issues: “reduced very considerably”.
- Current SME exposure: ~30%; value ~INR20–25 crores.
- Strategy change: sell whole stock within one week of listing.
- On SEBI scrutiny: management frames it as “investor-friendly” and says they adapt; also cites market conditions at 31 March (Nifty below 23,000) as a key driver of valuation impact.
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- Internal filters question (“promoter quality, merchant banker, credibility”) was answered vaguely: “That we are ascertaining” with limited specifics.
Theme C: Technology, cybersecurity, and AI roadmap
- Core questions
- Cumulative technology investment and split (in-house vs outsourced).
- Cybersecurity framework: audit frequency, vulnerability assessments, coverage, mitigations.
- Roadmap for AI-led analytics/fraud detection/client engagement.
- Any attempted breaches/disruptions?
- Management response
- Tech spend (last ~2 years): ~INR7.5–10 crores.
- Split: ~50% third-party vendors; in-house team for automation/compliance/audit/reporting; hardware acquisition emphasized for low-latency.
- Cybersecurity:
- Arbitrage desk on internal network not exposed externally.
- Client-facing trading platform on open network but endpoints audited monthly; OS end-of-life handled.
- Fail-safe/backup: secondary backup in 5–10 minutes; offline/segmented backups within ~1 hour.
- SEBI frameworks + third-party entity priority review.
- Mentions planning to implement “Mythos AI” (not yet officially provided) for auditing.
- AI roadmap: cautious due to “AI agent kind of hallucinating”; started regulatedly with human vetting; restrict data sources to institutional clients for auditability.
- Breaches: “None, none this year.”
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- AI roadmap is described at a high level; lacks measurable milestones (coverage, adoption rates, expected impact).
- Cybersecurity answer is detailed operationally, but still lacks quantified audit outcomes (e.g., findings, remediation timelines).
Theme D: Client metrics, ARPU, retention, and trading activity
- Core questions
- Active client base, new client additions.
- ARPU trends and segment breakdown.
- Retention for digital vs legacy.
- % of trading volumes via delay-assisted execution (or similar execution mode).
- Management response
- Active base: ~12,500 clients; +2,500 added in half-year.
- ARPU: ~INR5,000–6,000 per user; float income also significant.
- Float: ~INR100–120 crores.
- Segment trends:
- Institutional: empanelment started; real revenue from next year.
- Retail/HNI: brokerage improvement constrained; depends on market improvement.
- Retention: claims ~100% retention (no account closures except a few retirements).
- Trading volume via platform execution: not calculated; will compute and respond via email.
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- Several metrics are either approximate or not provided (ARPU trend over quarters not actually quantified; execution-mode share deferred).
Theme E: Competition vs discount brokers; digital marketing and branch strategy
- Core questions
- How differentiate vs large discount brokers (scale/price/marketing budgets)?
- Is digital marketing needed for Gen Z?
- Branch/franchise expansion strategy and geographies.
- Management response
- Differentiation: same brokerage as discount brokers plus “personal touch of dealers” as USP.
- Digital marketing: acknowledged as needed; management says platform readiness is being completed and digital marketing will start after this quarter.
- Expansion: not much branch expansion; 8–10 branches/franchises per year (or 10–12 minimum), but cautious due to compliance risk at branch level.
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- “Personal touch” is not quantified (no evidence on conversion, retention, or cost-to-serve).
- Branch strategy is somewhat inconsistent in numbers (8–10 vs 10–12).
Theme F: Guidance for FY27 and growth drivers
- Core questions
- Revenue/EBITDA/PAT growth outlook for FY27.
- Key business drivers supporting growth guidance.
- Management response
- Brokerage/cliental growth: ~20% growth in brokerage and client base.
- Algo trading/delta hedging income: ~20% to 25% growth.
- No explicit EBITDA/PAT numeric guidance provided in the transcript.
- Evasiveness / partial / strong points
- Guidance is partial (growth rates for specific income lines, not consolidated profitability metrics).
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- FY27 (ending March 2027):
- ~20% growth in brokerage and client base.
- ~20% to 25% growth in algo trading and delta hedging income.
- FY27 revenue level (implied by analyst question):
- Management states: “March 27th… it is a full year around INR40 crores.”
- (Context suggests this is likely a revenue figure, but the transcript does not explicitly label it as revenue vs another metric.)
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- Digital marketing: will start after this quarter (to compete with discount brokers / Gen Z).
- Institutional revenue ramp: empanelment ongoing; “real revenue will start from the next year.”
- Capital allocation: reduce cash market share investments to stabilize income.
- Market dependence: retail/HNI brokerage improvement is contingent on market conditions.
5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)
- On profitability pressure drivers:
- “loss from cash market shares… around INR20 crores to INR23 crores”
- “unrealized profit of INR4.33 crores from SLBM transactions has not been recognized… and is expected to realize in the coming quarters”
- On capital stabilization:
- “we have reduced also the investment in shares… INR50 crores… planning to reduce… another INR50 crores”
- On market making / SME strategy:
- “we have reduced the exposure… 30% only” and “sell the whole stock within one week of the listing”
- On cybersecurity posture:
- “None, none this year” (breaches)
- “secondary backup system… go live in 5 to 10 minutes”
- On AI caution:
- “AI agent kind of hallucinating… we have started it… but… not engaged it thoroughly… need a vetting of human intervention”
- On FY27 growth:
- “around 20% growth in brokerage and the cliental”
- “20% to 25% growth in the algo trading and delta hedging income”
- On digital marketing timing:
- “we’ll start the digital marketing like after this quarter itself”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
– Comparability/accounting complexity: multiple references to valuation losses, turnover vs investment classification, and accounting system change since Oct 2024—increases risk of misunderstanding underlying performance.
– Deferred/uncertain metrics: execution-mode share not calculated; ARPU trend by segment not provided; SME mandate filters not detailed.
– Guidance is line-item focused: growth rates given for brokerage/algo income but no consolidated PAT/EBITDA guidance despite analyst interest.
– Reliance on market conditions: retail/HNI brokerage improvement explicitly depends on market improvement.
Positive signals
– Clear risk mitigation actions: reduced SME exposure; reduced cash market share investment; stated realization timing for SLBM profit.
– Operational maturity claims: detailed cybersecurity segmentation, monthly audits, fail-safe backups.
– Institutional ramp plan: empanelment with banks/FPI; research division started; ETF market making expansion.
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis
Note: No prior earnings call transcripts were provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”), so a true historical comparison (tone shift, missed commitments, narrative changes across calls) cannot be performed from the supplied data.
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Not assessable (no prior transcripts provided).
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes
- Not assessable (no prior commitments/transcripts provided).
c. Narrative Shifts
- Not assessable (no prior transcripts provided).
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Medium credibility based on internal consistency within this call:
- Management provides multiple explanations for profitability pressure (valuation losses, SLBM realization timing, depreciation/tax).
- However, they also introduce accounting classification changes (Oct 2024) and sometimes answer partially (e.g., SME mandate filters, execution-mode share deferred), which can reduce confidence.
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Not assessable across periods.
f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)
- Not assessable without prior transcripts.
