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Indian Company Investor Calls

Finolex Q4 EBITDA Nearly Doubles on Inventory Gains

June 3, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Finolex Industries Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Conference Call (27 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights strong Q4 improvement: “EBITDA… nearly doubled” and “margin improvement of 25%”.
  • They frame macro volatility (Middle East conflict) as “near-term positive” for integrated players, while acknowledging risks but saying they are “monitoring very, very closely”.
  • Guidance is given with some conservatism, but overall messaging is constructive (better realizations, improving months ahead).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Profitability rebound despite flat volumes (Q4):
  • Volume “broadly flat” (101,772 tons vs 102,253 tons YoY), yet EBITDA and EBIT surged.
  • Margin drivers: inventory gains + backward integration + procurement timing
  • Inventory gain quantified by CFO: “INR35 crores to INR40 crores” (avg) in April/March price rise.
  • Margin benefit also attributed to PVC resin backward integration and fuel cost advantage.
  • Macro: Middle East conflict impacts polymer chain
  • Disruptions via Strait of Hormuz → PVC/other polymer price increases.
  • Management calls it near-term positive for integrated producers, but flags supply uncertainty and cost inflation as risks.
  • Demand seasonality and near-term demand variability
  • India PVC demand follows pre-monsoon uptick and monsoon moderation.
  • April subdued due to falling prices from March highs; May “slightly better”.
  • Monsoon timing/delay mentioned as a key variable for June demand.
  • Strategic shift: reduce agri concentration, grow non-agri
  • Agri share reduced from 67% (FY25) → ~63% (FY26).
  • Target: “more like 50-50 over the next 4 to 5 years.”
  • Capital allocation: ongoing capex + dividend, but cash deployment unclear
  • Capex continues annually (maintenance + debottlenecking/extruder replacement).
  • Dividend declared; remaining cash use still pending Board decision.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Inventory gains, EBITDA margin sustainability

  • Core questions
  • Size of inventory gain in Q4 and how much it inflated EBITDA/margins.
  • Whether sub-15% EBITDA margin is sustainable given Q4 outperformance.
  • Management response
  • Inventory gain: “INR35 crores to INR40 crores around” (avg).
  • Margin moderation expected: “going forward, it is going to moderate”.
  • Guidance: maintain sub-15% EBITDA margin; “very difficult to pinpoint” quarter volatility.
  • Assessment (evasive/partial/strong)
  • Partial: they quantify inventory gain but do not fully reconcile the remaining margin jump into a clean bridge (inventory vs spread vs cost).
  • Strong: they explicitly acknowledge margin is elevated and will moderate.

Theme B: Volume outlook—agri vs non-agri demand

  • Core questions
  • Why volume was flat in Q4 (restocking vs demand weakness).
  • April/May agri pipe trend; any FY27 volume guidance.
  • Impact of monsoon delay and rainfall expectations.
  • Management response
  • Volume flat because agri demand didn’t pick up in Q4; farmers anticipated price softening due to volatility.
  • April subdued due to prices high in March then falling; May better.
  • FY27: no hard numeric volume guidance; qualitative reliance on GDP drivers, Jal Jeevan Mission allocations, and monsoon outcome.
  • Strategy to offset agri weakness: increase non-agri share to compensate.
  • Assessment
  • Qualitative guidance only on FY27 volumes; relies heavily on monsoon uncertainty.

Theme C: Market share, competition, and strategy vs peers

  • Core questions
  • Whether they are gaining market share amid consolidation and aggressive competitors.
  • Why they are not expanding geographically like peers; whether capital allocation should change.
  • Management response
  • Market share: “No, I don’t think so” (not claiming gains).
  • Margin-focused positioning; procurement/discount timing and geography selection.
  • Geographic expansion rationale: local advantage diminishing due to better transport; but multi-location adds SKU sourcing complexity.
  • Re-evaluate decentralization only if opportunities arise.
  • Assessment
  • Unusually candid: explicit denial of market share gains.
  • Some deflection: acknowledges weak volume growth vs peers but doesn’t commit to a concrete capital reallocation plan.

Theme D: Capacity, utilization, capex, and inventory risk

  • Core questions
  • Is capacity a constraint? Utilization levels.
  • Capex quantum and whether it’s maintenance vs growth.
  • Inventory build rationale and risk of future dent if prices correct.
  • Management response
  • Capacity not a constraint: current capacity 520,000 with headroom.
  • Utilization: FY26 currently 67% (vs 71% last year).
  • Capex: INR100–200 crores annually; debottlenecking/extruder replacement ongoing.
  • Inventory: regular strategy—procure at opportune times; they claim “sufficient control” and are mindful of future price direction.
  • Assessment
  • Clear on capacity and utilization; less clear on how inventory levels will impact next quarters (they avoid numbers).

Theme E: Geopolitics / VCM sourcing and operational impact

  • Core questions
  • Middle East VCM sourcing share and whether FY27 production is impacted if conflict persists.
  • Management response
  • Middle East is major supplier; they are shifting supply chains to Far East and Northeast Asia.
  • Jetty not operational during monsoon; VCM line not run for 4–5 months, so they claim structural protection.
  • They do not expect PVC availability issues for the year.
  • Assessment
  • Strong operational mitigation narrative, but still relies on ability to secure competitively priced VCM.

Theme F: Regulatory protection (ADD/MIP)

  • Core questions
  • Whether ADD should be refiled; whether MIP (short-term protection) is preferable.
  • Management response
  • I don’t think right now there is a case for ADD per se” (cooling period mentioned).
  • MIP could be helpful short-term; government imposed 90-day import duty on PVC resin (April–June).
  • Assessment
  • Definitive stance on ADD “not now,” but framed as one view; no quantification of expected benefit.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • EBITDA margin target: sub-15% (repeated multiple times)
  • Guidance… lower double to low double digit around
  • target to sub-15 level
  • Capex: INR100–200 crores per year
  • every year… INR100-odd crores” and “INR100 crores to INR200 crores
  • Volume growth (FY27): higher single digit to lower double digit (explicitly stated as full-year target)
  • targeting a growth number of roughly around higher single digit to double – lower double digit
  • Agri/non-agri mix target: 50-50 over 4–5 years (qualitative but includes a numeric split)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Margin volatility expected due to geopolitical + PVC price volatility:
  • dynamic environment… difficult to pinpoint”
  • Demand near-term: April subdued, May slightly better; June depends on monsoon delay.
  • Non-agri ramp as hedge against agri seasonality and potential rainfall shortfall:
  • whatever… loss if we are going to incur in the agri… this time we’ll compensate with the non-agri
  • Inventory risk managed but not eliminated:
  • holding higher inventories… going to be a dent” (acknowledged risk), yet “sufficient control”.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • Inventory gain quantified:INR35 crores to INR40 crores around” (avg) in April/March.
  • Margin sustainability tempered:going forward, it is going to moderate to some extent.”
  • Conservative margin stance despite long-term capability:
  • We don’t want to give any rosy picture… geopolitical scenario… uncertainty
  • target to sub-15 level
  • Market share posture (not bullish):No, I don’t think so” (about gaining market share).
  • Agri concentration reduction progress:FY25, 67%… FY26, about 63%.”
  • Monsoon/seasonality dependence acknowledged repeatedly:
  • a lot will depend on what happens to the monsoon
  • monsoons are kind of getting delayed… extended by another week or 10 days.”
  • VCM operational mitigation:during the monsoon period, our jetty is not operational… we do not run the VCM line” (4–5 months protection).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No market share growth claim despite industry consolidation: “No… don’t think so.”
Margin guidance is conservative relative to historical performance and Q4 surprise; management repeatedly cites uncertainty without a clear bridge.
Cash deployment remains unclear: Board decision pending on “remaining cash” (dividend only partially addressed).
Inventory risk acknowledged (“holding higher inventories… dent on future period”) but impact is not quantified.

Positive signals
Clear operational levers: backward integration, procurement timing, inventory strategy, and debottlenecking.
Quantified inventory gain and explicit margin moderation expectation.
Supply chain mitigation for VCM sourcing (shift away from Middle East; structural monsoon shutdown reduces risk).
Non-agri share improving with a stated multi-year target.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): muted performance; margins pressured by PVC volatility; focus on operational efficiency and withdrawing discounts.
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): strong profitability improvement; guidance leaned toward maintaining margins; still cautious but more confident.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): profitability improved; PVC bottoming narrative; “more positively” on prices.
  • Q4 FY26 (May 2026): more optimistic on results (EBITDA nearly doubled) but still conservative on forward EBITDA (sub-15%) due to geopolitics.
  • Classification shift: More Optimistic than Q1/Q2, but not fully confident on sustainability.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past:maintain EBITDA margin… around 10% to 12%” (Nov 2025 call; also “higher digit… 10% to 12% around”).
  • Now: EBITDA guidance moved to sub-15% (wider band; more conservative).
  • Status:Delayed / widened (not necessarily missed, but guidance loosened).
  • Past: non-agri push and 50-50 ambition discussed earlier; agri share reduction implied.
  • Now: provides concrete progress: 67% → 63% (FY25 to FY26).
  • Status:Partially delivered (directionally on track, but still far from 50-50).
  • Past: capex range repeatedly INR100–200 crores/year.
  • Now: reiterated same range; debottlenecking/extruder replacement “already on”.
  • Status:Consistent.
  • Past: cash return timing repeatedly “Board decision / timing unclear.”
  • Now: still unclear: “remaining cash… decision… yet to come.”
  • Status:Dropped clarity (no improvement in specificity).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “PVC bottoming / ADD benefit” (Q2/Q3 FY26) to “geopolitics-driven polymer price volatility” (Q4 FY26).
  • Margin explanation evolves:
  • Earlier calls emphasized softening raw material prices + operational efficiencies.
  • Q4 emphasizes inventory gain + backward integration + procurement timing, and explicitly expects moderation.
  • Market share narrative becomes more defensive:
  • Earlier: “endeavor to keep market share.”
  • Now: explicit denial of market share gains.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Positives: inventory gain quantified; operational mitigations for VCM sourcing explained; consistent capex range.
  • Concerns: repeated conservative guidance despite strong quarters; cash return remains perpetually “Board decision” with no timeline; market share gains denied without offering a corrective plan.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: consistently seasonal and monsoon-dependent; Q4 adds “monsoon delay” as a near-term swing factor.
  • Margins: improved sharply in Q2/Q3/Q4, but management increasingly frames it as dynamic/volatile and not fully sustainable.
  • Portfolio mix: steady emphasis on reducing agri share; now quantified.
  • Regulatory: ADD narrative earlier (expectation of ADD); now management says no case for ADD per se and points to MIP as a possible short-term tool.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • Inventory accounting is becoming a recurring explanation for margin spikes:
  • Q2/Q3 already discussed inventory accounting effects; Q4 again quantifies inventory gain.
  • This suggests margins may be partly timing-driven, not purely structural—hence the conservative sub-15% stance.
  • Non-agri growth is still not fast enough to offset agri seasonality fully:
  • Agri share only moved from 67% to 63% in FY26; management still relies on monsoon outcomes and compensation via non-agri.