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Indian Company Investor Calls

Rico Guides FY27 10%+ Margins Despite Q4 Labour Code Hit

June 4, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Rico Auto Industries Limited — Q4 & FY ’26 Earnings Call (held June 1, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “highest ever annual revenue during FY ’26” and “healthy domestic and export demand,” with exports “growing despite ongoing geopolitical issues.”
  • They project strong forward momentum: “export… will grow to 2x in the next 2 years,” “remain optimistic,” and explicitly guide FY’27 toward “10% plus” margins.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Demand backdrop (India + exports): Macro described as supportive; auto volumes rising and EV penetration increasing (2W and PV).
  • Export growth despite geopolitics: U.S. and Germany exports growing; management claims resilience and expects 2x export growth in 2 years.
  • Program ramp-up / order visibility:ramp-up of new programs” and a pipeline of new orders; “new orders worth ~INR 2,500 crores over a program life of 5 years.”
  • Margin pressure explained as timing/non-recurring: Q4 margin decline attributed to Labour Code and lag settlement impacts; management repeatedly frames FY’26 margin weakness as largely recoverable.
  • Customer renegotiations to normalize margins: Renegotiating RM settlement cycle (monthly vs quarterly) and negotiating recovery of prior losses; 75% of customers by value accepted monthly settlement.
  • Expansion capex + subsidy: Hosur investment progressing; operational from Sep 2026; Tamil Nadu subsidy approval ~INR 39 crores over 10 years.
  • Non-auto diversification: Railway and defense scaling using existing infrastructure; railways approvals progressing; defense slower.
  • Balance sheet focus: Working capital improvement emphasized (days 7 days vs 33 prior year) and OCF INR 331 crores; net debt slightly up.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Margin decline in Q4 & FY’27 margin trajectory

  • Core questions:
  • What caused the “sharp decline” in Q4 EBITDA/gross margins?
  • How should investors model FY’27 margins (and whether Q1 onward normalizes)?
  • Management response:
  • Q4 impacted by non-recurring items:
    • Labour Code: ~INR 3.6 cr (Q4)
    • Lag settlement (raw material): ~INR 11 cr (Q4)
  • Adjusted Q4 EBITDA margin: from ~7.6% to ~9.8% (excluding these).
  • FY’26 adjusted margin: from ~9% to ~10.25% (excluding Labour Code + lag settlement).
  • FY’27: expects improvement “beyond 10.25%” if negotiations conclude; also states monthly settlements should reduce lag impact going forward.
  • Explicitly guided: “starting from Q1 itself… 10% plus” (confirmed by CFO).
  • Evasive/partial/strong elements:
  • Strong clarity on accounting/timing drivers, but FY’27 upside is conditional: “if everything else remains as it is.”
  • Probability of full recovery of prior losses was asked; management answered in a way that protects the normalized EBITDA but did not quantify likelihood of full PAT catch-up (see Theme B).

Theme B: Probability of recovering FY’26 losses into FY’27 PAT

  • Core questions:
  • Will the INR 11 cr (Q4) / INR 19 cr (FY’26) lag settlement losses fully flow into FY’27 PAT?
  • Management response:
  • CFO: normalized EBITDA margin 10.25% remains protected once monthly settlements are agreed.
  • Additional negotiations on “loss which was already incurred” are “parallelly going on,” and any negotiated recovery “will directly flow to the bottom line.”
  • Evasive/partial/strong elements:
  • Analyst asked for probability of full recovery; management did not provide a probability/quantitative range, instead emphasizing margin protection and conditional recovery.

Theme C: Revenue growth drivers vs industry growth

  • Core questions:
  • If OEM growth is only mid-single digits, why does Rico expect >20% revenue growth to cross INR 3,000 cr?
  • How do new orders/programs translate into incremental revenue?
  • Management response:
  • Growth comes from programs launched 1–2 years back ramping now; “40 launches” and revenue impact expected end of Q3 to Q4.
  • New orders (~INR 2,500 cr over 5 years) plus ramp-up and additional launches to bridge incremental revenue (analyst discussed INR 500 cr incremental; management referenced ramp-up + “couple of programs”).
  • They claim being single-source for certain components and gaining share, including hybrid/EV-related platforms.
  • Strong elements:
  • More concrete operational linkage than in prior calls: “40 launches” and timing of revenue impact.

Theme D: Railway & defense opportunity, margins, and timelines

  • Core questions:
  • Addressable opportunity and revenue targets for railways/defense over 2–3 years.
  • What margins to expect vs automotive?
  • What revenue was achieved in FY’26 and what products are supplied?
  • Management response:
  • Railways: approvals progressing; internal target cross INR 100 cr this year; defense target cross INR 50 cr this year and double over 2 years.
  • Margins: “obviously better than the auto margins” but asked to wait “1 or 2 quarters” for specifics.
  • FY’26 railway revenue was small: ~INR 3–4 cr; defense ~INR 20–30 cr.
  • Products: railway components like bearing adapters, LC cast iron inserts, track adjusters, distance blocks; defense includes shooting ranges and expanding portfolio.
  • Evasive/partial/strong elements:
  • Margin guidance for rail/defense is not quantified; they defer to future quarters.

Theme E: Net debt trajectory & land monetization

  • Core questions:
  • Will net debt reduce? Comfort with leverage?
  • Update on land sale/monetization timeline and expected value.
  • Management response:
  • Leverage ~3.75x; repayments ~INR 110 cr annually over next 2–3 years; expects a “downward gliding path.”
  • Land monetization: discussions ongoing; previously offered INR 700 cr rejected; now “better offers.”
  • Timeline: “If it happens, it will happen in 6 months also… If we don’t get the right price, we are not selling it.”
  • Strong elements:
  • Clear stance on not selling at low price (credibility-positive), but timeline remains uncertain.

Theme F: Capacity utilization

  • Core questions:
  • Current capacity utilization for aluminum die casting and ferrous casting.
  • Management response:
  • Ferrous: ~65–70% (later clarified ~75%).
  • Aluminum: “also in about the same region,” with some machines near 95% and higher-tonnage machines freeing capacity.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Revenue (FY’27):
  • CFO: expects to “cross INR 3,000 crores”.
  • Exports:
  • Management: exports to U.S. and Germany to grow to 2x in the next 2 years.
  • Near-term export growth: stated “exports would grow by… 32% this year” (corrected from earlier 15–20%).
  • Railway / Defense (this year):
  • Railways: cross INR 100 cr.
  • Defense: target to cross INR 50 cr.
  • Margins:
  • Normalized EBITDA margin (excluding onetime impacts): ~10.25% for FY’26.
  • FY’27: expects “improvement… beyond 10.25%”.
  • Q1 onward: “10% plus” (explicitly confirmed).
  • Capex / expansion:
  • Hosur facility operational from September 2026 onwards.
  • Tamil Nadu subsidy: ~INR 39 cr approval, accruing over next 10 years.
  • Working capital / cash flow:
  • Working capital days improved to 7 days; OCF INR 331 cr (FY’26 actual).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Margin normalization depends on customer renegotiations (monthly RM settlements already accepted by 75% by value).
  • Railway/defense margin confirmation deferred (“give us 1 or 2 quarters”).
  • Growth confidence is tied to ramp-up timing (“end of third quarter to fourth quarter” impact).

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • Exports resilience + growth ambition:export business in the U.S. and in Germany is growing despite of ongoing geopolitical issues” and “will grow to 2x in the next 2 years.”
  • Margin normalization claim:10.25% remains protected once we have agreed for monthly settlements.”
  • Q1 margin expectation (strong):we should see the kind of margin going forward starting from Q1 itself… 10% plus.”
  • Customer renegotiation progress (specific):75% of the customers by value have already accepted our request” for monthly RM settlement.
  • Revenue growth mechanism:40 launches… impact coming up… end of the third quarter to fourth quarter.”
  • Railway/defense scaling reality check: railway FY’26 revenue only “INR3 crores to INR4 crores,” defense “INR20 crores to INR30 crores.”
  • Land monetization discipline: offered INR700 crores previously; “we had said no… If we don’t get the right price, we are not selling it.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Conditional margin upside: “if everything else remains as it is” and recovery of prior losses is not quantified probabilistically.
Deferred margin disclosure for rail/defense: no quantified margin guidance; “give us 1 or 2 quarters.”
Net debt remains high: net debt INR 686 cr and leverage ~3.75x (though repayment schedule is cited).

Positive signals
Concrete normalization math (Labour Code + lag settlement quantified; adjusted margin stated).
Evidence of renegotiation traction (75% by value accepted monthly settlement).
Working capital improvement is dramatic (7 days vs 33 days), supporting cash generation.
Order pipeline visibility: INR 2,500 cr over 5 years.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4/FY’26): More Optimistic
  • Stronger confidence language: “highest ever annual revenue,” “export… will grow to 2x,” and explicit “10% plus from Q1.”
  • Prior calls:
  • Q2 FY’26 (Nov 2025): management said they were “in track” for 12–13% by Q4, with improvement expected in Q3/Q4.
  • Q3 FY’26 (Feb 2026): optimistic medium-term, but also used cautious phrasing (“near-term demand visibility remains cautious”).
  • Shift explanation:
  • The narrative moved from “margin improvement path” to margin normalization with quantified one-offs and customer settlement renegotiations now progressing.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  1. Railway revenue guidance (FY’26)
  2. Past statement (Nov 2025):INR50 crores, INR70 crores… FY ’26” (held guidance range).
  3. What actually happened (current call): railway FY’26 revenue only INR 3–4 cr; approvals delayed; now targeting cross INR 100 cr this year.
  4. Flag:Missed / delayed (railway ramp-up materially later than guided).

  5. Defense revenue guidance (FY’26)

  6. Past statement (Nov 2025): defense described as slower; no precise FY’26 number, but expectation of progress.
  7. What actually happened (current call): defense FY’26 revenue INR 20–30 cr; now targeting cross INR 50 cr this year.
  8. Flag:Delayed (directionally consistent with “slower,” but still behind implied acceleration).

  9. EBITDA margin target (12–13% by Q4 FY’26)

  10. Past statement (Nov 2025):on track to report 12%, 13% EBITDA margins in Q4.”
  11. What actually happened (current call): Q4 EBITDA margin reported around 7.1% (and adjusted to ~9.8% excluding one-offs); normalized FY’26 ~10.25%.
  12. Flag:Missed / reframed (management attributes miss to non-recurring impacts; adjusted margin still below 12–13%).

  13. Land monetization (earlier expectations)

  14. Past statement (Nov 2025): monetization discussed; target implied higher than earlier offers.
  15. What actually happened (current call): still “discussions are carrying on,” no sale yet; timeline only “6 months also.”
  16. Flag:Delayed.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Railway story changed materially:
  • Nov 2025: railways “already started delivering” and guidance of INR70–80 cr for FY’26.
  • Current: railway FY’26 was only INR3–4 cr, and the reason is approvals timing; now they are much more explicit about the delay.
  • Margin story shifted from utilization/product ramp to one-off normalization:
  • Earlier calls emphasized utilization and new products driving margin expansion.
  • Current call emphasizes Labour Code + lag settlement as the main Q4 drag and frames FY’27 as recovery via renegotiations.
  • EV/hybrid emphasis persists but becomes more operational:
  • Earlier: EV share discussion (EV/hybrid mix).
  • Current: Hosur capex explicitly for “hybrid and EV-related programs.”

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Positives: management provides quantified one-off impacts and shows renegotiation progress (75% acceptance).
  • Negatives: repeated guidance misses on railway revenue and 12–13% margin target, later explained via timing/one-offs rather than fully achieved outcomes.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: Stable-to-improving (India supportive; exports resilient).
  • Margins: Deterioration in Q4 explained as non-recurring; outlook now points to normalization from Q1.
  • Expansion: Hosur timeline remains consistent (operational from Sep 2026).
  • Diversification (rail/defense): Theme strengthened, but execution timing has been slower than earlier implied.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Pattern of “timing” deferrals: Railway approvals and margin targets both show a recurring theme of delays (approvals) or “catch-up” (lag settlement recovery), which management now treats as manageable.
  • More defensiveness on probability: When asked for probability of full FY’26 loss recovery into FY’27 PAT, management avoided quantification—suggesting uncertainty remains even if EBITDA normalization is expected.