Suyog Telematics Limited — Q4 & FY26 Post Earnings Call (FY ended Mar 31, 2026) | Call held on Jun 02, 2026
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management repeatedly emphasizes confidence in upcoming rollouts: “very confident about our rollout by BSNL and by Vodafone” and expects “bumper” quarters for Vodafone (“Q3, Q4 would be bumper”).
- They frame delays as operator-specific and temporary (e.g., Tejas issues at BSNL), while highlighting strong current profitability and execution capability.
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Operator concentration & rollout dependency
- Revenue mix: “48%… Airtel, 22.8%… Jio, 26.7%… VI, 2.5%… BSNL”.
- Growth narrative is heavily tied to Vodafone (expected 5,000 tenancies) and BSNL (30,000 sites plan, but order timing uncertain).
- Execution capacity + deployment phasing
- Even if Vodafone order is large, they stress it will be deployed over the year: “we don’t need to roll out 5,000 in one month… throughout the year”.
- Q1 expected to be similar to Q4 run-rate; major benefit in Q3/Q4.
- Revenue per tower stabilization
- They claim revenue per tower improved and should remain stable: “revenue per tower… reached INR31,000 and we are sure we will sustain INR31,000, INR32,000”.
- Fiber as a USP / recurring model
- Fiber described as “backbone of any 5G network or 6G” and positioned as a key differentiator.
- Fiber economics: they procure and lay fiber and sub-lease it; fiber revenue expected to be more meaningful later (FY28/FY29).
- Accounting-driven margin optics (Ind AS 116)
- Q4 EBITDA margin expansion attributed to accounting reclassification/contract renewal effects (Monorail contract renewal; rent shifted from COGS to depreciation/interest).
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Capacity planning, funding/debt, and rollout phasing (Vodafone-first)
- Core questions
- How will they take capacity if Vodafone + BSNL orders come in?
- What debt/fundraise is needed for 5,000 tenancies / ~5,000 towers?
- How does this impact quarterly additions and Q1 run-rate?
- Management response
- Vodafone order still “awaiting final numbers”; deployment will be spread: “we don’t need to roll out 5,000 in one month”.
- Fundraising timing is conditional: “awaiting final numbers from Vodafone… we have enough funds… and then… we will come back”.
- Q1: “Q1 will be similar to Q4… no major growth”; major numbers in Q3/Q4.
- Evasive/partial/strong points
- They avoid committing to a precise debt plan until Vodafone finalizes.
- They give a rough CapEx framework for FY27 (INR12 lakh/tower; total INR600 cr) but repeatedly say exact quarterly numbers depend on Vodafone orders.
Theme B: BSNL order delay—Tejas bottleneck and timeline
- Core questions
- What is the timeline for Tejas issues to resolve and BSNL order to be released?
- Why BSNL revenue is low despite prior rollouts?
- Management response
- Timeline: they refuse to commit because they’re not involved: “we can’t commit any timeline… we are nowhere involved… Tejas are direct partners of BSNL”.
- Revenue gap: BSNL rentals are capped/lower; also billing/integration delays: BSNL rent “highest is INR7,000” vs private operators’ much higher rents; hence top-line per tower dips.
- Evasive/partial/strong points
- Strong deflection on timeline (“not connected with Tejas”), but they do provide a mechanism (SIM latch + backhauling stability).
- They acknowledge uncertainty: “we are not factoring any orders from BSNL this year” (explicitly conservative).
Theme C: Vodafone timeline slippage and quarter impact
- Core questions
- Vodafone orders were expected earlier (Feb/Mar); now delayed to June—what changed?
- When will revenue/capex impact show up in quarters?
- Management response
- Cause: spectrum relief unlocked lender funding; “No lender was ready… unless… clarity on spectrum charges”.
- Expected impact: orders by June end; revenue starts Q2 but “major numbers… Q3, Q4”.
- Evasive/partial/strong points
- They tie timing to external events (Vodafone funding + spectrum relief), which reduces accountability for slippage.
Theme D: Tenancies vs towers; exact quantum and process
- Core questions
- Is Vodafone commitment 5,000 towers or 5,000 tenancies?
- How does Vodafone allocation work (tender vs direct allocation)?
- Tower types and CapEx per tower?
- Management response
- Clarification: “5,000 tenancies… maximum would be anchor sites… around 4,000 towers with 5,000 tenancies”.
- Process: direct allocation under master service agreement; “no bidding process required”.
- CapEx: ground-based 40m “INR12 lakhs to INR15 lakhs”; RTT 12m/18m for metros.
- Strong points
- They correct earlier ambiguity and provide a more concrete tower/tenancy mapping.
Theme E: Revenue drivers—what portion is upgrades vs new billing
- Core questions
- How much of revenue growth came from BSNL billing vs Airtel upgrades vs Vodafone rollout?
- Management response
- “Major revenue came from the upgrades of Airtel”.
- BSNL billing contribution: “around 45%… because of BSNL billing… 120-125 sites”; remainder from Airtel upgrades and Vodafone new rollout.
- Strong points
- Provides a quantified split (even if approximate).
Theme F: Data center business update
- Core questions
- Progress on data center business (previously expected by Q4).
- Management response
- “not much progress… no movement… dependent on operators”.
- Hopeful but delayed; “we are very hopeful it will come down in future”.
- Red flag (narrative drift)
- Prior expectation of materialization by Q4 is effectively walked back to “no movement”.
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- Vodafone
- Minimum commitment: “minimum of 5,000 sites from Suyog” (later clarified as 5,000 tenancies).
- Deployment timing: orders by June end; revenue benefit starts Q2, major in Q3/Q4.
- FY27 exit tenancies
- “somewhere around 12,000 to 13,000” (subject to Vodafone/BSNL).
- Later: “if we get Vodafone rollout of 5,000… add 5,000… clarify at Q1 end”.
- FY27 exit tenancies range
- Management previously (in Q&A) referenced “5,000 tenancies” from Vodafone and implied total exit tenancies could be ~12,000–13,000.
- CapEx
- FY27 CapEx per tower: “around INR12 lakhs”.
- Total CapEx: “total CapEx of INR600 cr”.
- Funding mix: “Around 50%… internal accruals + existing debt limit… balance 50%” (subject to Vodafone final numbers).
- Revenue per tower
- “INR31,000 to INR32,000” expected to remain stable.
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- BSNL not assumed for FY27
- “we are not factoring anything from BSNL this year” (explicitly conservative).
- Fiber monetization delayed
- Fiber revenue “will get materialized in say FY28, FY29” as operators shift from rollout quantity to quality.
- Data center remains optional
- “no movement… dependent on operators” suggests near-term uncertainty.
5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)
- Vodafone dependency + timing
- “we are expecting a huge business from Vodafone in… FY27”
- “by June end… big chunk of business… most likely”
- BSNL uncertainty
- “we don’t expect any new orders from BSNL right now”
- “we are not factoring anything from BSNL this year”
- Tenancies vs towers precision
- “5,000 tenancies… around 4,000 towers with 5,000 tenancies”
- Margin optics explained
- Q4 EBITDA expansion: “due to Ind AS 116… cost has reduced… EBITDA grown as a percentage”
- Fiber monetization timeline
- “Now FY27 will be very minute… fiber revenue… materialized in say FY28, FY29”
- Data center narrative softening
- “as of now, there is not much progress… no movement”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
– Guidance conditionality is high
– Multiple key numbers depend on Vodafone “final numbers” and BSNL “Tejas issues resolved”.
– Narrative drift on data center
– Previously expected by Q4; now “no movement”.
– Accounting-driven margin explanation
– EBITDA margin expansion attributed to Ind AS 116 reclassification—may not reflect underlying operating improvement.
– BSNL order timing remains vague
– They provide no timeline and repeatedly state they’re “nowhere involved”.
Positive signals
– Profitability and stability
– “EBITDA… 74%” and PAT margin “~30%… sustaining year on year”.
– Revenue per tower stability
– Clear target band: “INR31,000 to INR32,000”.
– Execution capability
– They claim capacity to execute on ground and long-term landlord agreements (10-year).
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior calls provided)
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Shift: More Optimistic
- Feb 2026 tone: confidence but framed as “delay” with expectation that Vodafone/BSNL funds would unlock rollout.
- Jun 2026 tone: stronger certainty on Vodafone (“by June end… release all the orders”) and more explicit phasing (Q3/Q4 bumper).
- What changed
- Vodafone story moved from “funds arranged/soon” (Feb) to “orders by June end” (Jun).
- BSNL remains the main uncertainty, but management is more explicit that they are not factoring BSNL for FY27.
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes
1) Vodafone rollout ramp in FY27
– Past statement (Feb call):
– Target: “3,000, 3,500 Vodafone sites in FY 2027” and “rollout will start from Q1 next year”.
– Current call (Jun):
– Now: Vodafone expected “5,000 tenancies”; revenue benefit starts Q2, major in Q3/Q4.
– Assessment: ⏳ Delayed / revised phasing (quantum increased, timing shifted from Q1 to Q2/Q3/Q4).
2) BSNL rollout expectation for FY27
– Past statement (Feb call):
– Expectation of BSNL process completion by end of March and rollout from Q1: “expectation is BSNL should start rollout from Q1”.
– Current call (Jun):
– Still unresolved due to Tejas; “we don’t expect any new orders… right now” and “not factoring anything from BSNL this year”.
– Assessment: ❌ Missed / dropped for FY27 (at least in their planning assumptions).
3) Data center business materialization by Q4
– Past statement (Feb call):
– Data centre expected to emerge as new growth avenue “expected to be materialized by quarter 4”.
– Current call (Jun):
– “not much progress… no movement”.
– Assessment: ❌ Missed / dropped (near-term timeline withdrawn).
c. Narrative Shifts
- From “operator funds will unlock rollout” → “Vodafone is now the near-term certainty; BSNL is not”
- Feb: both Vodafone and BSNL were framed as unlocking.
- Jun: Vodafone is emphasized; BSNL is explicitly de-emphasized for FY27.
- Fiber positioned as delayed monetization
- Jun introduces clearer staging: FY27 “minute”, FY28/FY29 meaningful—more structured than earlier.
- Data center loses priority
- Moves from “expected by Q4” to “no movement”.
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Medium credibility
- Positives: they correct/clarify tenancies vs towers and provide some quantified splits (e.g., revenue growth drivers).
- Negatives: repeated reliance on external operator timelines (Vodafone/BSNL) with slippage; data center expectation appears to have been walked back.
- Accounting explanations (Ind AS 116) are consistent with margin optics but also highlight that reported EBITDA changes may not be purely operational.
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Demand/rollout
- Improving for Vodafone (more concrete timeline), deteriorating/uncertain for BSNL (explicitly excluded from FY27 planning).
- Margins
- Reported margin strength remains, but Q4 expansion is attributed to accounting effects.
- Expansion
- Tower/tenancy expansion remains the core growth engine; fiber is positioned as a secondary engine with later monetization.
- New avenues
- Data center theme weakens materially.
f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)
- Management is increasingly “de-risking” by excluding BSNL from FY27
- This suggests either (a) BSNL resolution is taking longer than expected, or (b) management wants to avoid further negative surprises.
- Vodafone narrative is being used as the primary earnings catalyst
- Multiple questions and answers anchor on Vodafone’s June end orders and Q3/Q4 ramp—implying that without Vodafone, FY27 growth could be materially weaker.
- Accounting-driven optics may mask underlying operating variability
- With EBITDA margin expansion explained via Ind AS 116, investors should be cautious about extrapolating margin improvements without confirming cash/operational drivers.
