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Vodafone rollout timing drives Q3–Q4 “bumper” expectations

June 8, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

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.