Raymond Limited — Q4 FY26 & FY26 Earnings Call (held May 5, 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management repeatedly emphasizes resilience and “optimistic about the future growth trajectory” and highlights structural tailwinds (export sourcing, RFQ activity, localization pivot).
- Even when acknowledging margin pressure, they frame it as largely non-operational (e.g., “EBITDA margins faced pressure due to a reduction in non-operating income”) and stress mitigation via localization and capex.
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Macro & demand backdrop: India FY26 growth cited as robust (7.6% real GDP), manufacturing PMI moderated but still expansionary; automotive hit record PV/dispatch levels; aerospace demand supported by long backlog, but near-term conversions hampered by engine shortages and supply chain friction.
- Aerospace supply chain disruption → localization pivot: Q4 impacted by “contraction in aerospace-grade titanium and aluminum alloys” due to Gulf logistic blockades; management says this has “accelerated a strategic pivot towards domestic input localization to insulate margins.”
- Export-led growth with RFQ-to-contract conversion: Strong emphasis on “record RFQ pipeline,” FAIR approvals, and conversion into multi-year contracts; also “migration of domestic vendors… towards high complexity subsystems.”
- Segment performance divergence & margin explanation: Consolidated EBITDA margin down YoY mainly attributed to non-operating income reduction (Raymond Realty cash transfer post-demerger), while operating performance remains strong in segments.
- Value-chain expansion strategy: Pivot from “build-to-print” to “co-design and value engineering collaborations,” and further move toward subsystem manufacturing and “one-stop shop” capabilities (including discussion of surface/heat treatment integration).
- Capex & capacity scaling: “INR930 crores capital expenditure program over the next 5 years” (INR500 cr aerospace, INR430 cr precision/auto), with Andhra Pradesh greenfield targeted for late FY28 commercial production.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Aerospace R&D, SKUs, and order book composition
- Core questions
- R&D expense level and whether development costs are reimbursable.
- Breakdown of order book by engine platforms (LEAP/GTF/etc.) and customer concentration.
- Management response
- R&D: “Most of the R&D costs are written off as operational costs… between 3% to 5%,” generally not separately recorded; in some complex cases development costs may be reimbursable, but often built into pricing.
- Order book/platforms: declined detailed platform breakup (“I don’t think it’s okay…”), but stated “over 75% of the products… are for the engine segment.”
- Customer concentration: “over 25 customers” and strategy to “derisk our customers.”
- Notable/partial or evasive elements
- Platform-level disclosure (LEAP vs others) was explicitly refused; only directional statements provided.
Theme B: Tariffs/trade pressures and near-term demand normalization
- Core questions
- How reduced tariffs from mid-quarter affect Q1 onwards (aerospace vs automotive).
- Management response
- Aerospace: “there were no tariffs.”
- Automotive: tariffs down to “18% now,” customers “getting used to the new normal,” but war-related supply chain disruptions mean “a little bit more time.”
Theme C: Capacity, machinery lead times, and execution constraints
- Core questions
- Whether current facility can support the aerospace order book without running out of space.
- Machinery shortages (e.g., GROB) and whether machines are fully ordered.
- Management response
- Capacity planning: they claim they “will not run out of space till we grow,” with seamless ramp and transfer to greenfield to shorten approvals lead time.
- Machinery: not dependent on one manufacturer (“at least 15 different manufacturers”); continuous ordering based on lead times; “several machines are on order… receive over the next 3 to 6 months.”
- Notable
- They corrected a prior implied ramp math: new facility commissioning timing means growth ramp is “closer to a number much lower” than some analyst’s FY28 run-rate assumption.
Theme D: Greenfield commissioning timeline and capex run-rate
- Core questions
- Confirmation of commercial production start (late 2027 / end FY28).
- Capex for FY27 and FY28 for both units.
- Management response
- Commercial start: “second half… towards the last quarter FY ’28.”
- Capex: “approximately INR100 crores each to build capacities” per business per year → “INR200 crores per year for both the units for FY ’27 and ’28.”
- Notable
- Clear quantitative capex run-rate for near years; aligns with the broader 5-year INR930 cr plan.
Theme E: Margin drivers and sustainability (Precision/Auto)
- Core questions
- Why EBITDA margin expanded despite modest top-line growth; sustainability of margins.
- Other income/loss drivers and whether corporate effects distort quarterly margins.
- Management response
- Margin expansion: removed one-time land sale gain (“exception of INR13 crores”); remaining drivers include SAP implementation (Aug), integration synergies, cost reduction, consolidated buying.
- Sustainability: management says synergies/cost programs are “permanent,” with some raw material pressure expected but “normally… passed through.”
- Corporate other income: Raymond Corporate interest income offsets expenses; “even-steven” on a full-year basis.
- Notable
- Stronger-than-usual specificity on one-time items and operational levers.
Theme F: Cash/debt reconciliation and depreciation/cash flow mechanics
- Core questions
- Reconcile net cash surplus vs balance sheet borrowings/cash line items.
- How depreciation is high vs EBITDA and how internal accruals fund capex.
- Management response
- Cash line includes marketable securities/investments: “investments in other marketable securities… largely liquid.”
- Depreciation: largely driven by intangibles (~INR800 cr) from merger; “depreciation is a noncash charge,” and tax advantage helps cash flow.
- Notable
- Direct explanation of accounting vs cash economics; still relies on intangible assumptions but is coherent.
Theme G: Aerospace growth conversion vs order book math
- Core questions
- Why revenue growth doesn’t match order book conversion implied by backlog.
- Management response
- Clarified that order book reflects orders for already-made products and that order position “keeps increasing based on… new products”; order book is dynamic, not a fixed conversion schedule.
Theme H: EV vs hybrid outlook and Europe demand
- Core questions
- EV demand in Europe; export to Europe; hybrid vs EV relative strength.
- Management response
- Hybrid stronger than EV; EV timelines pushed out by “4, 5 years” in Europe; hybrid volumes increasing and offsetting other issues.
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- Capex: “INR930 crores capital expenditure program over the next 5 years”
- “INR500 crores dedicated to Aerospace”
- “INR430 crores for Precision Technology & Auto Components”
- Near-term capex run-rate: “INR100 crores each to build capacities” per business → “INR200 crores per year for both… for FY ’27 and ’28.”
- Aerospace commercial production timing: “second half… towards the last quarter FY ’28” (calendar year ’27).
- Aerospace growth target: management repeatedly references “25% growth year-on-year” for aerospace; also states FY28 growth largely from existing plant, FY29 growth must come from Andhra.
- Component additions: guided “adding around 300 to 350 new components every year”; management says “250 is possible to be made this year” and “on track.”
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- Demand visibility: “record RFQ pipeline,” “steady rise in RFQ activity,” FAIR approvals and audit outcomes supporting conversion.
- Margin outlook: margins should “remain where they are” in Precision/Auto after one-time effects; aerospace margin trajectory depends on operating leverage and ramping complex products.
- Execution focus: repeated emphasis that growth is “execution” constrained (engineering/process/tooling/supply chain), not just capacity or orders.
- Localization as risk mitigation: domestic input localization to “insulate margins” from geopolitical material premiums.
5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)
- Localization pivot due to material disruption: “accelerated a strategic pivot towards domestic input localization to insulate margins from geopolitical activity.”
- Margin pressure attribution (non-operating): “EBITDA margins faced pressure due to a reduction in non-operating income… INR600 crores of cash was transferred to Raymond Realty post the demerger.”
- Build-to-print → co-design/value engineering: “pivoting beyond build-to-print services towards co-design and value engineering collaborations.”
- Greenfield timing clarity: “commercial production… towards the last quarter FY ’28.”
- R&D accounting stance: “Most of the R&D costs are written off as operational costs… between 3% to 5%.”
- Execution constraint framing: “It is a question about having the entire delivery process… rather than just saying is it capacity or is it orders.”
- Dynamic order book explanation: “these orders are for products that you’ve already made… order position keeps increasing…”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Positive signals
– Clear operational explanations for margin movements (one-time land gain; SAP/integration synergies; non-operating income reduction).
– Concrete capex and commissioning timeline guidance (FY27/FY28 run-rate; late FY28 commercial production).
– Strong emphasis on RFQ/FAIR pipeline and customer derisking (25+ customers).
Red flags / watch-outs
– Refusal to disclose platform/order book concentration details (LEAP vs others) limits external validation.
– Multiple “optimistic” statements without hard quantitative revenue/margin guidance for FY27/FY28 (beyond capex and timing).
– Some growth math is corrected in Q&A (analyst run-rate assumption vs management’s actual ramp window), suggesting prior narrative may be easy to misinterpret.
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior calls)
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Current call (May 2026): Optimistic, with more emphasis on risk mitigation via localization and execution readiness; still confident on growth.
- Prior calls:
- Q3 FY26 (Jan 27, 2026): Optimistic; margins described as pressured by non-operating income; “remain optimistic.”
- Q2 FY26 (Oct 28, 2025): Optimistic but more about macro/tariff complexities; margin compression attributed to other income.
- Q1 FY26 (Aug 7, 2025): More cautious on auto; still optimistic on aerospace; discussed restructuring milestone.
- Shift classification: No Change / More Optimistic
- Management’s confidence is steady, but May 2026 adds a sharper “geopolitical material disruption → localization” narrative, implying risk is being actively managed rather than merely discussed.
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes
- Capex / Andhra commissioning narrative
- Earlier (Oct 28, 2025 / Aug 2025): Andhra expansion described as needed due to space constraints; timelines discussed in broad terms (18–24 months).
- Now (May 2026): provides clearer timing: “towards the last quarter FY ’28” and capex run-rate “INR200 crores per year” for FY27–FY28.
- Status: ✅ Delivered (greater specificity than before).
- Margin expansion targets
- Earlier calls suggested aerospace EBITDA margin could reach “23% to 25%” long run (Oct 2025).
- Now: aerospace segment margin in Q4 FY26 is ~25.5% (and FY26 ~22.3%), but consolidated EBITDA margin is flat YoY due to non-operating income effects.
- Status: ⏳ Partially delivered (operating segment strength exists, but consolidated margin story still dominated by non-operating items).
- Component addition cadence
- Earlier: “one new part every day” and pipeline growth.
- Now: quantified “300–350 new components every year” but admitted “250 is possible to be made this year.”
- Status: ⏳ Delayed / softened (still “on track,” but not fully meeting the upper bound).
c. Narrative Shifts
- More explicit geopolitical/material risk framing in May 2026:
- Earlier: tariffs/logistics discussed as headwinds.
- Now: specific “aerospace-grade titanium and aluminum alloys” contraction and “domestic input localization” as a strategic pivot.
- Value-chain shift becomes more central:
- Earlier: co-design/value engineering mentioned as direction.
- Now: “one-stop shop” and vertical integration discussions (surface/heat treatment) are more prominent.
- Order book explanation refined:
- May 2026 explicitly clarifies dynamic order book mechanics to address analyst skepticism.
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Medium credibility (improving but still mixed):
- Strength: consistent attribution of margin changes to identifiable items (one-time land gain; non-operating income reduction; SAP/integration synergies).
- Weakness: some quantitative targets are softened in Q&A (component count; growth ramp math), and platform/order book breakdown is repeatedly withheld.
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Demand / RFQ pipeline: Improving/stable (increasing RFQ activity repeatedly referenced).
- Margins: Stable at segment operating level, but consolidated margin narrative remains sensitive to non-operating income.
- Expansion / capex: Becoming more concrete (INR930 cr plan + FY27/FY28 run-rate + commissioning timing).
- Geopolitical risk: Deteriorating in specificity (from general “tariffs/logistics” to specific material shortages and localization response).
f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)
- A gradual shift from “macro headwinds” to “operationally actionable mitigation”:
- May 2026 is the first time the call ties geopolitical disruption to a specific operational lever (domestic input localization) rather than only describing delays.
- Management is increasingly prepared to correct analyst interpretations (order book conversion math; ramp timing), suggesting prior quarters may have left room for misunderstanding.
