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Indian Company Investor Calls

DB Corp Sees Print Growth and EBITDA Margin Expansion Despite Newsprint Pressure

May 14, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

DB Corp Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (Quarter & FY ended Mar 31, 2026) | Call held May 11, 2026

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “resilience and operational strength” and points to print advertising growth and EBITDA margin expansion.
  • They express confidence in demand continuity: “I am very confident that this growth should continue”.
  • Even when discussing risks (newsprint prices), they frame them as “temporary” and likely to persist only “next couple of quarters”.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Print advertising resilience + sector-led improvement
  • Q4: consolidated advertising revenue up ~6% YoY; print advertising (like-for-like excluding election impact) up 6.3% YoY for FY26.
  • Growth supported by advertiser sentiment in education, real estate, healthcare, automobile, government.
  • Margin expansion driven by cost discipline
  • FY26 EBITDA margin expanded 66 bps to ~28% (like-for-like basis).
  • Q4 EBITDA up 15.6% YoY to INR 1,176m.
  • Newsprint cost pressure acknowledged but treated as temporary
  • upward trends” in newsprint due to raw material pressure, logistics, and supply-demand imbalance.
  • Management believes the trend is “temporary” and may continue “next couple of quarters.”
  • Digital: scale focus (MAUs) with monetization still ahead
  • ~20m monthly active users as of Mar 2026; leadership in Hindi/Gujarati apps.
  • Emphasis on “high-quality content, better user experience” and “strengthening our technology platform”.
  • Monetization framed as future: “whenever we want to monetize it, we are able to do that.”
  • Radio: expansion with fast profitability
  • Added 7 new stations in FY26; “all new 7 stations have become EBITDA positive within 3 months.”
  • Strategy: maintain radio “with a very, very low cost” and add value to top line.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Near-term demand outlook, elections impact, and profitability targets

  • Core questions
  • Whether next quarters will see a “bump” from elections/other income.
  • Plans/ability to achieve higher EBIT/EBITDA margins (e.g., 16%+ / 18%+).
  • Management response
  • Elections normalized: last year excluding election revenues was ~6.5% growth; this year April saw “very good double-digit strong growth.”
  • Confidence: growth should continue at “strong single-digit” for the year.
  • Margin stance: they cite prior EBITDA margin levels and say maintaining around 24% is achievable (they do not commit to 16–18% EBIT explicitly).
  • Assessment
  • Strong confidence but no hard quantitative guidance beyond qualitative “single-digit” growth.
  • Some targets are reframed (EBIT vs EBITDA margin discussion).

Theme B: Shareholding / promoter cap

  • Core questions
  • Whether promoter buying will go beyond 75% and implications (open offer/delisting).
  • Management response
  • Direct: “Just to cap up till 75.”
  • Assessment
  • Clear answer; no evasion.

Theme C: Capex / cash deployment

  • Core questions
  • Where capex (~INR 120 crores) is going.
  • Thesis for buying properties vs renting.
  • Intangibles (~INR 13-odd crores) nature.
  • Any buyback plans.
  • Management response
  • Capex largely to buy existing rented properties/land (Bhopal, Jaipur office, Kota, Aurangabad printing unit, Nashik, Jalgaon, etc.) to avoid rent.
  • Thesis: “land appreciation and the property appreciation… are really decent.”
  • Intangibles: not true intangibles—“repair and maintenance of IT, upgradation of IT…”.
  • Buyback: “Certainly, we’ll be looking at… best tax-efficient manner” (no commitment).
  • Assessment
  • Reasoning is coherent, but no ROI/return metrics provided.

Theme D: Circulation stability vs prior schemes; what’s driving copy decline

  • Core questions
  • Why circulation is down ~1 lakh copies (from ~40 lakh to ~39 lakh).
  • Progress on prior announced circulation growth schemes.
  • Market/competition dynamics.
  • Management response
  • Maintained overall circulation despite market decline; “decent achievement” to maintain.
  • Explains localized shrinkage and attributes to ground delivery constraints:
    • shortage of delivery boys due to early distribution window (4:00 AM–6:30 AM).
  • Plans: “multiple things… not about the scheme alone” (distribution, editorial quality, brand awareness).
  • Competition: they claim they’re gaining share where competitors can’t hold copies; competitors “losing more.”
  • Assessment
  • Partially defensive but specific operational explanation (delivery workforce shortage) is a credible, concrete factor.
  • Still no clear timeline for returning to growth.

Theme E: Newsprint outlook and pricing

  • Core questions
  • Near-term newsprint rate evolution.
  • Domestic vs imported mix and expected increases.
  • Management response
  • Q4 average newsprint rate ~INR 49,000/ton; expects further increase 6%–8% in Q1.
  • Domestic/imported mix: 77%/23% in Q4 (India/imported).
  • Attributes imported pricing to FX and freight; parity pricing by domestic manufacturers.
  • Assessment
  • More quantitative than most topics, but still framed as expectation (“believe”, “may”).

Theme F: Digital user trends and monetization timeline

  • Core questions
  • Why MAUs reduced vs prior month (is it seasonal/event-driven?).
  • When digital will mature enough to monetize.
  • Monetization approach and impact of hiring/tech team.
  • Management response
  • MAUs: “constant growth” overall; month-to-month changes due to local events.
  • Monetization: optimistic but conditional—focus on improving UX/engagement so monetization becomes feasible later.
  • Hiring: new talent acquisition; results expected after “a couple of months” (no financial targets).
  • Assessment
  • Consistent with prior narrative: scale first, monetization later.

Theme G: Other operating income drivers

  • Core questions
  • Why other operating income increased (~INR 10-odd crores).
  • Management response
  • Largely job work and newsprint wastage sale due to higher newsprint prices.
  • Assessment
  • Straight explanation.

Theme H: Regulatory/competition (Google)

  • Core questions
  • Update on revenue from Google/other platforms.
  • Management response
  • Platforms filed case with CCI against Google and others; “still awaiting”.
  • Assessment
  • Clear status update; still no revenue visibility.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Advertising growth outlook (qualitative but with numbers)
  • strong single-digit” advertising growth expected for the year (after April double-digit).
  • EBITDA margin
  • They indicate maintaining around prior EBITDA margin levels is “achievable” (they reference 24% as prior year margin; no new FY target stated).
  • Newsprint price
  • Q1 expectation: further increase 6%–8% (management belief).
  • Circulation
  • No numeric growth guidance; only maintenance/efforts to “maintain or grow whatever we can.”

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Cost pressure is manageable
  • Newsprint uptrend is “temporary” and may continue only “next couple of quarters.”
  • Digital monetization is not imminent
  • Emphasis remains on engagement/UX; monetization framed as future capability rather than near-term revenue.
  • Radio profitability improving
  • New stations EBITDA-positive within 3 months suggests continued operational execution.

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • Demand confidence:I am very confident that this growth should continue… ‘strong single-digit’.”
  • Margin expansion anchor:EBITDA margin expansion of 66 bps to a robust 28% in FY 2026.”
  • Newsprint risk framed as temporary:We believe the current trend is temporary and may continue for the next couple of quarters.
  • Capex thesis: buying properties to “don’t have to pay the rent” and due to “land appreciation and the property appreciation… decent.”
  • Circulation decline explanation (operational): delivery boys shortage because papers distribute “at 4 in the morning until 6:30.”
  • Radio execution:all new 7 stations have become EBITDA positive within 3 months.”
  • Digital monetization stance:whenever we want to monetize it, we are able to do that” (no near-term monetization commitment).
  • Promoter cap clarity:Just to cap up till 75.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear margin expansion in FY26 and strong Q4 EBITDA growth.
Operational specificity on circulation issue (delivery workforce timing).
– Radio expansion showing fast EBITDA positivity.

Red flags
No concrete financial guidance for EBITDA/EBIT beyond references to past margins; targets like “16%+ / 18%+ EBIT margin” were not clearly committed.
– Newsprint outlook includes expected increases 6%–8%—could pressure margins, yet management still assumes resilience without quantifying impact.
– Digital monetization remains non-committal; regulatory monetization from Google still “awaiting.”


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current call (May 2026): More Optimistic
  • Stronger emphasis on growth continuity (“confident”, “strong single-digit”) and margin expansion.
  • Prior calls
  • Q4 FY25 (May 2025): cautious recovery narrative; “headwinds” and “anticipating returning to a growth trajectory.”
  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 2025): optimistic but still election/base normalization; profitability down YoY in reported terms.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 2025): “decent set of numbers” and recovery; still noted government/FMCG weakness.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 2026): more defensive on election/festive base; reported ad decline YoY due to high base.
  • Shift drivers
  • Management now has like-for-like growth and margin expansion to point to, reducing the need for “base effect” explanations.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Circulation growth schemes (“Jeeto 14 Crores” / ongoing schemes)
  • Past statement (May 2025): scheme drove uptake; expected reflection going forward; circulation growth target discussed as “2% right now” and “3%-4% growth” as a big achievement.
  • What happened by May 2026: circulation is still ~39 lakh and management admits a ~1 lakh decline vs ~40 lakh earlier quarters; they frame it as maintenance success.
  • Flag:Delayed / not delivered to growth (maintenance achieved, growth not sustained).
  • Digital monetization timeline
  • Past (Jul 2025):wait for a few more quarters” and no timeline.
  • Current (May 2026): still no monetization numbers; only capability/engagement improvements.
  • Flag:Delayed (scale continues; monetization still not quantified).
  • Radio station operationalization
  • Past (Oct 2025): new stations operational by Jan–Mar (for 14 stations plan).
  • Current (May 2026): 7 new stations added in FY26 and EBITDA positive within 3 months.
  • Flag:Delivered (at least for the stations referenced).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “election/base effects” to “like-for-like growth + margin expansion”
  • Earlier calls leaned heavily on election/festive timing to explain YoY declines.
  • Now they emphasize like-for-like print advertising growth and EBITDA margin expansion.
  • Circulation narrative changed
  • Earlier: schemes and “stop decline / maintain numbers.”
  • Now: acknowledges copy reduction and adds a new operational constraint (delivery boy shortage).
  • Digital narrative remains consistent
  • Still “scale/engagement first,” monetization later.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Consistent themes: print resilience, cost discipline, digital scale, radio low-cost expansion.
  • However, lack of hard forward guidance (especially margins and digital monetization) and reliance on “temporary” cost pressures reduces predictability.
  • Explanations for circulation decline are more concrete than earlier generic “market” statements—improves credibility somewhat.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / advertising
  • Improving/stabilizing: from election-driven volatility (FY25/FY26 early) to confident single-digit outlook.
  • Margins
  • Improving: FY26 like-for-like EBITDA margin expansion to ~28%.
  • Input costs (newsprint)
  • Deteriorating near-term: management now expects 6–8% increase in Q1 (vs earlier “range-bound/soft” language).
  • Digital
  • Stable progress on MAUs (~20m+), monetization still pending.
  • Radio
  • Improving execution: fast EBITDA positivity on new stations.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • Cost risk is shifting from “newsprint stable” to “newsprint uptrend”
  • Earlier calls (Q1/Q2 FY26) emphasized stability/range-bound newsprint.
  • Now they explicitly expect further increases in Q1—this is a meaningful inflection that could test the margin resilience story.
  • Circulation is no longer purely a “scheme effectiveness” story
  • The delivery workforce constraint suggests structural operational friction, not just marketing spend—could cap upside unless resolved.