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Indian Company Investor Calls

Ashoka Buildcon Targets 20% FY27 Growth, 2-Digit Margins

May 27, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Ashoka Buildcon Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (Quarter ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral

  • Management acknowledges multiple headwinds: “project delays in clearances and land availability,” “challenging global macroeconomic environment,” and “elevated input cost.”
  • However, they still provide constructive sector outlook and specific FY27 targets (revenue growth, margins, order inflow), indicating confidence in execution recovery and monetization.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Industry transition to quality/capital efficiency: Shift from “aggressive expansion” to “execution quality, financial discipline, monetization and sustainable growth”; corridor-based development and expressway/access-control focus.
  • FY26 execution pressure + margin drag: Delays from “clearances and land availability,” plus Q4 macro/input cost pressures (cement/bitumen/steel/fuel) and labor shortages.
  • International EPC expansion: LOA/contract wins in Saudi Arabia (Diriyah-I hotel package), Angola (water & energy T&D), Liberia (road upgradation); plus India bridge EPC win (Bihar Rajya Pul Nirman Nigam).
  • Order book diversification: As of Mar 31, 2026 order book INR 15,312 cr (excludes post-31 Mar Angola INR 681 cr); mix: Roads/Rail ~66%, Power T&D ~30%, Building ~3.7%.
  • Monetization continues but timelines slip: Sale of remaining 6 HAM SPVs—expected completion timeline extended to June 2026 (conditions precedent).
  • Balance sheet focus / ratings reaffirmed: Credit ratings reaffirmed (long-term AA stable, short-term A1+); debt levels discussed with expectation of reduced working capital debt post monetization.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Order book classification & SPV vs standalone accounting

  • Core question(s):
  • Where are the Saudi hotel and Mumbai ITS/traffic management orders reflected in the order book (standalone vs consolidated)?
  • Management response:
  • These are executed at SPV level, “not direct ABL order”; “at the consol they will be added.”
  • Assessment:
  • Clear accounting explanation; no evasion.

Theme B: FY27 execution ramp, revenue growth, and margin guidance

  • Core question(s):
  • Why were margins weak in Q4 FY26 (EBITDA margin miss)?
  • What are FY27 revenue growth and EBITDA margin targets?
  • How much improvement in execution is expected?
  • Management response:
  • Execution improvement: “next year we should improve by 20%.”
  • FY27 revenue growth: “targeting 20% of revenue growth.”
  • FY27 EBITDA margin: “9.5% to 10.5%… definitely reach a 2-digit figure.”
  • Q4 margin miss drivers: geopolitical pressure on price escalation; “considered… increase of around 0.5% to 1%”; plus ECL provisions and year-end provisions.
  • Notable points / partial answers:
  • They quantify ECL in Q4: “INR28 crores.”
  • They do not fully reconcile the “miss” versus earlier margin expectations beyond macro + provisions + fixed cost/turnover effects.

Theme C: Working capital stretch and receivable days normalization

  • Core question(s):
  • Working capital debt/receivable days doubled vs last year—what’s the outlook?
  • Management response:
  • Working capital stretch is “transitory” due to milestone-based projects awaiting appointed dates and ROW clearances.
  • Expect return to “110 to 120 days,” with normalization “by post September.”
  • Assessment:
  • Reasoning is plausible but conditional (“awaiting appointed date/ROW”); no hard metric commitment beyond directional guidance.

Theme D: Order inflow/bid pipeline and segment focus

  • Core question(s):
  • FY27 order inflow target and bid pipeline size; which segments are targeted?
  • Bid pipeline “as of today” and NHAI/state visibility.
  • Management response:
  • Order inflow guidance: INR 8,000–10,000 cr for FY27.
  • Bid pipeline: road EPC pipeline “around INR40,000 crores” (central) + states opportunities; also “more than INR1 lakh crores of billing” referenced.
  • Segment focus: roads/railways/power T&D; domestic agencies (NHAI/MoRTH/NHIDCL/states) and international.
  • Assessment:
  • Strong on targets; pipeline numbers are high-level and not tied to conversion probability.

Theme E: Asset monetization timelines (HAM SPVs) and cash inflows

  • Core question(s):
  • Timelines for remaining 6 HAM assets; expected cash inflows by June and December.
  • Holdbacks/contingent consideration amounts and timing.
  • Management response:
  • By June end: “at least 4 assets… definitely… bring in cash of around INR750+ crores.”
  • By December: “another INR400 crores.”
  • Holdbacks: “INR130 crores” expected between June–July.
  • Contingent consideration: “~INR550 crores” dependent on NHAI toll extension decisions, expected “next 1 or 2 years… 24–36 months.”
  • Assessment:
  • More specific than prior calls, but still heavily dependent on NHAI approvals/PCODs.

Theme F: Debt levels, capex, and tax on gains

  • Core question(s):
  • Target debt levels by March 2027; working capital debt outlook.
  • Capex for FY27.
  • Tax impact of asset sales.
  • Management response:
  • Working capital debt target: “INR500–600 crores by March ’27.”
  • Consolidated debt: “~INR2,778 crores” as of Mar 31, 2026; project loans expected to drop after HAM sales.
  • Capex: FY26 capex INR67 cr (Q4 INR16 cr); FY27 capex ~INR100 cr.
  • Tax: capital gains tax “12.5%” (effective tax at ABL level “~nil” earlier; ABL standalone “~INR22 crores” mentioned; later “6% to 7%” effective across ACL carry-forward losses).

Theme G: ECL provision drivers

  • Core question(s):
  • Which segment/project caused ECL (delay in payment)?
  • Management response:
  • mix of ECL on inventory as well as debtors”; example Bowaichandi awaiting appointed date; other projects in discussion with NHAI.

Theme H: NHAI debarment/casualty circular interpretation

  • Core question(s):
  • How strictly to interpret NHAI circular on disqualification for “casualty”?
  • Management response:
  • Road Federation discussing; guidelines being defined.
  • Management suggests harsh debarment only for “catastrophic kind of failure… structural defect.”
  • Assessment:
  • Reassuring but still lacks clarity on definitions; relies on ongoing discussions.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 revenue growth: ~20%
  • FY27 order inflow: INR 8,000–10,000 crores
  • FY27 EBITDA margin: 9.5% to 10.5%, “definitely reach a 2-digit figure
  • Execution improvement:improve by 20%” (qualitative phrasing but directional)
  • Monetization cash:
  • By June 2026: INR 750+ crores (4 of 6 assets)
  • By December 2026: INR 400 crores (remaining 2)
  • Holdbacks: ~INR130 crores between June–July
  • Working capital normalization: receivable days back to 110–120 days by post September
  • Capex FY27: ~INR100 crores
  • Working capital debt target by Mar 2027: INR500–600 crores

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • FY26 transition year; FY27 expected to be more “normal” execution after clearance/ROW/appointed date bottlenecks.
  • Margin pressure expected to ease as price escalation and turnover normalize; ECL reversals expected as payments come.
  • Monetization remains central to deleveraging and cash generation, but depends on NHAI approvals/PCODs.

5. Standout Statements (directly revealing)

  • Execution recovery target:next year we should improve by 20%.”
  • Margin confidence:Our estimation for FY ’27… 9.5% to 10.5%… we will definitely reach a 2-digit figure.”
  • Working capital normalization timing:we believe that we should go back to… 110 to 120 days… by post September.”
  • Monetization timeline extension admitted:expected completion time line has now been extended to June 2026.”
  • ECL quantified:INR28 crores” ECL in Q4.
  • Contingent consideration dependence:dependent on NHAI’s decisions on extension of toll24 months to 36 months.”
  • Order book size:balance order book stands at INR15,312 crores” (plus post-31 Mar Angola INR 681 cr).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Guidance depends on execution + approvals: appointed dates, ROW clearances, NHAI toll extension—multiple “conditional” drivers.
Margin narrative relies on reversals/provisions: ECL included in margin estimate; reversals expected later (“reversal of ECL also over a period of time”).
Working capital normalization is time-bound but not guaranteed:by post September” assumes clearance/milestones land on schedule.

Positive signals
Specific monetization cash schedule (June/December) with quantified holdbacks and contingent consideration.
Order book diversification across roads/rail/power T&D reduces single-segment risk.
International wins (Saudi/Angola/Liberia) support growth beyond India-only cycle.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3–4 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): Management blamed muted execution on “early monsoon” and mobilization; sounded confident about catching up in H2.
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): Still cautious—monsoon/competition; but emphasized monetization progress and EPC focus.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): Tone remained constructive but acknowledged ECL and margin pressure; guided margins improving into FY27.
  • Current Q4 & FY26 (May 2026): More explicit about macro/geopolitical + input cost and execution delays in clearances/land; yet still gives clear FY27 targets.
  • Classification shift: More cautious than earlier calls (more emphasis on delays and macro), but still not pessimistic due to quantified FY27 guidance.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Monetization timing (BOT/HAM) repeatedly pushed:
  • Aug 2025: expected BOT/HAM closures by September; later “extended” in subsequent calls.
  • Nov 2025: BOT transition expected by 30 Nov; HAM monetization timelines reiterated (4 by March, 2 by June).
  • Current (May 2026): remaining 6 HAM SPVs completion timeline extended to June 2026 (explicit slip vs earlier “by March” framing in earlier calls).
  • Flag:Delayed (at least for the remaining HAM SPVs; June 2026 is the new completion anchor).
  • Execution ramp expectations:
  • Feb 2026 (Q3): expected pickup in Q1/Q2 and margins improving into FY27.
  • May 2026 (Q4): still reports weak execution/margin pressure in FY26 and expects FY27 execution improvement by 20%.
  • Flag:Partially delayed (FY26 did not deliver stronger execution/margins; FY27 recovery is now the focus).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “monsoon/mobilization” to “clearances/land + geopolitical/input cost”:
  • Earlier calls emphasized seasonal and start-up delays.
  • Current call broadens to global macro + price escalation pressure + labor shortages.
  • Monetization remains central, but the company now frames it as “transition year” consolidation rather than purely a near-term balance sheet clean-up.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Positives: management provides quantified guidance (order inflow, margins, monetization cash).
  • Negatives: timelines have moved (HAM SPV monetization completion extended to June 2026; earlier calls implied earlier completion windows).
  • Margin explanations increasingly rely on provisions/ECL and reversals, which can obscure underlying operating performance.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/order pipeline: remains constructive; order inflow targets persist (now FY27 INR 8,000–10,000 cr).
  • Margins: guidance has stayed around ~10% but FY26 realized margins were pressured; FY27 is framed as recovery to 9.5–10.5%.
  • Deleveraging: consistent theme—monetization drives debt reduction; however, timing has slipped.
  • Risks: expanded from execution/monsoon to include geopolitical + input cost inflation.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s working capital stress appears to be a recurring operational bottleneck (receivable days doubling in FY26), and management now ties normalization to post-September—suggesting the issue is not fully resolved by monetization alone.
  • The SPV accounting clarification in this call (Saudi/ITS orders not in standalone) indicates that reported standalone order book/revenue may be structurally different from consolidated—investors should be cautious when comparing standalone metrics across periods.