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Indian Company Investor Calls

Finkurve Hits INR 1,000 Crore AUM, Credit Rating Upgrade

May 27, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Finkurve Financial Services Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (held May 21, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights multiple positive milestones: “crossed… INR 1,000 crores in AUM”, “closed the financial year on a stronger and a more stable note”, and “received a credit rating upgrade”.
  • They repeatedly emphasize stability and discipline: “asset quality metrics have been stable”, “portfolio performance remained stable”, “risk-adjusted growth”.
  • While they acknowledge macro uncertainty, responses are largely confidence-building rather than cautious.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Disciplined growth + governance/risk-first strategy
  • systems, control, and underwriting discipline remain ahead of growth
  • never… compromise on the quality of the asset
  • Scale-up milestones
  • AUM milestone: “INR 1,000 crores
  • Branch expansion: “crossed a 100 branch network
  • Asset quality strength
  • CFO cites “gross NPA 0.13% and net NPA 0.09%” and “record low level
  • Stage distribution: “stage 1 bucket still holds 99%
  • Funding access improving
  • credit rating upgrade from CARE… and Infomerics
  • improving access to diversified funding sources
  • Co-lending as a strategic lever (off-book AUM)
  • Godrej co-lending initiated; early traction: “INR 21 crores of AUM
  • Target aspiration: “20% of the overall portfolio in co-lending
  • Explanation: CLM-1 guideline implementation delayed; partnership “went live… in the last quarter
  • Cross-sell / fee-income expansion attempts
  • Arvog Wellness program launched; “issued over 150 policies” but “premature… to provide… guidance
  • Regulatory transition
  • transitioned into a middle-layer NBFC” with aligned governance/compliance.
  • Macro framing
  • Mentions “elevated global uncertainty” but asserts resilience of gold loans: “secured and short-tenure lending… demonstrate resilience”.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Branch expansion & technology enablement

  • Core questions
  • Timeline/ambition for physical branch rollout; how technology is used at branches; incremental tech investment.
  • Management response
  • Branch rollout: reiterated plan of ~50% growth; branch opening takes 30–45 days; manpower is the constraint.
  • Tech: focus on reducing customer journey TAT; HO already improved via “AI and automation”, branch-level gains “yet to be seen” but “in this financial year”.
  • Notable signals
  • No hard capex/tech spend guidance beyond per-branch operating numbers later in the call (see Theme D).

Theme B: Co-lending mechanics, targets, and partner implications

  • Core questions
  • Why co-lending is <2% of AUM; FY27/FY28 targets; whether new investments (RBL) improve opportunity; agri/PSL product approach under new rules.
  • Management response
  • <2% explained by CLM-1 implementation timing and partnership going live mid-quarter.
  • Aspiration: “20% of the overall portfolio in co-lending by the end of the financial year” (no partner-specific numbers).
  • RBL/UAE investment: management says they have 3 partners and will increase allocation; no commitments.
  • Agriculture: PSL can only be built via co-lending; independent agri product has “very limited benefit”; they’re “in talks” to launch an agri product with partners “over this financial year”.
  • Evasive/partial elements
  • No explicit FY27/FY28 co-lending % targets despite the question.
  • Partner-specific opportunity is discussed qualitatively; no quantified impact.

Theme C: Cost of funds / leverage / borrowing mix

  • Core questions
  • Efforts to decrease cost of funds; whether credit rating improvement will reduce borrowing cost; current WACB and expected trajectory.
  • Management response
  • Credit rating upgrade already achieved; “Credit rating improvement has already been factored in”.
  • They expect steady-state cost of borrowing: “We can consider the same for now” (implied ~11.2%).
  • Borrowing mix: more private banks and PSUs; co-lending at “better cost”.
  • Notable signals
  • They explicitly frame rating progression as a “journey” and deny immediate further benefit: “we should not and we cannot expect this immediately in this financial year”.

Theme D: Profit guidance, ROE/ROA targets, and capital allocation

  • Core questions
  • Profit guidance for 2–3 years; AUM/branch targets for FY29; capex/opex per branch; ROE/ROA medium-term drivers.
  • Management response
  • No profit guidance: “We don’t have a specific guidance on the profit…”
  • AUM target: “aspiring… INR 5,000 crore by 2029
  • Branch growth guidance: “around 50% expansion” in FY26; capex/opex per branch:
    • Capex ~ INR 14–15 lakh
    • Opex ~ INR 2.5–3 lakh
  • ROE/ROA: long-term benchmarks:
    • ROE of 17% to 18%
    • ROA around 3.5% to 4%
  • Profit drivers: they emphasize risk-adjusted growth and steady-state profitability rather than margin expansion promises.
  • Evasive/partial elements
  • Profit guidance avoided; they separate AUM growth from profit: “profit has its own adjustments”.

Theme E: Risk management: NPAs, overdue pipeline, gold price stress

  • Core questions
  • Overdue-but-not-NPA pipeline; stress testing if gold corrects 15–20%; current LTV.
  • Management response
  • Overdue pipeline: exact number to be checked and mailed (“need to check and come back”).
  • Stress: average LTV “around 72%”; comfortable with 15–20% fall; cited prior quarter sharp correction without losses; margin calls pool “not very high”.
  • Portfolio health: “stage 1 bucket still holds 99%”; stage 2/3 minimal.
  • Notable signals
  • Strong qualitative risk confidence, but limited transparency on overdue pipeline.

Theme F: Augmont ecosystem contribution

  • Core questions
  • Tangible benefits from Augmont ecosystem (cost of funds, acquisition, fraud/collections); whether Augmont customers are being used for gold loans; quality differences.
  • Management response
  • Tangible: “better cost of fund” via Augmont lineage/brand weight with lenders.
  • Intangible: brand weight in gold ecosystem.
  • Augmont customer sourcing: explicitly stated they have not leveraged Augmont customers yet for Finkurve gold loans; branch-led sourcing only.
  • Credibility implication
  • This is a meaningful “future upside” claim, but currently not monetized.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • AUM growth (FY26 guidance reiterated)
  • 40% to 50% YoY” (repeated from prior call)
  • Branch expansion
  • 50% branch network” / “around 50% expansion” in FY26
  • Co-lending
  • Aspiration: “20% of the overall portfolio in co-lending by the end of the financial year
  • ROE/ROA (long-term benchmarks)
  • ROE 17% to 18%
  • ROA 3.5% to 4%
  • AUM target
  • INR 5,000 crore by 2029
  • Cost of borrowing
  • We can consider the same for now” vs prior 11.2%; also stated they expect steady-state due to macro up-trend.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Profit guidance restraint: they avoid numerical profit guidance, implying variability from accounting/adjustments.
  • Branch-level tech benefits not yet realized: “major gain is yet to be seen” at branches; suggests near-term efficiency gains may lag.
  • Co-lending ramp is expected to be gradual: early quarter impact explained by CLM-1 go-live timing.
  • Risk posture remains conservative: repeated “risk-adjusted growth” and strong asset quality emphasis.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Asset quality & stability
  • gross NPA… 0.13% and net NPA… 0.09%
  • stage 1 bucket still holds 99%
  • Co-lending ramp explanation
  • went live with the partnership only in the last quarter… started… in the mid of the quarter
  • Co-lending target
  • aspire to achieve a 20% of the overall portfolio in co-lending
  • Cost of borrowing stance
  • Credit rating improvement has already been factored in
  • we can only expect… steady-state cost of borrowing
  • Profit guidance limitation
  • We don’t have a specific guidance on the profit
  • Augmont monetization not yet started
  • We have still not leveraged Augmont customers for the Finkurve gold loans
  • Gold stress confidence
  • average LTV was around 72%… comfortable in terms of stress test of even 15% to 20%”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No profit guidance despite strong performance; limits investor ability to underwrite earnings trajectory.
Overdue-but-not-NPA pipeline not disclosed (“need to check and come back”), reducing transparency on credit risk timing.
Co-lending targets are aspirational and partner-specific quantification is avoided.
Branch-level tech benefits “yet to be seen”—efficiency claims may not translate immediately.

Positive signals
Very low NPAs with explicit numbers and stage distribution.
Funding diversification + rating upgrades cited as improving access.
Clear risk management narrative (LTV, stress test, margin calls behavior).
Operational constraints acknowledged (manpower for branches), suggesting realistic execution planning.


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

Prior call provided: Q3 FY26 (Feb 09, 2026). Current call is Q4 & FY26 (May 21, 2026).

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Shift: More Optimistic
  • Q3 FY26 tone: foundational/early-call framing; guidance described as “directional clarity”.
  • Q4/FY26 tone: milestone-heavy and confidence-forward (“crossed INR 1,000 crores AUM”, “strongest note so far”, “rating upgrade”).
  • What changed
  • More willingness to provide specific quantitative metrics (NPA, CRAR, cash, NIM-related commentary in Q3).
  • Less emphasis on “we are young” and more on execution outcomes.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Branch growth plan (40–50%)
  • Past (Q3 FY26): guidance “40% to 50% growth” and branch expansion “40% to 50%”.
  • Current: “closed the year at 105 branches which is around 50% growth” ✅ Delivered
  • Co-lending target range
  • Past (Q3 FY26): target “10%-15% of the overall AUM” for co-lending (internal target).
  • Current: co-lending is ~INR 21 crore off-book out of INR 1,096 crore (~<2%), but management attributes delay to CLM-1 go-live timing; now aspiration is 20% by end of FY26.
  • Outcome vs expectation: ⏳ Delayed / Not yet achieved (no evidence of reaching prior co-lending target; also FY26 target now stated as 20% but not yet realized at Q4 start).
  • Cost of borrowing improvement via rating
  • Past (Q3 FY26): expected rationalization as credit rating improves; steady-state in industry range.
  • Current: “Credit rating improvement has already been factored in” and they expect steady-state ~11.2% rather than further near-term decline.
  • Outcome: ✅/⏳ Partially delivered (improvement claimed, but no further reduction promised).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Augmont ecosystem
  • Q3: Augmont described as structural advantage and integration.
  • Q4: explicit admission that Augmont customers are not yet leveraged for gold loans—shifts narrative from “advantage” to “advantage not monetized yet”.
  • Co-lending
  • Q3: co-lending described as new; traction expected in Q4; target 10–15%.
  • Q4: co-lending traction is explained as delayed due to CLM-1 implementation; target now escalates to 20% by end of FY26 (aspirational).
  • Profit guidance
  • Q3: no precise guidance; Q4 continues to avoid profit guidance—consistency in restraint.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: consistent emphasis on risk-adjusted growth and asset quality.
  • Weakness: co-lending ramp appears repeatedly “timing-dependent” (CLM-1 go-live), and management avoids key transparency (overdue pipeline exact number; profit guidance).
  • The “steady-state cost of borrowing” framing suggests they are managing expectations rather than overpromising.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / market
  • Stable: gold loan resilience and customer preference narrative continues.
  • Margins / funding
  • Q3 discussed NIM contraction due to leverage; Q4 focuses on cost-of-funds mix and steady-state borrowing cost.
  • Expansion
  • Branch expansion remains central and is being executed (105 branches).
  • Risk
  • Risk management narrative becomes more quantified (LTV 72%, stage 1 = 99%, stress test comfort).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • Efficiency/tech benefits are lagging at branch level: Q4 admits HO improvements already happened, but branch-level gains “yet to be seen”—this could mean cost-to-income improvement may not be immediate despite scale.
  • Co-lending is the main “future upside” lever, but current disclosure shows it is still early; management’s reliance on regulatory implementation timing increases execution risk.