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Indian Company Investor Calls

DFPCL Expects 90–95% TAN Utilization by FY27 End

June 1, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Deepak Fertilisers and Petrochemicals Corporation Limited (DFPCL) — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (quarter & year ended 31 Mar 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral to Optimistic

  • Management acknowledges a “very challenging environment” (LPG shortage affecting propylene/IPA, LNG cuts, subsidy delays, export/import bans, labor constraints).
  • Despite this, they repeatedly point to “respite” in Q1, “early sign of sequential movement”, and “confident of progressively stronger performance” as projects ramp and long-term contracts start contributing.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Macro/geo disruption driving margin volatility
  • LPG shortage → propylene cut impacting IPA.
  • LNG vessel delays → fertilisers & chemicals disruption; fertiliser prices “went shooting through the roof” with “inadequate and delayed subsidy coverage.”
  • China export ban on critical products; India export ban on ammonium nitrate.
  • Value-chain integration starting to show benefits
  • Long-term LNG contract: “maiden cargo… arrived”; suppliers ensured continuity.
  • Ammonia plant shutdown (planned) created a one-off ~INR 70–75 cr impact, but management says the plant is now performing well.
  • Narrative: “LNG to ammonia to the complete downstream… gradually coming alive.”
  • Project execution nearing completion
  • Gopalpur TAN ~95% complete, Dahej nitric acid ~86% complete.
  • Commissioning expected Q2 FY27; within capex envelope.
  • Crop Nutrition strategy: specialty premium validation but subsidy limits pass-through
  • Specialty enriched products are gaining adoption; premiums validated by “crossed the mindset of price boundaries.”
  • However, subsidy support lag and election-driven price controls limited premium realization.
  • Mining Chemicals / TAN: demand strength tied to mining targets
  • Q4 volume strength attributed to mining companies’ year-end production targets; monsoon season expected to be cyclically weaker but no long-term demand destruction.
  • Balance sheet/capex cycle
  • FY26 capex ~INR 1,569 cr; net debt INR 4,824 cr, net debt/EBITDA ~2.86x.
  • FY27 capex guided as elevated due to project completion.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: TAN volumes, utilization, and demand outlook

  • Core questions
  • Is Q4 TAN volume a new run-rate or backlog?
  • What utilization levels for FY27/FY28 (especially Gopalpur)?
  • Any risk of demand destruction / seasonal weakness?
  • Management response
  • Q4 volume improvement due to “demand strengthening” as mining companies chase annual targets.
  • Expect trend to continue; Q2 seasonally weaker (monsoon) but “no long-term demand destruction.”
  • FY27 ramp: by end of year “90% to 95% utilization on a TPD basis.”
  • FY28: “full capacity utilization or almost similar” from exit level.
  • Notable/partial
  • They did not provide a strict “new run-rate” number; instead framed as seasonality + ramp to new capacity.

Theme B: Equinor LNG contract impact (gas security + margin)

  • Core questions
  • How long is gas secured after maiden shipment?
  • How will gas cost and chemical margins change?
  • Any quantification of margin uplift?
  • Management response
  • Gas: “fully secured” via minimum take-or-pay + 15-year long supply; multiple parcels lined up.
  • Margin: says improvement is certain but won’t quantify; expects partial reflection in next quarter results.
  • They avoided disclosing exact gas cost / pooled gas price.
  • Notable/partial
  • Strong confidence but no numbers on margin uplift; repeated “not available/public domain” style deferral.

Theme C: IPA / acetone pricing outlook (“new normal”)

  • Core questions
  • Expectations for IPA prices next 6 months and drivers of recovery.
  • Management response
  • IPA prices are already very high; driven by propylene unavailability due to LPG shortage and RGP limited availability.
  • Price likely to remain elevated for some time; recovery to “similar level” is unlikely—implying a structural “new normal.”
  • Notable/strong
  • Clear directional view: elevated for a while; not back to old levels.

Theme D: Nitric acid / specialty nitric acid development

  • Core questions
  • Progress and opportunity for specialty-grade nitric acid products.
  • Management response
  • Specialty products are in commercial trial run; contribution “very, very small” currently.
  • Focus on ramp to commercial stage; too early to quantify.

Theme E: Gopalpur ammonia sourcing and “Strait of Hormuz” risk

  • Core questions
  • Where does ammonia supply come from?
  • Is there long-term ammonia contract vs spot?
  • Any geopolitical procurement risk?
  • Management response
  • They claim no disconnect: they already produce ~500k+ tons ammonia and also trade/import ammonia; additional quantity can be sourced.
  • Long-term contract: “at this point of time, long-term contract, no” but there are contracts with multiple suppliers ensuring continuous supply; long-term can be added if needed.
  • Notable/partial
  • They did not directly address “Strait of Hormuz” with a risk assessment; instead emphasized multi-supplier continuity.

Theme F: Capex guidance and project delays

  • Core questions
  • Any further delays beyond Q2 FY27 commissioning?
  • Capex guidance for FY27.
  • Management response
  • No further delays expected; prior delay due to skilled workforce shortage (elections + LPG shortage impacts).
  • FY27 capex: ~INR 4,650 cr total project capex; already spent ~INR 3,800 cr, leaving ~INR 800–1,000 cr plus maintenance.
  • Notable/strong
  • “Definitely no” further delay—firm language.

Theme G: Acquisitions / demerger / DMSL transformation

  • Core questions
  • Strategy for acquired explosive unit (DMSL).
  • CCDs and eventual stake conversion.
  • Demerger/listing timelines.
  • Management response
  • Explosives acquisition: enabler for DMSL transformation to “mining solutions” (outcome/KPI-based), not just product supply.
  • Demerger/listing: no immediate timeline; “yet to take a call” on form/shape/timing.
  • CCDs: issued last year; conversion due in ~30 months; split between third party and promoter; fixed conversion ratio.
  • Notable/partial
  • Demerger remains open-ended (no timeline), despite being a recurring topic historically.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Commissioning
  • Gopalpur TAN & Dahej nitric acid commissioning expected in Q2 FY27
  • Project completion
  • Gopalpur ~95% complete, Dahej ~86% complete (as of call)
  • Utilization
  • By end of FY27: 90%–95% utilization (TPD basis) for TAN
  • FY28: “full capacity utilization or almost similar” from exit level
  • Capex
  • FY27 elevated capex: total project capex ~INR 4,650 cr
  • Spent incl. GST/advances ~INR 3,800 cr → remaining ~INR 800–1,000 cr (plus maintenance)
  • Gas security
  • “Fully secured” with 15-year long supply and multiple parcels in the year (no numeric volumes)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Margins
  • Management expects margin improvement as global supply tightness improves spreads and LNG contract improves cost visibility.
  • They characterize FY27 as a “stepping stone year” with improvement in growth + margin, but no margin numbers provided.
  • Demand
  • TAN demand: cyclically weaker in monsoon (Q2) but no long-term destruction.
  • Crop Nutrition: El Niño risk may reduce rains, but they’re tracking; specialty adoption remains strong.
  • IPA
  • “New normal” likely persists: elevated prices for some time; unlikely to revert to prior levels.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • On the environment
  • very challenging environment… thanks to Mr. Trump” and multiple disruptions (LPG/LNG/subsidy/export bans).
  • On respite
  • some respite… thanks to the Petroleum Ministry providing us some help to source LPG propylene.”
  • On integration
  • our maiden cargo… arrived” and “LNG to ammonia to the complete downstream… gradually coming alive.”
  • On profitability trend
  • Adjusting… one-off… underlying operating trend is more stable” and “early sign of sequential movement.”
  • On ammonia value chain
  • fully secured” gas supply; “we don’t see… any shortage of gas.”
  • On IPA
  • price will remain elevated for some timeUnlikely [to come back to similar level], but the new normal is expected.”
  • On projects
  • Commissioning is expected in Q2 FY ’27” and “definitely no further delay.”
  • On demerger
  • No, not immediately… yet to take a call in terms of form and shape and timing.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Guidance opacity on margins: repeated refusal to quantify margin uplift from LNG integration and chemicals improvement.
Subsidy pass-through risk acknowledged:inadequate and delayed subsidy coverage” and “lag in subsidy realignment” impacted Crop Nutrition margins.
Geopolitical procurement risk not directly addressed: “Strait of Hormuz” question was redirected to multi-supplier continuity rather than a risk assessment.
Demerger timeline still unresolved (open-ended; “not immediately”).

Positive signals
Clear operational confidence on projects: “definitely no” further delays; commissioning timeline maintained.
Gas supply certainty: “fully secured” with long-term contract and multiple parcels.
Demand visibility for TAN: mining targets driving Q4 strength; utilization ramp to 90–95% by FY27 year-end.
Specialty adoption momentum: premiums validated; specialty share rising (Croptek/specialty mix improvements).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 2025): optimistic/constructive—focus on resilience, project readiness, and margin range stability (“hovered around 18% to 20%”).
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): still resilient but more cautious—IPA/ammonia headwinds; expects turnaround with Equinor LNG “kick in by middle of next year.”
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 2026): more defensive—extended rains and geopolitical uncertainty; margins down; “double whammy” from cost inflation and lagging subsidy.
  • Q4 FY26 (May 2026): neutral-to-optimistic—management admits severe disruptions but emphasizes respite in Q1, maiden LNG cargo, and early sequential improvement.
    Shift classification: More Optimistic than Q3, mainly due to tangible milestones (LNG cargo arrival; projects nearing completion; “early sign” of improvement).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Equinor LNG contract benefit timing
  • Past (Q3 FY26, Jan 2026): LNG contract expected to support gas pricing; “partial advantage emerging… supporting good gas pricing.”
  • Now (Q4 FY26):maiden cargo… arrived” and gas supply “fully secured.”
  • Status:Delivered milestone (contract commencement evidenced by shipment).
  • Project commissioning timing
  • Past (Q3 FY26, Jan 2026): commissioning expected Q1 FY27 (Gopalpur TAN and Dahej acid).
  • Now (Q4 FY26): commissioning expected Q2 FY27.
  • Status:Delayed by ~1 quarter (explicitly acknowledged as workforce shortage-driven).
  • Ammonia turnaround / margin improvement from LNG
  • Past (Q2 FY26, Nov 2025): LNG contract “kick in by middle of next year” to bring positivity; breakeven improvement narrative.
  • Now: expects improvement but still no quantified margin uplift; says improvement will reflect “partial” in next quarter.
  • Status:Partially delivered (milestone), financial impact still pending/uncertain.
  • Demerger/listing
  • Past (Q3 FY26, Jan 2026): demerger/listing roadmap discussed; timing not firm.
  • Now: still “not immediately” and “yet to take a call.”
  • Status:Dropped/extended (no timeline progress).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “weather/geopolitical volatility” to “integration turning the corner”:
  • Earlier calls emphasized resilience against volatility; Q4 adds specific integration proof (maiden LNG cargo + downstream value chain “coming alive”).
  • IPA story becomes more structural:
  • Q3 framed IPA as cyclic/awaiting realignment; Q4 says return to old levels is unlikely (“new normal”).
  • Demerger emphasis fades into deferral:
  • Repeated questions get the same answer: committed but no timeline.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strengths: consistent attribution of margin pressure to input cost inflation + subsidy lag; consistent project progress percentages and capex cycle framing.
  • Weaknesses: commissioning guidance slipped (Q1 → Q2 FY27) and margin uplift remains unquantified, limiting confidence in financial trajectory.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand
  • TAN demand: from monsoon-driven softness (Q3) → Q4 strength tied to mining targets; still seasonal in Q2.
  • Margins
  • Fertilizer margins: persistent sensitivity to subsidy timing.
  • Chemicals (IPA): moving from “cyclic correction” to “new normal elevated pricing.”
  • Integration
  • LNG/ammonia/downstream: increasingly central and now supported by a concrete event (maiden cargo).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Workforce shortage as a recurring execution risk: Q4 attributes delay to skilled manpower shortages linked to elections and LPG shortage; this is a non-market risk that could recur during ramp-ups.
  • Management is shifting from “expectations” to “milestones,” but still avoids hard financial quantification—suggesting confidence in operations, less certainty in near-term margin magnitude due to subsidy and commodity cycles.