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Indian Company Investor Calls

V2 Retail Targets 170–200 Stores, Maintains 28–30% Gross Margin

June 2, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

V2 Retail Limited — Q4 & FY25-26 Earnings Call (FY’26; call held May 29, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “continued momentum,” “ability…to execute with discipline and agility,” and “confidence in sustaining momentum into FY’27 and beyond.”
  • Uses strong performance framing: “stellar growth,” “record PAT,” “major milestone” (store footprint crossing 350).
  • Even when acknowledging risks (geopolitical tension, May softness), responses are framed as temporary and manageable.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Sustained high growth + operating leverage: Q4 revenue +60% YoY; FY revenue +63% YoY; EBITDA margin expansion (FY EBITDA margin 14.9% reported IndAS basis).
  • Value-fashion proposition driving full-price mix:full price sales contributed 89% in Q4” and “90% in FY’26,” with emphasis on product refresh and competitive pricing.
  • Expansion with disciplined economics: Store additions remain aggressive (FY net +136; Q4 net +31), with a stated plan to open 170–200 stores in FY’27 (conditional).
  • Inventory management as a core risk control: Increased safety stock due to geopolitical tension; explicit inventory targets: “maintain inventory at 90–100 days.”
  • Accounting transparency / pre-IndAS focus: Continues to guide on pre-IndAS numbers and aligns budgets/cash flows/incentives to pre-IndAS.
  • Strategic simplification:focusing on retail business only” and moving away from in-house manufacturing operations.
  • Long-term vision narrative: Building for a “20-year vision” and India/organized retail growth tailwinds; short-term disruptions shouldn’t derail store growth.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Store expansion plan, geography mix, and store economics

  • Core questions
  • Planned store openings for the next year and next 2–3 years.
  • How many stores will be in new vs core regions; state-by-state approach.
  • New store performance vs mature store performance (PSF, EBITDA/margins).
  • Management response
  • Store openings: 170–200 for “this year” (FY’27), and next year guidance implied as ~250 stores (conditional).
  • Geography: open 4–5 stores initially per new state to gather data, then expand; example: Karnataka scaling to 15–16 stores; Gujarat “performing very well.”
  • Mix: “30% to 40% new stores in newer regions” and “50% to 60% from core strong regions.”
  • New vs old PSF: old stores ~1,124 PSF (FY’26); new stores ~750 PSF; new stores start at ~70% of old store throughput.
  • New store profitability: “EBITDA positive from the first month itself,” maturity takes 3–4 years.
  • Operating leverage constraint: company-level EBITDA margin may stay stable because 50–60% new area offsets leverage.
  • Notable / potentially evasive or conditional elements
  • Expansion numbers are repeatedly “conditional” on momentum and profitability metrics, without hard downside scenarios.
  • When asked about margin expansion to 11%, management effectively reframes: “next two years…similar margins,” unless new area additions fall materially.

Theme B: SSSG, PSF trends, and margin outlook

  • Core questions
  • Why SSSG is ~7–8% while company PSF declined ~7–8% (analyst observation).
  • Whether SSSG guidance (8–10%) can hold and how.
  • Gross margin sustainability given yarn/cotton wage inflation and competitor behavior (pass-through vs absorb).
  • Operating leverage: how to improve EBITDA margin if new stores dilute blended margins.
  • Management response
  • SSSG strategy: “doubling down” on product strengthening, supply chain robustness, visual merchandising, store experience, and technology.
  • Price pass-through: expects to maintain gross margin; raw material increases “will be passed on…3%–4%” via MRP increases.
  • Gross margin guidance: maintain 28%–30% going forward.
  • SSSG vs PSF decline explanation: new stores have ~70% of old store PSF; overall PSF declines due to higher new area share, but old-store PSF is improving.
  • Operating leverage: explicitly states company-level operating leverage is limited near-term because new stores have lower EBITDA (old ~11–12%, new ~5–6%).
  • Notable / strong answers
  • Clear quantitative framing on inventory aging and PSF cohorts (e.g., new stores start at 750; old at 1,124; new stores EBITDA positive from month 1).
  • Potential red flag
  • Margin outlook is “stable” largely due to structural mix, not because of demonstrated incremental margin levers at company level.

Theme C: Working capital, cash flow, and inventory risk

  • Core questions
  • Whether cash flow can remain positive while opening 175–200 stores.
  • Why creditors/inventory changed; sustainability of working capital cycle.
  • Quantum of “early sourcing” inventory due to geopolitical tension.
  • Management response
  • Cash flow: operating cash flow can be positive; net cash from operating activities can remain positive even with store openings; prepayment program can be stopped if needed.
  • Inventory: safety stock increased in March; targets 90–100 days inventory; creditors target 45 days.
  • Inventory aging: “>1-year old inventory <5%,” “>6 months <24%.”
  • Early sourcing inventory: cited “~300 crores” combined (planned new stores + pre-GRC + safety stock).
  • Evasive/partial
  • “Cash flow positive” is asserted, but without a quantified cash conversion metric (e.g., CFO/EBITDA, FCF) for FY’27.

Theme D: Accounting, lease liabilities, and pre-IndAS vs IndAS

  • Core questions
  • Lease liabilities / right-of-use accounting: whether leases are shorter-term.
  • Whether pre-IndAS vs post-IndAS gap will reduce.
  • Management response
  • Policy change: reassess lease terms based on 2–3 years of performance; lock-ins ~1 year; vendor lock-in ~11 years.
  • Continues to guide on pre-IndAS and says the gap should reduce as expansion mix changes.
  • Credibility note
  • This is consistent with prior calls’ emphasis on pre-IndAS transparency.

Theme E: Omnichannel / loyalty / competitive threats

  • Core questions
  • Any omnichannel plans (quick commerce/e-commerce) and timeline.
  • Loyalty program existence.
  • Threat from low-cost online players (Meesho etc.).
  • Management response
  • Loyalty: no loyalty points; uses customer database (~8 crore) via WhatsApp/RCS/SMS with vouchers/gifts.
  • Omnichannel: management says they are focused on the store model; omnichannel is discussed as future tech leveraging store inventory (earlier call: “next financial year”).
  • Online competition: argues online logistics + acquisition costs make it hard to match value; omnichannel could be ~5% of sales when mature.
  • Potential inconsistency
  • Q4 FY’26 call does not reiterate the “next financial year” omnichannel timeline as clearly as Q2/H1 FY’26 did.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Store openings (FY’27 / “this year” in Q&A): 170–200 stores (also stated “170–180” and “170–200” in different Q&A answers; consistently conditional).
  • Revenue growth:at least 50% revenue growth over the next 2 years.”
  • SSSG guidance:8% to 10%” going forward / next year.
  • Gross margin guidance: maintain 28%–30%.
  • Inventory policy: maintain inventory at 90–100 days; creditors at 45 days.
  • Inventory aging:>1-year old <5%,” “>6 months <24%.”
  • EBITDA margin (near-term): management repeatedly indicates similar margins due to new area mix (no new numeric target raised for FY’27).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Margin expansion at company level is constrained near-term because 50–60% new area keeps blended EBITDA margin stable.
  • Geopolitical disruption is temporary (“once situation normalizes, we will reduce safety stock”).
  • Expansion confidence is long-term (“building for 20-year vision”; short-term hindrances won’t sway plan).
  • No diversification: “We are completely focused on this model” (no other verticals/brands).

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • On expansion funding / capital strategy
  • No [QIP needed].debt-to-equity ratio is very healthyoption of getting more debt… first preference.”
  • On inventory risk control
  • >1-year old inventory is less than 5% and >6 months… less than 24%.”
  • Once the situation normalizes, we will reduce our safety stock.”
  • On margin strategy
  • We won’t absorb [raw material increases] in gross margins3%–4% increase is not significant.”
  • We would look to maintain our gross margin at 28%–30%.
  • On operating leverage limitation
  • Because we are opening so many newer stores… we cannot get an operating leverage at the company level.
  • On new store profitability
  • EBITDA positive from the first month itself… breakeven around Rs. 500 per square feet.”
  • On long-term narrative
  • We are building today… for our 20-year vision… short-term hindrances don’t sway us.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Conditional guidance dominates (store count and momentum depend on performance), but downside metrics are not provided.
Margin expansion expectations are dampened: management resists analyst requests for higher EBITDA margin, citing structural mix—could be interpreted as limited upside unless new area share declines.
Cash flow positivity is asserted without quantified CFO/FCF targets for FY’27.

Positive signals
– Strong disclosure discipline: continued pre-IndAS transparency and explicit inventory aging targets.
– Clear operational metrics: PSF cohorts, new store EBITDA positivity, full-price contribution.
– Inventory risk appears actively managed (safety stock explained; aging quantified).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q2 FY’26 (Nov 2025): very bullish—“very bullish,” “positive outlook,” high SSSG (reported 23.4% in Q2).
  • Q3 FY’26 (Feb 2026): still optimistic but with more nuance: SSSG reported low (2% in Q3; normalized higher), and lease accounting gain discussed.
  • Q4 & FY’26 (May 2026): optimistic again, but with more explicit structural caveats:
  • Management now more directly states company-level operating leverage won’t show up while new area share remains high.
  • Classification shift: More Cautious (operationally), while overall tone remains optimistic.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Pre-IndAS gap reduction expectation (Feb 2026 call):
  • Prior statement: reassessment of lease accounting should reduce pre vs post IndAS gap as expansion continues.
  • Current call: continues pre-IndAS guidance; no explicit “gap reduced” claim, but no contradiction either.
  • Flag:Not clearly evidenced in this transcript.
  • Omnichannel timeline (Nov 2025 call):
  • Prior: omnichannel “in the next financial year.”
  • Current: Q4 call does not restate a timeline; only general focus on retail model and future tech investments.
  • Flag:Dropped/less emphasized.
  • SSSG guidance continuity:
  • Prior calls: consistently guided 8–10%.
  • Current call: reiterates 8–10% and provides cohort logic.
  • Flag: ✅ Delivered/Consistent.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From growth/optimism → to structural margin explanation
  • Earlier calls emphasized margin levers and bill discounting; Q4 call more strongly explains why company-level EBITDA margin stays stable (new store mix).
  • Manufacturing exit becomes explicit
  • Q4 call: “moved away from in-house manufacturing operations.”
  • Earlier calls discussed shutting down manufacturing units (Feb 2026 call referenced manufacturing shutdowns and focusing on standalone).
  • Shift: ✅ consistent direction, now more clearly operationalized.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • High credibility on operational metrics: inventory aging, PSF cohorts, new store EBITDA positivity, full-price mix are repeatedly quantified.
  • Moderate credibility on forward upside: management resists margin upside targets and frames it structurally; this is consistent but limits perceived upside.
  • Overall credibility: Medium-High
  • Strong consistency on SSSG and store economics narrative.
  • Less clarity on cash flow quantification and omnichannel execution timeline.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: stable-to-strong narrative; May softness acknowledged but June expected to be strong.
  • Margins: gross margin target maintained (28–30%); EBITDA margin framed as stable due to new store mix.
  • Expansion: store count remains aggressive; geographic expansion continues with data-driven state entry.
  • Inventory risk: becomes more explicit and quantified in Q4 (safety stock, aging thresholds, days targets).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Operating leverage “ceiling” is now explicitly admitted: management previously talked about operating leverage; now it clarifies that consolidated operating leverage is structurally delayed until new area share falls (implying upside may be slower than investors expect).
  • Omnichannel emphasis appears to fade from Q2/H1 call (timeline stated) to Q4 call (not reiterated), suggesting either execution delays or prioritization shift back to store economics.
  • Capital strategy flexibility increased: moving from QIP-driven narrative (Nov/Feb) to “debt first preference” (May) indicates a shift in financing posture as growth continues.