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Indian Company Investor Calls

Bhopal license uncertainty drives FY27 guidance and margin targets

June 5, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Som Distilleries & Breweries Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (held June 2, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral (leaning Optimistic)

  • Management acknowledges a “challenging year” with “operational disruptions” and “industry-wide cost pressures,” and reports sharp declines in revenue/EBITDA/PAT.
  • However, they express confidence in resolution of the Bhopal license issue (“Management remains confident of a favorable resolution”) and provide constructive forward-looking signals (Karnataka excise rationalization, UP plant commissioning, cash flow resilience).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • FY26 performance hit by Bhopal license disruption + weak demand in key states
  • temporary license related disruption at the Bhopal facility
  • subdued demand conditions in Karnataka and Odisha
  • Beer volumes down “20%” to 187.19 lakh cases; total volume down “17.7%”.
  • IMFL resilience vs beer weakness
  • IMFL volume grew “32%” to 15.03 lakh cases, supported by “improved market penetration” and “premium portfolio”.
  • Industry-wide inflation pressuring margins
  • elevated energy costs,” “glass bottles, aluminum cans, barley and logistics” under pressure.
  • Regulatory resolution underway (Bhopal)
  • renewal process… is currently underway
  • does not anticipate any long-term impact
  • Offtake improving in Karnataka after excise rationalization.
  • Growth capex narrative: UP greenfield brewery on schedule
  • greenfield brewery project in Uttar Pradesh… remains on schedule
  • production terms have commenced
  • FY26 capex: “approximately INR250 crores
  • Commercial operations expected after trial phase; management frames this as strengthening North India manufacturing footprint.
  • Balance sheet/capital discipline despite lower profitability
  • Gross debt increased only “INR43 crores” in FY26; debt-to-equity “0.30x”.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: FY27/FY28 revenue & EBITDA margin guidance

  • Core questions
  • Outlook for revenue growth and EBITDA margins for FY27 and FY28.
  • Whether guidance assumes Bhopal restart timing.
  • Management response
  • FY27 revenue: aiming to return to ~FY24-25 levels; stated “INR1,440 crores, INR1,450 crores is something… quite possible”.
  • FY27 EBITDA margin: “close to 10% for this year”.
  • FY28: “wait for another 6 months… to give a guidance for FY ’28” due to dynamic macro/margin inflation.
  • Confidence tied to Bhopal license resolution: “hopefully… could get resolved in the next couple of weeks” (also later “this month” / “week to 10 days” language).
  • Notable signals
  • Conditionality is high: multiple answers link guidance to Bhopal resuming in time.
  • FY28 guidance explicitly deferred—suggests visibility is limited.

Theme B: Bhopal license issue—cause, timeline, inventory disposal, internal controls

  • Core questions
  • Why proactive action wasn’t taken earlier; risk of recurrence.
  • Status of Bhopal inventory (stuck vs sold).
  • “Rational” timeline for license restoration after repeated delays.
  • Management response
  • Cause: described as “miscommunication and misunderstanding” and “sub judice” (limited detail).
  • Inventory: “remove the finished goods inventory… already disposed off… It is sold.”
  • Timeline: cannot give a definite date; initially “next couple of weeks,” later “even within the next week to 10 days” (still no fixed commitment).
  • Internal prevention: appointing “a dedicated compliance officer” to improve compliance.
  • Evasive/partial elements
  • No clear root-cause explanation; repeated “sub judice” / limited disclosure.
  • Timeline remains non-committal, despite being a major driver of FY27 guidance.

Theme C: UP plant commissioning, utilization, revenue contribution

  • Core questions
  • When UP plant goes live; expected utilization and FY27 revenue from UP.
  • UP plant capacity and ramp-up period.
  • Management response
  • Trial runs ongoing; commercial production “from this month onwards” / “Most likely June”.
  • FY27 UP volume: “15 lakh to 20 lakh cases”.
  • Implied revenue: cited consolidated realization “INR600-odd per case” and UP revenue around “INR120 crores” (from ~20 lakh cases × ~INR600).
  • Capacity: “UP plant is 1 crore cases per annum”; ramp-up “2 to 3 years”.
  • Notable signals
  • UP contribution to FY27 appears meaningful but not sufficient to offset Bhopal risk—management repeatedly frames Bhopal as pivotal.

Theme D: Karnataka demand recovery and excise policy impact

  • Core questions
  • How Karnataka is improving; whether market share lost is being regained.
  • Onetime vs ongoing impact of excise rationalization.
  • Management response
  • Karnataka improving after excise duty rationalization; management expects competitiveness and volume recovery.
  • Market share: “improving… quarter by quarter for the last 3, 4 quarters”; also “we will continue to increase market share in Karnataka”.
  • Delhi dependence on Bhopal supplies: Delhi “not… great” until MP license issue resolved.
  • Onetime impact question: management said “no impact” on revenues/margins; consumer price down, but “top line… slightly go up”.
  • Notable signals
  • Management distinguishes consumer price changes from their revenue/margin impact, but provides limited quantitative proof.

Theme E: Corporate governance / key manager departures / promoter stake

  • Core questions
  • Reasons for Company Secretary resignation and auditor/key manager changes.
  • Promoter interest in buying shares; target promoter holding.
  • Management response
  • Company Secretary: “personal issues… moved back to Delhi.”
  • Auditor: clarified as “internal auditor” and governance rationale.
  • Promoter stake: reiterated long-term intention; emphasized need for “end use” and referenced Phase 2 of UP as a purpose for promoter funding.
  • Notable signals
  • No direct contradiction, but answers are process-oriented rather than providing hard timelines/commitments.

Theme F: Premiumization roadmap (IMFL margins, barley/glass buying strategy)

  • Core questions
  • Roadmap to increase margin and market share in premium whisky/IMFL.
  • Forward buying strategy for barley/glass; returnable bottle strategy.
  • Management response
  • Premiumization setback acknowledged due to Bhopal disruption; Mahavat demand response; “go back to the drawing board” to ramp once operations resume.
  • Forward buying: “long-term supply contracts” but prices can’t be fully sanctified; returnable glass focus in Karnataka/Odisha; MP not comparable due to downtime.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 Revenue (consolidated)
  • Target: INR 1,440–1,450 crores (stated as “quite possible”).
  • FY27 EBITDA margin
  • Target: “close to 10%”.
  • FY27 UP plant contribution (qualitative-to-quantitative)
  • Volume: 15–20 lakh cases.
  • Revenue implication discussed: ~INR120 crores from UP using ~INR600/case realization.
  • FY27 revenue range also reiterated
  • INR1,400 crores to INR1,500 crores” (asked/confirmed in Q&A).
  • Quarter 1 FY27
  • Expect “better results” than Q4 due to sold Bhopal finished goods and better utilization from Hassan/Odisha.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Bhopal license resolution is the gating factor
  • Guidance repeatedly assumes Bhopal resumes soon (answers: “next couple of weeks,” “this month,” “week to 10 days,” and “full 9 months… factored”).
  • FY28 visibility limited
  • Management deferred FY28 guidance: macro and margin inflation “very dynamic”.
  • Margin pressure likely persists
  • They cite ongoing inflation in glass/cans/barley and only “close to 10%” EBITDA margin for FY27.

5. Standout Statements (most revealing)

  • Bhopal license confidence (but non-committal)
  • Management remains confident of a favorable resolution
  • does not anticipate any long-term impact
  • Yet in Q&A: “we can’t give you a definite time frame” and “pending with the government”.
  • Guidance explicitly tied to Bhopal restart
  • hopefully… get resolved this month” and “full 9 months… factored” into INR 1,400–1,500 crores.
  • Margin guidance constrained
  • close to 10% for this year” despite inflation commentary.
  • UP plant ramp expectations
  • Commercial production: “Most likely June
  • Capacity: “1 crore cases per annum”; ramp “2 to 3 years”.
  • Internal control improvement
  • appointing a dedicated compliance officer… so that such kind of things do not happen in the future.”
  • Delhi dependence acknowledged
  • we have not been able to supply anything to Delhi” until MP license issue solved.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
High dependence on a regulatory event for FY27 guidance (Bhopal restart). Multiple timeline answers remain uncertain.
Limited disclosure on root cause of license disruption (“sub judice,” “miscommunication and misunderstanding”).
FY28 guidance deferred due to dynamic macro/margins—suggests visibility risk.
Corporate governance questions (resignations) answered with minimal detail; no quantified impact.

Positive signals
Operational mitigation already executed: Bhopal finished goods inventory “already disposed off… sold.”
Balance sheet resilience: debt-to-equity maintained at “0.30x” despite lower profitability.
Growth asset on track: UP project “on schedule” with trial runs and capex progress.
Karnataka excise rationalization cited as improving offtake trends.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Earlier calls (May 30, 2025; Aug 12, 2025; Nov 17, 2025): management was more confident about growth recovery and UP commissioning timelines; less about regulatory disruption severity.
  • Current call (Jun 2, 2026): tone shifts to more cautious/defensive due to realized disruption and explicit reliance on license resolution.
  • Classification shift: More Cautious (from prior “hopeful recovery” narrative to “license gating + deferred FY28 guidance”).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Bhopal license suspension/judgment expectation (Feb 12, 2026 call)
  • Past statement: expected judgment “in the next 2 to 3 days”.
  • Current call: license renewal process still “currently underway”; timelines remain “next couple of weeks / this month / week to 10 days” without certainty.
  • Flag: ⏳ Delayed / Not fully resolved (resolution not evidenced by call).
  • UP plant commissioning timeline
  • Aug 12, 2025: “expect by August or September of next year” (Phase 1).
  • Nov 17, 2025: “by maybe June of next year”.
  • Current call: commercial operations expected “from this month onwards / Most likely June”.
  • Flag: ✅ On track (directionally consistent), though exact “commercial” start still framed probabilistically.
  • Promoter stake increase
  • Feb 12, 2026: intention to increase to ~51% “in next 2 to 3 years”.
  • Current call: reiterates “plan… still very relevant” but emphasizes “end use” and links to UP Phase 2; no new timeline.
  • Flag: ⏳ Partially progressed / timeline not tightened.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Beer weakness now anchored to Bhopal regulatory disruption, not just weather/excise.
  • Premiumization narrative remains, but management now explicitly says they must “go back to the drawing board” for premium ramp due to Bhopal disruption.
  • FY28 guidance removed from the conversation (previously more willing to discuss forward outlook; now deferred).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium-Low
  • Repeated “soon” language around Bhopal (2–3 days → next couple of weeks → this month → week to 10 days) without closure.
  • Guidance is provided, but key assumptions are regulatory and not fully controlled by management.
  • Mitigation actions (inventory disposal, compliance officer) improve credibility, but root-cause transparency remains weak.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro
  • Earlier: weather and Karnataka excise were primary drivers.
  • Now: regulatory disruption (Bhopal) becomes the dominant driver of FY26/FY27 uncertainty.
  • Margins
  • Earlier: margin recovery/maintenance optimism.
  • Now: margin guidance constrained to ~10% EBITDA with explicit inflation caveats.
  • Expansion
  • UP expansion remains the consistent growth pillar across calls; ramp-up expectations reiterated.

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Guidance structure suggests “Bhopal must return”: UP contribution discussed as ~INR120 crores (implied), which is not enough to bridge the gap if Bhopal remains offline.
  • Management is increasingly using “process” language (pending with government, sub judice, compliance officer) rather than operational levers—often a sign that control over outcomes is limited.
  • Karnataka excise rationalization is now treated as a tangible positive catalyst, contrasting with earlier calls where Karnataka issues were more about adverse taxation and weather.