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Indian Company Investor Calls

Apex Frozen’s FY26 EBITDA Surge, U.S. Tariffs Near 10%

June 5, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Apex Frozen Foods Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (FY ended 31 Mar 2026; call held 02 Jun 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights strong FY26 financial turnaround (“EBITDA grew 145%EBITDA margins expandingProfit after tax increased…”) and balance sheet strength (“borrowings… reduced… to INR6 crores”).
  • They frame FY27 as a recovery/scale-up phase driven by tariff normalization and EU/UK FTA benefits (“there should be a better volume growth for FY27”).
  • However, they also add caution around logistics/equipment and “uncertainties are increasing,” but the dominant tone remains constructive.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Geographic diversification as a hedge vs U.S. disruption
  • U.S. faced “first tariffs and later… war-led logistics issues,” while non-U.S. grew strongly (EU “grew 19% YoY in FY26” and “15% YoY in Q4”).
  • Non-U.S. became the largest sales contributor for the first time (“almost 52% of the total sales mix”).
  • Profitability expansion driven by mix + costs + FX + debt reduction
  • FY26 growth attributed to “firm global shrimp prices and favorable currency movements.”
  • Margin drivers cited: “usage of… inventories,” “reduction of overall debt / cost of debt,” “efficiencies,” and “favorable raw material pricing for a certain period.”
  • Balance sheet strengthening / deleveraging
  • Borrowings down sharply from March 2024 to FY26 end; net debt to equity “negative of 0.02x.”
  • Operating cash flow strong (“INR96 crores during FY26”).
  • Forward-looking growth levers
  • Tariff normalization: U.S. tariffs reduced to ~10% (management expects volume and revenue scaling as volumes return).
  • EU/UK FTA: management expects gradual benefits; UK “first,” EU “towards… end of this calendar year.”
  • Capacity headroom: utilization described as low (Q&A references ~30% full-year utilization), implying scalability.
  • Operational/logistics risk
  • Middle East crisis impacts shipping line equipment availability; shipments delayed “by 3 to 5 days” and equipment delays exist.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: U.S. tariff normalization → volume/revenue recovery

  • Core questions
  • If tariffs are “behind us,” should U.S. revenue scale back (analyst references prior U.S. revenue ~INR700 cr vs current lower)?
  • What is the current U.S. tariff rate and how does it affect demand/pricing vs competitors (e.g., Ecuador)?
  • Management response
  • Volumes should scale back: “The volumes to the U.S. will be scaling back… end result will be the revenue growth also.”
  • Current U.S. tariff: “currently… around 10%.”
  • They argue currency depreciation benefits are not a simple “pass-through to customers” story due to order/realization timing (70–90 days after shipment).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • No hard quantitative U.S. revenue target; relies on qualitative “volumes should come back.”
  • On whether they gain market share by pricing vs Ecuador: management says it’s not “not really” about cutting prices; also emphasizes cost changes and timing—somewhat defensive.

Theme B: Margin sustainability and what drove the spike

  • Core questions
  • What aided margin expansion in Q4/FY26?
  • Are margins sustainable at current levels?
  • Is margin guidance for FY27 or FY26?
  • Management response
  • Drivers: inventory usage, lower cost of debt, process efficiencies, stable farm gate prices, favorable raw material pricing period.
  • Sustainability: “We should be… considering… most of it is being done away” (referring to prior provisioning) and “hoping that the market remains stable.”
  • Clarification: when asked about “steady state,” they confirm sustainability for FY26/Q4 context (“Currently means FY26 or Q4 FY27? FY26, right”).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • Sustainability is conditional (“hoping,” “market remains stable”)—no explicit FY27 EBITDA margin number.

Theme C: FX hedging policy and forex impact

  • Core questions
  • Hedging policy given rupee depreciation; how much is hedged?
  • Management response
  • Partial hedging via forward contracts: “around 30% — max 32%.”
  • They frame rupee depreciation as “positive sign on the side of exports,” but also acknowledge currency affects business.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • No detail on hedge tenor, effectiveness, or P&L sensitivity—only coverage range.

Theme D: FY27 outlook: volumes, margins, and strategic levers

  • Core questions
  • What will be FY27 “bottom”/direction for volumes?
  • Margin guidance for FY27?
  • Long-term goal (2–5 years).
  • Management response
  • FY27 volumes: expects “increase in volumes overall” if no new issues; mentions original plan of ~30% volume growth but “need to see” quarter-to-quarter.
  • Margin: reiterates ability to sustain current margins; no numeric FY27 margin.
  • Long-term: positive medium/long term with FTAs and capacity utilization; mentions planned volume around 14,000 metric tons (qualitative “planned”).
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • “Bottom” and “30% growth” are softened with “need to see” and “between quarters,” reducing commitment strength.

Theme E: Raw material / farm gate prices and supply risk

  • Core questions
  • Do farm gate price collapses create raw material challenges?
  • Current farm gate prices and procurement/realization trends.
  • Management response
  • They downplay India-specific collapse: demand-supply driven; India farm gate still “higher… compared to many other countries.”
  • Current averages: farm gate around INR340 for Q1 (roughly), procurement Q4 FY26 INR348, realization ~$9.5/kg and rupee realization guidance discussed with currency caveats.
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • They avoid feed-specific commentary (they don’t deal with feed), and repeatedly qualify with currency movement uncertainty.

Theme F: Operational execution: facilities, logistics, and shipping constraints

  • Core questions
  • Are both facilities operating? Any consolidation plan?
  • Middle East crisis impact on margin/logistics; expected improvement in Q1?
  • Management response
  • Both facilities operating; consolidation was brief and now both used due to summer crop arrivals.
  • Logistics: freight cost increase “marginal,” but shipping line equipment support is a challenge; shipments postponed “3 to 5 days.”
  • Notable/partial/evasive elements
  • No quantified shipment delay impact on revenue/margins; “hope” language dominates.

Theme G: Export incentives / rebates

  • Core questions
  • Will export benefit continue and at what percentage?
  • Management response
  • It’s a rebate of indirect taxes (not a “true incentive”); expected to remain around 5%–6% with caps, subject to policy change.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 volume growth direction
  • FY27… expect… increase in volumes overall
  • Mentions original plan: “growth by almost 30% in volume terms” but “need to see” quarter-to-quarter.
  • Planned volume
  • planned a volume of around roughly… 14,000 metric tons” (medium/long term framing).
  • Non-U.S. / EU/UK timing
  • UK FTA “first,” EU “towards… end of this calendar year” (qualitative timing, not a numeric target).
  • Export incentive
  • Expected rebate level: “between 5%, 5.5% to 6%” (subject to caps/policy).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • U.S. recovery is expected but not guaranteed
  • Tariff reduced to ~10% → “volumes… scaling back” and “re-gaining the volume… post reduction of tariffs.”
  • Margin sustainability is conditional
  • Management repeatedly ties sustainability to stable market conditions and removal of prior provisioning effects.
  • Logistics risk persists near-term
  • Equipment availability and shipping line support issues could affect shipments into Q1.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Non-U.S. mix milestone
  • For the first time… non-U.S. export markets became the largest contributor… almost 52%.”
  • Deleveraging strength
  • Total borrowings… reduced… to INR6 crores as of FY ’26 end” and “Net debt to equity… negative of 0.02x.”
  • Margin drivers + sustainability framing
  • usage of a significant part of our inventories… supported profitability”
  • We should be… considering that… most of it is being done away… ‘hoping that the market remains stable’.”
  • U.S. recovery mechanism
  • The volumes to the U.S. will be scaling back… end result will be the revenue growth also.”
  • Logistics constraint admission
  • equipment support… not available… shipments postponed by anywhere between… 3 to 5 days.”
  • Hedging coverage
  • We partially… cover… around 30% — max 32%.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Strong FY26 profitability and cash generation with deleveraging.
– Clear narrative shift toward diversification (non-U.S. > U.S. mix).
– Concrete operational explanations for margin drivers (debt cost, efficiencies, inventory usage).
– Acknowledgement of logistics constraints (not fully denied).

Red flags
Guidance softness: FY27 volume growth “need to see,” no numeric margin guidance.
Conditional margin sustainability: repeatedly “hoping/considering market remains stable.”
Forex/realization uncertainty: they emphasize currency movement can change rupee realization; hedging only 30–32%.
Logistics risk not quantified: delays could impact shipments and quarter timing.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): optimistic but still heavily framed around tariff uncertainty; margins improved sharply, but U.S. disruption was a key overhang.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 2026): more confident on structural positives (EU opportunity, U.S. tariff reduction to 25% effective Feb 7) and “structurally positive” demand outlook.
  • Q4 & FY26 (Jun 2026): more optimistic—management now reports realized FY26 turnaround (profit after tax up dramatically, net debt near zero) and expects FY27 volume recovery.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic.
  • More “delivered” language (actual FY26 results) vs earlier “expected/structurally positive.”
  • Still cautious on logistics and “uncertainties increasing,” but confidence on scaling is higher.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past statement (Q2 FY26 / Nov 2025): capacity utilization ramp targets (e.g., “take it up to 50% minimum over the next 1 year” and earlier talk of 14,000–15,000 tonnes).
  • Expected by now: higher utilization and stronger revenue scaling.
  • What happened (Q4 FY26 call): they cite utilization still low (~30% full year referenced in Q&A) and volumes were impacted in Q4 by holiday/worker issues and logistics.
  • Flag:Delayed / not fully achieved (utilization still described as ~30%).
  • Past statement (Q3 FY26 / Feb 2026): revenue outlook “INR1,200-plus crores over the next 2 years” and EBITDA sustainability.
  • Outcome by Q4 FY26: FY26 revenue is INR931 crores (call), but the “next 2 years” target is not confirmed/updated in this call.
  • Flag:Not verifiable yet (no updated 2-year number; only FY26 delivered).
  • Past statement (Q2 FY26 / Nov 2025): RTE facility impact expected more in FY27; earlier mention of 2,000–2,500 tonnes RTE next year.
  • Current call: RTE mix given (FY26 12% vs FY25 10%), but no explicit RTE volume target for FY27 reiterated in this transcript.
  • Flag:Partially tracked (mix improved; volume target not re-affirmed quantitatively).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • U.S. from “major overhang” to “recovering market”
  • Earlier calls: U.S. tariffs were a dominant explanation for volume declines and planning disruption.
  • Current call: U.S. is still important, but narrative emphasis has shifted to EU/non-U.S. strength and U.S. volume scaling back as tariffs normalize.
  • Margin story moved from tariff/FX effects to operational/cost structure
  • Earlier: heavy discussion of tariff component in other expenses and realization effects.
  • Current: margin drivers include inventory usage, debt reduction, process efficiencies—more “operational” than “accounting/tariff.”

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: management consistently attributes performance to a mix of (1) diversification, (2) cost discipline/debt reduction, (3) FX and shrimp price environment.
  • Weakness: several forward-looking items are softened (“need to see,” “hoping,” no hard FY27 margin number). Also, utilization targets from earlier calls appear not fully met (still ~30%).
  • Pattern: fewer outright overpromises now, but guidance remains non-committal.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / volumes: Improving trajectory—EU growth strong; U.S. expected to recover with tariffs down to ~10%.
  • Margins: Up sharply in FY26; sustainability discussed as conditional on stable market and provisioning normalization.
  • Expansion / markets: Continued approvals (Russia mentioned; Australia earlier in Q&A history) and facility approvals for newer markets.
  • Regulatory transitions: EU/UK FTA timing remains a central catalyst; management reiterates gradual accrual.
  • Logistics risk: becomes more explicit in Q4 (Middle East crisis equipment support issues).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Inventory usage appears to be a recurring “bridge” factor for margin improvement; management now leans on “inventory usage” and “provisioning done away,” which can mean margins may be harder to sustain if those tailwinds fade.
  • Utilization remains the key missing lever: despite strong FY26 financials, management still describes capacity utilization as low (~30%), implying future upside depends on execution and shipping/logistics stability.