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Gujarat Energy’s highest-ever CNG volumes offset Morbi propane tightness

June 5, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Gujarat Energy Limited (erstwhile Gujarat Gas Limited) — Q4 & FY25-26 Earnings Call (held 1 Jun 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights multiple positives despite volatility: “highest-ever CNG segment sales” and “progress on our scheme of arrangement.”
  • They repeatedly emphasize resilience and confidence: “We remain confident in our strategy” and “positions us well to navigate challenges and capture growth opportunities.”
  • Even where volumes/margins face pressure (Morbi, gas market instability), responses are framed as manageable and temporary (e.g., propane tightness supporting industrial demand).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Scheme of arrangement completed; entity restructuring underway
  • Final MCA order received 17 Apr 2026; scheme effective 1 May 2026.
  • Merger mechanics: GSPC/GSPL/GSPC Energy merged into Gujarat Gas (renamed Gujarat Energy Limited effective 14 May 2026).
  • Gas transmission demerged into GTL, with listing/trading expected by end-July 2026.
  • Financials are not like-for-like due to demerger timing.
  • Gas Trading profitability resilience despite volume decline
  • Gas trading volume fell ~19% (12.6 → 10.2 mmscmd), but EBT increased to INR 1,334.61 cr (from INR 1,222 cr).
  • Strategy: expand competitively priced long-term LNG; signed 2 long-term LNG SPAs (up to 1.36 MTPA).
  • Regasification contracts managed through volatility.
  • CGD growth momentum led by CNG + PNG domestic
  • CNG: highest-ever Q4 volume 3.6 mmscmd, +12% YoY, infrastructure to 839 stations, vehicle base 17.68 lakh (+15%).
  • PNG domestic: 43k new customers in Q4; cumulative 24.18 lakh.
  • LPG-to-PNG policy tailwind: conversion of LPG-free societies and commissioning ramp in commercial units.
  • Morbi industrial dynamics: near-peak volumes but propane tightness supportive
  • Morbi Q4 volumes near ~8 mmscmd; management suggests a remaining gap to customer-reported peak (~8.8–8.9 mmscmd).
  • Propane expected to remain impacted short-to-medium term, supporting gas demand.
  • Digital transformation + business development for next decade
  • ERP expansion, AI analytics, AMI/SCADA, automation.
  • McKinsey engaged to define growth/adjacencies and implementation plan for “steady growth over the next decade.”
  • Power/E&P/renewables: power losses framed as exceptional items + revival optionality
  • Power segment losses attributed to forex losses and impairments, plus very low PLFs (GPPC ~1%, GSEG ~6.5%).
  • Management exploring options to revive/align power usage and potentially support trading.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Morbi industrial demand, pricing, and sustainability

  • Core questions
  • Is Morbi demand near a peak? Sustainable volumes without propane?
  • What are Morbi vs non-Morbi pricing levels and sourcing mix implications?
  • Management response
  • Volumes: “close to 8 mmscmd” with customer feedback that it can reach “8.9 / 8.8” → ~10% headroom.
  • Pricing: Morbi ~INR 75/SCM, non-Morbi ~INR 68/SCM (later clarified indexed pricing; May/June fixed; June up ~INR 1.5).
  • Propane: “don’t see propane coming back to normal levels” short-to-medium term; still confident in competing when it returns.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • When asked about sustainable volumes if propane normalizes, management stayed qualitative (good position to compete; did not give a firm volume number).
  • Margin math questions were met with defensiveness (“we are not selling at a loss”) rather than a clean per-SCM EBITDA bridge.

Theme B: Gas trading economics, contract structure, and margin run-rate

  • Core questions
  • Trading profitability: one-offs vs recurring; margin sustainability.
  • Contract benchmarks (Brent vs Henry Hub), duration, and back-to-back structure.
  • How trading volumes relate to CGD intersegment volumes.
  • Management response
  • One-offs: customer duty refund; regasification-related one-off ~INR 200 cr; recurring trading profitability guided as ~INR 1,000–1,100 cr annually.
  • Margin: trading margin guided as ~4% to 6% (percentage-based, not per-unit).
  • Contracts: long-term LNG mostly Brent-linked; sourcing contracts include Qatar/Shell/Uniper/Total; customer contracts include fertilizer/CGD/industrial with long tenures.
  • Volume accounting: trading volume excludes CGD; total company volume includes intersegment and CGD allocations; segment EBIT includes intersegment transfer economics.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Repeated accounting clarifications were needed; management acknowledged they “have not given you the EBITDA for gas trading” and suggested improving disclosures—implying current reporting may be harder to reconcile.

Theme C: Capex and investment plans (CGD, trading, E&P)

  • Core questions
  • Capex guidance for CGD and trading; any E&P capex.
  • Management response
  • There is no capex in respect to trading segment.”
  • CGD capex: “close to INR 1,000 crores.”
  • E&P capex: “close to INR 100 crores” (drilling a few wells).

Theme D: Tax benefits from merger / deferred tax asset

  • Core questions
  • Remaining tax loss utilization; timing of tax refunds; how deferred tax asset is represented.
  • Management response
  • Tax losses: initial ~INR 7,200 cr; absorbed INR 2,800 cr in ’24-’25 and ~INR 2,500 cr in ’25-’26; balance ~INR 1,900 cr.
  • Any profits of INR 1,900 crores, there will be no tax over and above that.”
  • Deferred tax asset created; utilization over 8 years; refund timing depends on assessment by IT department.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Timing of refunds was not precise (“assessment… will take its time”).

Theme E: Power segment losses and turnaround

  • Core questions
  • Why power segment is loss-making; outlook; PPA expiry and steady-state profitability.
  • Management response
  • Losses due to exceptional items: forex losses (GSEG ~INR 15 cr; GPPC ~INR 23 cr) and impairments; PLF very low (GPPC ~1%, GSEG ~6.5%).
  • Strategy: revive by aligning/combining with other businesses to utilize capacity; could also support trading via gas imports.
  • PPA expiry clarified: “PPA is expiring to the ’36, not in ’28.”
  • Steady-state profit not quantified; management said it depends on identifying opportunity and including ROE.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • No quantified steady-state operating profit; answers were conditional and exploratory.

Theme F: Balance sheet / cash representation

  • Core questions
  • Cash vs other financial assets reconciliation; “correct number” for cash.
  • Management response
  • Representation changed: fixed deposits >1 year shown as other financial assets.
  • Other financial assets include GSFS funds; details can be shared via mail.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Capex
  • CGD capex: ~INR 1,000 cr
  • E&P capex: ~INR 100 cr
  • Trading capex: INR 0
  • CGD margin guidance (per SCM)
  • INR 5 to INR 6” and specifically “INR 5.5 to INR 6, 6.5” (management reiterated CGD guidance around this band).
  • Gas trading growth
  • Expect ~25%–30% growth by 2030/31 (from current ~10–12 mmscmd).
  • Gas trading margin
  • Trading margin: ~4% to 6% (percentage).
  • Morbi demand headroom
  • Management indicated Morbi can reach ~8.8–8.9 mmscmd (implying near-term peak potential).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Propane tightness likely persists short-to-medium term → supports Morbi gas volumes.
  • Volatility remains due to geopolitical conflict and spot RLNG prices; management emphasizes monitoring and “right balance between volume growth and sustainable margins.”
  • Power segment turnaround is optionality-driven, not yet monetized with a quantified plan.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • Scheme completion & integration
  • scheme has become effective from 1st May 2026
  • name… altered to Gujarat Energy Limited… reflects… integrated energy company.”
  • Gas trading resilience
  • Despite… volumes fell by about 19%… profitability… increased” (EBT INR 1,334.61 cr).
  • Morbi near-peak
  • we are selling close to 8 mmscmd… customers… can reach up to 8.9 / 8.8
  • Propane outlook
  • we don’t see propane coming back to normal levels… short to medium term.”
  • Trading run-rate vs one-offs
  • only… refund…” and recurring trading profitability guided as ~INR 1,000–1,100 cr annually.
  • Tax shield
  • Any profits of INR 1,900 crores, there will be no tax over and above that there will be tax.”
  • Power PPA clarification
  • PPA is expiring to the ’36, not in ’28.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Accounting complexity / disclosure gaps
– Multiple questions on segment volume/margin definitions; management admitted they “have not given… EBITDA for gas trading” and suggested improving press release.
Conditional/uncertain turnaround narratives
– Power segment steady-state profitability not quantified; depends on “exploring other options” and “subsequent… business plan.”
Defensive responses on margin-attribution
– When challenged on Morbi EBITDA math, management emphasized “not selling at a loss” rather than providing a clean bridge.

Positive signals
Clear operational momentum in CGD
– Highest-ever CNG volumes; strong vehicle base growth; PNG customer additions and LPG-to-PNG conversions.
Contractual visibility
– Detailed sourcing and customer contract tenures (Qatar/Shell/Uniper/Total; fertilizer/CGD/industrial).
Capital allocation discipline
– Explicit capex split and “no capex” for trading.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): cautious on Morbi/propane dynamics; guidance framed around uncertainty (“difficult to guess” volumes; festivals/propane differential).
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): still cautious on industrial; but more structured on propane entry progress and continued CNG strength.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 2026): (from transcript provided) continued focus on Morbi volatility and scheme progress; still managing spot/propane impacts.
  • Current Q4 & FY26 (Jun 2026): more optimistic—scheme completion is a major positive catalyst; management now speaks with greater confidence on near-term demand and long-term strategy (“integrated energy company,” “confident in strategy”).
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic
  • Reason: completion of major corporate event + stronger reported operational highlights (CNG peak, PNG conversions) + clearer long-term LNG SPAs.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Scheme timeline
  • Prior calls: expected MCA approval by Dec 2025 / Q3 2025-26.
  • Current: final MCA order 17 Apr 2026, effective 1 May 2026.
  • Flag:Delayed (relative to earlier “by Dec 2025 / Q3” expectations).
  • Propane infrastructure / entry
  • Earlier: propane entry discussed as strategic; infrastructure discussions underway.
  • Current: propane business is still “evaluating / investigations on” and “port facilities close to Morbi” (not yet a fully operationalized business).
  • Flag:Delayed / still in evaluation (no clear commercialization milestone in this call).
  • Morbi volume recovery expectations
  • Earlier: Morbi muted due to propane advantage; management expected volumes to improve with winter/propane seasonality.
  • Current: Morbi volumes now near ~8 mmscmd with headroom to ~8.8–8.9.
  • Flag:Partially delivered (improvement evident; still not confirmed at peak).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “CGD-only story” to “Integrated energy + trading”
  • Earlier calls were dominated by CGD segments and Morbi/propane.
  • Current call adds a stronger emphasis on gas trading as value-accretive and long-term LNG portfolio building.
  • Power segment becomes more prominent as “revival optionality”
  • Earlier calls focused less on power turnaround; now it’s discussed as a strategic lever for utilization and trading support.
  • Disclosure focus changes
  • Current call spends time on segment accounting mechanics (intersegment sales, demerger effects), suggesting investors are scrutinizing comparability.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Positives: management provides specific numbers (volumes, contract tenures, capex, tax loss balances).
  • Concerns: scheme timeline slipped; some guidance remains conditional (power steady-state, propane business status).
  • Accounting clarity issues recur (segment EBIT/EBITDA definitions and volume exclusions).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand (Morbi): Improving/stabilizing (from muted to near-peak), but still dependent on propane tightness and spot dynamics.
  • Margins: CGD margin guidance maintained in a band; trading profitability resilient despite volume decline.
  • Expansion: CNG and PNG growth continues; infrastructure expansion remains active (839 stations; digital transformation).
  • Geopolitics: Still a key risk, but management now frames it as something they can navigate via diversified sourcing and contract structure.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Propane tightness is now a structural support, not just a short-term factor
  • Earlier: propane advantage caused Morbi volume weakness.
  • Current: propane tightness is expected to persist and support gas volumes—this is a meaningful narrative reversal.
  • Trading segment is being positioned as the “stability engine”
  • Even with CGD volatility (Morbi), management leans on trading resilience and long-term LNG additions to smooth earnings.
  • Investor communication is becoming more defensive on margin math
  • When challenged on Morbi EBITDA margin calculations, management relied on “no loss” assertions rather than transparent bridges—suggesting sensitivity around profitability attribution.