JD Cables Limited — H2 FY26 Earnings Call (held June 04, 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management repeatedly emphasizes strong momentum and visibility, citing “healthy business momentum,” “robust order book of approximately INR515 crores,” and “well-positioned to deliver sustainable growth.”
- Forward-looking statements are confident and specific (e.g., FY27 revenue growth 50%–60%, EPC revenue minimum INR200 crores, capex INR20–30 crores), with limited hedging.
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Demand & capacity utilization strength
- FY26 utilization: 82.4% (Unit I) and 84.6% (Unit II).
- Capacity expansion / new facility ramp
- New industrial facility at Jamshedpur (1.18 lakh sq ft); conductor division already installed, waiting for electricity connection; cable division expected to start in ~2 months.
- Mentions potential 3x–4x capacity expansion within two years (subject to orders and approvals).
- Product portfolio expansion into higher-value cables
- New product lines: MVCC, AL-59 conductors, HTLS conductors, HE cables.
- Management expects better margins than existing products, and suggests double-digit margin potential (in response to investor question).
- Strategic shift / expansion into EPC & infrastructure
- EPC described as forward integration: “EPC is a forward integration for us” because electrification works require cables/conductors.
- EPC execution already started; management claims recurring nature of infrastructure participation.
- Financial performance driven by growth
- FY26: Total income INR365 cr (+45.67% YoY); EBITDA INR48.11 cr (+40%); PAT INR31.72 cr (+44%).
- H1 FY26: Total income INR243 cr vs INR143 cr; EBITDA INR28 cr (+52%); PAT INR19 cr (+69%).
- Order book and revenue visibility
- Order book: ~INR515 cr as of Mar 31, 2026.
- Timeline for orders: “normally one and a half years.”
- Working capital / cash flow pressure acknowledged
- Multiple Q&As focus on cash deficit / working capital cycle, especially due to EPC execution.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Capacity commissioning, utilization, and ramp timing
- Core questions
- When will new capacity be commissioned?
- What utilization to expect in FY27 and by September 2026?
- Management response
- Electricity connection expected within this month; conductor division to start immediately after.
- Cable division expected to start in next two months.
- Utilization: “for the next year… utilized fully… 70% to 80%”; by September end “operating at a good pace.”
- Notable signals
- Some ambiguity on exact ramp milestones (e.g., approvals for BIS license mentioned as a potential delay: “it may take some time… to get the approval to get the BIS license”).
Theme B: Margins—H1 vs H2 decline and forward margin outlook
- Core questions
- Why did margins decline from H1 to H2?
- What margin range going forward for the company and for EPC/new products?
- Management response
- Decline attributed to “lots of expenses” and bulk supply timing; management then says margins are “mostly same” vs last year.
- Forward guidance: “similar margins… expecting the same margin” and later suggests ~12%–13% (in response to investor follow-up).
- EPC margin: stated around 8% (clarified later as PAT margin, then “more or less” aligned to ~12%–13% EBITDA in a later exchange).
- New products: expects “good margins… definitely better” than existing; when asked about double-digit, response: “We are expecting.”
- Evasive/partial elements
- Margin metrics appear inconsistent/unclear:
- EPC “8%” is first discussed as operating margin context, then corrected to PAT margin.
- Later, investor asks about EBITDA margin alignment and management says “more or less you can tell,” without a clean reconciliation.
- New product margin quantification remains non-committal (“once we will start selling… I’ll be in better position”).
Theme C: EPC business scale, execution progress, and economics
- Core questions
- EPC completion % to date and FY27 execution outlook.
- EPC revenue split and FY27 EPC revenue target.
- EPC cash flow impact.
- Management response
- EPC completion: “around 10% approx” (later clarified as 10% of the project).
- FY27 EPC revenue: minimum INR200 cr (conservative) and “it will go higher.”
- EPC economics: “operating at around… 8% margin” (then clarified as PAT margin); later suggests EBITDA could be ~12%–13%.
- Cash flow: acknowledges negative cash flow in growth phase; argues working capital will rise with growth and EPC execution.
- Notable signals
- Strong scale-up narrative: EPC booked INR30 cr in FY26 → INR200 cr minimum in FY27.
Theme D: Order pipeline, bidding activity, conversion ratio
- Core questions
- Current order pipeline and timeline.
- Additional tenders being bid; conversion ratio.
- Management response
- Order book: ~INR500 cr; timeline ~1.5 years.
- Bidding: participated in >INR1,000 cr tenders (EPC + cable tenders); results due.
- Conversion ratio: says it’s “difficult to tell” due to limited prior experience in those tender types; still expects “good favorable results.”
- Evasive/partial elements
- Conversion ratio not provided; relies on expectation rather than evidence.
Theme E: Working capital, funding needs, and debt strategy
- Core questions
- Can cash/working capital improve in FY27?
- Will they need equity/debt to sustain growth?
- How much external funding is needed?
- Management response
- Working capital cycle increased due to EPC execution; expects cash inflows as EPC bills get deducted.
- Funding stance: “looking for… debt funding from banks only”; claims sufficient cash and bank balance and banks are “ready.”
- External funding: no quantified incremental debt; says it depends on orders and they are already in touch with banks.
- Notable signals
- Clear admission that EPC execution is driving working capital pressure, but confidence that it will normalize as revenues convert to cash.
Theme F: Non-order-book/repeat revenue and order book targets
- Core questions
- Revenue from non-order-book / repeat customers.
- Order book target by Mar 31, 2027.
- Management response
- Non-order-book exists via “running orders” and customers wanting material quickly.
- They did not provide FY25–26 split of order book vs non-order book (said they haven’t “sorted that out still”).
- Order book target: INR700–800 cr (conservative) by end of FY27.
- Evasive/partial elements
- Lack of historical split data reduces ability to validate revenue quality (repeat vs tender-driven).
Theme G: Demand outlook by geography / policy changes
- Core questions
- Demand in West Bengal after government change.
- Management response
- Expects “good business” and “lots of infrastructure development,” with projects in pipeline and ongoing discussions with officers; cabinet expansion underway and more clarity from next week.
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- FY27 revenue growth: 50% to 60% (also stated “even in the next financial year”).
- FY27 margins: “similar level of margins” / “same margin” and referenced ~12%–13% in Q&A.
- Capacity utilization (new unit):
- FY27: 70%–80% utilization; “utilized fully.”
- EPC revenue:
- FY26 EPC booked: ~INR30 cr
- FY27 EPC expected: minimum INR200 cr (conservative), “will go higher.”
- Capex: INR20 cr to INR30 cr (around INR20 cr mentioned as base).
- Order book target by Mar 31, 2027: INR700–800 cr.
- Order book execution timeline: “normally one and a half years.”
- EPC completion to date: ~10% of project.
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- New products (MVCC/AL-59/HTLS/HE cables) expected to deliver better margins than baseline cables.
- EPC is “recurring in nature” (not purely tactical).
- Working capital pressure is expected to be manageable as EPC bills convert to cash (“revenues… will be in cash” and bills deducted).
- BIS license approvals could affect timing of full-capacity operations.
5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)
- Order book & visibility
- “robust order book of approximately INR515 crores as of March 31, 2026.”
- Capacity ramp confidence
- “for the next year… utilized fully… 70% to 80% capacity.”
- Revenue growth target
- “We are expecting 50% to 60% revenue growth… even in the next financial year.”
- EPC scale-up
- “In ’27, we are expecting minimum INR200 crores… it will go higher.”
- EPC economics ambiguity
- “We are operating at around… 8% margin in EPC” → later corrected/clarified as PAT margin.
- Working capital stance
- “Working capital cycle has gone up due to execution of EPC projects.”
- Funding approach
- “looking for… debt funding from banks only… banks are ready to do that.”
- Infrastructure strategy
- “EPC is a forward integration for us… it will be quite beneficial in the longer term.”
- “Yes, it will be recurring in nature.”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
– Metric inconsistency on EPC margins (8% stated, then clarified as PAT; later EBITDA discussion becomes “more or less” without a clean bridge).
– Non-order-book revenue transparency gap: management could not provide FY25–26 split and said it wasn’t “sorted.”
– Conversion ratio not provided despite large tender participation; relies on expectation.
– BIS license / approval timing risk acknowledged (“may take some time”), yet utilization targets are still stated confidently.
Positive signals
– Strong reported growth across income, EBITDA, and PAT in FY26 and H1 FY26.
– High utilization in existing units (mid-80%).
– Clear order book and execution timeline (1.5 years) supporting near-term visibility.
– Capex and expansion plan quantified (INR20–30 cr) with stated ramp targets.
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis
Note: Prior 3–4 earnings call transcripts were not provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”), so a true historical comparison cannot be performed. The analysis below is therefore limited to internal consistency within this call.
a. Change in Tone Over Time
- Not assessable (no prior transcripts provided).
b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes
- Not assessable (no prior transcripts provided).
c. Narrative Shifts
- Not assessable across calls; however, within this call there is a clear narrative emphasis on:
- EPC becoming “recurring” and forward integration (a strategic expansion beyond manufacturing).
- New product lines as the next margin/scale lever.
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Medium credibility (within-call):
- Management is confident and provides numbers, but margin metric clarity and order book vs non-order book disclosure are weaker points.
- Working capital explanations are coherent (EPC execution → WC pressure), but funding needs remain unquantified.
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Not assessable across calls; within this call:
- Demand theme is strong (utilization + order book).
- Margin theme is cautiously optimistic but not fully quantified.
- EPC theme is moving from “entered during last quarter” to large FY27 scaling.
f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)
- Not possible without prior transcripts. Within this call, the most important “future risk” signal is that EPC-driven working capital pressure is expected to persist during ramp, even if cash conversion improves later.
