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Indian Company Investor Calls

Sunrakshakk Targets INR1,000 Cr by FY28 on Guwahati Ramp-Up

June 6, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Sunrakshakk Industries India Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (ended 31 Mar 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “strong growth” and “highest ever revenue and profitability” in FY26.
  • Repeated confidence in scaling: “gives us confidence in the long-term scalability” and “remain confident about the opportunities before us.”
  • Forward-looking targets are stated with relative certainty (e.g., INR1,000 cr by FY28), with limited discussion of downside.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • FMCG scaling as the core growth engine
  • FMCG + FMCG intermediates “contribute the majority of our revenues” and are the “primary growth engine.”
  • FMCG revenues “crossed the INR500 crores milestone.”
  • Manufacturing footprint expansion and ramp-up benefits
  • Guwahati facility commissioning/revamp: improved capabilities (soap noodles, cosmetics) and “better capacity utilization.”
  • Edible business (spices/savories) scaling from Bhilwara facilities: “started contributing meaningfully.”
  • Balance sheet strengthening via preferential issue
  • Capital raise “strengthened our balance sheet” and supports “manufacturing capacity, working capital… and future growth.”
  • Margin improvement narrative tied to operating efficiencies
  • Q4 profitability improvement attributed to “ramp-up of the Guwahati facility,” “better capacity utilization,” and “improved operating efficiencies.”
  • Medium-term aspiration
  • approximately INR1,000 crores in revenue by FY28” framed as a milestone, not the end.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: INR1,000 cr (FY28) growth plan & drivers

  • Core questions
  • What drives the INR1,000 cr target?
  • Is it achievable with existing capacity or needs capex?
  • Organic vs inorganic contribution?
  • Management response
  • Drivers: annualized Q4 run-rate (~INR800 cr) + “organic growth of 10%-15%” and adding new customers (soap section).
  • Capacity: “can be achieved with the existing capacity” and “we don’t see much of the expansion… in the capex side.”
  • Organic vs inorganic: INR1,000 cr can be achieved organically; inorganic is “constantly looking for… acquisition… if lucrative in terms of ROI.”
  • Notable / partial / evasive points
  • Clarification attempt on the 10–15% growth: management later says it is “over and above the INR800 crore” (suggests earlier framing could confuse).
  • No concrete inorganic plan (segments/geographies are broadly stated).

Theme B: Margins—sustainability and path to targets

  • Core questions
  • Why margins are down Y-o-Y; what sustainable EBITDA/PAT margins can be?
  • Can they reach PAT ~7% in FY27?
  • What operating leverage to expect?
  • Management response
  • Margin dip attributed to “product mix”; segment-wise improvement claimed.
  • Internal target: “PAT at the rate 7% in the near future.”
  • FY27: “we will be nearby to the target.”
  • Operating leverage: improved capacity utilization; management suggests ~“another 1, 1.25%” PAT improvement from better utilization/absorption.
  • Notable / unusually strong answers
  • Confidence that margin improvement is largely mechanical from utilization, with limited discussion of pricing power, input costs, or competitive intensity.

Theme C: Segment outlook (Guwahati performance, edibles size, FMCG vs edible mix)

  • Core questions
  • How is Guwahati performing and customer response?
  • How big can edibles become in 3–5 years?
  • Which FMCG categories have strongest demand?
  • Management response
  • Guwahati: “doing very well,” production increasing gradually; “product acceptance is quite well.”
  • Edibles: spices & savories growing; expects “growth of 20%” and FMCG remains lead contributor; edibles “substantial share” but not top.
  • FMCG categories: “personal care and home care” are key contributors.
  • Notable / partial points
  • Edibles “size” is discussed qualitatively; only growth rate is given (no explicit revenue share target).

Theme D: Working capital / risk factors

  • Core questions
  • Debtor cycle stability despite growth?
  • Raw material price risk (war-related)?
  • Any capacity constraints?
  • Management response
  • Debtor cycle: “stable, it’s not increasing.”
  • Raw materials: “bit pressure” on pricing, but “supplies… right on time” due to strategic supplier selection.
  • Capacity constraints: “no constraint right as of now,” spare capacities exist.
  • Notable / partial points
  • “No risk” language is used for topline achievement; risk discussion is limited.

Theme E: B2B vs B2C, branding, and advertising

  • Core questions
  • Are they only B2B? Any B2C plans?
  • What is “Swechha” brand—who owns it?
  • Will they advertise to improve market presence?
  • Management response
  • B2B now; B2C only “in a longer run” with good partners; “not in the immediate future.”
  • “Swechha” is owned by a customer; they manufacture for multiple brands (ITC, Godrej, Patanjali, Jyothy, etc.).
  • Advertising: “not much of the need” in B2B; “not going to happen in near future,” though one investor suggestion was acknowledged (“Let’s see what we can do”).
  • Notable / evasive points
  • Advertising question is partially deflected into B2B logic; no clear alternative marketing strategy is provided.

Theme F: Preferential issue utilization

  • Core questions
  • Where did preferential issue proceeds go?
  • Management response
  • Mostly for edible manufacturing expansion and FMCG Guwahati unit.
  • Mentions tentative splits: “55 crores” utilized for FMCG segment; “10 crores FD” available; remaining for edible section.
  • Notable / partial points
  • Numbers are described as “tentatively,” implying some lack of precision.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Revenue
  • approximately INR1,000 crores in revenue by FY28.”
  • Organic growth expectation: “10%-15%” (later clarified as “over and above the INR800 crore” annualized run-rate).
  • Margins / profitability
  • PAT target:PAT at the rate 7% in the near future.”
  • FY27: “nearby to the target” (implies approaching 7%).
  • FY28 EBITDA margin improvement: “improvement of around 1%, 1.5% in the existing EBITDA margins.”
  • Segment growth
  • Edibles: “growth of 20%” (no revenue share given).
  • FMCG intermediates growth: “15 to 20% kind of” in coming year.
  • Capacity utilization
  • Guwahati utilization: “45% to 50%” (cosmetics) and “45% to 55%” (soap noodles/capacity).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Capex discipline: management repeatedly indicates limited incremental capex needed to reach INR1,000 cr.
  • Margin improvement thesis: relies heavily on capacity utilization and operating leverage, not on pricing or cost inflation relief.
  • Inorganic optionality: acquisitions are “constantly looking” but not committed.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • FMCG revenues crossed the INR500 crores milestone.”
  • The improvement in profitability… reflects the early outcome” of operating efficiency efforts.
  • INR1,000 crores turnover can be achieved with the existing capacity.”
  • We are aiming a PAT of 7%… and we are working on it.”
  • In FY27, we will be nearby to the target.
  • No, we are not forcing any such kind of risk in achieving that topline by 2028.
  • Capacity utilization disclosure: “45% to 50%” (cosmetics) and “45% to 55%” (soap noodles).
  • Advertising stance: “in B2B… there is not much of the need for any kind of publicity and advertisement.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Margin guidance is utilization-centric with limited discussion of input cost volatility, pricing power, or competitive dynamics.
“No risk” language on achieving topline by FY28 (“not forcing any such kind of risk”) may be overly absolute.
Some guidance clarity issues:
– Organic growth framing required clarification (“10–15% over and above INR800 cr”).
Preferential issue utilization includes “tentatively” and mixed figures, suggesting incomplete precision.

Positive signals
Operational ramp-up is evidenced: Q4 is described as strongest quarter with sequential improvement in margins.
Working capital discipline: debtor cycle “stable” despite strong growth.
Customer traction: Guwahati “doing very well” with “product acceptance quite well.”
No stated capacity constraints and disclosed utilization ranges.


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

Only one prior transcript is provided (Q3 & 9M FY26 call on 16 Feb 2026). So “3–4 calls” comparison is limited.

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Shift: More Optimistic
  • Prior call: transformation narrative + ramp-up expectations; margins discussed with more cautious “aiming” language.
  • Current call: stronger achievement framing (“highest ever revenue and profitability,” “strong growth,” “results… clearly visible”).
  • What changed
  • More confidence in execution: INR1,000 cr target is reiterated with “existing capacity” claim.
  • Margin improvement now tied to already observed Q4 profitability improvement, not just future operating leverage.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Past statement (Feb 2026):commissioned in January 2026” and scaling FMCG; target of INR1,000 cr by FY28 reiterated.
  • What was expected: ramp-up of Guwahati and improved utilization to drive growth/margins.
  • What happened (current call):
  • Guwahati ramp-up cited as a driver of Q4 margin improvement (“ramp-up… from January 2026”).
  • FMCG now “crossed INR500 crores milestone.”
  • Assessment:Delivered / on track for the Guwahati ramp-up narrative and growth momentum.

  • Past statement (Feb 2026): PAT target of ~7% by FY28 (and margin improvement via operating leverage/automation).

  • Current call: PAT 7% reiterated; FY27 “nearby to target.”
  • Assessment:In progress (no proof of reaching 7% yet; only trajectory).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Textile down-weighting becomes more explicit
  • Feb call: textile still present; FMCG expected to rise.
  • Current call: textile share expected to fall to “10% to 12% max” and no de-merger plans.
  • Advertising/brand narrative
  • Feb call leaned into manufacturing/B2B; current call repeats B2B logic but acknowledges investor suggestion.
  • Margin explanation evolves
  • Feb: margin improvement via scale, cost optimization, automation.
  • Current: margin dip mainly “product mix,” and improvement via utilization absorption.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Consistent strategic direction: FMCG-led integrated manufacturing + B2B customer base.
  • Some credibility risk from:
    • “No risk” statement on topline achievement.
    • Margin improvement reliance on utilization without addressing potential downside drivers (pricing/input costs/competition) in detail.
  • However, Q4 sequential improvement and Guwahati ramp-up attribution support the narrative.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand / growth: Improving/stable—management now cites milestones (INR500 cr FMCG) rather than only plans.
  • Margins: Mixed—FY26 EBITDA margin is stated as down vs FY25 (9.66% vs 14.24%), but Q4 shows improvement; management attributes to mix and expects PAT stabilization at 7%.
  • Expansion / capex: More disciplined tone—current call emphasizes “existing capacity” to reach INR1,000 cr, whereas Feb call discussed capacity additions and planning.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s growth is now supported by disclosed utilization ranges (45–55%), implying they are not yet at full capacity. This makes the PAT 7% target dependent on further utilization ramp—consistent with their operating leverage thesis, but also a key execution dependency.
  • The FY26 EBITDA margin decline vs FY25 (despite “highest ever profitability”) suggests profitability improvement may be driven more by scale/revenue growth than by sustained EBITDA margin expansion—management now shifts focus to PAT margin rather than EBITDA.