Exato Technologies Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (FY ended Mar 31, 2026; call held Jun 2, 2026)
1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic
- Management highlights strong results (“pretty good”, “revenue… grew by almost 35%”, “PAT… grew… more than 67%”) and repeatedly frames initiatives as “strong foundation”, “very strong leadership team”, and “very strong possibility” of expansion.
- Forward-looking language is confident and growth-oriented (“we are expecting… 50 to 60%”, “we see a lot of potential”, “stepping stone for something much bigger”).
2. Key Themes from Management Commentary
- Strong FY performance + margin expansion: Revenue +35% to ₹168 Cr; PAT +67% to ₹16.09 Cr; PAT margin improved to ~9.5%.
- International expansion as the core growth lever: Building US/Australia/Singapore subsidiaries; goal to increase international revenue share to 50–55% over ~2 years; US described as “key focus market”.
- AI-led transformation and “trust” narrative: AI adoption constrained by “trust” in AI/LLMs/data; Exato positions itself as a “trusted partner” with AI centers of excellence and AI-as-a-service.
- Shift from point solutions to managed services + consulting-led deals: Explicit move to “entire managed services” and “consulting-led practices”; example of a large managed-services deal (₹172 Cr).
- Proprietary platform (Exato IQ) as a future profitability driver: IP currently 2–3% of revenue, target 20–30% of revenue and profitability over 3–4 years; later reiterated target 15–20% IP contribution (see red flags).
- Order book / ARR as visibility anchors: Order book ~₹600 Cr; active execution ₹230–235 Cr; ARR growth ~₹60–65 Cr → ~₹118 Cr; claims ₹120–125 Cr order billing secured for next 3 years even “if we did nothing”.
- Infrastructure / hardware + AI infrastructure deals: Higher software/hardware purchase costs explained as strategic AI infrastructure exposure; management wants to build an infrastructure practice alongside AI-as-a-service.
3. Q&A Analysis
Theme A: Cost structure / software & hardware purchases (impact on margins)
- Core question(s):
- Why did “purchase of software and hardware” rise sharply (to ~81% of something), impacting Q4 results despite revenue growth?
- Is margin “too low” on one-time hardware/software purchases?
- Management response:
- Attributed to AI infrastructure deals and customers using their IT budgets; hardware/software is bought and sold to customers, so it “cannot be capitalized”.
- Acknowledged transactional deals can have lower margins; strategic intent is to build a dedicated infrastructure vertical for better margins later.
- Assessment (evasive/partial/strong):
- Partially clarifies mechanics (buy/sell to customer; not capitalized) but does not provide a clean reconciliation of margin impact vs mix; relies on strategic rationale.
Theme B: Quantitative guidance for FY26
- Core question(s):
- FY26 guidance for revenue and PAT.
- Management response:
- “Expecting an increase of 50 to 60% on both the revenue side and the PAT side.”
- Rationale: focus on international geographies; hybrid delivery from India; larger deal sizes and higher profitability internationally.
- Assessment:
- Clear numeric guidance, but framed as “minimum” with potential upside (“can do more”).
Theme C: Scale targets (₹500 Cr revenue; customer count)
- Core question(s):
- Can they hit ₹500 Cr in next two years?
- Target customer base expansion from 150 → 500–600 by when?
- How much of the order book will be billed in FY26?
- Management response:
- ₹500 Cr: “to be very honest… possible also” but NDA/inorganic plans under wraps; no firm commitment.
- Customer count: “aspiration… move to the mainboard in the next three years”; target 500–600 in three to four years.
- Billing: out of ₹380 Cr (portion of order book), 30–35% billed in FY26; rest over next 2–3 years.
- Assessment:
- Strong on timelines for customer count; weaker on revenue commitment (wish-list tone + NDA).
Theme D: International revenue share and margin delta
- Core question(s):
- Current export % and target export %.
- Margin comparison: domestic vs international.
- Does export mix imply PAT growth > revenue growth?
- Expected revenue contribution from infrastructure business.
- Management response:
- Export share: ~28–30% current; target 50–55% in next two years.
- Gross margin: domestic 22–24% vs international 30–35%.
- PAT growth: “Absolutely” higher than revenue growth; also cites managed services + AI partnerships + IP.
- Infrastructure contribution: 30–35% in next 2–3 years; claims not necessarily lower margins because managed services/IP compensate; cites historical Cisco margins 30–40%.
- Assessment:
- Provides specific margin ranges; however, infrastructure margin logic is somewhat conditional (“depends on control/RFP stitching”).
Theme E: Investor engagement / liquidity / valuation
- Core question(s):
- Actions to engage long-term investors; shareholder count decline implications for liquidity/valuation.
- Management response:
- Attributes decline to lock-in and profit booking; points to marquee investors increasing stake.
- Notes listing is recent (4–5 months); focus on business; PR agency + regular information + quarterly results; mentions possible acquisitions/organic growth as future catalyst for broader investor base.
- Assessment:
- Directly addresses liquidity concern but does not quantify impact or provide a concrete plan beyond PR/communications.
Theme F: Subsidiary traction (US/Singapore/Australia) + macro risks
- Core question(s):
- What traction from new subsidiaries? Where will they be in 2–3 years?
- Macro challenges impacting expansion?
- Management response:
- Expects ~50% revenue from international geographies in next two years.
- Provides anecdotal deal example: $10M US healthcare BPO deal; claims US would have been $25M if closed in US.
- Macro risk: “main challenge could only be cash flow… addressable”; execution responsibility with large orders.
- Assessment:
- Traction is described qualitatively; limited hard metrics by geography.
Theme G: Board appointment (Dr. Milind Godbole)
- Core question(s):
- Role of non-executive director with healthcare/scaling background.
- Management response:
- Mentor/guru; strategic guidance; healthcare vertical focus; cites healthcare orders ~₹220 Cr (Inventurus Healthcare Solution + “Big Language Solution”).
- Assessment:
- Clear role definition (oversight + strategic guidance), but no measurable KPIs.
Theme H: Inorganic growth strategy + IP revenue mix
- Core question(s):
- Inorganic growth: product vs service companies?
- Target IP contribution in 3 years?
- Management response:
- Looks at both: acquire/partner with product fits within AI CX; or services integrators for regional diversity and aligned delivery.
- IP target: “15 to 20%” in three years (later also earlier stated 20–30% over 3–4 years).
- Assessment:
- Strategy is coherent; IP target shows inconsistency (see red flags).
4. Guidance / Outlook
Explicit guidance (quantitative)
- FY26 revenue growth: +50% to +60%
- FY26 PAT growth: +50% to +60%
- International/export revenue target: 50–55% in next two years
- International revenue share (another phrasing): “50% of revenue to come from international geographies in the next two years”
- Order book billing in FY26: from ₹380 Cr, 30–35% billed in FY26
- Customer count target: 150 → 500–600 in 3–4 years
- IP contribution target:
- Stated earlier: 20–30% of revenue and profitability over 3–4 years
- Later in Q&A: 15–20% in three years
- Infrastructure business contribution: 30–35% of revenue in next 2–3 years
Implicit signals (qualitative)
- US expansion is the priority (“US is going to be a very important part” / “key focus market”).
- Managed services and consulting-led AI are expected to improve profitability and deepen wallet share.
- AI partnerships (NDA) and “large AI partnership” are positioned as near-term catalysts.
- Cash flow is the primary macro risk, but described as manageable.
5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)
- Performance: “revenue from operations grew by almost 35% to 168 CR” and “PAT… grew… more than 67% to 16.09 CR.”
- Guidance: “expecting an increase of 50 to 60% on both the revenue side and the PAT side.”
- International ambition: “We want to increase it to 50 to 55% in the next two years.”
- Margin delta: “In domestic… gross margin… 22 and 24%. In international… 30 to 35%.”
- Order book visibility: “even if we did nothing, 120 to 125 crore of order billing is secured for the next three years.”
- Managed services shift: “moving from point solutions and support to entire managed services.”
- Infrastructure margin logic: “infrastructure business is not necessarily a low-margin business; it depends on how much control you have over the customer.”
- IP target inconsistency (important):
- “over the next three to four years, 20 to 30% of revenue… should come from this line of business”
- Later: “In three years, our target is that our IP should contribute around 15 to 20%”
6. Red Flags / Positive Signals
Red flags
- IP contribution target inconsistency: 20–30% (3–4 years) vs 15–20% (3 years)—suggests either changing assumptions or unclear definition of “IP line of business”.
- Margin explanation is strategic, not fully quantified: Hardware/software cost rise explained, but no detailed margin bridge or gross margin impact by segment.
- Cash flow risk acknowledged but not quantified: “main challenge could only be cash flow” without discussing working capital needs, payment terms, or capex/financing.
- Revenue scale commitment is hedged: ₹500 Cr in 2 years framed as “possible” with NDA/inorganic plans, not a firm target.
Positive signals
- Clear quantitative guidance for FY26 (+50–60% revenue and PAT).
- Specific margin ranges for domestic vs international (gross margin 22–24% vs 30–35%).
- Strong visibility metrics: order book ₹600 Cr, ARR growth ~₹60–65 Cr → ~₹118 Cr, and claimed secured billing ₹120–125 Cr over 3 years.
- Leadership additions tied to execution: CTO/TCS background for AI; CRO for international GTM; COO elevation.
7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis
Limitation: No prior earnings call transcripts were provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”). Therefore, I cannot perform a true historical comparison of tone, missed commitments, or narrative shifts across earlier calls.
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 (no prior transcripts provided).
d. Consistency & Credibility Signals
- Within this call only: credibility is mixed due to internal inconsistency on IP contribution targets and some hedging on large scale goals (₹500 Cr).
e. Evolution of Key Themes
- Not assessable across calls (no history provided).
f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)
- Not assessable without prior transcripts.
