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Indian Company Investor Calls

Nuvoco – Record volumes and EBITDA, but packaging costs stay hard

April 17, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Nuvoco – Q4 FY26 Earnings Call

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral → Optimistic (leaning Optimistic)

  • Management highlights “strongest annual performance” with record volumes/EBITDA and says “we remain confident that the structural demand for cement is intact.”
  • However, they repeatedly flag near-term margin pressure from “rising fuel prices, currency volatility, escalation in raw material costs, particularly for packing materials” and acknowledge “mindful of near-term headwinds,” which tempers the optimism.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Record FY26 performance + premiumization momentum
  • FY26: “highest volume of 20.4 million tons and EBITDA of INR1,881 crores
  • Premiumization expanded “by 300 basis points… to 43%
  • Q4: first time “reached 6 million ton volumes” with “historic high quarterly EBITDA of INR 590 crores
  • Demand improving on infra execution
  • Q4 demand improvement attributed to “capex by both state and central government gained momentum… up by ~12% in Q4 till February
  • PMAY-Gramin allocation up “73%”; ADB GDP estimate revised upward (qualitative demand support)
  • Capex/projects on track (growth agenda)
  • Vadraj Cement: “progressing well and remains on schedule”; clinker + grinding commissioning phased Q3 FY27–Q1 FY28
  • East expansion (4 mtpa grinding): execution updates at Surat/Kutch; bulk terminal at Viramgam targeted FY28
  • Near-term cost/margin risk is explicit
  • geopolitical uncertainty, rising fuel prices, currency volatility… escalation in raw material costs, particularly for packing materials
  • Packaging/bags and granules are described as difficult to mitigate (availability constraints)
  • Mitigation strategy: mix + procurement + efficiency
  • Fuel: reduce petcoke share, increase domestic coal/Churcha coal/AFR; gypsum cost mitigation via more FGD gypsum
  • Pricing: management is actively taking price increases to offset inflation

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: East expansion / debottlenecking timelines & commissioning

  • Core question(s):
  • Analyst asked whether East expansion plans are delayed vs prior guidance and requested updated timelines for expansions.
  • Management response:
  • Clarified sequencing: Jojobera & Panagarh largely done; “waiting for the CTO
  • Jajpur should happen in the next 2 to 3 months, and Arasmeta will happen by the end of this year
  • Confirmed: “everything should be online by the end of FY 2027
  • Assessment (evasive/strong/partial):
  • Direct and specific on hardware completion; reliance on CTO is a partial dependency (not fully within management control).

Theme B: Fuel cost outlook (petcoke/coal/AFR)

  • Core question(s):
  • Current blended fuel cost and expected change from Q4→Q1/Q2; flexibility to shift fuel mix.
  • Management response:
  • Blended fuel cost: Q4 “INR1.44 per million kcal” (similar to prior quarter)
  • Q1 forecast: “INR1.51 to INR1.55
  • Petcoke mix: Q4 petcoke “~37%”; AFR “~10%
  • FY27 target: AFR “from 10% to plus 13%
  • Q2: “further increase… too early…” but expects higher blended cost
  • Assessment:
  • Strong transparency on numbers (fuel cost and mix).
  • Q2 cost is intentionally less precise (“too early”), which is a partial answer.

Theme C: Packaging cost & availability risk (bags/granules)

  • Core question(s):
  • Whether March packaging cost impact was inventory-driven or will persist; granule availability and mitigation; risk of bag shortages disrupting production.
  • Management response:
  • March impact: granule price spike from “INR99/kg… to INR155/kg” leading to “~INR20 per ton” consolidated impact in March
  • April: expects “close to about INR100 per ton increase” due to bags/granules/conversion
  • Mitigation: “can’t be mitigated… only offset by price increase
  • Bag inventory: “15 to 20 days of bag inventory
  • Availability: acknowledged industry-wide scarcity; for Nuvoco March had “two major disruptions” including rake availability and bag availability; still hit “historical high of 6 million tons
  • Freight/rakes: expects continued issues until monsoon; road diversion used
  • Assessment:
  • Unusually candid on operational disruptions (rakes + bags) while still delivering record volumes.
  • Clear admission that packaging cost/availability is structurally hard to mitigate (strong risk signal).

Theme D: Pricing sustainability vs weak season / monsoon

  • Core question(s):
  • Are price hikes sustainable into April/May despite seasonal demand weakness?
  • Management response:
  • Called current environment “unique times” and argued inflation is broad-based across industries.
  • Confidence: “fairly confident that the price hikes… will stay put in the near-term
  • If further cost inflation occurs: “we will have to find a way to pass on the cost inflation
  • Also stated price-cost is not 1:1: “Cost increase by 100, price increase by 100. That’s not the way one works.
  • Assessment:
  • Strong confidence language, but with conditionality (depends on further cost inflation).

Theme E: Debt/cash flow & FY27 guidance (capex/debt)

  • Core question(s):
  • Why net debt increased QoQ; and requested guidance on capex and debt for FY27.
  • Management response:
  • Net debt: explained increase primarily due to Vadraj acquisition and CCD/bridge mechanics; like-for-like operational cash reduced debt by ~INR300 cr, but acquisition drove balance sheet up.
  • Capex guidance:
    • FY27 capex: “INR900 crores for ’27” (also later detailed as ~INR900–1,050 cr in Q&A)
    • FY28 capex: “INR960 crores for ’28” (also later ~INR650–700 cr in another answer—see Red Flags)
  • Debt: “goal has been to maintain that debt level to 2x to 2.5x EBITDA
  • Assessment:
  • Debt explanation is coherent and quantified.
  • Capex guidance inconsistency appears across answers (see Red Flags).

Theme F: Demand growth targets & capacity constraints

  • Core question(s):
  • Industry growth and Nuvoco volume target for FY27; whether capacity can meet demand.
  • Management response:
  • Industry FY26 growth: “6% to 9%
  • FY27 outlook: “7% to 9%” industry; Nuvoco targeting “grow anywhere between 7% to 9%
  • Capacity: North near capacity; Vadraj will relieve North tightness; East has headroom.
  • Assessment:
  • Consistent demand framing; capacity logic is plausible and region-specific.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • East expansion commissioning
  • Jajpur: “next 2 to 3 months
  • Arasmeta: “by the end of this year
  • everything should be… online by the end of FY 2027
  • Fuel cost
  • Q1 blended fuel cost: “INR1.51 to INR1.55
  • Q2: expects further increase but “too early…
  • AFR target
  • FY27 AFR: “from 10% to plus 13%
  • Demand
  • Industry FY27: “7% to 9%
  • Nuvoco FY27 volume: “7% to 9%” (in line with industry)
  • Capex
  • In one place: “FY27 and FY28 will be INR900 crores for ’27 and INR960 crores for ’28
  • Later in Q&A: “’27 and ’28 will be INR900 crores… INR960 crores” (repeated)
  • But another Q&A section gives different numbers: “’27 ~INR900–1,050 cr” and “’28 ~INR650–700 cr” (see Red Flags)
  • Debt
  • Maintain debt at “2x to 2.5x EBITDA” and “meet our numbers during FY27

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Structural demand intact, but near-term margin pressure likely for “at least 1 to 2 quarters” due to fuel + packing costs.
  • Packaging/bags: management implies availability risk persists into April/May (“tightrope walking”).
  • Pricing: management expects near-term price stability unless costs rise further; otherwise further price actions may be needed.
  • Growth agenda: “firmly on track” (Vadraj + East expansion).

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • Record performance:
  • strongest annual performance… highest volume of 20.4 million tons and EBITDA of INR1,881 crores
  • for the first time… reached 6 million ton volumes with… EBITDA of INR 590 crores
  • Demand/infrastructure:
  • structural demand for cement is intact
  • capex… gained momentum… up by approximately 12% in Q4 till February
  • Packaging risk (high-signal admission):
  • it’s going to be difficult… it can’t be mitigated… only offset by price increase
  • Bag inventory: “15 to 20 days of bag inventory
  • Operational disruptions: “We did face in the month of March bags… two major disruptions… rake availability… and bag availability challenge
  • Pricing stance:
  • fairly confident that the price hikes… will stay put in the near-term
  • Cost increase by 100, price increase by 100… That’s not the way one works
  • Fuel cost outlook:
  • Q1 blended fuel cost: “INR1.51 to INR1.55
  • Debt/capex framing:
  • goal has been to maintain that debt level to 2 x to 2.5x EBITDA
  • Capex inconsistency (credibility-impacting):
  • Management gives conflicting FY28 capex figures (see Red Flags).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags

  • Capex guidance inconsistency
  • One answer: FY27 INR900 cr, FY28 INR960 cr
  • Another answer: FY28 INR650–700 cr
  • This is a material discrepancy and can affect investor modeling.
  • Cost pass-through uncertainty
  • Packaging: “can’t be mitigated… only offset by price increase” but also admits not 1:1 cost-to-price.
  • Q2 fuel cost not quantified
  • “too early” for Q2 blended cost; increases modeling uncertainty.

Positive signals

  • Detailed operational transparency on fuel mix, fuel cost, packaging cost drivers, and inventory levels.
  • Project execution confidence with phased commissioning windows and on-ground status (grid connection, trials commenced, equipment deliveries).
  • Pricing actions already taken with quantified price increases by region/channel (trade/non-trade).

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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q4 FY25 (May 2025): optimistic on demand and pricing sustainability; emphasized premiumization and cost leadership; less explicit about packaging constraints.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 2025): neutral-positive; acknowledged monsoon/GST transition but framed GST cut as structurally positive; still focused on premiumization and efficiency.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 2026): optimistic recovery narrative; “encouraging signs of recovery,” and cost control highlighted (“lowest blended cost in last 17 quarters”).
  • Current Q4 FY26 (Apr 2026): still optimistic on structural demand and record FY performance, but tone shifts toward explicit near-term cost risk, especially packaging availability/cost and geopolitical-driven fuel volatility.

Classification shift: More Cautious (relative to Jan 2026), due to stronger emphasis on margin headwinds and operational disruptions.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Vadraj commissioning schedule
  • Prior calls (Jan/Oct 2025) consistently targeted phased commissioning Q3 FY27–Q1 FY28.
  • Current call: reiterates “remains on schedule” and provides detailed commissioning phases → ✅ On track / reiterated
  • East expansion 4 mtpa grinding
  • Earlier (Oct 2025) sequencing suggested phased additions across FY26–FY27.
  • Current call: confirms debottlenecking largely done but CTO waiting; still targets “end of FY2027” → ✅ Mostly delivered / delayed only on approvals
  • Cost leadership / fuel cost control
  • Jan 2026 emphasized lowest blended cost in 17 quarters (~1.41).
  • Current call: Q4 blended fuel cost stable at 1.44 but Q1 expected 1.51–1.55 → ⏳ Cost pressure re-emerged (not a failure, but a reversal of prior “lowest” narrative).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • New dominant risk narrative: packaging bags/granules scarcity becomes central in Q4 FY26, whereas earlier calls focused more on GST, monsoon, and fuel cost trends.
  • Pricing narrative evolves: from “price increases sustaining” (Jan 2026) to “price hikes will stay put near-term, but further cost inflation may force more pass-through” (Apr 2026).
  • Operational logistics risk becomes explicit: rake availability diversion to power plants and road diversion—this is more detailed than earlier calls.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility improved on operational specifics (fuel cost, mix, packaging inventory, disruptions).
  • Credibility reduced by capex guidance inconsistency for FY28 (two different numbers in the same call).
  • Debt explanation is consistent and quantified (waterfall logic holds across questions).

Overall credibility (communication consistency): Medium (strong on operations, weaker on capex guidance precision).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand: improving trajectory remains consistent (structural demand intact; FY27 growth 7–9% reiterated).
  • Margins/costs: deteriorated in narrative due to packaging + fuel volatility; mitigation levers emphasized.
  • Expansion: execution remains consistent (Vadraj + East expansion on schedule).
  • Premiumization: remains a steady long-term pillar (43% FY26; continued emphasis).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • The company’s record FY performance in Apr 2026 coexists with acknowledged supply-chain constraints (bags + rakes). This suggests management is prioritizing volume delivery despite cost headwinds—potentially increasing risk of margin volatility in coming quarters.
  • The shift from “fuel cost control” (Jan 2026) to “fuel cost up next quarter” (Apr 2026) indicates that prior cost leadership may be cyclical and vulnerable to geopolitical-driven input inflation.