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Indian Company Investor Calls

Five-Star’s Collections Surge Drives FY27 Credit Cost Drop

May 6, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Five-Star Business Finance Limited — 4QFY26 (Quarter ended Mar 31, 2026) | Earnings Call (Apr 29, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly states the turnaround is underway and “the worst is behind us” and “onwards and upwards.”
  • They cite strong collection improvements (e.g., “98.1% unique customer collection efficiency,” “slippage ratio… 0.7%”) and explicitly guide growth and credit cost improvement for FY27.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Asset quality stabilization driven by collections
  • Collection efficiency improved sharply; slippages reduced; NPA “largely stable” at 3.37%.
  • Operational reset: separation of business vs collections
  • split between business and collections is fully operational from the 1st of April,” expected to support disbursement growth.
  • Refocus on disbursements after collection traction
  • Disbursements restarted: INR 1,213 cr in Q4 (+24% QoQ); full-year disbursement INR 4,675 cr enabling ~11% portfolio growth despite the stress year.
  • Funding support and cost of funds management
  • Incremental borrowing INR 928 cr at 8.53%; ADB $100m raised (with hedging cost impact).
  • Cost of funds improved QoQ: 9.12% → 8.95%.
  • Credit cost outlook: still elevated but expected to improve
  • FY27 credit cost guided at 1.7%–1.75% (and steady-state 1.5%–1.6%).
  • Growth plan with quality emphasis
  • AUM growth target ~20% for FY27; medium-term “close to 20%” for 2–3 years.
  • Narrative on “behavioral crisis”
  • Management frames the prior stress as moving from over-leverage to behavioral issues, now “getting set right.”

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Asset quality trajectory (April trend, GNPA/NPA direction, slippages)

  • Core questions
  • How is April trending on collections/flows?
  • Will GNPA/NPA continue to improve from next quarter?
  • What credit cost is implied if early delinquency indicators are improving?
  • Management response
  • April is “seasonally weak” but “trending quite well,” with no “material deterioration.”
  • Expectation: “NPA slowing down from next quarter onwards” due to lower forward flow from x-bucket.
  • Credit cost guidance: FY27 1.7%–1.75%, starting from Q4 1.88%.
  • Notable/partial or evasive elements
  • They avoid giving granular “bucket-by-bucket” forward trajectory beyond broad guidance; rely on qualitative “lead indicators.”

Theme B: Credit cost—what changed vs prior guidance and steady-state

  • Core questions
  • Why steady-state credit cost is 1.5%–1.6% vs earlier lower levels?
  • What changed in environment/customer segment?
  • Management response
  • They attribute the change to better understanding of customer segment skews and need for more consistent credit cost build-up.
  • Also acknowledge macro events and stress recurrence risk; they want a “comfortable number” to support growth.
  • Notable/partial
  • Some inconsistency in how they frame “earlier guidance” (they reference converting total assets guidance to AUM, which can confuse comparability).

Theme C: ROA/ROE drivers—margin outlook and leverage

  • Core questions
  • If credit cost improvement is limited, how will ROA evolve—will margins compress?
  • Management response
  • ROA depends on leverage; they expect spread around 13.5% and ROA ~8.25%–8.5% in FY27, steady-state ~8%–8.25%.
  • Notable
  • They do not provide a detailed margin bridge; rely on spread/leverage assumptions.

Theme D: Growth mechanics—disbursement run-rate, disbursement conditionality on asset quality

  • Core questions
  • Is disbursement growth contingent on GNPA decline?
  • How will they achieve INR 1,400–1,500 cr disbursement in Q1/Q2 (seasonally weak)?
  • Medium-term growth aspiration vs earlier “structural 25%” narrative.
  • Management response
  • Disbursements will be pushed: Q4 disbursements +24% QoQ; FY27 disbursements expected INR 6,500–7,000 cr.
  • They argue it’s feasible because FY25 run-rate was ~INR 5,000 cr/year and they “consciously pulled back” last year.
  • Medium-term: “close to 20%” for next 2–3 years; range 18%–20% if conservative.
  • Notable/partial
  • They acknowledge arithmetic/tenure effects but still present confidence; limited discussion on how they’ll manage seasonality beyond “post Q1/Q2 should be strong.”

Theme E: Operating model—restructuring rationale, branch hiring, opex to AUM

  • Core questions
  • What gaps led to the restructuring (business vs collections separation)?
  • Will opex decline with scale or remain elevated?
  • Branch expansion and break-even timelines.
  • Management response
  • Restructuring: business team focuses on new business; collections team stabilizes DPDs.
  • Branch plan: 60–75 new branches in FY27; prior year ~90 branches with 95% break-even.
  • Opex to AUM expected ~7%–7.25% (remain around Q4 level due to investments + retention costs).
  • Notable
  • They provide clearer operational KPIs (break-even timing 9–12 months) than many peers.

Theme F: Pricing/yields—pass-through of rate cuts and yield compression risk

  • Core questions
  • How much yield impact remains from prior rate cuts?
  • Any yield compression due to segment shift?
  • Management response
  • Yields “largely factored,” with 30–40 bps further impact over next 3–4 quarters.
  • Segment shift is not expected to materially disrupt yields; they emphasize the segment is “not very price-sensitive.”
  • Notable
  • They explicitly state no pricing drop expected in FY27.

Theme G: Digital collections and fintech competition risk

  • Core questions
  • If customers pay digitally (84% → target 90%), does it create fintech competition via better data?
  • Management response
  • They argue fintech competition is limited because Five-Star’s value is ticket size (~INR 4L avg) and tenure (~7 years); fintechs operate shorter tenures (6–12 months).
  • Notable
  • This is a qualitative defense; no data on observed competitive displacement.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • AUM growth (FY27):around 20%” (also reiterated as 18%–20% range by one analyst response).
  • Credit cost (FY27): 1.7% to 1.75% of average AUM.
  • Steady-state credit cost (next couple of years): 1.5% to 1.6%.
  • ROA (FY27): ~8.25% to 8.5%; steady-state ~8% to 8.25%.
  • Spread (FY27/thereafter):around 13.5%” (implied steady-state spread).
  • Opex to AUM (FY27): ~7% to 7.25%.
  • Branch openings (FY27): 60 to 75 branches.
  • Disbursements (FY27 implied): INR 6,500–7,000 cr (from Q&A).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Worst is behind us” and “NPA slowing down from next quarter onwards.”
  • Disbursement growth is expected to be supported by the business/collections split operational from Apr 1.
  • They are not planning aggressive pricing changes; focus remains on underwriting + collections + proactive risk management.

5. Standout Statements (directly revealing)

  • Turnaround claim:the worst is behind us” and “onwards and upwards.”
  • Collection strength:unique customer collection efficiency of 98.1%” and “slippage ratio… 0.7%.”
  • NPA stability:NPA remain largely stable between quarters at 3.37%.”
  • Growth target:AUM growth of around 20% for the financial year 2027.”
  • Credit cost guidance:credit cost of 1.7% to 1.75% for the next financial year.”
  • Steady-state credit cost:anywhere between 1.5% to 1.6%… steady-state number.”
  • Funding confidence:ADB… $100 million… reinforcement of lenders’ belief.”
  • Cost of funds caution:we don’t expect too much benefit to come in from the cost of funds in the next financial year” (geopolitical uncertainty).
  • ECL conservatism:no tearing hurry… to keep creating buffers on the provision” (suggests they may allow credit cost to normalize if buckets improve).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear improvement in collection efficiency, slippage, and current bucket proportion (81.77% → 82.69%).
– Specific operational execution: business/collections split operational from Apr 1.
– Funding access: ADB draw + lender attractiveness.
– Quantified FY27 targets across growth, credit cost, ROA, opex, branches.

Red flags
Confidence-heavy language (“worst behind us”) without fully addressing how quickly credit cost can normalize given they still guide 1.7%–1.75% (only modest improvement from Q4 1.88%).
Geopolitical/liquidity uncertainty acknowledged; they also say rating upgrade is “out of question” until they show benefits—could cap cost-of-funds upside.
– Some narrative shifts on “what changed” in credit cost (environment understanding + customer skew) without hard evidence of reduced risk beyond collections.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 29, 2025): “green shoots… Q3/Q4 stronger,” but still cautious; guidance stability emphasized.
  • Q3 FY26 (Jan 29, 2026):last leg of fixing,” confidence that improvements visible in Q4; still avoided growth guidance specifics.
  • 4QFY26 (Apr 29, 2026): markedly more assertive: “worst is behind us,” “coming quarters… onwards and upwards,” and provides quantitative FY27 guidance.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic (from stabilization/fixing to explicit growth + credit cost + ROA targets).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • “Fixing problems” → growth acceleration timing
  • Prior: Q3 FY26 said focus on collections and “accelerating the growth” after stabilization; growth guidance deferred.
  • Current: now provides FY27 AUM growth ~20% and disbursement push.
  • Assessment:Delivered directionally (collections improved materially in Q4; disbursements resumed).
  • Credit cost guidance evolution
  • Q2 FY26: credit cost guided around 1.25%–1.35% (and later discussed as steady-state).
  • Q4 FY26: FY27 credit cost guided 1.7%–1.75%, steady-state 1.5%–1.6%.
  • Assessment:Delayed / revised upward vs earlier implied lower levels (management explains via environment/customer skew and need for consistency).
  • Branch expansion pace
  • Q3 FY26: continued investment in branches/officers (35 branches in Q3).
  • Current: FY27 branch openings 60–75 with break-even claim.
  • Assessment:Consistent with prior infrastructure build; now scaling again.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “over-leverage crisis” to “behavioral crisis” (consistent across calls), but in Q4 they add a stronger claim that “worst is behind us.”
  • Collections-first strategy remains consistent; however, Q4 introduces a more mechanical operational lever: business/collections split operational from Apr 1 (new emphasis).
  • Geographic narrative shifts: earlier calls discussed stabilization broadly; now they explicitly say South growth will drive FY27 and list non-South turnaround states.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: management provides concrete collection metrics and operational explanations.
  • Weakness: repeated “near-term” confidence (“last leg,” “worst behind us”) has historically been used during a prolonged stress period; credit cost guidance has moved upward vs earlier ranges, though explained.
  • They do not fully quantify how much of credit cost is “conservative overlay” vs model-driven.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/growth: Deterioration → stabilization → now explicit growth target (inflection in Q4).
  • Collections/asset quality: Gradual improvement narrative becomes more data-backed in Q4 (98.1% unique efficiency, slippage 0.7%).
  • Margins/funding: Cost of funds improved, but management now tempers expectations: limited further benefit next year.
  • Risk management: Increasingly institutionalized (collections vertical, legal recovery, business/collections separation, underwriting layers).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • The company’s “credit cost won’t drop quickly” stance appears to be a recurring theme: even as collections improve, they guide only modest credit cost improvement (Q4 1.88% → FY27 1.7–1.75%).
  • They increasingly rely on forward-flow containment (x-bucket forward flows) rather than claiming immediate cure of stressed pools—suggesting the remaining risk may be more about timing than absence of stress.