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Indian Company Investor Calls

HFCL Sees All-Time High Order Book as Margins Expand

May 8, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

HFCL Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Conference Call (held Apr 30, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “confidence” and “remain confident of sustaining this growth momentum.”
  • Uses strong positive framing: “defining milestone,” “structural transformation,” “structurally stronger and very predictable growth phase.”
  • Provides multiple forward-looking revenue/margin drivers (order book, capacity expansion, preform backward integration, data center interconnect, defense scaling).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Sustained demand led by hyperscale data centers / AI
  • Claims global structural upcycle: “100 to 150 million fibre kilometres of incremental demand globally.”
  • Demand skew toward “high fibre count, low-latency, high-performance solutions,” with “significant improvement in realisations.”
  • Order book strength and visibility
  • All time high order book of Rs. 21,200 crore,” with 58% exports and a landmark USD 1.1B global supply contract.
  • Execution window: delivery orders “within this year to about five years,” AMC “6–7-year time period.”
  • Margin expansion strategy
  • Mix shift to higher-value products; expects margin uplift from improved realizations and reduced EPC losses.
  • Backward integration into preform positioned as “a key margin expansion lever.”
  • Capacity expansion / product-led growth
  • Optical fiber capacity targets: 28 mn fkm → 33.9 mn fkm by Dec 2026; optical fiber cable capacity scaling in phases.
  • Data center interconnect (HTL Limited): expects incremental revenue contribution (see Guidance section).
  • Defense scaling via platform consolidation
  • Acquisition/expansion narrative: consolidate defense capabilities under HFCL Advance Systems; add aerospace exposure with export-oriented order book.
  • New ammunition facility in Andhra Pradesh (foundation stone May 15, 2026) to support multiple ammunition products.
  • Geopolitical insulation
  • Claims supply chain “largely insulated” from current geopolitical disruptions.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Revenue/margin outlook and whether implied upside is “real”

  • Core questions
  • Analysts triangulated the USD 1.1B hyperscaler contract + defense execution and asked if revenue could scale to ~₹8,000 cr and profit north of ₹800–900 cr.
  • Asked about telecom PBT margin trajectory and blended margin expansion.
  • Management response
  • Refused explicit profit guidance: “I would not like to give such a guidance at this point of time.”
  • Gave limited expectations: revenue growth “20% to 25% at least” and blended margin expansion “3% to 4%.”
  • Clarified margin is expectation based on “current order book, prices, raw material prices,” but “tomorrow… you don’t know.”
  • Assessment (evasive/partial)
  • Strongly avoided converting order book into earnings guidance; provided only ranges and “expectation” language.

Theme B: Execution timing of major contracts

  • Core questions
  • When does the USD 1.1B contract start executing?
  • Management response
  • Corrected/clarified: execution starts “end of Q1” / “from Q2.”
  • Assessment
  • Minor confusion in phrasing, but ultimately pinned to near-term execution.

Theme C: EPC profitability, unbilled revenue, and working capital

  • Core questions
  • Why EPC turned loss-making; will it become profitable?
  • Why unbilled revenues increased despite EPC weakness and global OFC customers.
  • Management response
  • EPC loss attributed to Army network warranty period: “incurring cost, but nothing was received.”
  • Expect AMC to start: loss “nullified totally.”
  • Unbilled revenue explained as invoice timing/compliance: tax invoices couldn’t be raised at year-end; will convert in April–May; set-off against prior unbilled.
  • Next-year EPC profitability expected: “Second quarter…” when AMC signed.
  • Assessment
  • More detailed and concrete than other topics; still relies on timing of AMC signing.

Theme D: Capacity utilization, ability to take new orders, and pricing

  • Core questions
  • Whether capacity is fully utilized and how much incremental growth is possible.
  • Whether new orders go into backlog; how they manage spot vs long-term orders.
  • Fiber/preform/cable price momentum and whether cooling-off occurred.
  • Management response
  • Fiber: “100% utilization” and trying to push “110%.”
  • Cable: “100% utilized” but also says they keep capacity for spot orders and regular customers; hesitant to take large orders without capacity expansion.
  • Pricing: said prices “almost the final level” in their opinion; cited defense/drone-related demand but claimed they don’t supply to war-drone requirements.
  • Assessment
  • Pricing commentary is qualitative and opinion-based (“my personal opinion”), not a firm forecast.

Theme E: Preform backward integration economics

  • Core questions
  • Why preform facility is only 300 tons initially; margin impact; when it comes on stream.
  • Management response
  • 300 tons is for availability control (not full requirement): current need 1,000 tons/year, facility starts at 300 tons, possible stage 2 to 500 tons.
  • Make-vs-buy: reduces preform cost “roughly between 15% to 20%.”
  • Timing: “at least 2 years.”
  • Assessment
  • Clear on purpose and economics, but margin impact is not quantified at consolidated level.

Theme F: Defense acquisition rationale, product commercialization, and timelines

  • Core questions
  • Strategic reason for defense acquisitions; defense outlook 3–5 years.
  • Progress on specific products (electronic fuzes, BMP upgrade, radar, ammunition).
  • Management response
  • Acquisition rationale: enter aerospace with existing approvals/certifications and export order book (~₹1,930 cr).
  • Fuze/BMP: “plain white truth” and specific next steps (e.g., upgraded sample submission by 26th June).
  • Ammunition facility: foundation stone 15th May; first product Multi Mode Hand Grenade; expects to participate in a “very large tender” in 1–1.5 months.
  • Assessment
  • Product-level updates are more specific than earlier calls, but still no hard revenue/margin commitments.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Revenue growth (FY27 vs FY26):20% to 25% at least” (year-on-year).
  • Blended margin expansion:3% to 4%” (expected).
  • Data center interconnect incremental revenue:
  • ~₹400 crore additional revenue in FY26–27
  • ~₹800 crore in FY27–28
  • Defense revenue mix (FY27):
  • Defense + data center: defense “INR600–INR” (implied) and data center interconnect “INR400–INR500” (conservative framing).
  • Defense share of revenue: “10% to 12%” (FY27), largely aerospace + land systems.
  • Capex:
  • FY27: “~₹600 crore” (part already incurred)
  • FY28: “₹350 crore
  • Preform facility economics/timing:
  • Cost reduction: “15% to 20% of preform
  • On-stream: “at least 2 years
  • Optical fiber capacity targets:
  • 28 mn fkm → 33.9 mn fkm by Dec 2026
  • Optical fiber cable capacity scaling to 42.36 mn fkm by Dec 2026 (as stated)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Management believes HFCL is entering a “structurally stronger and very predictable growth phase.”
  • Pricing environment expected to remain favorable “over the medium to long term,” but they hedge with geopolitical uncertainty.
  • EPC losses expected to normalize as warranty period ends and AMC starts (timing suggests improvement from Q2 FY27).

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • We have successfully achieved the commitment of 20% revenue growth along with expansion in margins…”
  • Order book stands at Rs. 21,200 crore including export order worth Rs. 12,250 crore…”
  • Preform will act as a key margin expansion lever and a long-term competitive advantage.”
  • Data centre interconnect solutions… expected to contribute about Rs.400 crore additional revenue in FY26-27 and about Rs.800 crore in FY27-28.
  • I would not like to give such a guidance at this point of time” (on profit north of ₹800–900 cr).
  • We are not only experiencing a substantial expansion in our order book, but also a meaningful uplift in its business composition…”
  • We are largely insulated from the current disruptions due to geopolitical situations.”
  • EPC turning point: “Second quarter… we expect this AMC contract with Army would be signed” and losses get “nullified totally.”
  • Pricing stance: “in my personal opinion, it will not go further in a major way.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No hard profit guidance despite analysts’ triangulation; management repeatedly uses “expectation” and “no guidance.”
Geopolitical hedging: margin/realisations depend on “current order book… current raw material prices,” but “tomorrow… you don’t know.”
Pricing forecasts are opinion-based (“my personal opinion”) rather than evidence-based.
Execution risk still present in defense and EPC (depends on AMC signing, tender outcomes, DRDO/Army evaluation cycles).

Positive signals
Very specific operational milestones (preform facility stage plan; AMC timing; BMP sample submission by 26 June; ammunition foundation stone 15 May).
Large, visible contract wins (USD 1.1B hyperscaler supply contract; all-time high order book).
Mix shift quantified (exports share jump; product-led revenue share jump; government exposure reduced).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Jul 25, 2025): optimistic but framed as “breakout year” with recovery from subdued demand; more narrative on capacity ramp and defense trials.
  • Q2 FY26 (Oct 17, 2025): confident on capacity expansion completion and export pipeline; still acknowledged tariff noise.
  • Q3 FY26 (Feb 03, 2026): strong demand narrative; more emphasis on data center upcycle and export share; still discussed execution volatility (logistics/tariffs earlier in quarter).
  • Q4 FY26 (Apr 30, 2026): more assertive and “structural transformation” language, plus quantified outcomes (20% revenue growth achieved; margin expansion achieved; order book all-time high).
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic (from “expectations” and “pipeline” to “delivered” and “defining milestone”).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Capacity expansion to 42.36 mn fkm by June 2026
  • Prior: Q2 FY26 said expansion “fully operational by June 2026.”
  • Current: reiterates scaling and gives Dec 2026 targets; implies progress and confidence.
  • Status:On track / reinforced (no explicit miss stated).
  • Data center interconnect / PCS revenue contribution
  • Prior (Q3 FY26): PCS expected “₹400–500 crore additional revenues over FY26–FY27.”
  • Current: “~₹400 crore additional revenue in FY26–27” and “~₹800 crore in FY27–28.”
  • Status:Consistent; extended to FY27–28.
  • Defense revenue ramp
  • Prior (Q3 FY26): defense revenue expectation “INR400–INR500 crores” next year.
  • Current: FY27 defense share “10% to 12%” and defense/data center revenue framing (defense ~₹600 cr; data center interconnect ₹400–500 cr).
  • Status:Directionally consistent; more specific now.
  • EPC profitability normalization
  • Prior (Q3 FY26): EPC execution “subdued,” but expected revenue uptick; O&M to start.
  • Current: attributes losses to warranty period and expects AMC to start and EPC to become profitable from Q2.
  • Status:Not yet proven in results; now tied to AMC signing timing.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “pipeline/capacity ramp” to “delivered structural transformation”
  • Earlier calls emphasized demand revival and capacity expansion; now emphasizes achieved results and order book quality (exports, long-term contracts, high-margin products).
  • Preform backward integration becomes central
  • Not a major focus in earlier calls; now positioned as a margin lever with quantified cost reduction (15–20%).
  • EPC losses explanation becomes more technical and time-bound
  • Warranty period → AMC conversion narrative is clearer than earlier “subdued execution” framing.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium–High
  • Strength: management has provided consistent demand drivers (data centers/AI) and consistent capacity expansion direction.
  • Weakness: repeated refusal to give profit guidance; reliance on “expectation” and timing of external approvals/contracts (AMC, DRDO/Army evaluations).
  • No major contradictions, but earnings-to-order-book conversion is still not fully quantified.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand (OFC/IBR): Improving/stable (from “revival” to “structural transformation”).
  • Margins: Improving (from margin volatility to “expansion in margins” and “3–4% expansion expected”).
  • Exports: Strong improvement (exports share jump is repeatedly quantified).
  • Defense: From trials/approvals to acquisitions + facility buildout + product-specific evaluation timelines.
  • EPC: From subdued execution to a clearer “warranty loss → AMC normalization” pathway.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Management’s language has increasingly shifted from “we expect” to “we delivered”, suggesting confidence is rising as capacity and contracts convert into results.
  • However, profit guidance remains deliberately withheld, implying either (a) earnings sensitivity to execution timing is still high, or (b) management wants flexibility if geopolitical/material price/order mix changes.
  • The preform facility suggests management is proactively addressing a supply-chain/margin risk that earlier calls treated more as “contracted supply” and “no shortage.”