Akums Drugs and Pharmaceuticals Limited (NSE:AKUMS)
India flag India · Delayed Price · Currency is INR
520.80
-0.55 (-0.11%)
May 22, 2026, 3:30 PM IST
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Q4 25/26

May 18, 2026

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Akums Drugs and Pharmaceuticals Q4 FY 2026 results conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen- only mode, and there'll be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star and then zero on your touchtone phone. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Abdulkader Puranwala. Thank you, and over to you.

Abdulkader Puranwala
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Thank you, operator. Good afternoon, everyone. On behalf of ICICI Securities, I welcome you all to the Q4 FY 2026 earnings conference call of Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Limited. Today on this call, we have with us the following members from the management team. Mr. Sandeep Jain, Managing Director, Mr. Sumeet Sood, CFO, Mr. Sahil Maheshwari, General Manager, Strategy, and Mr. Ankit Jain, Head of Investor Relations. I now hand over the call to the management for their opening remarks, followed by which we will open the line for Q&A. Thank you, and over to you, Ankit.

Ankit Jain
Head of Investor Relations, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you, Abdul, for the introduction. Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to Akums Q4 and FY 2026 earnings call. I am Ankit Jain, and I head Investor Relations at Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals Limited. I will commence with our standard disclaimer that any discussion on today's call might include certain forward-looking statements, which are predictions or projections of future events. Our business faces several risks and uncertainties that could cause our actual results to differ materially from what is expressed or implied in such statements.

At Akums, we do not undertake any obligations to publicly update any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new confirmation or future events or otherwise. I hope you would have had an opportunity to review our investor presentation and financials that we posted on Thursday evening. I would now like to hand it over to our Managing Director, Mr. Sandeep Jain, to discuss our performance. Thank you.

Sandeep Jain
Managing Director, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you, Ankit-ji . Namaskar, everyone, thank you for joining us today for our Q4 and full year FY 2026 earnings call. During Q4 FY 2026, we maintained the business momentum on last quarter and ended FY 2026 on a strong note despite a very challenging H1 FY 2026. The operating environment through the first half was adverse, characterized by sharp erosion in API prices and prolonged phase of low volume growth in the domestic market. We, as Akums, managed to navigate the challenging phase due to the depth of our client relationship and quality of our manufacturing setup, and at the same time continued to invest for the future to ensure long-term sustainable growth.

Coming to operating performance for the quarter, CDMO once again delivered a healthy top-line growth led by double-digit volume expansion. We believe this reflects the structural strength supported by growing customer preference for compliant manufacturers. Our international CDMO journey continued to gather pace following the EU GMP accreditation of Plant 2 received in January. We have commenced dossier filing and country-specific registrations across multiple European markets in line with our stated plan to commence commercial supplies Plant 2 in FY 2028.

Supplies to Europe, which began in the early part of this fiscal, have continued to scale, and along with the strong pipeline of 10+ products for the European markets. On the Zambia partnership, the project remains on track with commercial supplies of approximately $25 million from our Indian facilities to Zambia, expected to commence by the end of Q2 FY 2027, along with the project planning and erection of the local manufacturing facility.

While Akumentis, the domestic branded formulation business, reported modest revenue growth during the year, margins in the business expanded meaningfully, validating the efficiency-focused strategy as we head into FY 2027. We expect this segment to grow at above IPM rates, driven by new launches, focus on brand building, and continued emphasis on field force productivity. Our international branded formulation business had a tough year with limited growth due to market-specific disruption in our focus geographies.

We expect this segment to return to growth as we are confident of the structural attractiveness of our chosen geographies. In the API business, pricing pressure in the cephalosporin persisted through most of the year, resulting in continued losses. Our continued focus on cost optimization, portfolio rationalization, yield improvements, and the gradual shift towards higher margin non-cephalosporin products and regulated markets are expected to curtail losses for the coming year.

The European audit of our API facility is expected in the upcoming quarter, which would unlock regulated market opportunities at improved realization. The Trade Generic business turned a corner in this quarter. Going forward, we expect a stabilized, though much smaller profit-oriented footprint going forward. On the operational and digital infrastructure front, our SAP S/4HANA transformation, initiated early this fiscal and progressing as per plan, and will over time drive material improvements in efficiency, automation, and real-time analytics across functions. The Darwinbox implementation across our HR function is delivering tangible employee experience benefits.

We continue to invest steadily in capacity expansion, R&D, and modernization through the year. With CapEx broadly in line with our trend run rate, our new, newer facilities, including the dedicated injectable plant, the Penem facility, and the new plant in [inaudible] are all progressing through their respective ramp-up curves, with client audits and product approvals in advanced stages. As volumes build in over FY 2027F and FY 2028, these facilities will drive next leg of growth for the CDMO business. The Board has also recommended final dividend for the year FY 2026 for INR 1 per equity share and a special dividend of INR 2 per equity share.

We thank all the stakeholders for their continued trust and patience through what was a transitional year, and we reiterate our commitment to creating sustainable long-term value for our shareholders. I shall now request our CFO, Mr. Sumeet Sood, to take you through the detailed financials for the quarter and the full year. Over to you, Mr. Sumeet.

Sumeet Sood
CFO, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you, sir. Thank you, Sandeep-ji. Good afternoon, everyone. I will take you through the financial highlights. Revenue for the fiscal year 2026 stood at INR 4,359 crore as compared to INR 4,170 crore in FY 2025, an increase of 5.8%. Adjusted EBITDA stood at INR 522 crore. This is the highest that we've seen over the recent past, as compared to INR 461 crore in the previous year, increasing by 13.3%. Adjusted EBITDA margin stood at 12% against 11.2% in FY 2025.

PAT stood at INR 256 crore as compared to INR 344 crore in FY 2025. Last year, there was a significant benefit of deferred tax asset that was created due to the restructuring of the group. This was INR 106 crore. I think important would be to look at the PBT, which probably would insulate the tax, the deferred tax asset. If we look at the PBT, we were at INR 382 crore in FY 2026 compared to INR 341 crore in FY 2025, an increase of 11.9%. If we look at the quarterly performance, revenue stood at INR 1,158 crore, t his was 9.7% higher year-on-year and 0.1% lower quarter-on-quarter.

Adjusted EBITDA stood at INR 152 crore. This is INR 61.6 crore higher year-on-year. Q4 2025 was INR 94 crore and 3.3% higher quarter-on-quarter. Q3 2026 was INR 147 crore. Driven by improved profitability in the CDMO segment and Trade Generics segment turning EBITDA positive. Adjusted EBITDA margins were 13.1% versus 8.9% in FY 2025 and 12.7% in Q3 of FY 2026. The reported PAT for the quarter was INR 81 crore compared to INR 150 crore for Q4 FY 2025 and INR 68 crore for Q3 FY 2026.

As stated earlier, there was a significant deferred tax asset creation in Q4 last year. If we look at the PBT for the quarter, then the PBT is INR 121 crore in Q4 2026 compared to INR 75 crore in Q4 2025. If we go business, the five segments that we've given, if we look at the CDMO, the CDMO performance has been good. The revenue stood for the year at INR 3,485 crore compared to INR 3,208 crore in FY 2025, an increase of 8.6%. EBITDA for the full year stood at INR 467 crore compared to INR 450 crore last year, an increase of 2.9%.

Q4 revenue was at INR 952 crore, a growth of 13.4% year-on-year and 4% quarter-on-quarter. EBITDA stood at INR 137 crore, improving 54.9% year-on-year and 9.1% quarter-on-quarter. The segment sustained its strong growth momentum while also benefiting from operating leverage driven by improved capacity utilization and ramp-up of newer facilities. Domestic Branded Formulations. FY 2026 revenue stood at INR 456 crore compared to INR 434 crore in FY 2025, an increase of 2.9%. EBITDA for the full year was INR 90 crore compared to INR 77 crore last year, an increase of 17%.

Q4 revenue stood at INR 102 crore, decline of 1.5% year-on-year and 11.1% quarter-on-quarter. EBITDA stood at INR 22 crore, similar to Q4 last year, and declining 13.2% quarter-on-quarter. International Branded Formulation. For FY 2026, revenue stood at INR 143 crore, similar to last year, which was also INR 143 crore. EBITDA for the full year stood at INR 36 crore compared to INR 28 crore last year, an increase of 32.3%. For Q4, revenue was INR 36 crore, a decline of 9.7% year-on-year and 28.5% quarter-on-quarter. EBITDA stood at INR 10 crore, improving 14.7% year-on-year and declining 22.3% quarter-on-quarter.

For the Trade Generics business, the revenue stood for FY 2026 at INR 100 crore compared to INR 115 crore FY 2025, a decline of 13.2%. EBITDA for the full year stood INR -10 crore compared to INR -28 crore last year. For Q4, the revenue was INR 27 crore, a growth of 22.6% year-on-year and 10.2% quarter-on-quarter. EBITDA turned INR +1.4 crore from INR -10 crore Q4 2025 and INR -3 crore Q3 FY 2026. For the API business in the current year, the revenue stood at INR 184 crore compared to INR 219 crore in FY 2025, a decline of 15.9%. EBITDA for the full year stood INR -40 crore compared to INR -44 crore last year.

For Q4, revenue stood at INR 41 crore, a decline of 18.8% year-on-year and 24.9% quarter-on-quarter. EBITDA stood at INR -12 crore compared to - INR 6 crore Q4 2025 and INR -7 crore in Q3 FY 2026. The company's operating cash flow stood healthy at INR 1,181 crore compared to INR 465 crore last year. This is majorly attributable to the European contract that was assigned to the company. The free cash flow for FY 2026 stood at INR 958 crore versus INR 201 crore for FY 2025. We had a slight increase in the working capital days from INR 91 crore to 105 days.

This was largely due to the buildup of inventory, which was secured by advanced payment to creditors, and we wanted to ensure the supply during the wartime. The company continues to maintain a strong liquidity position and cash and cash equivalents stood at INR 1,682 crore and a healthy balance sheet of the company. We are well-positioned to enter new fiscal year with positivity and confidence. I now request the moderator to open the forum for question and answers. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We will now begin the question- answer- session. Particpants who wish to ask a question, may press star and one their touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use a handset before asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We have the first question from the line of Sajal Kapoor from Antifragile Thinking. Please go ahead.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Hi, team. Couple of questions. As your European and regulated market business ramps up, which specific internal capability is currently least scalable? Is it regulatory filing throughput or quality systems or tech transfer? Is it leadership bandwidth or manufacturing facility? The capability that is required to compete successfully in highly regulated markets are somewhat different compared to Indian market, right? That's, that's one part of the question. If you can also help in terms of, you know, what concrete investments are being made today to get to a level where we can, you know, pitch Akums as a high quality, you know, regulated market ready kind of a facility. Thank you.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sajal, this is Sahil from Akums. On the first question, obviously, reg market play requires stringent capabilities compared to the domestic capabilities. A few points why we think we are capable to serve those markets is one is we already serve large Indian customers and MNCs in the Indian markets who themselves have a strict KRA sheet of how they operate, right? We have been serving MNCs for over 15 years now in India, from the likes of all the large MNCs in India across their multiple products, be they a regular established one for the new DCGI, right. Also, we received our first EU GMP approval way back in 2022.

The capabilities, we have been strengthening our capabilities and as you rightly mentioned, these are across R&D, quality, production, regulatory, everyone. These capabilities, since we already serve the larger ones in India, and we're also European GMP, these are the capabilities which we think we have. As we go along, we'll further strengthen up those capabilities. Our Plant 3 also, apart from European, also received ANVISA approval this year, right. This again is a testament of our commitment towards regulated market. We were also awarded the European CDMO contract, which was after a thorough review by the partner. It's a learning journey. We are on the way, rightly so we'll have to strengthen capabilities as we go along.

Secondly, on the investments required, this will be tied down to what projects in the future we get, which capabilities, which dosage forms we have to expand. As we look today, we already have a European GMP approved facility for injectables. We already have a European GMP facility for oral liquids and an injectable facility which is also ANVISA approved, right. For most of the important dosage forms which contribute to value and volume are already European GMP approved. As we go along, we have plans for some additional plants to get European GMP approved over the next 18 months.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Sure. No, that's helpful. Very thoughtful. Thank you. On the gross margin side, if you see ever since the IPO listing today, we are sitting at one of the highest or best ever gross margins this business has reported, which is very positive indeed. There are two kind of loops that are playing out in parallel for us as a business. One is the negative loop of what's happening in the Middle East, which is something external. Everyone is facing, you know, crude linked inflation in solvents, et cetera. We can only be backward integrated to a certain extent. We cannot start manufacturing KSMs and all the rest of it. There will be some negative pressure coming from that side of the negative loop.

In parallel, there is also a positive loop that will play out, which will be as we move from India into more complexity, more specialty regulated markets. We obviously expect to get a fair share of the pricing power. With that should help our gross margins move up. These two loops are kind of contradicting each other. What I'm trying to understand here is what in your view is the net effect of one negative loop, which is a cyclical loop, hopefully, fingers crossed, this situation will hopefully change at some point. The other one is much more structural loop, which is a positive loop. Higher complexity, better specialty products and higher demanding markets giving us pricing power. What is the net effect on the gross margin in a nutshell?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

I'll quickly address. As you rightly said, one is external, which is not really in our hands, but as a business model, it's a pass-through business model. Whatever is the cost of input material gets passed on as part of a CDMO contracts, a nd on top of it is our conversion and margins. While the uncertainty in the global environment creates a cyclical period of shortages, price hikes, but all of that gets passed through. Secondly, what is internal to us is how we can ramp up our unique differentiated dosage forms, our product offerings, our capabilities. This is which we are constantly focusing on. If you look at really last three years, we have been investing over INR 100 crore in our R&D, which is a result of which we can at a larger base as well, we can gradually move up our gross margins.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

No, that's helpful. Very finally, very quickly.

Operator

Sorry to interrupt, Mr. Sajal Kapoor. Request you to kindly come back in queue for follow-up questions.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Yeah, yeah. Sure. No problem. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Participants are requested to kindly restrict to two questions per participant. We have the next question to the line of Aditya Khemka from InCred Asset Management. Please go ahead.

Aditya Khemka
Analyst, InCred Asset Management

Hi sir. Last two quarters, the volume variance has been north of 25%. What is driving this and what is your outlook on the same? The price variance has been - 3.5% on an average in the last few quarters. With API prices rising 10%-20% on an average, will this reverse going forward? If prices sustain, can we deliver a double-digit growth in the CMO business by virtue of the same?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sure. As you rightly pointed out, over the last two quarters in the H2, the volume growth has been significant. What we have seen as we also discussed this in Q3, this is primarily led from existing customers only, right? This is not new geographies or new customers. What we are seeing is increased demand for existing brands from the existing customers only. Honestly, what is driving it still to be thought through and looked at, but because the overall IPM is still growing at 1.5%. We think that this is a sustained growth because similar double-digit growth is also visible as we said in May for the Q1. That's on the volume growth.

Pricing wise API prices over the last full financial year were a bit soft, right? The whole of the year the API prices crashed by over 20%-25% as a basket, right? Due to the current ongoing global geopolitical situations, the API prices have slightly gone up, single high digits they have gone up as a basket. Will they come down sharply soon? That has still to be seen, but still the prices remain lower than what they used to be in April of last year, right? While the price has still gone up, they are still lower than the April prices, right? The API softening still continues if we have to compare it, 12 months prior to it, right. Volume growth looks positive. I believe the APIs won't go down sooner from these levels. That's how we see the CDMO outlook from here.

Aditya Khemka
Analyst, InCred Asset Management

Got it, sir. Next question was on the Trade Generic turning EBITDA positive. If you can share your outlook on how do you see the Trade Generic and API business for FY 2027 and beyond? A question on the tax rate expected for FY 2027 ? That's it, sir.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sure. I'll maybe address the business drivers. Sumeet, you can chime in for the tax. On the Trade Generic , as you rightly said, we turned EBITDA positive. We over the last couple of years have really cut the business short. Now it's EBITDA positive. We are only doing the business in pockets where it makes sense for the business. This is expected to remain, as we mentioned in the opening statement, it is expected to remain at similar levels of revenue with similar levels of EBITDA. This will not meaningfully contribute to the group's top line or profitability as we move along.

On the API, this was a year of miss, honestly. The API prices continued to remain low and hence our costs, the COGS, remain elevated, which resulted that our fixed overheads and our variable expenses of manufacturing could not be fully utilized and we could not be EBITDA positive. The API prices have started to go up. We have also started to venture into exports. In March of this year, we also started our European inspections. All of those CEPs have been filed in ANVISA Brazil as well. This year we are hopeful we should do much better than what we delivered last year in API and similar to our Trade Generics turnaround in 2026, we are hopeful we can do some significant turnaround in APIs this fiscal year o n the tax submission.

Sumeet Sood
CFO, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

On the tax rate, if we were to look at some of the entities which are making losses, it does give an effective tax rate of 32%- odd. You know, going forward, we think 29% on phone and overall is something we can build into our business models, right. Right now, I mean, at around 32%.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

No other comments.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on line of Praveen Jayaraman from Avendus Spark. Please go ahead.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Thank you for the opportunity, sir. Hope I'm audible.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yes.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Sir, my question is on the model side. In CDMO for Q4 FY 2026, our margins have expanded to 14.4%, even though we had a product mix base which was adverse product mix of around INR 100 crore. Can you explain the model followed here, sir? Like, I understood it is a cost plus margins, b ut whether it's a percentage margins or a margin fixed on an absolute basis. My question stems out on the case where, even though the base portfolio carries lower absolute conversion margin compared to the niche, how could this adverse mix improve our EBITDA margins this quarter? What am I missing here, sir, like on a sequential basis?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sure. If you really compare it with last Q4, you will see an aberration. Look it as standalone any other quarter, whether it is quarter three, in general every quarter, you will see these are the regular margins. Q4 of 2025 was a year where we had a significant dip in EBITDA driven again by the product portfolio and some year-end provisions as well, right? This essentially in Q4 we had less of those low margin products and hence this looks to be a regular quarter.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Sir, is it a percentage margins or absolute one or like the model which you follow?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Business model is a percent margins on the input cost. The input cost then depending on the product type, the dosage form, the quant and so on, the percent margins is applied on top of it.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Okay. Okay. Thank you, sir. My second question is on Schedule M. Now, the deadline has passed and we heard like inspections would have started by now. Have we seen any visible improvement, like we getting some volume growth or customers approaching us on this angle due to MSMEs, Schedule M getting implemented?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

While this remains within the purview of the government, Schedule M and is being followed through, right, we'll have to look for how this gets rolled out and implemented. Obviously, even prior to Schedule M, the customers we serve are largely cost, quality, conscious customers.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Sir, My question stems from the point like we said, that there were some pricing disruptions caused by MSME people on like due to the Schedule M, and like as now it is being implemented, like still are they doing this cost-cutting to retain customers or with this getting implemented we could expect those customers to come back to us?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

I will like to skip this question because honestly, we have no visibility on ground of how the government plans to roll this out.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Okay, sir. Okay. Sir, can I add one more question on the injectables side?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yeah, yeah, it's okay.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

The new injectables facility, what would be the utilization and, what would be the contribution from this facility going ahead, sir?

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, the management line has dropped. Request you to kindly stay connected while we rejoin the management. Ladies and gentlemen, we have the management line reconnected. You may go ahead.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Hello, sir.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yes, Praveen. We are back.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Yeah. Okay. My last question was on the injectables facility. The new one, what was the utilization, exit which we had, and, what would be the contribution from this facility going ahead, sir?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

For the newer facility or overall injectables?

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

New facility, sir.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Newer facility, we are still ramping up. The utilization is in early teens. We expect that, this year we will have a significant ramp up, in the injectable facility.

Praveen Jayaraman
Analyst, Avendus Spark

Okay, sir. Thank you for answering all my questions. That's it from my side.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on the line of Ankur Kumar from Alpha Capital. Please go ahead.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Hello, sir. Thank you for taking my question. Sir, I wanted to understand in terms of CDMO, what kind of overall revenue growth are we expecting this year? Because you said API prices have improved, which will be a pass-through, but they are still lower than last year. Volume growth, you said we will expecting double digits. Overall, what kind of revenue numbers and margins are we expecting?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

As I said, we have visibility for 45-60 days of our revenue book, right? What we said is in Q1, Q2, as we can see, we can, we expect a double-digit volume growth, right? While H2 still has to be seen through, the pricing, as I also mentioned in my last, are transiently high. Whether they stay at the current levels, go down, go further up, we still have to see as we go along but t his is what we can say for H1, and as we talk through in the next quarter, we can give more flavor on the Q3 and Q4.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Any color on the margins itself? We have seen improvement in Q4, so w hat kind of numbers can we expect?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Similar margin profile, what we currently have.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Got it, sir. Sir, on API side, you said you expect this year to be much better in terms of reduction in losses. Can we expect EBITDA losses to reduce to Trade Generic levels, or how should we think?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

While the losses will be sizably reduced is what we expect, we'll have to wait for at least a couple of quarters to think through whether we can turn monthly EBITDA positive or not. That's the goal and aspiration. On a full year basis, we might still see some losses.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Got it, sir. Sir, on tax rate, you said 29%. When do we expect to go to 25% type as a normal range?

Sumeet Sood
CFO, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

See, I think the way, the way we look at it is when some of our entities continue to make losses, right? If the API business was to turn around, right, and the Trade Generic business was to turn around, we would be coming at the tax rate that you're saying, right. If let's say we have a INR 100 profit and we were to pay a 25% tax over there, but that 25%, if is taken as a delta to an INR 80 because of the losses, you'll see a higher percentage, right.

I think the way the taxes should come down is once most of our businesses come down at the normal rate. While this number is looking also differential because of the deferred tax asset, I think to answer your question broadly is the way I said that once most of the businesses are, you know, PAT positive, we'll come at the normal rate.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Got it, sir. Sir, last question would be, we have good cash increase, we have good cash flow from operations also. What is our plan? We gave only 18% dividend payout this year. What is our plan on the cash usage?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Primarily given we are extensively a growth-focused organization, the primary usage of the cash still remains in assessing organic or inorganic opportunities for growth. Dividend also was a way to reward the shareholders. We expect that we'll soon utilize some parts of the cash for growth. We are already in process of expanding our oral solid facilities.

Since you have seen, we have almost 20%+ volume growths over two quarters, the quarter will also look good, and hence we see that we now would need to ramp up our oral solids facility as well. We are in process of ramping up. That's where some parts of the CapEx of this year will go. Also we are actively evaluating our objectives around niche businesses if we can acquire inorganically. This is where we expect the cash utilization to happen.

Ankur Kumar
Analyst, Alpha Capital

Sure, sir. Thank you and all the best.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question on the line of Rohit Bahirwani from Naredi Investments. Please go ahead. Sorry, from Vijit Global. Please go ahead.

Rohit Bahirwani
Analyst, Vijit Global

Yes. Thank you for giving me the opportunity. My question is related to the execution of lease deed, which we have done for land in Haridwar. I wanted to know the purpose of, you know, this execution and expansion plans for this land in future.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Simply, if you really look at the history of Pure & Cure Healthcare at Haridwar, we have gradually expanded our operations there by acquiring nearby land sites and so on, right? This is how we have grown historically across Haridwar, right? This is simply one of those activities we will need for expansion of our capacities as well as building utility supports and so on.

Rohit Bahirwani
Analyst, Vijit Global

Okay. Understood. My second question is related to the European contract of EUR 200 million, h ow much of this is expected from the first year? Will it be a EUR 40 million commitment every year or there is some clause of, you know, initially the amount being lower and gradually the execution going up year-on-year?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

This is an established brand, already marketed with predictable volumes being sold in the European market, right? This is not a new launch to your question. How we look at it, once we start, the launch, whichever month or quarter it is, once we start, we will have almost a EUR 35 million on a MAT basis.

Rohit Bahirwani
Analyst, Vijit Global

Okay. Okay. Initially it will be INR 35 million and thereafter.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

INR 35 million.

Rohit Bahirwani
Analyst, Vijit Global

And will be-

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Broadly, this is how it is. INR 35 million for the next six years till 2032.

Rohit Bahirwani
Analyst, Vijit Global

Okay. Okay. Understood. Thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on the line of Aanchal Maheshwari from Naredi Investments. Please go ahead.

Aanchal Maheshwari
Analyst, Naredi Investments

Yeah, hi. I had just one question on international branded business side. Their revenues have seen a sharp decline, but the margins have improved to 28%. Is there a reason for that?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Certainly. What we are focusing on is a more. We are investing into marketing while the business is small, which honestly was not one of the best years for the exports business, and we are hopeful this business will be shaped well this year. Margin expansion has come from two reasons. One is we are focusing on marketing of brands rather than just pure B2B play. It is more B2B2C wherein we are doing a marketing. Seven, eight countries, we have our own field force, extensive field force. We have over 10 countries where we have our country managers, right? That's there. Also, we got some benefits of the U.S. Since it's USD, we got some benefits from the Forex gain.

Aanchal Maheshwari
Analyst, Naredi Investments

Right.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Which resulted in the gross margins to be up by over 3.5%-4%.

Aanchal Maheshwari
Analyst, Naredi Investments

Right. Right. Thank you. Just one more thing, sir. The domestic business does not seem to be doing well. How do we ensure that the domestic business, you know, delivers at par with IPM over the next few years?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

This year, if you really have seen through, we hardly took a price hike, right? What we thought through was more cautious approach on price growth while the focus was on volume growth. In the future, what we think through is this year, we expect we should grow in line with the IPM, where the volume growth, the price growth and the NI growth will all play a part, and we expect to be double-digit top-line growth in the domestic formulation business.

Aanchal Maheshwari
Analyst, Naredi Investments

Right. Thank you. Those are my questions. All the best.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question on the line of Avnish Tiwari from Vaikarya. Please go ahead.

Avnish Tiwari
Analyst, Vaikarya

Hi. Can you just repeat that, your in the CDMO business you get a markup on bill of material. When the API prices are going down, what does it do to your absolute amount of profits you make or percent of margins you report? Relatively when API prices are going up, will you experience a reverse of that phenomena?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yes. you answered it correctly. These are percent margins and hence if the input materials go down, the absolute margins also go down.

Avnish Tiwari
Analyst, Vaikarya

Absolute profits go down. Okay.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Correct.

Avnish Tiwari
Analyst, Vaikarya

The second question I have is on Trade Generic side. if you are a manufacturer of these drugs, then why are you not making money? What's wrong with this industry structure that you should be the lowest cost producer of these drugs and directly sell into pharmacies t hrough distributors? What is it that this segment is having an issue in the industry structure which is causing this phenomena?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

This is honestly a question of how and where we deploy our capital. Trade Generics historically has been an area where you have elongated working capital cycles across inventory and receivables. Right and hence we thought through, at one point in time, four, five years back, 2022, we did almost INR 400+ crore in our Trade Generics business. We scaled down simply because it had elongated working capital cycles, and the margin profile was not what we expected these to return and it's a conscious call of capital reallocation.

Avnish Tiwari
Analyst, Vaikarya

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have our next question on line of Divya from Safal Capital. Please go ahead.

Divya Shah
Analyst, Safal Capital

Hi, sir. Am I audible?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yes.

Operator

Yes, we can hear you.

Divya Shah
Analyst, Safal Capital

What was the CapEx for FY 2026 and, how much are we going to spend in this year?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

FY 2026 we did a CapEx of INR 222 crore. This year we are targeting to keep our CapEx to INR 300 crore. That's the target for our CapEx.

Divya Shah
Analyst, Safal Capital

All right, sir. Any top-line targets for the whole year FY 2027?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

No, ma'am, we do not want to answer this question. We don't want to state future numbers. Thank you.

Divya Shah
Analyst, Safal Capital

All right, sir. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on line of Avnish Burman from Vaikarya. Please go ahead.

Avnish Burman
Analyst, Vaikarya

Yeah. Hi. Good afternoon. Thanks for taking my question. Sir, I have a couple of questions. When we had a phase of API declines in the last year, it was kind of led by CEFA prices. Now when you please correct that understanding if it's wrong. Now when you say that sequentially there has been a little bit of bounce back, is it fair to assume that the bounce back is also led by CEFA API prices?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

In the API business or the CDMO business? The CDMO business you're talking about.

Avnish Burman
Analyst, Vaikarya

Yeah. I want a view on the CEFA API prices.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sure. If you see, analyze the data, not just CEFA, most of the APIs over the last year have gone down. As simple as paracetamol went down, metformin went down, anti-infectives went down. All of those went down. Rightly, the ones which suffered a significant decline in prices are the ones which picked up in this April post-war. Those numbers still have to come out because these are the numbers we are talking about till March, and likely we'll have received the order in February, right? Till that time, the impact on API prices was not seen. Talking about Q1, across most of the APIs, whether it is cephalosporin, non-cephalosporins, chronic APIs and so on, whether imported, domestically sourced, we have seen that, the API prices, the basket has started to go up.

Avnish Burman
Analyst, Vaikarya

Okay. Just to clarify, I think this question was asked earlier. When the API prices are going up, then your absolute gross profit growth is higher than the volume growth. Is that a fair understanding?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Since the margins are linked to a percent, rightly so, right? Factory operates at a non-formula linked fixed expenses, right? The labor, the unit manpower, and so on. One, since the percent is on the gross input cost, as and when it fluctuates, it fluctuates my absolute margins.

Avnish Burman
Analyst, Vaikarya

Okay. The last question was on the volume growth. Of course, I mean, last couple of quarters have seen such a strong volume growth for like a very large player, like yourself. You mentioned that it's coming from existing customers, which means that you are gaining volume share from your existing customers. I just wanted a little more color on how is that happening. I mean, are you gaining from, let's say, a little bit of the unorganized or less organized sector, or are you gaining from other competitor which are already compliant with Schedule M? If yes, then why is that happening?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

This is broad-based. I think there's some volume share gain from their in-house production. There is some volume gain share from what they used to manufacture it from other CDMOs, right? While we have not done that analysis of what percent comes where, this will also meaningfully change every month on month on quarter- to- quarter. What we are seeing is either new brands from in-house or other CDMOs or existing brands which are sold more, which we already had, are sold more into the channel and hence we get a better order book for it. All of it is contributing. Since, as you rightly said, on a large base, such large volume growth, most of the parameters will have to play out for this to sustain this.

Avnish Burman
Analyst, Vaikarya

Okay, thanks. This was helpful. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on line of Saket Kapoor from Kapoor & Co. Please go ahead.

Sandeep Jain
Managing Director, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Namaskar, sir.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Namaskar, sir. Hope I'm audible.

Operator

Clear.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Sir, I'm new to this company and the sector, so pardon me for my questions. Sir, if we take our mix of revenues and as alluded by you that we have pressure on the API segment and that getting negated with the current year. If you could just give us some more understanding with the type of commissioning of orders, especially for the, I think the Zambia nation you, which you mentioned. How should the current year probably shaping up in terms of the different verticals, sir? I guess a brief summary of the same.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

CDMO we have talked about extensively, right? At least for the H1, we see strong volume growth and the API prices I think should remain at current levels. That's how we look at the CDMO segment. The domestic marketing we talked about, we should be targeting an IPM level, a high single digit, low double digit kind of growth in the domestic Akumentis. For exports as well, while the last year was flat, this year we expect to do a double digit growth in that segment as well, and the margin should sustain, the margin profile should sustain. On the Trade Generics, we have already turned positive.

As we said, this will not meaningfully contribute to our top line and bottom line going forward and should not drain our P&L going ahead. On the API segment, while we had a INR -40 crore of losses consistently for the last three years, every year on our P&L, this year we expect the losses to come down sharply. We expect that while the full year would still remain negative, this will be sizably lower and would have a significantly lower drag on our P&L. This is how the five business verticals will shape up. Apart from this, as you rightly said, one more element is on Zambia. Zambia will flow in into our CDMO revenues.

This will be, as we said, a $25 million, which at today's rate will be INR 230- odd crore, addition to our top line, which we expect to deliver in Q2, Q3 sequentially as we roll out the orders and get confirmed purchase orders. This will be slightly at a margin similar to CDMO business, right? This is how the overall year is somewhat we are thinking through. The European CDMO contract will kick in from the next fiscal.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Okay. Sir, with the Zambia order, is it a multi-year contract that we'll be executing or a one-time exercise?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

This is for two years, $25 million each, FY 2027, FY 2028. In parallel, we have to commission the facility, whether it takes two years, 2.5 years, this is our internal target, right? FY 2029 is something, somewhere we believe, calendar year 2029, we will start the revenues from the Zambian facility, which will gradually scale up, in which we have a 51% equity share.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Okay. This is different than the order which we are executing of INR 25 million for the current year? I could not get it.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Yes. The initial two years will cease these supplies from the Indian facilities.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Okay.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

...after FY 2028. Once in FY 2029 or FY 2030, we have the plant cleared for commercial production, we will start ramping up the facility from and supply to Zambian government, local Zambian private market or neighboring nations from that facility. Zambia today is largely a $200 million pharma market, and we expect to gain a sizable share within that market, where the government itself procures over 80% of the products which are largely imported.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Okay, sir. What is the total investment that we have envisaged in the facility in the Zambian nation?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Across building, across products, tech transfer facilities, machine, land, everything, tangible, intangible, this is a $45 million, which will be borne 51% by us.

Saket Kapoor
Analyst, Kapoor & Company

Right, sir. Thank you, sir. I join the queue and all the best to the team.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next in line of Richa from Equitymaster. Please go ahead.

Richa Agarwal
Analyst, Equitymaster

Thank you for the opportunity. Am I audible?

Operator

Yes, we can hear you.

Richa Agarwal
Analyst, Equitymaster

Yeah. My question is on the European contract for which you have already received an advance. From what I understand, it's not based on, you know, cost plus basis, but it's a lump sum contract. Could you just give some insight on, you know, how the margins could play out in case the in case there's an inflationary environment in the raw material side?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Right, Richa. This is while we were finalizing the contract, this is an established product, established molecule over last few decades now. We have already taken into our costing the inflationary patterns of that API and the input materials. Right. At the current API prices, we are fairly confident this remains our comfort zone of the margins we're thinking through. You're right, this is a fixed price contract till 2032.

Richa Agarwal
Analyst, Equitymaster

At current API prices, the margins that you expect are more or less in line with the current CDMO or is it expected to be higher?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

It should be similar, or high teens. This is what we expect.

Richa Agarwal
Analyst, Equitymaster

Okay. Sir, apart from this European contract, what kind of international mix do you expect within the CDMO itself, let's say two to three years from now?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Similar efforts are going, being driven across oral solids, injectables, across niche products like hormones and anti-infectives. We expect that over the next two, three years, we will have 8-10 global customers for whom we will serve, whether large or small. That has still to be played out, but we expect within CDMO we should have 8-10 customers, which could be Indian players or Euro-European global players as well, for whom we'll do CDMO services.

Richa Agarwal
Analyst, Equitymaster

Okay. Thank you so much and all the best.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on the line of Abdul. Please go ahead.

Abdulkader Puranwala
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Hi. I hope I'm audible. Thank you for the opportunity. First question with, you know, just to follow up on the previous participants, about, you know, when the CDMO relation with 8-10 overseas customers. I mean Sahil, if you can talk about, you know, what stage we are into in terms of discussion or, and you know, what kind of an investment we will have to do to bring or, you know, take that relationship ahead with those customers.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

But as Abdul, these are long-term contracts, right? And require sizable time investment as well. As I heard you right, Abdul, you're talking future CDMO export customers, right?

Abdulkader Puranwala
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Yes. Yes.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

These require sizable investment in time, dosage clearances and so on. Require two to three years till we ramp them up. In terms of manufacturing capabilities, we are largely through. We are only taking our those facilities which we have already constructed. We are not thinking to a new facility, a new dosage form, and then take it up to the global level. Already have a new injectable facility. We already have a hormone facility in continuation with the existing approvals.

That is there. Our pitch remains similar. An Indian manufacturer with capabilities across R&D regulatory quality. A track record of serving MNCs for over a decade now with cost-conscious, quality-conscious manufacturing. The pitch remains similar and t his is how we proceed. It could be across tech transfer, from their existing manufacturing site or a completely new development, which in most of the cases we are helping our partners in our R&D centers only.

Abdulkader Puranwala
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Got it. Got it. One more on if I may. On the GLP-1 front, you know, we have seen a good amount of traction getting developed with the generic pharma companies. Are we also supplying, you know, GLP-1 drugs either in an injectable or an oral solid dosage form to our customers?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Obviously we all recognize and acknowledge GLP-1 is a large and a massive opportunity. As of now, we are still evaluating when to enter, at which stage to enter, given if you also have read some news last week when we have been witnessing in the industry itself, the pricing still remains very volatile and going down south, right. Since we first have to think through who will our API partners be, what is the right stage of investment into any dosage form if required. We'll enter the GLP-1 market. We'll inform in our subsequent calls what is our strategy going forward.

Abdulkader Puranwala
Analyst, ICICI Securities

All right. Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question on line of Sajal Kapoor from Antifragile Thinking. Please go ahead.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Thank you. [Non English content] Hello?

Operator

Sajal Kapoor?

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Yes.

Operator

Please go ahead with the question, Sajal Kapoor.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Yes. Yeah. Hi. Yeah, hi. Thank you. Thank you for the follow-up. Just a quick one really. Given the net cash on the balance sheet we have and the sustainable operating cash flow, there must have been many options on the table in terms of, you know, should we do X or Y in terms of both domestic and international expansion. Can you just help me out with one or two areas which the team evaluated and decided not to pursue despite a strong cash position? Thank you.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Sure. Sure. If I talk about inorganic growth for here, we there are some dosage forms we still don't have. For example, metered- dose inhalers we don't have. For example, we still don't have oncology injectables, right? Few other dosage forms in small molecules. Within the large spaces, we are still not present into the large molecules, right? These are few opportunities we evaluated. Obviously we have to be cognizant of also the investment and the return expectation, right? At times it does not match up to our expected valuations, or it does not match up to the planned standards or the product standards we wish for, right? Hence, these are the areas where some of the conversations drop.

Also on organic front, we were also contemplating long back on the expansion of our oral solids, which I recently mentioned we are kicking off now. These are the decisions that you take as the business and the volumes progresses that which are the areas where we can invest. Similarly, for example, in the Akumentis space as well, we can have options of brand or a portfolio acquisitions as well. The current valuations in the market for a branded player are significantly higher than what we currently trade at. All of those decisions come into play, and we and the team have been consciously evaluating a lot of opportunities, and hopefully we should deploy some capital in the near future.

Sajal Kapoor
Analyst, Antifragile Thinking

Very helpful. Thank you. That's all I had. Thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. We have the next question from the line of Nitish from ChrysCapital . Please go ahead.

Nitish Rege
Analyst, ChrysCapital

Hi. Thank you for taking my question. Just with respect to our international CDMO contracts, when I'm looking at FY 2028, we will have around INR 70 million of revenue, right, from Zambia and the EU contract, which is around INR 680 crore of top line. You know, is this the right way to say that export CDMO will be around 15%+ share in our CDMO revenues in FY 2028?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Simply on the Excel, looks a good number. Yes, this is how we think through that next year, we should Once we start, right, as I said, on a MAT basis, the European contract will give us EUR 35 million, and the Zambia ones are FY-driven, right? We'll have FY $25 million this time in 2028 and FY 2027 and 2028 each.

Nitish Rege
Analyst, ChrysCapital

Just to follow up, you know, these, you know, these contracts will effectively have, assuming we'll have better margin just because of, you know, favorable FX movements. Do we see our CDMO margin, which has been under 13%-14% level, improve to a 15%-16% level?

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

We can think through that the base margins, for the business once both of these contracts are in full swing will improve.

Nitish Rege
Analyst, ChrysCapital

Okay. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. I would now like to hand the conference over to Ankit Jain for any closing comments.

Ankit Jain
Head of Investor Relations, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you everyone for attending the Q4 and FY 2026 earning call for Akums. If you have any remaining questions, you can reach out to the investor relations team. Thank you and have a good day.

Sahil Maheshwari
General Manager of Strategy, Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals

Thank you. Namaskar.

Operator

Thank you. On behalf of Akums Drugs & Pharmaceuticals, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.

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