Ladies and gentlemen, good evening and welcome to Alivus Life Sciences Limited Q3FY26 conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will 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 then zero on your touchtone phone. I now hand the conference over to Ms. Soumi Rao from Alivus Life Sciences. Thank you, and over to you, Ms. Rao.
Good evening, everyone. I welcome you all to the earnings call of Alivus Life Sciences Limited for the quarter ending December 31st, 2025. From Alivus Life Sciences, we have with us Dr. Yasir Rawjee, our MD and CEO, and Mr. Tushar Mistry, our CFO. Our board has approved the results for the quarter ending December 31st, 2025. We have released it to the stock exchanges and updated it on our website. Please note that the recording and transcript of this call will be available on the website of the company. Now, I'd like to draw your attention to the fact that some of the information shared as part of this call, especially information with respect to our plans and strategy, may contain certain forward-looking statements that involve risks and uncertainties.
These statements are based on current expectations, forecasts, and assumptions that are subject to risks, which could cause actual results to differ materially from these statements depending upon the economic conditions, government policies, and other incidental factors. Such statements should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute of their own judgment. The company undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. Our actual results may differ materially from these expressed or implied by these forward-looking statements. With that, I invite Dr. Yasir Rawjee to say a few words. Thank you and welcome you, Doctor.
Thank you, Soumi. Good evening, everyone, and welcome to our Q3FY26 earnings call. Thank you for joining us, and I would like to extend my warm New Year wishes to all of you. Before we discuss the company's important performance, allow me to outline the broader industry landscape that is influencing our business environment. The global pharma industry continues to evolve amid a dynamic macroeconomic and regulatory environment. Demand remains resilient, supported by an aging population, rising chronic disease prevalence, and sustained healthcare spending. We are seeing a gradual pickup across generics, APIs, and CDMO services, while tighter regulatory scrutiny and supply chain de-risking are reinforcing the need for quality compliance and reliable partners. While some parts of the market continue to face near-term challenges, the long-term outlook for the pharma industry remains encouraging.
With this, let me draw your attention to our performance for the quarter and nine months FY26. For Q3, we reported our highest-ever revenue of INR 673 crores, registering a growth of 14.4% QOQ and 4.8% YOY. Performance during the quarter was strong across the board, with business firing on all cylinders. We saw a strong recovery in the CDMO business as new projects began, contributing alongside continued momentum from the API generics business in reg markets such as Europe, Japan, Latam, ROW, and India, recording robust performance and contributing meaningfully to overall revenue expansion. As expected, GPL business also saw recovery during the quarter. Revenues for nine months stood at INR 1,863 crores, registering a growth of 7.2%. More importantly, our non-GPL business grew at 16.1%, driven by growth across markets.
This reflects the underlying strength of our diversified business across geographies, and we expect this to continue its momentum in the overall growth, driven by strong demand across all markets. Moving on to our profits for the quarter, our gross margin for the quarter was 58.9%, up 330 basis points YOY. Our EBITDA margin for the quarter was 36.4%, up 510 basis points YOY, our highest-ever reported quarterly margins. Margins improved on the back of new product launches, favorable product mix, and enhanced operational efficiencies. I am pleased to share that our CDMO segment has made a strong recovery, delivering an exceptional performance in Q3, with revenue growth of 100% QOQ and 85.3% YOY, in line with our expectations for a second-half turnaround. This growth was driven by robust traction in the newer CDMO projects, supported by revenue from the regular CDMO projects.
Our expansion initiatives at Solapur, Ankleshwar, and Dahej are progressing as planned. Our pipeline remains robust, with 595 DMF and CEP filings globally as of December 31st, 2025. The high-potency API portfolio remains on the development path, with 27 products in the active grid, representing a total addressable market of $70 billion. Of these nine are validated, seven are in advanced stages of development, and the remaining 11 products are progressing through lab development stages. Going forward, we continue to expect high single-digit revenue growth for FY26, driven by strong and profitable expansion across our diversified non-GPL segment and the continued ramp-up of CDMO projects. We remain confident in maintaining healthy margins and expect it to range between 30% to 32% going forward, higher than our earlier guidance of 28% to 30%.
This is catalyzed by operational efficiencies and contributions from new product launches, a reflection of the strength and resilience of our business model. So with this, I now turn the floor to our CFO, Tushar Mistry, who will walk you through our financial performance for the quarter in depth. Tushar, over to you.
Dr. Yasir Rawjee, good evening, everyone. Welcome to our Q3FY26 earnings call. Before we take questions from you all, I would like to highlight the key performance updates for the quarter and nine-month ended 31st December 2025. For Q3FY26, revenue from operations stood at INR 673 crores, a growth of 14.4% QOQ and 4.8% year-on-year. Gross profit for the quarter was INR 397 crores, up 16.9% quarter-on-quarter and 11.2% year-on-year. Gross margins for the quarter stood at 58.9%, driven by new launches, product mix, and operational efficiency. EBITDA for the quarter was INR 245 crores, up 26.5% QOQ and 22.1% year-on-year. EBITDA margin for the quarter was 36.4%, up 340 basis points quarter-on-quarter and 510 basis points year-on-year. These are the highest margins we have delivered to date. PAT for the quarter stood at INR 150 crores, with PAT margins at 22.3%.
For nine months, FY26, revenue from operations stood at ₹1,863 crores, a growth of 7.2% year-on-year. Gross profit for nine months was ₹1,067 crores, up 32.6% year-on-year. Gross margins for nine months stood at 57.3%. EBITDA for nine months was at ₹620 crores, up 22% year-on-year. EBITDA margin for nine months was 33.3%, up 400 basis points year-on-year. PAT for nine months stood at ₹402 crores, with PAT margins at 21.6%. Turning to the therapeutic mix, CVS and CNS continued to lead the growth during the quarter, with both therapies contributing 51% to the top line. Chronic therapies contributed 66% to the top line in Q3FY26. R&D expenditure for Q3FY26 was ₹23 crores, which was 3.4% of our sales. For nine months, FY26, it was ₹66 crores, 3.5% of our sales.
On the balance sheet and cash flow movement, CapEx for the quarter was INR 105 crores and INR 218 crores for nine months. For FY26, we now guide the CapEx to be at around INR 450 crores compared to our earlier guidance of INR 600 crores. The balance of INR 150 crores is expected to be deferred to FY27. We continue to remain an asset light company, with strong free cash flow generation of INR 221 crores in nine months FY26 and the cash and cash equivalents of INR 733 crores on the books as of 31st December 2025. In closing, we are confident that the continued demand and improved performance in H2FY26 will help us achieve steady growth for the year. With that, let us open the floor for Q&A.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on the touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Pratik Kothari from Unique PMS. Please go ahead.
Yes, hi. Good afternoon, sir. Good evening. Thank you. So one question, I mean, despite, I mean, if you look at our numbers over the last two, three, four years, so despite PLI going away, despite R&D spend, which used to be 2.5% or 4% of sales, ramping it up to 3.5%, 4%, we still have been able to maintain margins, and now we are kind of highlighting that we'll be able to even go beyond that. So this margin differential from what it was two, three years back to now is much higher than what is being reported because of these things that are happening below. So if you can just highlight what has changed in terms of our business, what is it that we are doing, what is it that we are intending to do, which is helping with all of this?
Okay, so see, there are three elements here. One is that CDMO has begun to contribute more. There's also launches that are happening across markets, and usually, newer products tend to get us much higher margins. Okay, I mean, in the first couple of years, we can expect to see pretty good margins with newer launches, and then it begins to settle down. So we've had both of them. Plus, on the operational side as well, we've had, we performed a lot better in terms of both raw material costs as well as on the operation side. So all this put together, and this is sustainable. Okay, I mean, the thing is that that's why we feel confident in guiding to a higher margin. So this is what has done it, right?
I mean, we were also a little bit when PLI went away a couple of years ago. I mean, we were also wondering whether we'll be able to bring it back, but we've been able to do that, and it's happened steadily. If you see the last few quarters, right, we have been inching up, and so that confidence is very high that we can do this and continue the momentum.
Correct. Correct. Lastly, on this capacity, I mean, in terms of our breakup, I mean, it seems there is some delay in this capacity coming up. Also, in Solapur, it seems the capacity that we had planned or guided earlier, it seems to be much lower beat on the first backward integration or even the phase one. You can just highlight what has changed, how is our plan from what we had said earlier to now.
Solapur is a little delayed. It's not going to impact business because see, more than 80% of our business comes from the reg markets. Okay, and the Ankleshwar Dahej capacity expansion is well on track, and it'll deliver and basically give us the runway for at least the next couple of years for the reg markets. So no challenge there. We have Mohol as well, right, to service the ROW markets and Kurkumbh. So all that put together puts us in a reasonable position with respect to capacity. Solapur is delayed by like three months. So we expect Solapur to start operations by July of this year.
So it's not a delay. I mean, more like first phase, we wanted to do about 600 KL. Now we are doing about 450-500 KL. So even the capacity that we are putting up initially has changed.
Slightly because see, as we moved along, right, there's been a fair amount of mapping that has happened, right? And we've always said that our capacity expansions are going to be calibrated, right, because there's no point in building too much capacity and not utilizing it. You just create more underutilized option, right? So there, we've sort of gone with a reasonable product mapping that has happened already for Solapur. And as soon as the plan starts in July, we'll be able to see a fair amount of utilization of the asset.
Correct. And in your opinion, sir, how long does it take for Solapur? You'll start with ROW markets and then gradually you'll shift to regulated markets. So what would that timeline be?
See, if we are going to validate products in Solapur this year itself, this calendar year, the idea here is to go for shortage products so that we can trigger an FDA inspection soon, so there will be quite a bit of validation happening as well in Solapur, apart from the ROW markets servicing the demand from ROW markets, so it's going to be a kind of dual approach, and hopefully, if we can trigger an inspection in a year's time, then I mean, by FY20, late FY28, we should see regulated products happening from Solapur as well.
Fair enough. Great. Thank you and all the best, sir.
Thank you.
Thank you. Participants who wish to ask a question may press star and one now. The next question is from the line of Ahmed Madhav from Unifi Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good evening and thanks for the opportunity. Just to understand the margin bit little better, can you elaborate or explain little granularly? In, I think, in presentation, you have mentioned three levers. One is the new launches, second is the CDMO business, and third, the efficiencies. If you can break it up and explain a little bit better how the what has explained the margin improvement in current quarter and your overall guidance as well.
So let's go backwards. When it comes to operational efficiency, that impacts margins pretty much across the board, okay, because there's I mean, it's all common there, right? When it comes to launches, obviously, it's those particular products that we've launched that are contributing much higher margins. And again, I explained in the last call that we've had launches in Europe, in China, in Latam, okay, and Russia. Okay, so all these launches have contributed very significantly to the margin. Interestingly, the same products will get as patents expire in Europe as well as North America and so on. So this sort of runway with the newer products is going to last us for some time. And that's the second lever. With respect to CDMO, we had expected that Project 4 and Project 5 would kick in in second half, and that's exactly what has happened.
So Project 4 had started off in H1, but the volume pickup has happened much more significantly in H2, and Project 5 has also started kicking in. So again, this also being sustainable going forward is something that gives us the confidence that we can sort of get to those margin levels pretty comfortably.
When you say efficiencies, is it in terms of yields and the raw material cost, or is it below the raw material cost line item?
It's both. It's both, so I mean, there's been a fair amount of work on key products that has started giving us that benefit on better yields, so basically less utilization of raw materials, and even on the energy side and basically, we are getting lower overheads on the products, so that has also helped us.
Okay. And in terms of CapEx, you explained to the earlier participant regarding how it doesn't impact our growth. So I mean, with the little bit of delay, little bit of capacity sort of fine-tuning in terms of how much you'll put, does that sort of risk our growth for next year, or will we have enough capacity from existing as well as from Ankleshwar Dahej from July to deliver us decent growth for next year? And you can also please comment how you see the next year growth based on the launches and the existing products.
See, capacity is no longer a limitation. Okay, we were in a sort of bind some time back, about a year, year and a half back, and we were running neck to neck with the recent brownfield expansions that we've had at Dahej and Ankleshwar, and they are going to become operational in the second quarter of next year. Both Dahej and Ankleshwar, we should be fairly comfortable to service the reg markets. And like I said earlier, both these expansions on the brownfield side should give us a runway of at least another two years comfortably for the reg markets. With Solapur coming in, we have a little more leverage in terms of moving the ROW products into Solapur, and that can further free up capacity if necessary. So capacity is not a challenge anymore.
With respect to the growth for next year, again, I'm talking in terms of a fair amount of visibility that we have, and so we want to continue to guide to a high single-digit growth for next year as well. But certainly, the margins will remain in the 30%-32% range.
Got it. And in terms of CDMO business, the number of projects that we have, is there any more visibility for new projects getting added? Any conversations are at the stage of sort of conclusion, or the project addition will be gradual from here on beyond the five we have, I'm assuming five.
Yeah. So, there is good traction on CDMO. Hopefully, we'll conclude one or two projects by the end of middle of the calendar year. So let's say first quarter, we should conclude. Things are going well. We have even supplied some early quantities to the customers. So let's see how that goes. Again, because we have focused on the regulated markets here for CDMO, there's always that lag time in terms of approval. But to lock in, I'm pretty confident that by first quarter of next year, we should have we would have brought in one or maybe two projects more into the.
Sure. Sure. And in terms of pricing environment, has there been any improvement, or it continues to be sort of a significant erosion kind of an environment? And from our portfolio perspective, new launches have done well, but is there sort of a pricing issue industry-wide for the sort of base business existing molecule, or has there been any change, or is it steady state?
I would say it's fairly stable. I mean, on our entire bucket, we are guiding to 4%-4.5% margin erosion. So it's okay. I mean, we are comfortable. Plus, what happens is we make sure that on those products where we are likely to see a price erosion, we do have the next generation process lined up. So margins are not going to get impacted as a result of price erosion.
Sure. Sure. And last bookkeeping question. In the presentation and press release, we have three cash flow numbers. Tushar, if you can please share the operating cash flow number for nine months or Q3 FY24?
Yeah. The operating cash flow is about INR 439 crores before CapEx. So that's the operating cash flow.
Okay. Thank you so much.
This is for the nine months that I mentioned.
Sure. Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Yog Rajani from Omega Portfolio Advisors. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you for taking my question. My question mainly had to do with the company's growth plans. Given that we have a high level of capability and a lot of cash on the balance sheet, is there any reason we aren't willing to be more aggressive either with our organic expansion or our inorganic expansion?
See, organic is pretty well scripted. Okay, in terms of the portfolio buildup, the choice of molecules that we are making, the capacities that we are building up to service the growth in the business through launches, with new launches and so on coming up in the next few years, right, so that is pretty much on track. I hear you, right, in terms of the inorganic part, but see, we want to be sure that, and even that is well defined within our plans, right, in terms of what kind of way we need to go in terms of inorganic, so we are looking out. It's not like we have shut our minds to that. We are pretty clear that when the right opportunity comes along, we will take the right steps. But obviously, we are not just going to do things willy-nilly.
I mean, it's hard on money, and we're going to make sure that it's deployed well.
Okay. Great. My second question had to do with the R&D. As I understand, we will be inaugurating a new R&D facility. So how are we planning to improve our R&D capabilities over the next few years? If you could share some idea with us, what would it be like?
So there's going to be well, I won't say improve, but I would say basically add to what we already have, right? We are turning out molecules pretty quickly, and also the complexity of molecules that we have is increasing in terms of complexity. So R&D has been pretty productive in Alivus. The question, though, is what else can we do? So we are looking very in a very focused way at flow chemistry because it has already yielded good commercial benefit, and that effort is going to increase substantially. There's also opportunities on the green chemistry side, which we are working. And I keep talking about API + from time to time. So in order to do more there, we are adding things like particle engineering and so on to benefit what we already have for more enhanced formulations.
All that put together is going to make our R&D even much more productive and give us more in terms of new business opportunities.
Okay. Fair enough. My final question is about the risks we're facing. So if you could comment more on the risks we're facing, either in terms of, say, getting more CDMO contracts or in general, the market environment, if there's any comment you could give us about that?
I mean, in terms of risks, the geopolitical situation is always something that we worry about because we have an international business, and we don't know what part of the world will heat up when. I mean, you know how things are sort of happening everywhere, right? So given the fact that we have a global business, right, something could get impacted somewhere. But then that's also a positive because no particular area in the world is going to impact us very badly, right? I mean, this we've seen during COVID. We saw this even before COVID, right, where we were basically because we were well diversified across geographies, right, we were able to manage small hits here and there. So risks are, I mean, not quantifiable at this point, right? Things seem to be going pretty well.
But like I said, the geopolitical environment is extremely fragile right now. So we don't know.
My question was more with regards to the CDMO business. Do we see any threats to the CDMO business? Because it's still a young business, which we plan to grow, so are there any risks we're facing in getting more contracts toward the business, or is everything all right on that front?
No. In fact, things have only become better because, I mean, having left the Glenmark umbrella, I mean, we are no longer looked at as a kind of part of a big pharma group, right, that innovators do eye with a bit of suspicion, right? Although even when we were under the Glenmark umbrella, we were operating independently, right? And there was no real interference or any kind of thing from the parent. But still, it's a perception, right? People tend to look at you differently. So I mean, now that that has also gone, we are looked at more favorably by many more companies. So I don't see a risk. Again, we basically are banking on the strength of a very strong process development platform, which we can customize for our customers along with a well-oiled manufacturing platform, again, with all approvals from major regulatory agencies.
Okay. Thank you so much, Doctor.
Yeah. Sure. Welcome.
Yes.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, to ask a question, you may please press star and one now. The next question is from the line of Krishnendu Saha from Quantum Asset Management. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the question. Doctor, just one thing.
Sorry to interrupt you, Mr. Saha. We are unable to hear you clearly, sir.
Can you hear me now? Hello?
Your voice is sounding very muffled.
Can you hear me now?
Yes. Please go ahead.
Yeah. When you speak about implementing flow chemistry, are we going to implement it all across? What percentage or what portion of our total manufacturing is using flow chemistry? So we could generate more cost savings or efficiency in that manner?
So we are targeting the bigger volume APIs that we have. Okay? And let me be clear that not everything is amenable to flow. Okay?
Right. Right.
So in a batch process, many times we do in-situ conversion, and we have three chemical conversions happening in one batch. That is not amenable to flow. But where you have long reaction time, a lot of energy consumption, excessive reagents that are being used, there's a good possibility to use flow to optimize both material usage as well as energy usage. So there, it can have a big impact. We've had a very successful product that we brought down the cost to 40% of what it was, okay, in batch. And that is now.
Doctor, can we go ahead?
Sorry? Could you please repeat that?
The new product, revenue-wise, could we implement more flow chemistry in the future, or this is only going to be limited to some very limited portion of the revenue in the future? So let's say, put it this way. We have high-potency APIs, which will come for 2028, 2029 onwards. Will there be flow chemistry, or will there be batch?
No. No. High-potency doesn't have the volumes to basically enable flow. There's no point. High-potency is done in very small reactors.
I see. I get that. I get that.
So to make small batches, and that's more efficient in terms of utilization of the platform. Flow would be used for higher volumes, basically.
Okay. I get it. So there's some still scope to implement further flow chemistry in the future molecules. Right. Just on the turnover side, we are 2.3 right now. And we have the best margins the last four, five years and the lowest turnover for asset turn. So is there any scope of improving the asset turn in the future, or it's going to stay like that to 2.3?
Krishnendu, this 2.3 is on the basis of our existing asset base, which has historical asset base. Now, you would have seen that we are currently in the CapEx cycle. If you are generally into an investment phase, this asset turnover will come down. We expect it to come down below 2 in the short term. But eventually, we want to stabilize this at around 2 level.
Two level. I see. And still maintain the same margin. Even if it comes down, we still maintain the same margin.
Yes.
The last question on my side. Do we get into the future plan to get into innovation drug research or innovation, pure innovation, novel molecules, something like that? Do we have anything on the thought process?
No. No.
Thank you for your time, sir. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Karthik Swaminathan from Catamaran. Please go ahead.
Good evening, sir, and thank you for taking my question, so my question is that if we look at the reactor capacity expansion plan, we are going from 1,400 kiloliters to 2,100 kiloliters over the next year, which is almost a 50% increase in reactor capacity, but when you're talking about revenue growth, you're only talking about a high single-digit growth, so I just wanted to understand why is there such a large difference? I mean, obviously, I understand price erosion and other components will be there, but to a good extent, why such a big difference in terms of capacity and revenue growth?
400 KL is just backward integration, right?
Right.
This we are doing to protect the larger molecules that bring in like INR 40-50 crores of revenue per molecule. So I mean, we've got to protect those businesses from a supply security perspective as well as from a margin protection. So that will be deployed for BI. And then the remaining is basically for the growth. And like you said, there's price erosion. So the volume growth is much higher than what we are seeing. Okay? So that should cover us up. Plus, we've been operating at 90% capacity. And that can be pretty risky because if new business comes along, then we don't have any capacity, any kind of surge capacity to be able to grab that business.
Got it. All right. Thank you, sir.
Sure.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nitin Agarwal from DAM Capital. Please go ahead.
All right. Thanks for taking my question. Sir, on your input cost pressures, because we have a bit of sourcing, which we have of intermediates, which happen from China. So there is this whole talk around ending pollution and general inflation in intermediate pricing coming from China. Are you beginning to see any of that, and how do you see that plays out for the business for us?
So far, it's been okay. The only place where we are likely to see a little bit of challenge is that the RMB is strengthening against the dollar. And then the rupee is weakening against the dollar. So I mean, we have kind of a double hit over there. But so far, we've got contracts that go anywhere from six months to a little more. So I expect that we should hold steady.
So per se, you don't see any challenges on that account as far as this?
No, no, no. Nothing very serious. I mean, and then see, even if it is China, we've got a pretty well-distributed supply base for most of our molecules. So unlikely that people can hold it on our head, basically. I mean, it's not like a one vendor or a two vendor situation. We've got a pretty well-spread out supply base. And we have worked actively to bring a fair amount of that back to India.
Okay. So how would our sourcing from China change over the last two, three years, roughly?
Nitin, in terms of, it has not changed because we are getting benefited by lower prices or better prices, I should say, right? But then from a supply security perspective, if for whatever reason we would if we ended up getting lesser supplies from China, we do have alternate suppliers out of India.
Got it. I got that. And sir, on the CDMO business, the contract that we have right now, what should be the peak sort of annual potential or revenue potential for those contracts at peak? All of these five put together?
So it's a bit of a spread here, right? We had basically said that project four and five together would get us around $12 million, right? It could be a little higher also based on what we are seeing now. But we expect that to top out around second half of the next financial year. Okay? And then we were basically doing a sort of run rate of around INR 140-ish crores on the earlier three projects. So that might move a little bit, but not much. So we expect to be in a reasonably good place with respect to these five projects on CDMO. I mean, we'll have to look at it as a bundle kind of number because there is some waviness, right, like I explained in the first three projects.
For FY28, you believe that some more incremental wins that we typically get next year should begin to contribute?
Yeah. So like I said, right, we are in advanced stages for two more projects, right? And hopefully, we'll be able to know by Q1 of next financial year of FY27, right, whether we've locked those projects.
In general, with your conversations, I mean, are there the contracts that you're discussing with your various sort of partners, is the size and scale of these contracts bigger than what we've typically done, or it's kind of in the same ballpark?
No, it's the same ballpark. I mean, we are looking at anywhere from four million to six million kind of opportunity.
Okay. And last one, on the generic API business, you've talked about low single-digit growth from a broad guidance perspective. But over the next two, three years, where do you think positive surprises can come from on this part of the business? I mean, if things do play out.
On the generics?
On the generics, yeah.
I mean, there's a fair amount of molecules that are going off patent now in the next couple of years. And we have lined up across geographies, right? A reasonable part of our portfolio will start playing out. I can't give you numbers, like hard numbers, because frankly, we have a good estimate that we'll be seeing a pretty good string of launches coming up in the next couple of years and going forward as well.
Last one, on the current set of products that we already have commercialized, I mean, do you see reasonable volume expansion opportunities there, or this part of the current sort of commercialized portfolio is largely tapped out from a volume perspective?
So let's split that into two parts. There's a very mature portfolio, which is pretty stable in terms of volume. Okay? That's not growing a lot, right? Maybe like 2-3% growth over there, right? Okay. But then there are the newer launches where there are patent expiry that are still not exhausted. I mean, we are seeing patent expiry that are coming up in the next two years or so. So that portfolio will grow pretty well. Plus, because it's all post-approval changes now, we are also looking into getting alternate source opportunities for that portfolio. So that's where on the so-called regular portfolio, we'll see much better growth.
Okay. And when do you see the high-potency portfolio sort of becoming meaningful for the business?
So that will start from late FY28.
Okay. Okay. Got it. Okay. Thank you, sir. Best of luck.
Sure. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Tarang from Old Bridge. Please go ahead.
Hi, sir. Good evening. Congratulations for a very strong set of numbers. A couple of questions, sir. One, on the raw material side, what percentage of our procurement are we solely dependent on China for?
Less than 10%. But even there, you said solely dependent, right? So it's less than 10%. But even there, it's a distributed base. So again, there's no single vendor dependency here.
Okay. Second, how is the raw material environment? I mean, has it gone down further, or it continues to be at the levels that you witnessed in the earlier quarters?
No, it's okay. But again, right, I mean, there are some here and there, you do see a few products moving. But then we also get benefited on other products. So I mean, it's not as if, right, it's just going in one direction. So when you look at our portfolio, in general, we are able to balance it out. The other thing that we are actively looking at is with Solapur coming online by July, we would be bringing in certain volumes, right, where there are significant margins that we are leaving to the vendor. So we've mapped out those. And as soon as Solapur starts, we'll be shifting a good percentage of that into Solapur.
Got it. Second, sir, on the end product side, to the earlier question, for your mature molecules, what is the kind of market share that you have now across the geographies that you're servicing?
For which ones, Tarang?
Mature molecules.
Oh, it ranges. It goes anywhere from sort of global market share of 10%-35%. Depends on the molecule.
Okay, and for your upcoming or, so to say, relatively newer molecules, how would that number be? Number one. Number two, there is also an inherent expectation that the market for those molecules will also expand, correct?
Yeah, because patents are going to be expiring over time, right? I mean, in different markets. It's not like all the patents expire on day one, right?
Right, so that will be growth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Right. And the idea there is, from a filing perspective, that's the number that you want to get to. Basically, it continues the flywheel of following your mature molecules, correct?
Yeah. See, filings are done, right? We've already filed, and our customers have filed with our API, but they can't launch until the patents expire, right? So we are already locked in. I mean, we are able to confidently predict that, okay, if we've got two customers in a particular market, let's say Brazil, and they are good front-end players, then we can assume a market share of around 20% or 25%. So based on that, we are saying that growth will come from those molecules. Got it. And last, sir, for nine-month FY26, what would be the volume growth for the business?
Nine-month FY26, sir, you just tell me in a second, yeah?
Volume growth? I mean, on the overall growth, you can take about 5% price erosion, Tarang. The balance is the volume growth. Got it. Got it. Wonderful, sir. Thank you. All the best.
Sure. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ankit Minocha from Adezi Ventures Family Office. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, good evening. Just on a continuation of the previous participant's question regarding volume versus pricing growth. So I mean, how does pricing mechanics usually work across your portfolio? How much of the percentage pricing is based on spot pricing versus where do you have more stable contract prices there? Question basically coming from the point that if you are guiding for, say, high single-digit revenue growth, then what is the kind of estimations that you're taking for pricing erosion in this growth? And where could we kind of see surprises there?
So I'll answer it in two parts, okay? So there is the regulated markets, right, where we are locked in with our customers. And there, the market itself does not see significant erosion at the front end. So we have a pretty good comfort level in terms of prices staying relatively stable in those markets. But then there are the ROW markets where changes to API vendor can be pretty quick. And so there we have to be more agile and essentially be ready to match with respect to pricing. So that's one way of looking at it. Another way of looking at it is that we have a very mature set of molecules where it's five years plus in the market. Now there, things are pretty much set. So even the competitive intensity is defined, right?
So we know we have so many players, we have so much market share, and our customers have so much market share across whichever geography they are operating in. So there we don't see major sort of pricing shocks, okay? But it's there. I mean, there is a mild erosion there as well because customers are customers and they will ask, right? But it's not very big, right? It's a very low kind of margin price erosion, okay? And then, of course, we have the newer molecules where for a period of maybe 18-24 months, we have stability. But then as the market starts becoming more intense, right, and more players start entering, then we see erosion. But then we have the next generation process also sorted out. So that then comes in and sort of so we see erosion there to answer the question, right?
But we can manage at least the margin side.
Okay. So when you say high single-digit revenue growth for next year, then do you build in any base cases for what is the volume and what is the pricing breakup of that growth?
Yeah. So Tushar just answered the question, right, where we said that we are factoring in 5% price erosion. And so with a high single-digit growth, we obviously should be geared up for about 15%, 15%-17% of volume growth.
Understood. That's clear. Thanks. My second question is with regard to the capacity expansion from 1,400 to 2,100 odd KL. So I mean, assuming currently, I believe you mentioned that your capacity utilization levels were above 90%. What are you envisaging as the utilization levels in FY27? And assuming we kind of reach those utilization levels, what would be the EBITDA margin profile of the business once those levels are reached? What could be the margin profile? Yeah.
I'm not sure I got it, okay? But let me try. You want to repeat what you just said, Ankit?
Yeah. Basically, after you are completed with your capacity expansion, what is the EBITDA margin profile that we are looking at for the business? And what are the capacity utilization levels that you're looking at for FY27?
Okay. So capacity utilization should be between 85%-90% when the new capacity comes online. Because I said that, look, 400 KL is getting utilized for backward integration, and then the remaining is available for the regular CDMO and API business. Okay? We will operate at around 85%, which was, like I said, it gives us the surge capacity. The EBITDA margins are driven by a mix, okay? And yeah, maybe we have some underabsorption, but compared to our overall profitability, I don't think that underabsorption is going to significantly hit our EBITDA.
Okay. Sure. Sure. Thanks. And finally, on the CDMO side, I mean, could you explain a little bit how does it integrate with the core API, generic API business? What is it that the CDMO operations entail? And overall, the growth profile and the margin profile of this business versus your current business?
So it's a shared capacity, both with respect to the R&D platform as well as the manufacturing platform. And the margin profile is certainly better on CDMO. It's more stable. Okay. Once we lock in these projects, we don't see that much erosion to begin with. And then there's always room for improvement on the efficiency side. So then that only helps us more with respect to the margins. It's better than generic, no doubt about it. I mean, that's clear.
Okay. Sure. Thank you and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sunil Kothari from Unique PMS. Please go ahead.
Thank you, sir, for the opportunity. Sir, this is not related to this quarterly numbers. My broad I want to understand is you have so many years of experience with working with a different mindset or a growth-oriented promoter or maybe manager from Matrix to Glenmark and now Nirma, and with this solid balance, so many years of changes very well absorbed from Glenmark dependency to non-Glenmark business, the way you are investing in R&D, so can we, as an investor, maybe over three, five years, should we expect a better growth rate from you, I mean, lowering your conservatism, investing a little bit more, maybe aggression? Anything would you like to share thoughts on with now solid foundation and base? Would you like to go a little faster, or this is the way we'll be working?
Okay. See, there are two, three things here, okay? I mean, the industry has changed so much in 20 years. I would say it has had at least three avatars in the last 20 years, so you can't firstly apply the same logic that would be applied even five years ago, right? Okay, so I mean, those days are gone, right, where you had Para IVs and all that, and you had big Bonanza products. Where are those? Those are not there, right, and so what happens is our job is to read the market the way it's shaping up. Okay? That's one thing. Second is that I think we've done a reasonably good job of reading the market. Because if you look at our non-GPL business, it is going well. The non-GPL business is growing well.
So 70% or 75%, 70%-75% of our business is growing in the mid-teens or the low to mid-teens, okay? Because we made the right choices, firstly in terms of portfolio, right?
Sure.
In terms of the geographic expansion that we went on about five, six years ago that we went on, we seeded projects all over the world. That has definitely contributed. Now, with respect to getting aggressive, I think I answered that, that yeah, we are sitting on cash, right? And hopefully that pile will grow a little more, right, as we go along. But whatever choices we make beyond the organic growth, right, has to fit in well with our overall plan of how we grow and how the overall pharma market is evolving. Okay? That will definitely be front and center in terms of how we think of so growth will come. But to us, what is more important, right, as a philosophy, is maintain a high-quality business. Because if you keep a high-quality business, right, you generate cash.
The moment you go for a low-margin business, volume business, you suck your working capital sucks out whatever money you make, whatever cash you make. And then you're stuck, okay? So we don't want to go there, right? We've been fairly right in terms of reading the market. And so this will, I feel this is a sort of path that will keep us on a good track in terms of generating cash. And then at the appropriate time, when we find the right kind of things, we'll make the right investments and move forward. And hopefully that aggressive growth that you're talking about may come at that time.
Great. Great. Thanks a lot for clarification. Thank you.
Sure. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Smeet Gala from RSPN Ventures. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you for the opportunity. So most of my questions have been answered. Just want to understand a bit of longer-term picture when the full capacity of Solapur also goes live after what we are utilizing for backward integration. So maybe from FY28, FY29, can we start seeing double-digit growth?
Yeah. Yeah. I'm sure we will. We will.
Sure. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sajal Kapoor from Antifragile Thinking. Please go ahead.
Yes. Thank you for taking my question. Dr. Rawjee, our CDMO model has long gestation cycles and much smaller deal sizes. It takes significant time to onboard a new project. And even then, the revenue opportunity is limited to six to eight million kind of an annual run rate. In contrast, some of the other Indian CDMOs who offer fee-for-service model, not the CRO type running on FTE models, I'm not talking about those. There are other CDMOs that offer fee-for-service. And they are scaling much faster, targeting individual CDMO molecules of anywhere from 50-100 million annual run rate because these are NCEs, and they partner with the innovators early in the cycle from phase two and phase three onwards. And that offers a much higher magnitude as well as visibility of adding more molecules to the pie. So their funnel size is also larger.
I mean, why can't we aim for higher magnitude and faster growth in CDMO? Because our scientific talent is also right up there.
Okay. Let's put this in some perspective here. How many such $50-100 billion opportunities are fructifying, at least in our country, right? Okay? Not many, right? Because the reality is that these are all patented products, which big pharma usually likes to keep with themselves. Maybe we could get an intermediate here and there that may give us some business. But the reality is that it is Ireland where they manufacture because Ireland has a 12% tax rate, I believe, right? And all big pharma companies park their profits there, so they don't take manufacturing out of Ireland. This is the reality. Coming to us in terms of how we are positioned, see, we've got a pretty big portfolio that we can offer, and we are offering in terms of life cycle management, okay, and to the specialty companies, and we are seeing traction there.
Yeah, you're right. We also are clear that we will target those. But with respect to gestation, I think we are doing a pretty reasonable job. I mean, the projects start kicking in commercially within two years of our first discussion, literally within two years. And this is, I'm talking full commercial, right? I mean, we initiated project five last November, okay? So it's been a little over a year now, and we are already seeing that we'll start seeing traction. So literally within 18 to 24 months, we are getting the projects on board. Yeah, it's $4-$5 million. It could be a little higher. But then the projects are fructifying faster. Now, if we play it right with the numbers, right, we had three projects. Now five, we are likely to get to seven projects in another half year, right?
There are more in the pipeline. I mean, as we speak, there are at least seven to eight projects that are in active discussion. The confidence level also, like I pointed out earlier, has gone up because we are not in a large pharma ownership, right? We could get into this game, but I can assure you attrition is very high, right? You can count on one hand, okay, how many such $50-100 million opportunities are really there in the entire country, okay? I don't know. I mean, attrition is very high.
No, of course, Dr. Rawjee. You know more than anyone in the industry. Attrition is high, but even in case of phase three clinical trial batches, the volumes are as big as 8-10 million, even before the drug is commercial. On that Ireland thing, right? I mean, so Ireland takes N minus one. So they do the end stage in Ireland to make it tax compliant in that jurisdiction. But coming back to our CDMO strategy, I mean, if you go back to the November 2022 investor roadshow that we did, we were very confident that we'll double our CDMO by 2025 in that presentation. That has not happened for a variety of reasons that you have been explaining over the quarters.
I think it's a common question from most of the participants, or many participants, that we want to be seeing Alivus a little more aggressive in the growth. I'm sure we'll get there. I think we are slightly behind in the CDMO segment. Otherwise, given the complexity of products that we deal with, from particle engineering to flow chemistry, we are right up there, and you can compare our capability with anyone in the industry.
I do agree that from a capability perspective, we have it, right? It's defining what we take up and what we let go. Because again, it's a cost-benefit analysis, right, in terms of I mean, the big part of our business is a generics business. It's also generating, because of the portfolio, a pretty good growth as well as margins. So let's see. I mean, we'll take your suggestion, Sajjal, and let's see how we'll take that internally, okay? But I can tell you, based on what we have seen, right, it's a high-risk game.
Yes. Yes. No, I appreciate that. Thank you so much for all the responses. Very thoughtful. Thank you so much, and all the very best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Tarang from Old Bridge. Please go ahead.
Sajal, I mean, continuing on the earlier question, can you cross-utilize your current capacities in case you wish to cater to the innovator for projects which are under development?
Yeah, we can. Because again, we have inspected sites. So that's not a hurdle at all, right? Typically, that's the first sort of hurdle that you have to clear. And then if you've got good business continuity plans, right, and we do, so with a fair amount of surge capacity, now with Solapur coming on board, we'll be able to offer that as well.
Got it, sir. And just I can't speak for others, but from my vantage, I think so. We've seen reasonable execution on the non-GPL part of the business on a year-on-year basis. And I think on the CDMO business also, it's an interesting niche that you've carved out for yourself. And we would want you to continue doing this. I mean, it's up to the management as to how they want to take forward the trajectory of the business. But I just wanted to bring that clarification. Thank you.
Okay. Thanks.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, dear depositors of time, that was the last question for today. On behalf of Alivus, I'm closing this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.