Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to the Arvind Fashions Limited Q4 FY 2025/2026 earnings conference call. As a reminder all participants lines will be in an only listen mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation is complete. Should you need assistance during this conference call, please signal an operator, by pressing star, then zero on your touchtone telephone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Girdhar Chitlangia. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thanks, Swapnali. Hello, everyone. Good afternoon. Thank you for joining the Arvind Fashions Limited earnings call for the quarter and year ended March 26th. I'm joined here today by Kulin Lalbhai, Vice Chairman and Non-Executive Director, and Amisha Jain, Managing Director and CEO. Please note that results, press release, and earning presentation have been mailed across to you, and these are available on our website, www.arvindfashions.com.
I hope you've had the opportunity to browse through the highlights of the performance. We will commence the call with Kulin providing his key strategic thoughts on our quarter and year's performance. Post that, Amisha will cover the financial performance and the business highlight. At the end of the management discussion, we will have a Q&A session.
Before we start, I would like to remind you that some of the statements made or discussed on this call today may be forward-looking in nature and must be viewed in conjunction with risks and uncertainties we face. A detailed statement of these risks is available on the quarter's earnings presentation. The company does not undertake to update these forward-looking statements publicly. With that said, I would now turn the call over to Kulin to share his views. Thank you, and over to you, Kulin.
Thanks, Girdhar. A very good afternoon to you all. Thank you for joining us for the Q4 results. FY 2025/2026 continues our trajectory of impressive growth and high-performing business outcome. I'm very happy to share that this quarter we have again achieved a very strong growth of 14.8% and a full year growth of 14%. This highlights our disciplined execution across all growth drivers, enabling us to successfully deliver on our FY 2026 objectives that we set at the beginning of the year. The demand environment remains stable. Investments in brand and people and our consistent and superior retail execution Sorry, I'll continue. The demand environment remains stable. Investments in brand and people and our consistent and superior retail execution and have enabled us to deliver a very healthy LTL growth of 7.8% in retail and over 40% growth in the online direct-to-consumer channel.
Our EBITDA grew by 19% with a 50 basis points margin expansion. Our PAT on a comparable basis has grown by 56% in Q4 and 62% in FY 2026, which shows strong operating leverage in our business. We have also achieved the milestone of generating more than 23% return on capital employed, which remains our North Star metric, and this is likely to improve going further. The seamless transition to new leadership has ensured continued growth momentum and sets the company up for its next phase of growth and transformation. Moving forward, we remain committed to maintaining our growth trajectory through investments in marketing tech and the AI initiatives whilst keeping consumer at the core and continuing to drive operating leverage and stronger cash flows. We continue to stay focused on our mantra of profitable growth which should result in further improvement in return on capital employed.
I would like to now hand it over to Amisha Jain to take us through the specifics and more details about our financial performance.
Good afternoon, everyone, and a warm welcome to our investor call for Q4 and the full year ended March 31st, 2026. Let me start with key highlights. FY 2026 was a year of profitable broad-based growth with 14% revenue growth, 40 basis points EBITDA margin expansion, PAT up 62% on a comparable basis and ROC crossing 23%. Importantly, this was not driven by a single channel or brand. It was execution across the board. Three things I would like for you to take away from today's call. One, our D2C engine is compounding. Direct channels now account for 56% of sales, up 300 basis points year on year. Online B2C alone grew 40% in Q4. Number two, profitability is structural. Gross margin is up, EBITDA is up, ROC at a new high, and the inventory is the freshest it has ever been.
Number three, we are entering fiscal 2027 with confidence. We expect to sustain mid-double-digit growth with another 30- 40 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion despite a more uncertain macro. Now, coming back to Q4 performance. Q4 revenue grew 14.8% with NSV at INR 1,365 crores versus INR 1,189 crores in the same quarter last year. EBITDA, excluding other income, was INR 189 crores versus INR 159 crores, a 50 basis points margin improvement. PAT came in at INR 47 crores versus a loss of INR 93 crores in Q4 last year. On a comparable basis, that is 56% growth. Q4 marked another strong quarter for us, driven by consistent execution in our direct-to-consumer channels.
These together account for nearly 56% of sales, 300 basis points higher than same quarter last year. Our gross margin improved 20 basis points in Q4. Inventory freshness is at an all-time high. Despite the channel mix shift to D2C carrying slightly more inventory, working capital has been well controlled. On channel performance in Q4, we delivered a robust LTL of 7.8% in retail, with overall retail growing at 14%. Retail growth was impacted by a transitory GST rate change impact on PVH brands for a few weeks. That dip is behind us, and both brands are back to double-digit growth. Online B2C grew over 40%, taking its share to 14% from 11%, which is in line with our intent to pivot away from B2B online. Wholesale and department stores delivered strong double-digit secondary sales growth as well.
50 EBOs were added in the quarter. Coming to brand performance in the quarter, USPA led the pack, delivering its highest ever growth this quarter. PVH brands and Flying Machine each grew over 10%, and Arrow was subdued due to a one-time model change and a weak wedding calendar. Both are timing related and not structural. I'd like to highlight that Flying Machine deserves a special mention. Flying Machine clocked retail LTL of double digits and a B2C growth of 70%. We have sharply positioned Flying Machine as a unisex denim anchored on-trend youth brand, and that has shown good early traction. Flying Machine is now live across multiple e-commerce platforms. We will also launch flyingmachine.com in H2 fiscal 2027 to build a direct community of consumers. Coming to full-year fiscal 2026, our revenue grew 14% with growth across every channel.
Retail LTL was remarkably consistent at 8.1% for the year. Overall retail was in mid-double digits, reflecting strong execution rather than a single quarter tailwind. We added more than 1.4 lakh net sq ft of retail space. Other categories beyond men's apparel now contribute 24% of our business and were a meaningful growth driver. On profitability, EBITDA margin is at 13.4%, up 40 basis points year-on-year. PAT at INR 124 crores, up 62% on a comparable basis. ROCE at 23%+ is a multi-year high. In my view, the single best indicator of how our business is consistently improving. Let me shift gears towards fiscal 2027 outlook and vision now. As we enter fiscal 2027, I would like to take the opportunity to talk about two things. First is on the macro.
Government measures around GST interest rates and income tax have supported demand. The West Asia situation is a watch item for us. We expect mild pressure on certain raw materials, Forex and CapEx over the medium term, with the risk of a consumption slowdown due to a supply-led inflationary pressures. Our mitigation actions are already in motion. A couple of points to highlight there. We bought inventory slightly ahead of the curve for SS26, locking in costs before the increase. For AW26, we are actively monitoring and hedging where required. Our sourcing remains predominantly India-based, and we are deepening that further. Lastly, to navigate the volatility, we plan to remain nimble. We intend to double down on our cost control measures, and we will selectively implement price increases while safeguarding growth.
Moving to the second point on fiscal 2027, I'd like to share our vision and way forward with you. Our strategy rests on five pillars. I will list out the five pillars, first being portfolio diversification. We aim to deepen our leadership in menswear by establishing a top position in the country's five largest apparel categories shirts, polos, denims, T-shirts and blazers, while doubling down on adjacencies like footwear and innerwear that are already contributing 24% of our business. Number two, building differentiated brands of scale and desire. Our portfolio of five brands has meaningful headroom to grow. The unlock is sharper positioning, deeper consumer connection, and a strong merchandising grid led by innovation across our brands. Hence, we expect growth from each of our brands. As we have said earlier, we will continue to invest more towards marketing.
Number three, building a world-class direct-to-consumer organization. We will continue to double down on our D2C journey with a vision to take the share of D2C to 65%. Driving retail excellence and building a digital powerhouse remains our priority. Talking about offline retail, we will continue our expansion and upsizing journey with a relentless focus on LTL and conversion driven by right product, brand experience and service. We will build a digital powerhouse through our dotcoms and marketplace partnerships. We expect each brand to have its own dotcom and app live this fiscal year, which will be the foundation for great brand experience and commerce. Number four, transforming Arvind Fashions Limited with data analytics and AI. This is a key growth driver for us and not a back-office initiative. Our investments will target two outcomes.
First is leveraging AI to drive cost efficiencies across functions, and second, to leverage analytics and AI to drive front-end effectiveness. Retail excellence, pricing, assortment, marketing effectiveness are some of the examples of the same. Lastly, and importantly, a nimble supply chain that sits closer to demand, which should yield shorter cycles, faster leads and less inventory risk. Those are our five growth drivers. I also want to highlight the fact that in line with the above strategy, we have already put a few things in motion over the last two quarters. We took a deep consumer work to map the market opportunity and consumer demand landscape, which is now informing our portfolio and where to play choices.
We are putting structured investment in tech and AI with a dedicated specialist team built over the last two quarters, which is now working towards tech AI consumer analytics and growth. We have also reorganized ourselves into a business unit structure for sharper accountability and speed, while centralizing consumer brand marketing, digital and data AI initiatives to build deep leverage capabilities. These things are already in motion. To summarize, with a clear strategy and right organizational design now in place, we are reasonably confident of sustaining mid-double-digit growth in fiscal 2027, with 30-40 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion. With the unifying goal of one team, one mission driving cohesiveness and collaboration in Arvind Fashions Limited, we are poised to embark on the next phase of growth. Thank you so much. We're now happy to take your questions.
Thank you very much. We will now begin with the question-and-answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and then one on their touchtone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and then two. Participants, you are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the questions are sent. A reminder to all, you may press star and then one to ask a question. We have the first question from the line of Deep Shah from Equirus Securities. Please go ahead.
Hi, team. Thanks for the opportunity, and congratulations on good set of numbers. First of all, on the guidance which we have given around mid-double digit sort of a growth, I just wanted to if you can help me and give me some color around the brand-wide performance. This year if we see U.S. Polo Assn. has been a standout performer throughout the year for us. Should we expect the same sort of growth for U.S. Polo Assn. continuing in the years to come? How do we brand-wide, how do we see growth coming in the future period?
Hi, thanks for your question. I think as we have seen our portfolio, and like I mentioned earlier, you know, we are sort of committed to building a portfolio of differentiated brands, and each of our brands have a very specific role to play. As we have seen U.S. Polo obviously ahead of the curve and it's now reached its potential with product innovation, right product market fit, a great retail presence, and it continues to clock solid growth across our channels. Having said that, our PVH portfolio is really well poised to service the premiumized end of the consumer demand, and we expect that this portfolio will continue to clock growth as well. What we are bullish about is also Flying Machine with the positioning getting deeper and sharper.
With it being a denim-oriented youth brand which is on trend and unisex, we believe that Flying Machine will continue to clock solid double-digit growth as well. Having said all of that, for us, Arrow is our unique position in terms of the formal wear workwear market, and we believe that with some of the measures around store expansion, the right merchandising grid and the right store format, we should see again a solid growth coming out of Arrow. All in all, I think what we believe is that with this diversified portfolio that we have, we should see consistent growth across our brands.
Okay. Got it. Just a follow-up over here. See, if I'm not wrong, U.S. Polo will be roughly around INR 2,400 crore-INR 2,500 crore of top line. What I wanted to understand is that on this base, do we expect U.S. Polo continue to grow at 13%-14% CAGR in next three to four years? Or should we say, look for a lesser growth over here?
We expect our brands to grow at mid-double digits.
Okay, got it. Second question is on the margin side. While it's extremely positive that we are guiding for 30- 40 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion, what I understand is that the cotton prices are on the uptrend, plus we are focused on investing behind A&P and all. Shouldn't we consider our margins remaining under pressure? How confident are we of achieving this 30- 40 basis points of EBITDA margin expansion? How will we drive this EBITDA margin expansion?
I think just a couple of points here. As I mentioned earlier in my opening remarks, our sourcing remains predominantly India-based, and we are deepening that further.
Okay.
Second, also we're overall watching this environment very closely. To navigate the volatility, we do plan to remain nimble. While we on one hand we will double down on our cost measures, but at the same time we will be selective in driving price increases where required while protecting our growth as well.
Okay, got it. One last question, if I can squeeze in.
Yeah. Yes, please. Go on.
Yeah. Yeah. On the store side, we have been constantly seeing new store addition, but on the other hand, we are seeing store closures as well. This quarter as well, we have closed down somewhere around 45 odd stores. Can we just give some color, what are the brands for whom we are closing down the stores? Are we done with this store closure initiative or not?
I think, look, I think store closing is a journey of retail, right?
Right
This journey will continue, right. We should see approximately about 5% closure going forward. I wouldn't say it's one higher in one brand over the other. This is just how overall the retail journey will look like.
Okay. Got it. [Foreign language]. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
All the best.
Thank you so much. Thank you.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Kaustubh Pawaskar from ICICI Direct. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Good afternoon, Deep. Thanks for giving me the opportunity and congrats for good set of numbers. My question is on online B2C business. That part of our business is doing extremely well this quarter also we have seen strong growth. Considering the competition building around in this space or on this channel, do we see, you know, this growth momentum to continue, or what is helping us, you know, to be a standout player in this particular channel, you know, and we are doing extremely well in terms of growth?
Thanks for your question. I think one thing I'd say broadly is B2C is a core channel strategy for us, right? Like I said, that overall, as we look forward, building a world-class B2C organization that is built of retail and online is a priority for us. We have key initiatives in place to drive our B2C. Whether you think about product, the way our brands show up, how we control our pricing, and how we manage our last mile, these are the certain few things that is actually driving growth for us. Over the years, we've also been able to actually drive full price, sell-through and reduce our discounts on our online channels as well. It's a solid channel which delivers profitability as well.
In terms of your question, when you say that online B2C competition increasing, in fact, we are seeing this channel stabilizing. We have seen advent of certain B2C brands, but with the brands that are there in our portfolio and the product innovation and the offering that we bring to the table with the pricing that we bring, I think our brands are pretty solid. From a competition point of view, what we're seeing is the offtake in the market is actually much better. You know, we continue to drive that through driving brand experience, great assortments and overall, you know, last mile service as well. Hope that answers your question.
Right. Should we expect this momentum of, you know, 30%-40% kind of a growth to continue, in the coming years, and that will help us, this mix to further improve, towards online B2C?
Yes. See, I think for us, online B2C, like I said, continues to remain solid. We expect that over the years this should continue to be at a 20%+ .
Right. Right. My second question again is around the margins. Like, you just mentioned that, you know, we are expecting 30- 40 basis points improvement in the margin. This is despite the fact that currently, there is a uncertainty related to volatility in the commodity prices. You mentioned in your comment that you are focusing more on sourcing from India, and you also have good cover in terms of the raw material prices, which will take a large part of your season. However, if this continues, if this volatility continue or uncertainty continue, should we expect some kind of deceleration in what you have guided or should we, whatever uncertainties it would be, you will still manage to clock 30%- 40% EBITDA margins, expansion?
At this point in time, we, like I had mentioned earlier that while we are seeing mild pressure on raw materials, Forex, CapEx over the medium term, we do expect that there could be a potential risk of a consumption slowdown due to the inflationary pressures. Having said that, we are reasonably certain about our mitigation actions, and given that we are, you know, at this point in time, we are cautious and at the same time optimistic about our guidance.
Okay. Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. A reminder to all the participants, you may press star and then one to ask a question. We will take the next question from the line of Avinash Karumanchi from Motilal Oswal Financial Services Limited. Please go ahead.
Hi, team. congrats on good set of numbers. Am I audible?
Yes.
Hi, Avinash.
Hi.
Hi. Hi. Congrats on good set of numbers. Question is to Amisha Jain. This year, both Flying Machine and U.S. Polo Assn. has seen a very significant rebound. What are the things that you could highlight for this kind of rebound? What are the changes that has happened in these two brands, Flying Machine in particular?
Sure. Thank you so much. You know, I think, I'll talk about both the brands, one at a time. When we look at Flying Machine, as you know that, you know, we've just gone through a very recent sharper positioning and deeper work with Flying Machine. With that, the one thing that we've done is actually gone deeper with how do we drive consumer connect. Flying Machine now is positioned as a on-trend youth brand, which is more focused on denim and also pivoting towards unisex, right? What that does is, what we have seen with that initial season that we've launched, is a great offtake across our channels.
The other thing with us kind of taking over Flying Machine fully, the one thing that we've been able to also do is now been able to kind of make sure that this brand is available to our consumers across the channels of their choice. You will find Flying Machine distribution now in retail and across various e-commerce platforms. We've actually seen a pretty healthy growth across the board, both in retail and online. With those measures, with a great product positioning, we believe that Flying Machine is actually well-poised to grow. From a, from an overall youth and Gen Z point of view, if you look at it in the denim space, there isn't a strong player out there beyond barring one, and we believe that Flying Machine has a very, very strong positioning.
With that, we believe that we should be able to take on a much larger market share over a period of time. That's about Flying Machine. In terms of U.S. Polo, I think U.S. Polo has been on a fabulous journey. You know, with the way the U.S. Polo is set up across the consumer landscape, you know, it caters to various occasions for men's apparel. With our leadership in polos, shirts, and as you can see in denims, U.S. Polo is actually very well-poised in terms of the way we are expanding ourselves across various channels, both online and offline. We've been able to bring great innovation in U.S. Polo across the pricing merchandising grid at great price points as well, and we've seen really good offtake across the board.
I think all in all, if I were to look at it, all three pillars in terms of product merchandising, the way the brand is connecting with the consumer and the strong spread we have from a channel point of view, we believe that U.S. Polo is actually set for a very strong trajectory ahead. Having said that, we do believe that there is potential for us to expand the network from a retail point of view, and also drive uspoloassn.in and our marketplace presence in a much stronger way. We expect and we remain bullish on U.S. Polo going forward as well.
Okay, got it. Regarding the channel mix, how does the channel mix vary for brands like Arrow or Flying Machine? U.S. Polo Assn., it's already at 400 stores, you are adding a larger stores with different outlook there. How does this channel mix looks like in case of Flying Machine and Arrow?
I think, look, each brand has its own channel journey. Like I said, I think for us, the channel mix is more coming from consumer demand and where do we believe that there is pockets of growth. U.S. Polo is a brand which is, you know, which addresses a certain demand, and it has got a much wider distribution in terms of stores. We do believe that there is a lot more potential for it to for our network to actually expand from where it is. Similarly, Arrow and Flying Machine are on the beginning of their journey, and we do believe that as we go and as we rethink the product line, as we expand the product mix and drive assortment, in a certain way, we believe that both these brands will see an evolution of their retail further.
Both you should expect expansion of retail. At the same time, we will go much deeper with our online business as well in both these brands.
Okay, understood. The next question is to Mr. Girdharji regarding the CapEx and debt. If you look at it like, this year, the CapEx was around INR 110 crores. Can you give the break up for that?
Yeah, I'll take that. Hi, Avinash. I think, you know, the CapEx includes besides investment in stores, it also includes investment in MBO, the department stores. It also includes deposits that we give to the landlords where we sign up COCO stores. If you look at the break up, it could be, you know, we opened about 50 COCO stores and deposit for those stores, plus investment in department store, MBO. We also, you know, invested some in IT and admin tech CapEx.
Okay, okay. Regarding the other point is debt. How should we see the net debt going forward?
See, in the quarter just ended, our debt was higher because we took some borrowing to fund the Flipkart transaction. I think, apart from that, we have been quite efficient and this basically, you know, changes our goal of becoming a net debt zero company by about maybe nine to 12 months. I think we are in the right trajectory. I think apart from this one-off transaction, we are in line to reduce our debt on a year-on-year basis.
Okay. A little bit of the debt also sits in payables, right, in form of acceptances. How does it move going forward?
You see this business always has, you know, purchases from small suppliers and small vendors, MSME vendors. You know, there is obviously, we all know that there is a cash cycle that has to be managed, and hence we use some kind of, you know, funding to manage that purchases. You know, usually it is to manage our payables. I mean, there is nothing extraordinary. It has always been there, and it has always been reported as part of our annual report.
I mean, should we see like, historically, if I look at it like it is somewhere around 5%-6% of the sales. Are you planning to reduce that debt as well or that would continue going forward?
I mean, you see, as there is cash generation, primary objective is to reduce the debt, which is the term loan. Then secondary, of course, is to reduce the working capital financing.
Okay, got it. That is my third.
Than you we will take the next question from Abhijeet Kundu from Antique Stock Broking. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi. Congratulations on a great set of numbers. One was on the overall macro environment, in the sense that, you know, we have been seeing that premium brands have been growing at a better rate. There has been some amount of, you know, pressure on the value brands and some amount of pressure on the mid-premium price brands. Wanted your view on that and how the overall scenario has evolved because, you know, March quarter, there has been some amount of recovery, I mean, perceived recovery, in apparel, in fashion brands. Just wanted a view on that.
Secondly, you have been, you have, I mean, out of all the denim brands, a single brand has done very well in the last seven, eight years. That gives you a very strong ground on how to revive the Flying Machine brand. Through our channel checks, what we understood is what you did in Levi's, other brand, your other brand. You have brought down the SKUs or the designs or the most dropped down to the most selling designs in Flying Machine. You've done a lot of restructuring. How much is the confidence that Flying Machine will revive from this level?
Flying Machine used to be a very strong brand 20, 25, 20-25 years back. Yeah, just a view on that, and I have my second question after that.
Thank you so much. I think, you know, on your first part, you know, premiumization has been a trend for us, and we've seen that both across our brands, that that has kind of something that has paid off very well for us. Our brands have actually premiumized while at the same time ensuring great value at fabulous prices, right? From that point of view, all our brands, when you look at our PVH brands, when you look at U.S. Polo, Arrow, Flying Machine, I think from a premiumization trend point of view, we're definitely seeing that, and we see that consistently, quarter-over-quarter as well, right? That to the question that you asked first, I think that trend is something that we expect to continue.
Coming back to Flying Machine, we're actually quite bullish on Flying Machine. If you look at it, and I think you touched upon this, Flying Machine has a fabulous equity. With the latest consumer work that we've done, what we've found is that consumers actually resonate really well with the equity. For us, the question has been about how do we go and drive this brand much deeper, bring great products, and ensure that we drive much deeper consumer connect as well. We've gone in and done some work on Flying Machine. From a brand positioning point of view, here are the few things that we're driving. We believe that this equity is actually well-poised, and it connects really well with the youth and the Gen Z consumer. That's number one.
The second is we also strongly believe that it has a potential to drive both for men's and women's, and you'll see that coming out of Flying Machine also. The third being that, you know, the Flying Machine has always been a very strong denim equity, and we are going much deeper with that, offering really great products for the consumer from a Gen Z point of view. If you look back at the point you made, I think this is again a very strong anchor for Flying Machine. The last part I'll touch upon is that the one thing that I feel that the Flying Machine will bring to the market, and again, kind of connecting back to its equity, is ensuring that it is on trend, because that's what this consumer is seeking.
We believe that given our strength in denim, given the strength in product and innovation, we are very well poised to bring that to the market. We will definitely cater to the consumers through their preferences. You know, the one thing that we're doing is actually staying very close to the ground, ensuring that we understand what are the trends they're seeking, the price points they're seeking, the silhouettes they are looking for, and, you know, making sure that our offering is tight and our product assortment is actually right-sized for the right product mix and pricing as well. With that, we believe that it has a very unique position that it can take in the market.
Understood. Two things here. One is, in Arrow, I believe one year back, in the last three, before that, in all three seasons, a lot of new products were launched in the semi-casual segment, and which were looking extremely great. What would be the, in the last two years and after you have joined, what have been the changes in Arrow and then what has been the progress there? Secondly, in terms of profitability in these two brands, I don't need a figure, but has there been a profitability improvement in Arrow as well as Flying Machine? Because this is one of the very frequent questions asked by the investor community.
Sure.
That's.
Great. Thank you so much for asking that. We're actually You know, when you look at Arrow from our portfolio point of view, Arrow is actually one of our brands that is all set to kind of, you know, cater to the innovation and the workwear market in a much sharper way, actually pivoting towards how the modern professional seeks to, you know, go about his day. As we look at it, we've kind of looked at this brand closely. We've looked at the consumer demand. We've looked at, again, done some deep work around consumer and we are again sharpening the offering in Arrow.
The 1 thing that you will see happening is we're re-looking at the line, and we're actually simplifying the merchandising grid and going much more sharper in terms of the benefits that the consumer is seeking on a day-to-day basis, right? The other thing is, as you look at our stores, you'll see a little more simplification and navigation happening at our retail and online as well. Third, we are also re-looking at the store formats to see that it is allowing us to cater to the consumer, the navigation, all of those pieces in a much tighter way. All of this should yield much better sell-throughs, should yield much better full price sell-through. With that, we expect that the profitability will only improve.
All in all, again, like I said, I think in our portfolio, this is one brand that we believe is actually very well-positioned to cater to the formal workwear market and some of the special occasions as well.
Understood. Thanks. Thanks for your answer.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Swapnil Gupta from White Pine Investment Management. Please go ahead.
Yes. Thank you for the opportunity, sir. Just a bookkeeping question. Why our reserves have declined by about INR 13 crores?
Because we did this transaction with Flipkart, and there was some equity adjustment because of that.
Thank you.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Naveen from Nuvama AMC. Please go ahead.
Thank you. Thank you for the opportunity and congratulations on a great set of numbers. Just wanted to check on, you know, what is our store expansion plans for FY 2027. Secondly, in terms of our adjacencies, we are already at 24%. From here on, while you're guiding for mid-double-digit sort of growth for FY 2027, but is it the core portfolio which will have to do the heavy lifting from now on, considering that, you know, on adjacencies we are already at 24%? Do you think that adjacencies will continue to grow?
I think the first question you asked is around the store expansion, right, for the next fiscal year?
That's right.
I think, like I mentioned earlier, I think when you look at our store fleet, we do believe that there's a great opportunity for us to expand our store fleet, at the same time upsize our stores as well, because our offering is increasing and our consumer offtake of some of our brands is also great. We expect to drive about 1.5 lakh net sq ft addition over the next fiscal year across our portfolio, right? That's kind of answering your question number one. On your second question, the way I would look at our brands, right? As you look at our brands, what we are seeing is that there is a significant potential for us to grow even in just the men's apparel space.
For us, we've kind of set a goal for ourselves to establish a strong leadership position across the top categories in the market, right? There is a significant opportunity, headroom for us to grow just within that. Second, we've also identified that there is opportunity for us to grow across other categories, and footwear, innerwear, being the key ones that we're driving. Over a period of time, we will also start scaling womenswear as well. To answer your question, we do expect that growth to come through our brands, through the network. At the same time, you know, the adjacencies will continue to clock growth as well. We're quite confident about the mid-teens that we've talked about.
If I can just add in one more question. In the past, you said that beyond these five brands, you aren't really actively looking to sort of expand the portfolio. Do we still hold on to that position, or are we in active evaluation of new brands?
I think what we've maintained is that, you know, obviously our five brands are key, and we see significant headroom of growth, right? Having said that, over a period of time, if something comes up which strategically makes sense from a portfolio point of view, we will be open to looking at it.
Sure. Thank you, and all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Muskan from Swan Investments. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Just wanted to know that what is the size of the business we had for footwear in FY 2026? How many stores, like, we opened for Tommy in FY 2026, and how many stores do we plan to open in the coming year, like FY 2027 and FY 2028? How many stores are there for Stride? These are my three questions.
I think broadly speaking, if I were to talk about the adjacency growth, our adjacent category has grown at 25%, and it is now sitting at about a 24% share of our business. And we expect the adjacent parts of their categories also to continue to grow as well, right? In terms of our growth, like I said, we are expecting to expand at a portfolio level to about 1.5 lakh net sq ft addition next year. We don't give out, brand-wise numbers, so hopefully the 1.5 lakh net sq ft helps you.
If you can help me with the footwear sales mix, such a big size of the footwear business that we build in it.
See, I think footwear also for us is an expansion through our, you know, U.S. Polo Assn. Footwear stores and our Stride format. This year, you know, we're currently at 19 stores of Stride, and, you know, we will look at it from an opportunity and a catchment point of view, and we will continue to expand. I would also want to highlight that for us, online is a very important channel for footwear, and that will continue to be the case.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Ankit Kedia from PhillipCapital India. Please go ahead.
Hi. Inventory days have increased by, you know, nearly 20 days over last two years. What is leading to this inventory day increase, while at the same time you are commenting that the inventory is the freshest ever? Have You know, what's changed out here?
Ankit, hi. Girdhar here. You see, inventory days is a function of channel mix. As we will increase our channel towards more D2C, which is basically retail and B2C, you know, the inventory sits are now in our books. In a wholesale business, it actually moves out of our books. Correspondingly, if you see while our inventory days has gone up over last two years, receivable days also has correspondingly reduced. You know, all in all, it's a balancing between the DWC section within the balance sheet. As we increase, and just to let you know, as we increase and focus our energies on the B2C business or the D2C business rather, this is likely to remain like this or maybe increase a little as we go along, as the channel share changes.
The receivable days have reduced only by three days, versus 18 days increase in inventory. Is that the right way to look at the business?
Yeah. There was a small B2B transaction done on the Tommy side at the end of March. Other than that, you know, there is a corresponding reduction in receivable days.
Sure. My second question is regarding the stores. You know, the previous participant, you mentioned that there were 50 COCO stores open for which security deposit and others were paid. Now, the net store opening in the quarter, or the year is also 50 stores. How many COCO stores have you-
Sorry.
Yeah, sorry.
That number of 50 was for the year. I think the question was on the CapEx for the year, and the answer was for the year, not for the quarter, the CapEx for COCO.
Right. My question is also for the year. We have net opening of 50 stores for the year, and 50 were COCO stores, which you opened, while gross opening is around 150. How many COCO stores, during the year have you closed?
Ankit, I don't have this data handy. We can catch up separately on this one.
Sure. My last question is on the retail like-for-like growth. This 8% growth which we have delivered, is it only for COCO stores or full franchisee network of full 1,000 stores? Is it the primary which we give to franchisee? Does it capture that data or the consumer data? Same thing.
This is consumer data, Ankit, and this is across the network. This is basically across our network. If you know our business model, we are on a consignment basis for on all our stores. The sale is recorded in our books when the final consumer buys out.
Sure. That's helpful. Thank you so much and all the best.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Prakash Kapadia from Kapadia Financial Services. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity. Couple of questions. What is the share of adjacency we are targeting in the coming years? If that share, you know, further increases, would the margin see more expansion? Is that the right understanding? Secondly, on, you know, Tommy and Calvin Klein, any major cost pressures we are seeing? What is the price hike mechanism, the frequency of, you know, price changes? Something on Arrow. I think in the PPT you've mentioned some new products in linen. Are they launched? What kind of products are we looking at, if you could give us some sense? These were my three questions. Thank you.
Sure. I think coming back to your question on gross margins, I think we do believe that with our work around Overall, I'd say that, you know, we do believe that over a period of time we would like to take this to high fifties. It's not just about the adjacencies, but I think overall we believe that there is some headroom for growth over here. As we drive full price sell-throughs through our consumer analytics, et cetera, we do believe that we should be able to drive that. Now, coming to your question on the PVH side, there definitely was an impact of GST, right? With from a slab movement to about 18%, those are the brands that kind of got impacted. We did see an initial and a transitory sort of a impact.
Having said that, I think both our brands, we're starting to see now a double-digit traction there as well, right? Those are the two questions. In terms of Arrow, I think that's a great question. You know, innovation has always been at the heart of everything that we do, and that is true for across our portfolio, especially talking about Arrow. You know, we've always been one of those companies that has been known for, to be bringing the best shirts in the market. With linen, you know, linen on trend, we've been able to kind of capture that and bring some great products out in the market.
You will see, you know, you would have seen that we are kind of leading with that as well in terms of some of our, more localized, store campaign as well. You know, this is something that is part of our DNA, and we will continue to drive more of that as we go along.
In the adjacency, U.S. Polo Assn. would have the largest contribution in our brand salience, adjacent contribution?
That's true, because U.S. Polo is at a certain size and scale. We've also built out the other categories for U.S. Polo faster. That's absolutely right. I think U.S. Polo is a little ahead. Having said that, our PVH businesses also have a strong adjacency business as well. Both of those, you know, all three of those kind of look in the same zone also.
Directionally, you know, you said would look at 50% gross margin. The next two, three years, would that be possible to achieve? Is that the direction we are working on?
We have directionally been working on delivering towards the high 50%s, right? That's what we will go towards the next two to three years. We'll continue to drive gross margin upwards.
Oh.
As our direct channel also goes up, we drive efficiency through COGS and also reduction of discounts. We'll continue to drive that.
Thank you. All the best.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Varun Singh from Alf Accurate Advisors. Please go ahead.
Am I audible?
Yes, you are.
Sure. Thank you for the opportunity. The question is, you know, I think the previous participants has asked on growth in the inventory. If we just compare FY 2025 inventory with 2026, there is almost more than 30% growth. Historically, we have not seen a similar kind of a growth, given the change in the business mix and the revenue growth that we have delivered. Honestly, I mean, if you look at FY 2025 and 2026, the mix of the business in terms of revenue looks not significantly different. In front of 15% revenue growth, 30% inventory growth, please help us, you know, deconstruct the maybe how to look at it.
Hi, Varun. As I said earlier, change in channel mix, I think you cannot look at the full year number. You'll have to look at a quarter on quarter number, which is more representative of how the inventory is moving. Our channel mix has changed by 3% on towards the direct. That itself is almost a six days impact. As we also mentioned in our investor deck, as well as Amisha mentioned in her opening comments, we had an early inwards, which is also to mitigate some of our, some of our, you know, risks that we saw. If you recollect our previous call, we had mentioned that there were delays on account of the geopolitical issues, Bangladesh shipments and so on and so forth.
We were really extra inwarded a lot of our SS 2026 merchandise before March. Having said all this, you know, we of course, used to have a four inventory turn, but that was at a certain channel mix, which was more skewed towards wholesale channels. As we move down our path of achieving a larger business in retail and B2C, we expect our inventory turns to improve to 3.7%-3.8%. The last point that I want to make is, while this inventory is of course there in our books, it is a large part of the late inward also get mitigated by higher credit terms. In terms of net working capital, if you look at it, I mean, over December quarter, for example, there was hardly any change, and we continue to focus on reducing our inventory.
All right. Understood. Secondly, maybe if you could call out that full price sale compared to the overall sale in our revenue has been how much in FY 2026 compared to FY 2025?
I mean, the only thing I will say is that, you know, we continue to clock, and when you look at our gross margins as well, I mean, we're looking healthy and positive, which is an indicator of the fact that our, you know, overall sell-throughs are in a good place. We expect that we will keep improving on it. And it has improved over a period of time as well, right? While we don't give out specific numbers there, but we're actually seeing a good traction in that direction. With our initiatives around pricing and analytics coming in, we will only continue to see improvement in that area.
Understood. Reason I was asking that is, you know, when you call out 40- 50 basis expansion in margin, where exactly should we expect those margin expansion to come from? Is it only from the, maybe, you know, store maturity and, improving, output from the existing stores or from, increasing full price, sale of merchandise also? Just wanted to understand that maybe how much of that journey has already been traveled.
Absolutely, we will expect to see our GP improve, you know, powered by a couple of things, right? As we kind of drive premiumization and product innovation, with a great product market fit, we're expecting to see a better sell-through. We're also continuing to see that with our some of our initiatives around analytics, et cetera, our pricing and full price sell-through will also get better, right? With further COGS improvements, all in all, we expect to see an improvement in GP. That's one. The second is, you know, on an ongoing basis, we expect that our select should continue to improve as well. All of those pieces should kind of drive operating leverage for us.
All right. Just one last question, if I may. If you could, just deconstruct the 15% growth expectation. How much do you think you would be expecting that growth from like-to-like, and how much from retail area expansion? What is the math behind the 15% growth expectation guidance?
We're expecting to see about 7%-8% of like-for-like, and the rest of it to come from an expansion upsizing, et cetera.
Even in like-to-like, it should be largely, what, mix led, price led, or how should we expect it to be?
There I would say probably an equal split in terms of driving through pricing and volume growth.
Okay, okay. Sure. Thank you very much, and wish you all the very best.
Thank you so much.
Thank you. We will take the next question from the line of Jaymin from Ardeko Asset Management. Please go ahead.
Thanks for taking my questions. Amisha, I have one question for you. When you say, I mean, you will be open to something strategic at a portfolio level, does that imply that the current portfolio alone may not be sufficient to deliver the growth momentum or that you are targeting at a company level? Also, I mean, given the capabilities of the company, can you elaborate more on your thoughts on build versus buy strategy?
Sure. I think one thing that I do want to highlight is that our overall plan is around driving growth through our own five brand portfolio, and the strategy that I just laid out in my opening comments, which is our own organic growth around 15%, right? That's what we've spoken about in the mid double digit is what we've spoken about, right? The only thing that I've highlighted is that the question on are we open. Yes, if something comes which is more relevant from a strategic direction point of view, and it looks like something that will allow us to double down from a capability or from a future growth point of view, we might look at it. Hope that answers your question.
Okay. Any white space you are seeing in a portfolio that, I mean, you would like to fill through the inorganic growth?
I think it's too early to, you know, comment on that. Like I said, we picked up some deep consumer work, and we are very, very clear on the areas that we want to double down with our brands in terms of menswear, men's apparel space itself, and we believe our portfolio is actually really well-poised to service some of those specific opportunity areas. There are a couple of spaces that we want to build, and we might still seek to build it organically.
Wow, it's great to hear. The last question. I mean, right now the demand seems to be, I mean, holding for now, and you are clearly investing behind it through the marketing investment. You have also flagged out the inflationary pressure, I mean, as a risk to consumption. In that context, I mean, can you elaborate more on the internal cost control measure that are already underway at the company level that can help you to protect the margins in the coming times, versus just simply cutting down your marketing spend?
You know, we are, we are always, continuously looking at it from an organization point of view, and we are quite, nimble about looking at cost structure across the board. As we look at, the next, few months and some of the inflationary pressures, we are conscious of it, and we're just putting in cost controls in various areas. I know nothing one point to, specify, but I think that's something that we're looking at across the board.
Okay. Okay. That's it from my side. All the best for the future.
Thank you. Thank you so much.
Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, that was the last question. With that concludes the question-and-answer session. I now hand the conference back to Mr. Girdhar Kumar Chitlangia for the closing comments. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you everybody for joining the call today. If you have any questions, please feel free to reach out to me, and we would be happy to answer them offline. Thank you so much. Have a good day.
Thank you, members of the management. On behalf of Arvind Fashions Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you all for joining with us today, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.