Concord Biotech Limited (NSE:CONCORDBIO)
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Apr 27, 2026, 12:00 PM IST
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Q3 24/25

Feb 14, 2025

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Q3 FY 2025 Earnings Conference Call of Concord Biotech Limited, hosted by JM Financial. This conference call may contain forward-looking statements about the company, which are based on the beliefs, opinions, and expectations of the company as on date of this call. These statements do not guarantee the future performance of the company, and it may involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. 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 the star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Amay Chalke from JM Financial.

Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Amay Chalke
Pharma Research Analyst, JM Financial

Thank you, Steve. Good good evening, everyone. I am Amay Chalke on behalf of JM Financial. Welcome you all on the Q3 FY25 Earnings Conference Call of Concord Biotech. At the outset, I thank the management of Concord Biotech for giving us this opportunity to host the call. Today, from the company, we have with us Mr. Sudhir Vaid, Chairman and Managing Director, Mr. Ankur Vaid, Joint Managing Director and CEO, Mr. Lalit Sethi, CFO, and Mr. Prakash Sajnani, Compliance Officer and Assistant Vice President of Accounts. I now hand over the call to the management for their opening remarks. Over to you, sir.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Good evening, everyone. This is Ankur Vaid. Thank you for joining us on our Q3 FY25 Earnings Conference Call. We are pleased to report stable performance for Q3 FY25. Our revenue from operations stood at ₹244 crores compared to ₹240 crores in Q3 FY24, a modest growth of 1%. This growth was moderated due to customer procurement patterns and also on account of upcoming annual tenders for the formulation, resulting in lower uptake in Q3 FY25. EBITDA for Q3 FY25 stood at ₹98 crores, with EBITDA margins at 40.1%. Our profit after tax stood ₹76 crores, with margins at 31.1% for Q3 FY 2025. Looking at the nine-month FY 2024 performance, revenues increased by 10% year-on-year, driven by a 3% rise in API revenues and a 42% increase in formulation revenues compared to the same period last year.

Our outlook remains positive, in line with our long-term guidance of achieving a 25% CAGR growth over the next five years. Moving towards the segmental breakup, our API revenues for Q3 FY 2025 stood at ₹176 crores against ₹172 crores in Q3 last year, a growth of 3% year-on-year. We would like to highlight that the inter-unit sale of API to formulations has not been considered in the API revenues. Hence, we see a muted growth for our API segment. Including the inter-unit sale of API to formulations, our API revenues grew by 9.6% for Q3 FY 2025 on a year-on-year basis. We observed some of the customers phasing out their procurement from Q3 to Q4, which is also reflected in the strong order book position we have. Our formulation business has experienced notable success, gaining strong acceptance among customers across various regions.

In Q3 FY 2025, our formulation segment stood at ₹67 crores. Formulation segment revenues were impacted during the current quarter on account of calendar year closure for many of our global clients and on account of tenders from these customers, which generally open for the next year in January, reflecting high order inflows and revenue booking in the coming calendar year. However, for nine months FY 2025, our revenues from formulation segment stood at ₹192 crores, up by 42% year-on-year basis. We have built a strong on-ground sales and marketing team of over 200 members across India, driving expansion and deeper market penetration. With the continuous addition of new products to our portfolio, we are optimistic about broadening our customer base in the years ahead. Our strategic focus is to target domestic and emerging markets, leveraging our expertise and market reach with an opportunistic approach for the regulated markets.

As our formulation business continues to evolve, we anticipate substantial growth in both product offerings and customer acquisition, contributing significantly to our overall success in the medium to long term. Currently, our product portfolio includes 30-plus Fermentation-based APIs across Immunosuppressants, Oncology, Anti-Infectives, and Antifungal segment. As part of our strategic growth plan, we aim to introduce 8-10 additional products over the next three years, with a strong focus on Oncology and Anti-Infectives. This expansion aligns with our R&D priorities, where we are developing niche products with complex processes and limited competition. By leveraging our expertise in Fermentation-based APIs, we are strategically positioning ourselves to capture a significant share of these niche markets. Our goal is to establish a strong global presence and achieve market leadership, targeting a sizable global market share within the next five years.

In addition to product expansion, we are actively acquiring new customers across different regions while strengthening relationships with existing partners. By offering a comprehensive and differentiated portfolio, we are enhancing our market share, driving long-term revenue growth, and solidifying our leadership position in the specialized space. In our CDMO business, we continue to engage with potential customers to consider Concord as a potential CDMO partner, and are seeing a growing number of inquiries and multiple RFQs being submitted. With our established capabilities, strong track record, and regulatory approvals in place, we are well-positioned to capitalize on this opportunity and drive our future growth. Our strategic focus is to partner with large innovators and well-established generic companies with significant market presence.

Concord offers a unique advantage as a CDMO partner, utilizing our expertise in Fermentation-based APIs, complex formulations, and high-value products, making us a strong and reliable partner for majority for major industry players looking for a fermentation-based manufacturing partner. While CDMO was initially part of our long-term strategy, we now see it as a medium-term growth driver, given the increasingly industry interest. This shift reflects our confidence in utilizing our niche capacities and capabilities to support large partners in bringing innovative and complex products to market. Moving on to quarterly updates, during the quarter, we made a strategic investment of $1 million in compulsory convertible notes of Alvela Therapeutics Inc. Alvela Therapeutics, founded in 2015, is driven by a singular mission to provide treatments for individuals suffering from rare genetic skin diseases. Alvela Therapeutics is a biotechnology company specializing in developing and commercializing medicines for patients with rare dermatological diseases.

Headquartered in Wayne, Pennsylvania, Alvela's leadership and scientific management team have a proven track record of success and a strong commitment to leading the way in the advancement of target treatments for rare Genodermatosis. With a team of passionate industry leaders, the company is dedicated to developing breakthrough solutions for patients with high unmet medical needs. This investment aligns with our long-term growth strategy as it paves the way for a strategic partnership focused on the manufacturing and commercialization of Qutron, a therapy designed to treat rare genetic skin diseases. Through this financial commitment, we aim to strengthen our collaboration with Alvela and enhance opportunities for supplying our products to them in the future, expanding our footprint in the global markets.

Additionally, we have also made a strategic investment by entering into a share purchase agreement with CleanMax Private Limited and CleanMax Enviro Energy Solutions , under which Concord will acquire a 26% equity stake in CleanMax. Our investment is specifically in the state of Gujarat, where CleanMax operates a 6.6 MW wind capacity and a 3.3 MW DC solar capacity dedicated to powering our Dholka plant. This investment aligns with our commitment to sustainability and our focused efforts to address environmental challenges. By transitioning to renewable energy sources, we aim to significantly reduce our carbon footprint, contributing to global climate action initiatives. Additionally, renewable energy adoption offers long-term financial benefits, including lower energy costs and enhanced operational efficiency. Finally, an update on our injectable plant. The plant is scheduled to begin commercial production in the current quarter, with revenue generation expected to build up over the next financial year.

We have set up, lined up, or launched from this facility in the upcoming year, which will contribute to both revenue growth and profitability going forward. Concord is one of the few companies that manufacture both oral solid dosage and injectables, along with In-House API production and backward integration to produce key starting materials. This unique capability positions our products alongside those of large pharmaceutical companies, increasing their acceptance and usage within the medical community. We are also delighted to announce that Concord has been honored with the Sustainability Reporting Award from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India. This prestigious recognition reaffirms our commitment to transparency, ethical governance, and sustainable growth, all in alignment with global standards and the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

At Concord, sustainability is at the core of our business strategy, and this award is a testament to our ongoing efforts to drive responsible and impactful growth while maintaining the highest standards of corporate governance. At last, I would still emphasize to assess our financial results on an annualized basis rather than a quarterly one. This is because customer procurement patterns may lead to lumpiness, with some quarters experiencing higher procurement than others. Therefore, a more accurate assessment of our performance is best achieved by analyzing the medium and long-term trends rather than focusing solely on short-term variations. With this, I hand over the call to Lalit Sethi, our CFO, for financial and operational performance. Thank you.

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

Thank you, sir. Let me take you through the financial and operational performance for the quarter ended December 2024.

Our revenue for the nine-month financial year 2025 stood at ₹770 crores as compared to the ₹698 crores in nine-month financial year 2024, representing a growth of 10%. Our revenue for this quarter stood at ₹244 crores as compared to ₹240 crores in the same period last year. Revenue from API business stood at ₹176 crores in this quarter, against ₹172 crores during the same period last year. And API revenue in the nine months of this year stood at ₹577 crores, against ₹562 crores during the same period last year. As mentioned, API revenue excludes intercompany sales to the formulation unit and hence shows muted growth. API revenue growth includes inter-unit transfer to formulation segments stood at 9.6% for the quarter and 10% for the nine months on a year-on-year basis.

Revenue from the formulation business for this quarter was INR 67.6 crores compared to INR 68.5 crores in the same period last year. The revenue growth was impacted by the year-end closure in several of our international markets, which led to the sales being pushed to the following quarters. Additionally, new tender releases, typically occurring in January, will be reflected in the financials of the current quarter. Revenue from the domestic business grew by 13% in the nine months 2025 on a year-on-year basis, and revenue from exports business has grown by 8% in the nine months of this financial year. Speaking on EBITDA, EBITDA for this nine months stood at INR 315 crores, representing a growth of 6% on a year-on-year basis, and EBITDA for this quarter stood at INR 98 crores as compared to INR 105 crores in the same period last year. This is on account of subdued revenue growth.

However, our long-term sustainable margin guidance is in the range of 40%-43%. EBITDA margin for this quarter stood at 40.1%, and for nine months, it stood at 41%. On profit after tax, our profit after tax for this quarter stood at ₹76 crores as compared to ₹77.6 crores in the same period last year. PAT margins for this quarter stood at 31.1%. PAT for the nine months 2025 stood at ₹231 crores as compared to ₹213 crores in the same period last year, a growth of 9% year-over-year. PAT margins for nine months financial year 2025 stood at 30% as compared to 30.5% for the same period last year. We are a zero-debt company with investments, bank balances and cash equivalents to the tune of ₹250 crores as of 31st of December 2025. With this, I shall now leave the floor open for question and answer.

Operator

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 their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to withdraw yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handset 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 Chintan Sheth from Girik Capital. Please go ahead.

Chintan Sheth
Investment Analyst, Girik Capital

Thank you, Ankur ji, Sethi ji and Lalit ji for the opportunity. On the revenue growth, you mentioned the reason for the quarterly revenue, but even if I look at trailing 12-month revenues, the growth has been around 10-12% versus what we were you know initially guiding for this year was around 18%-20%.

So just trying to understand whether we maintain our current year's growth guidance at around that level or we would like to you know revise it a little downward. And secondly, on the Limbasi facility, if you can highlight how how has the ramp-up and the you know product shifting, which was likely to happen during the year, how how that progress has been made so far?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Sure. Thank you. So you know as you would have seen in our quarter-on-quarter numbers, our quarter-one number was slightly on the lower side, and we saw a ramp-up in our growth in quarter two. And again, quarter three has been relatively muted. And as I mentioned, that given our order book position that we have and given that so much of the phasing out has happened or the shift has happened to quarter four, we expect our quarter four again to be on the higher side.

And you know so it is going to be more about the execution of the orders book position that we have. That being said, you know in our previous calls also, we have mentioned that if you have to break down the growth for us, it is basically, say, at 10% on a baseline growth. We look at around 2%, 2%-3% shift from the innovators to the generic, and other 2 to 3% growth comes from new customer acquisition, and another 2%-3% comes from increasing the market share for our newer products. That's how the 18% kind of comes out. Historically, we've been doing that, and you know even in this quarter, we are looking at a couple of our customers that we intend to you know work with, new customers for some of our new products.

So so you know one would have to see how how that pans out, but as I said, that we have a good order book position, and I think our January numbers have been good. We are working very much on getting our February numbers out as well in line with what we expect. So I won't be able to guide you on that, but from the looks of it, you know we are we are moving in the right direction. We just need to see that some of the customers that we intend to build on as part of that 2%-3%, how we are going to be doing that. Things are moving in the positive direction. In terms of the in terms of Limbasi ramp-up, you know our capacity utilization, Lalit, stands at?

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

Yes, it stands at 35% for this nine [inaudible] , against 32% in the same period last year.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you know I mean the customer additions have happened, I would say that still some of the customers are taking a little bit more time than than I would have actually wanted it to be. But again, the efforts are going on on that front. You know we have a couple of customers who have taken the the material from the new site, and we expect that in the next couple of months, they would also shift. So you know depending upon the on the resources that our formulation partners have versus new products and site qualifications, this process is an ongoing process, and you know we anticipate that more and more customers in the coming months would be shifting to Limbasi facility, which will further increase our capacity utilization.

And as I said earlier also, that the new products that we intend to build on in the Anti-Infective Antifungal segment, that is all going to be coming from the new site only instead of the Unit 1.

Chintan Sheth
Investment Analyst, Girik Capital

Right. Right. And just to touch upon the growth, are we seeing you know end-market demand for the products for our clients declining or competitive intensity with them has increased, which results in the slower offtake from them, or this is just a channel timing issue in terms of you know procuring from you guys?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So we have not seen any change in the in the market per se. It's not like our customers have added alternate suppliers, and you know they are procuring it from other other players.

Well you know I think since you know we had a heavy quarter two, my my sense is that probably because of the heavy quarter, they would have had inventories which would have led them to to some of the customers phasing out. It is not that all the customers ended up phasing out to quarter four, but you know some of the customers phasing out gets reflected in in the overall growth for that specific quarter. But you know new customer additions for our existing products, I think that is something that didn't happen in quarter three, but the discussions were ongoing, and I expect that at least a couple of them should get you know on board in this quarter.

Chintan Sheth
Investment Analyst, Girik Capital

Sure. I'll just thank you for the question. Thanks . Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Hussain from Carnelian Capital. Please go ahead.

Hussain Bharuchwala
VP of Equity Research, Carnelian Capital

Sir, am I audible?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes.

Operator

Hello. Am I audible?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes, you are audible.

Hussain Bharuchwala
VP of Equity Research, Carnelian Capital

I just wanted to understand on the CDMO side, since you said that it was moving from long-term. It has now moved to medium-term. So how do you see the CDMO contracts? Can you give some color on that? Well are you seeing customers visiting your site, and are they looking at? Are the RFQs have actually increased over the period compared to last quarter or so, or maybe a year or so? Can you give some color on that, sir?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you know on CDMO, as I mentioned, that we had earlier built it into a long-term strategy, and we have, given how things are panning out globally, we have made it into more of a medium-term strategy. And you know currently, we have filled out a lot of RFQs, but if you see active engagements, I would say those would be a couple of projects that we are actively discussing.

Again, decisions like these could take time, and the true impact of that would take at least nine to 12 months. And that's why you know while our efforts are going on on building the CDMO segment, I would still put this in a medium-term bucket while things can change, but the the true impact on the on the financials, I would say, would be in the medium-term only. But our efforts are ongoing on this CDMO.

Hussain Bharuchwala
VP of Equity Research, Carnelian Capital

Any numbers that you can share in terms of the RFQs that have gone up significantly? I think RFQs have gone by 40% or 30% or anything of that sort. If you can share.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

The RFQs never talk about the quantum of the business. So you know they are typically talking in terms of the technical evaluations that are going on.

So you know I would not want to you know give any number on the CDMO because whatever growth that we talk about, that is apart from the CDMO. So if that happens and our efforts are going on, I think at appropriate time when things move to that level, I would be happy to share that in terms of what is the quantum impact on the top line. But for now, I would just say that our efforts are ongoing on that, and a couple of the projects are where we are actively engaging with them.

Hussain Bharuchwala
VP of Equity Research, Carnelian Capital

Got it. And sir, any viewpoint that you would like to share on the raw material prices? So are the raw material prices have gone up a little bit, and we are not able to pass through? Because our gross margins have contracted.

Is it because of the change in the mix and formulation going up, or is it because the raw material prices have gone up, and we are not able to pass through all those increase in the cost? Any color on that, sir?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

I think our gross margins have been relatively flat [inaudible] . B asically some of the there is some kind of a product mix, but as far as the prices of the raw material is concerned, there is no impact on the raw material prices.

Hussain Bharuchwala
VP of Equity Research, Carnelian Capital

Got it. Got it. Okay. That was the only question from my side. Thank you so much. [audio distortion]

Operator

Hello. Hello. Hello, is team there?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes. We are here.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Sumit Gupta. Please go ahead.

Hi, sir. Am I audible?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes.

Ok, Sir. Sir, what has been the capacity utilization of all the three facilities?

For unit one, it is 78%, and for unit three, it is 35%. Unit one is the Dholka facility, and unit three is the Limbasi facility. And for unit two, it is 26%.

Okay. So what kind of utilization can we expect over the next, let's say, one year or two years? How do you see that panning out?

See, I mean, you know if you look at unit one, while we're at 78%, but at times, the capacity may not be a true indicator of the volume, the revenue contributions that it could give because you know when we talk about the utilizations, it isn't based on the fermentation capacity being used.

Now, for oncology products where we have a 5,000-liter fermenter compared to you know the 400-liter tube that we have at Unit 1, the contributions from the 5,000-liter fermenter would be significantly higher at times. So you know with an increase of maybe 0.5%-1% level, the contributions to the top lines could be much higher. But that being said, you know as I mentioned earlier, that much of the growth in the API space is going to come from Unit 3, where we'll be you know shifting the customers from Unit 1 to Unit 3, and also newer products are going to be manufactured at the Limbasi facility. So so ex-oncology products, the capacity utilization is bound to increase on Unit 3. And given the growth guidance that we have given, you know it would move in line with the API growth will move in line with the capacity utilizations for Unit 3.

Okay Sir. T hank you for the detailed answer. And second question on the basically the trajectory of the margins. So how do you see that panning out? Do you see like like what has been the pricing environment and then leading to the margins trajectory over the medium term?

I'm sorry. The margins trajectory and?

And the pricing scenario. What has been the overall trend, and how do you see that panning out?

So you know the growth for us has been primarily volume-driven growth, and you know there is not much change on the pricing front with our existing partners. That being said, you know when we go for a much larger customer base, the newer newer customer acquisitions could be you know at times higher or lower to our our average pricing that we have for the products. Depends upon you know d epends upon the market and depends upon the customer-to-customer.

But the existing prices to our existing customers have been fairly stable and have been primarily volume-driven growth for us. And when it comes to margins, I think you know since you know the price points are not changing and you know there is not much variation on the raw material cost, you know the prices the gross margins expected to be relatively stable, and that's something that you would see on our nine-month gross margins as on date as well.

And you know, one more . Hello?

Operator

Yes, sir. Yes, sir. Go on.

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

Well, another variable is the product mix, which too has some kind of an impact on the margin profiling. But since our API formulation is normally in the range of 20%-80%, so therefore the margin profiling is going to be more or less in the same range. Unless and until there is a significant shift in the split.

But as far as the designing of our capacity is concerned, with respect to the API and formulation, the designing of the capacity has been in such a manner that the potential revenue from API and the potential revenue from the formulation stands at 80%, 20% respectively. Therefore, going forward also in the long run, our margin profiling is going to be in the same range of 40%-43% EBITDA.

Okay. And sir, your overall employee cost has also increased if I take the nine-month data of around yearly, I think around 10% kind of increase. So do you expect more employees to add? So what is the current headcount, and like what exactly do you see the trajectory going on here?

So as far as the unit four, for which is also ready for capitalization, the new headcount is likely to be appointed for the unit four.

Therefore, there could be a one-time increase in expense, and going forward, it's going to be offset from the revenue which will be generated from the injectable units.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

See, in addition to the injectable manpower, as our capacity utilizations would increase, and also with the injectables coming in, there could be some increase in our field force also, but that is not a significant change. But definitely, you know we we expect some additional manpower coming at at both unit three as well as our injectable marketing team as both the things ramp up.

Understood, sir. L astly, on the price, I understand that you said that you have not taken price hedge. Is it like on the consolidated, right? But are there some contracts where on a case-by-case basis, you have taken price hedge?

Yes, of course. So it depends upon the customer.

As I said earlier, that there could be certain accounts wherein we want to get into those larger accounts where the pricing could be different compared to what our average pricings could be. And there could be certain smaller accounts where we may be able to to get relatively better pricing. So it depends upon product to product, customer to customer, and which region that we are targeting.

Okay. So in that case, what is the frequency of price revision?

So you know we don't have a standard pricing. It depends upon you know if we are going with a second source opportunity, what is the price that we need to give in order to to get that opportunity. So you know it it it gets on a case-by-case basis, and if there is any revision in the price, then it depends upon that opportunity.

But I would say that there are no upward revisions, so ours is more of a volume growth, but price revisions could happen depending upon the opportunity that we intend to capture.

Understood, sir. Thank you.

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Participants who wish to ask a question may press star and one. The next question is from the line of Alok Dalal from Jefferies India. Please go ahead.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Yes. Good afternoon. Lalit sir, what is the growth that we are seeing in the top five APIs?

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

In the top five APIs, the growth is at the range of around 5% to 6% in case taken on the third-party sales.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Okay. And rest of the APIs, how is the growth trending there? .

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

Yeah. So in Anti-Infectives and Oncology, the rate of growth is significantly better as compared to the Immunosuppressants as there are some new molecules. New markets have been there for those molecules.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

And when we talk, Alok, about the 5%, that is to third parties. As I mentioned that you know when you the the Unit 2 primarily has you know backward integration with our API. So when we are going with a 43% rise in the formulations sales, it is getting it is also impacting the growth in the API sales also. So that 5% is just to third parties, but we are capturing a much larger market through through our formulations, which in turn would also lead to API growth.

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

So one thing more I just wish to add here.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So in case there is not inter-unit sale and the inter-unit sale is to be made to the third party, in that case, the growth in API would have been 10%.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Okay. And sir, these numbers are on nine-month basis, no?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes. These are on nine-month basis.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Okay. Would you be able to share the contribution of top five APIs to overall revenue for nine months?

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

No. Normally, we don't share the molecule-wise or

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

so product-by-product breakup, typically, we don't provide.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Okay. Fine. And sir, what is the CapEx guidance for FY 2025 and 2026?

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

CapEx is more or less over. As we mentioned that this quarter picks up that amount of INR 225 crores which we have spent on injectable unit will be capitalized. And there is no growth CapEx which is expected for the financial year 2024-2025.

There will be only maintenance CapEx with respect to all the units which will be to the extent of around INR 15-20 crores per annum.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yeah. But if we do get into, you know apart from Formulations or Fermentation APIs, if we look at other opportunities within the areas of fermentation, and if that requirement comes, whether to do it in-house or through you know through through other procurements, then that's something that we may we may look at. But for our API and Formulation business, as Lalit said, there will be no CapEx requirement.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Got it. And Ankur, last point, what will be the utilization rate for the injectable plant for FY 26? Let's say when you end FY 26, what kind of utilization can one look at?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So Alok, a little too early for us to come down on the numbers, but as I said that, for the next financial year, this is primarily going to be targeting the domestic market, and we will do the filings into the emerging markets in the coming financial year. And in FY 2027 is when we would see both emerging markets and India markets contributing. But for next year, it is primarily going to be the India market, which you know I believe is also a very, very significant and a very big market, particularly for the APIs, particularly for the finished formulations that we intend to sell in the domestic market. Because as I said earlier, there are there is no other company like Concord which is fully integrated right from API to finished formulation.

So definitely, you know we would be able to to use it to our advantage, the backward integration approach, and be able to cater to the Indian markets in a much more aggressive manner.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Understood. And and sir, while you explained about the margins in the 40%-43% range, wouldn't the margin shouldn't the margin be higher, more than 43%? Because now you have the CapEx is over, you will have the utilization ramping up. So shouldn't the margin move, let's say by FY 2027, shouldn't it be more towards the 45% range?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you know again, this will go it is more cyclical in nature because you know when we had our Limbasi facility not ready or just got ready, our EBITDA numbers were lower. And as ramping up started, you know we we saw that going from 38% to 40%-42%.

And and you know now that in the next year we will have the injectable facility coming up, one would have to see that there would be a positive impact from the ramping up of the Limbasi facility, but there would be some bit of drag coming from the injectable. And but of course, we will stay in that 40%-43% range as Lalit mentioned. But once the injectable facility also starts ramping up in a manner that we are looking over the next two to three years, then yes, it could also start having you know higher contributions to the EBITDA margins.

Alok Dalal
Research Analyst in Healthcare, Jeffries

Understood. Okay, sir. Thank you for taking my questions.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Harish Bhatia from Bandhan Mutual Funds. Please go ahead.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Yeah. Thank you. Am I audible?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Yeah. Ankur, just two three quick questions.

Are you calling out the drag from the injectable facility, the new injectable facility?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Not in this year. This year, we will be you know we intend to capitalize the commercialize the injectable plant by end of this quarter. So I don't see any significant impact in this in this quarter.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Okay. And in the Q2 , you had mentioned that the External API sales will grow in low double digits for FY 2025. So do we still hold to that guidance for the full year, External API sales?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes. But see, again, as I say that now you know as I mentioned that now you need to look at from an overall company perspective because there are a lot of markets that we are also able to address through our formulation. So you know the overall pie is the same, whether I address it through an API sales or I address it through Formulation sales.

That's why since the last two quarters or so, we've been also giving that how the API growth has been considering the inter-unit. Because that is a true representation in terms of how we are addressing the addressable market. Some bit happens through the API and some is happening through the finished formulation.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Just to get this more accurate, talking only about the Q3 you mentioned that external sales would have grown by almost 9% to 10% x of the captive sales. So if I do the rough...

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Captive sale, is at 10%.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Sorry, you were saying?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

I was saying it includes the captive sales. So the API growth, including the sales inter-unit sales, constitutes to 10% API sales growth.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Roughly, if I do the calculation, again, if I'm not wrong, that would be incrementally another 12-13 crores for this quarter that would have been captively consumed?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

10% will account for around 20 crores of rupees. Sorry, 240. Yes, 15-17 crores of rupees.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

So the 15-17 crores of sales that are basically getting transferred to the formulations in terms of, let's say, capital sales. I'm just trying to get the numbers sort of more directionally accurate. That is not getting reflected in the formulations as of now, right? Because your 68-crore formulation sales was in Q3 of last year, and it is same as 67 crores in this Q3 . So that incremental 15 crores is getting accounted in which format? Like I understand that transfer pricing might be something that I don't understand, but how should we think about this? Because even Q2 , this was the same case, but the formulation sales were higher. But this quarter, you're saying that 15-17 crores is getting transferred to formulations, so.

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

In fact, you need to see that from the nine-month basis. So in nine-month period, there is a growth of 42% as far as the formulation sales is concerned. The increase in the formulation sales is on account of the API which has been provided from unit one or unit three to the formulation. So that kind of a growth number has come only through the inter-unit sales. So instead of looking at the quarterly number, we need to see the nine-month number.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Okay. And when we are providing the guidance of 20%-25% sales target for the next three to five year period, that is on an external sales basis, right?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

No. So the 20%-25% guidance is at the company level. So you know there we are you know we are not breaking it down into the API or the injectables or the oral solid.

Here we're talking in terms of the overall growth of the company coming at 20%-25%. And you know when we will see, there are certain markets where we will go through the API. There are certain markets where we will address it through the finished formulation. And I think when you have the backward integrated approach, especially for Fermentation APIs, I don't think any company globally has that they are making the Fermentation APIs also and integrating into injectables or oral solid. So you know wherever required, we would use this as an opportunistic approach to cater to the market requirements. So you know that would result into the overall growth of the company, which is the 25% target that we talk about. So you know the breakup will depend upon how the market is panning out.

Lalit Sethi
CFO, Concord Biotech

Okay. So, that means on a reported basis, it's a 20%-25% target on a reported basis.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

On a company level, correct. Correct. On the reporting basis. Yes.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Okay. And are we working on, since we're in the Fermentation side, so anything on the CDMO from a peptide level perspective that we're working on? Anything you would like to share or to early to call out?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Sorry, could you repeat?

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

Anything from the Fermentation side for the CDMO angle, are we working on the peptides space as of now?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So definitely, it is an area of our interest and meets to our our expertise that we have. So so currently, you kow definitely a good area to to evaluate.

Harsh Bhatia
Fund Manger in Equity, Bandhan Mutual Fund

All right. Thank you so much.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, in order to ensure that the management is able to answer questions from all participants, please limit the questions to two per participant. And if you have a follow-up question, please come back in the queue.

The next question is from the line of Alankar Garude from Kotak Institutional Equities. Please go ahead.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. Ankur, one clarification. Can you reconfirm the 25% growth guidance is a CAGR and not a guidance of 25% year-on-year growth in the fifth year, which would be, say, FY 2029?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

That is correct. So this is a CAGR guidance approach, CAGR guidance that we are giving and not a fifth-year 25% growth.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Understood. And the second clarification would be when you say a 80/20 split between API and Formulations, so do you also include the inter-unit sales within the API percentage of 80%?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

No. No. No. In fact, what happens is when the sale is made from the API plant to Formulation plant, that sale is not being reported and it's been adjusted as an inter-unit sale in the consolidated accounts.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Got it.

My question is, so see, if I look at nine months overall sales growth of 10% year-on-year, even if you assume that Q4 is very strong, we won't finish the full year FY 2025 more than low to mid-teens overall sales growth. Now, in this context, how should we look at the journey from, say, that FY 2025 growth rate to the 25% CAGR you mentioned? Will it be a stepwise journey as we had guided in the past, or will there be a strong growth in FY 2026 on this relatively low base, followed by further growth in FY 2027 as the injectable contribution kicks in?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you know I'll give a broad level answer to this. Again, what we spoke about, that you know the journey, we know that how the journey is going to be.

And again, it is based on the capacities and the capabilities that we have and the product mix that we have. So maybe you know I give a rough number, say, on the injectables. So with an asset turnover, considering the asset that we have for the injectables, the asset turnover should give close to around INR 500-600 crores you know based on the asset turnover. And even if I discounted significantly a number to it and say, let's go with a number, you know just now that we're talking, say, INR 300 crores. And if you take it on an INR 1,000-crore base, that turns out on a five-year period to almost 6% growth. So you know again, that 6% is not going to happen on a year-on-year.

This will happen again on a gradual basis because, because as I mentioned, in year one, it is going to be more domestic, followed by penetration into the emerging markets, and then more stabilization and ramping up happening. So you know even if we take on an 19% growth, this takes you to the 24% on a CAGR number. But the other area, which is the oral solid dosage or the new APIs that are that we are building up on the fermentation side and the ones that are there in the pipeline, they would also be contributing. So if you take out that you know when I spoke earlier about 10%, 2%, 3, and 3, taking it to 18, there could be a year wherein maybe one of those may not have contributed. But that doesn't mean that the baseline becomes lower and you build on an 18% growth or a 20% growth on that.

It could be that opportunity, maybe work is going on, but it gets translated into potential business in the next year. So as long as you have the expertise, you have the scale, you have a competitive cost point, you know that that transition from that opportunity to get would happen. Now, it could happen in year one, or it might translate into business opportunity in year two. So that's how we kind of look at in terms of how do we break up the API business, and then what's the contribution coming from the oral solid and the injectable space.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Understood. And one last question with your permission. For us to track the progress of the Limbasi facility, I mean, at least we believe that External API sales should be the right metric to look at. Our External API sales have been relatively weak.

The growth has been relatively weak for us for the last few quarters now. We did speak about clients taking more time than anticipated. But at the same time, we have also seen one of your competitors, Neor Facilities, getting ready. So in that context, can External API sales growth be relatively slow for a few more quarters?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So there are two points to it. First is that you know Concord Formulation Unit was the first one to qualify Limbasi, which also kind of triggered. So much of our sales to the formulation actually happens through unit three, which is the Limbasi. So our procurement is primarily from Limbasi side, while unit one, you know customers have not shifted. We'd like to cater to them through our unit one. So Limbasi facility is not only catering to third parties, but is also catering to unit two, which is our formulation.

In terms of client, as I said, that this is a continuous work that is going on. Many of the customers have shifted, but there are quite a few customers who are in the process and some who have to take that step. Regarding the competition, Alankar, I won't you know comment on that. I think we would just need to see that how the progress happens there and you know if there are any challenges that come due to that. You kow I think at different platforms, we have spoken in terms of how our competitors' capacities are and how they are panning out, but you know I would not want to talk in terms of how they are going ahead.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

One follow-up here, Ankur, would be so within that 35% utilization, which Lalit sir mentioned of Limbasi in this quarter, when you started this facility, got FDA approval for this facility, you would have envisaged a certain captive versus external split. So I mean, at this 35% threshold, I mean, can you give a broad indication as to where we are on this external captive split today versus what our expectation was, say, three years back?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So our expectation was to gain more market share. You know we would have never thought that you know let's target an X market through our formulations. You know the the intent is to to capture market share, preferably through API, but if it doesn't happen, then through the formulation. So you know there are certain opportunities in formulation, like the growth that we have of 42%. You know three years back, we would have not built these kinds of ramp-ups in the formulation.

So you know the idea is to cater the demand, whether to third party or to our in-house, via formulations through the Limbasi facility.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Got it. That's it from my side. Thank you.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Not done this kind of segregation is what I would say.

Alankar Garude
Associate Director, Kotak Institutional Equities

Understood. Thank you.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Parvati Rai from Equentis Wealth Advisory. Please go ahead.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Hello.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Yeah.Thanks for taking my question. So quick on the follow-up, where we just spoke that some of these orders kind of have shifted to Q4. So is there a possibility that it might move beyond Q4? And what I'm trying to ask is, will that growth? T he shifting which has happened from Q3 to Q4, will that move from Q4 to Q1? Is there a possibility of that as well?

I mean, since we are banking so much on a strong quarter, because last quarter also we did say that H2 would be much stronger. So that's where I'm coming from.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you know again, H2, we continue to say would be stronger than H1, but we cannot take away the possibility of anything moving to quarter one. But you know our January and so far our February numbers have been pretty good. But again, you know I can't rule out that possibility. That would always be there. But the way that things are progressing, you know confident of where we are.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Okay. Okay. A quick one. So the other income was quite high during this quarter. So specifically, anything to call out there?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Basically, on account of the investment which we had made, the interest component and the profit on some of the investment which has been in cash.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Okay. Okay. And one quick one.

So last quarter, we did call out that with respect to the Immunosuppressants, some client discussions were on in LATAM and possibly materialize within a couple of months. So any update there?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So I'm not sure on that, but I think if it is for the market that I think probably we have taken that opportunity through the formulations.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Okay. Okay. And last one, a quick one, where you did mention that eight to 10 new products and possibly one or two every year. So two to three products to be launched every year. So if you could give some more color since we are almost on the last quarter now sitting here. So from a next year perspective, what are those two to three products that, and are we on time to launch them as in on track?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yeah. So you know I think we did speak on one of the calls also on this, that you know one product like Voclosporin. It is again for Immunosuppressant for Lupus, and this had a Para IV opportunity. And you know we are we are also working with a Para IV company on Voclosporin. So we have just filed our DMF, and you know so that is there. We have a couple more products which are at very advanced stages of filing also, which I would expect that maybe in February or March, we would we would be filing the DMF for that product also. So you know I would say this year, we would have two products that we would have launched. We have also supplied certain exhibit-backed quantities to that customer, but this has a Para IV opportunity. So the impact of that would happen probably in the next few years.

Until that time, we would see how we can you know take that product to different markets where you know that patent is not applicable. But but yeah, those are the two products. And again, for the other products, we are at quite advanced stages as well.

Parvati Rai
VP Research, Equentis Wealth Advisory

Okay. Great. Thank you.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Thank you.

Operator

The next question is from the line of Harshal Patil from Mirae Asset. Please go ahead.

Harshal Patil
Senior Equity Research Analyst in Institutional Equities, Mirae Asset

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

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Yes.

Harshal Patil
Senior Equity Research Analyst in Institutional Equities, Mirae Asset

Sir, though you've been alluding to, we should be looking at it more from an annual basis or a nine-monthly basis. So this is basically just for my understanding. I just wanted to know, for this quarter, both the API as well as the formulation sales have actually declined on a sequential basis, and we've actually had a gross margin expansion. So I just wanted to understand if I'm missing anything out here.

This is just for my understanding purpose sir.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So you're saying with respect to quarter previous quarter or

Harshal Patil
Senior Equity Research Analyst in Institutional Equities, Mirae Asset

Yeah, with respect to previous quarter, Q3 on Q2.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

On the gross margin level?

Harshal Patil
Senior Equity Research Analyst in Institutional Equities, Mirae Asset

Yeah.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So I think we need to look into this and get back to you separately.

Harshal Patil
Senior Equity Research Analyst in Institutional Equities, Mirae Asset

Sure, sir. Sure. Sure. Sure. Sure. Okay, sir. That was it from my side.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nikunj Mehta from Magma Ventures. Please go ahead.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. And sorry for hopping again on the API point. One of the points which you mentioned in this quarter was because of the delays in order order bookings from the customer side. And typically, that happens towards the end of the calendar year.

So, my question to you was that if I look at the last quarter, the base business also, there was a 20% decline in the API business. So we are initially sitting on a lower base. And if I'm not wrong, last time also during this time, there was a site transfer which our couple of clients were kind of going through, and we were expecting that in the second half, we would see the improvement to kind of come through. So just tallying these two points, we were expecting the second half to be on a third-party sales, stronger growth on the API side, which has not happened. So is it that the end market itself is seeing some sluggishness, or are we losing some market share on the third-party side? Any color? Because you mentioned that the pricing has not moved.

So just wanted to get the sense on that part.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So if you see the impact of the API not being sold to that specific third party, I think we spoke about it more in the last quarter, and the impact is something that we we saw you know that it happened in March. So this was, my sense is it happened from December to to to February. But that being said, I think you know if you see the formulation sales growth that has happened, you know the kind of year-on-year rise that we've had on the formulations, as I mentioned earlier, that you know there are certain markets that we would go through the API, and it's not done through the formulation. So the overall pie is the same. It is just that how we are addressing that pie. Certain markets, we have moved in through the formulation route, and certain markets, we continue to do it through the API.

And you know that's why if you would look at on an overall API sales basis, that comes out to be 10%. And our H2 numbers would continue to be higher than the H1 numbers. That's how we are looking at also. And and you know if the H2 numbers are higher, that means that the quarter four numbers are bound to be higher. And you know even the API growth or formulation growth translating to API, I would see that that number moves to the numbers that we we are looking at.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

Understood. Understood. So you are saying that there has been no market share loss or the end market has not seen any because APIs also are very cyclical. So you don't see any cyclical downturn or any market share loss from our side, which has happened on the API side.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

No, no. Because these are not cyclical APIs.

Nephrology products, you have to take a patient take irrespective of what happens. They have to take it for the rest of their life. So there is no cyclical impact here. And again, when you talk about formulations, maybe injectables could have a cyclical impact. But when the procurement comes for the formulation partners, we don't see that cyclical impact happening. I think the lumpiness that comes to us is primarily in terms of how our formulation partners are targeting the market, what's the kind of inventory they have. So that lumpiness comes to that, not on account that the product itself has a cyclical nature.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

Understood. Understood.

And just from my understanding now, since we have the full year in base in terms of the formulation ramp-up and the sales the third-party sales to that extent, so for typically for a 20% kind of overall growth, which we are kind of looking at, we need our third-party API to grow at 10-odd%. And maybe the formulation run, assuming 43% is there, which stays. So then only we'll be able to reach that 20-odd% number, which we are kind of aiming at, considering even the injectables ramp-up to that extent. So that's the understanding, correct? That's how we should look at that the third-party API sales will have because it's a mature business.

We will be growing in between 10-12-odd %, and the formulation is something where since we are ramping up in terms of capacity, should be north of 40-odd % to make that 20-odd % growth at a company level. Is that a fair understanding?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

I had given in terms of how the breakup of the 18% kind of growth comes in. And and you know there are certain opportunities which we already have to our strong order book position. There are certain opportunities that we are working and anticipate to to convert in this quarter. So you know and that number, whether it gets translated from API or formulations, I won't be able to comment at this time.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

Okay. Okay. No problem. And sir, last last question in terms of volume terms of our API, in terms of volume, what percentage goes to formulation?

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So I don't think we have a number like that, that of the total capacity that we make, how much goes to formulation. But you know I would say that depending upon we have the formulation percentage, and and you know based on that, one can translate it to the overall sales that we have done, maybe on a value basis. You know considering that it is around the gross margins that are there on the API, on the formulations, one can figure out from that what is the value-based contribution coming. On a quantity basis, you know we won't be able to have that information right now.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

Understood, sir. Thank you and all the best.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Like the microphone alert, Marc Maurer, if you talk we are in multi-ton. But if you talk about Everolimus or Tacrolimus, they are at KG level basis. So you know every product would have a different configuration.

So not sure if we'll be able to do that at this point.

Nikunj Mehta
Associate in Listed Equities, Magma Ventures

I understand, sir. Thank you.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

Thank you.

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, due to time constraint, this was the last question. I now hand the conference over to the management for their closing comments.

Ankur Vaid
Joint Managing Director and CEO, Concord Biotech

So thank you, everyone, for joining on our Q3 FY 2025 earnings call. We hope we have been able to address all your queries. For any further information, please get in touch with us or SDA, our investor relations advisor. Thank you once again. Have a good evening.

Amay Chalke
Pharma Research Analyst, JM Financial

Thank you. On behalf of JM Financial, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your line.

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