Indus Towers Limited (NSE:INDUSTOWER)
India flag India · Delayed Price · Currency is INR
410.40
-3.50 (-0.85%)
Apr 30, 2026, 3:30 PM IST
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Q4 25/26

May 1, 2026

Operator

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I am Michelle, the moderator for this conference. Welcome to Indus Towers Limited fourth quarter and full year ended March 31st, 2026 earnings call. For the duration of the presentation, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode. After the presentation, the question and answer session will be conducted for all the participants on this call. In case of a natural disaster, the conference call will be terminated post an announcement.

Present with us on the call today is the senior leadership team of Indus Towers. Before I hand over the call, I must remind you that the overview and discussions today may include certain forward-looking statements that must be viewed in conjunction with the risks that we take. I now hand over the call to our first speaker of the day, Mr. Prachur Sah. Thank you, and over to you, Mr. Sah.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Thank you, Michelle, and a very warm welcome to all participants. Joining me today are my colleagues, Mr. Vikas Poddar, CFO, Mr. Tejinder Kalra, COO, and Mr. Dheeraj Agarwal, Head Investor Relations, on the call. Today, I will talk about our business performance for the quarter and year ending on March 31, 2026. FY 2026 was marked by strong colocation additions and continued tower additions, reflects our strong execution capabilities, exceptional service to our customer, underpins our competitiveness strength to capture a meaningful share of customers' network expansion. Gradual improvement in the financial position of a major customer, aided by the government support, provides visibility of strong business momentum. Overall, FY 2026 was another year of solid progress with strong operational and financial performance.

With the improved financial situation of one of the customers and the potential business momentum, the board has recommended final dividend of INR 14 per share. Before delving deeper into our business performance, I would like to acknowledge the exceptional commitment of our field force, whose ability to overcome geographic and climatic challenges enables consistent delivery of reliable round-the-clock connectivity nationwide.

During the quarter, assigned parts of Northeast experienced severe weather conditions, which significantly disrupted the movement of our on-ground workforce. Despite these challenges, our field teams acted swiftly to restore services, stabilizing connectivity and effectively preventing any major disruption. On the regulatory front, the Ministry of Finance introduced incentive-linked schemes to encourage states to align with the ROW Rules 2024. With an allocation of INR 4,000 crores to states, the scheme is expected to accelerate approvals and ease deployment bottlenecks.

The Green Energy Open Access policy has now been operationalized across all states, reinforcing the sector's transition towards cleaner and more sustainable energy sources. This is expected to help reduce the energy costs for tower costs. Additionally, Central Electricity Authority, CEA, has notified the Installation and Operations of Meters Regulations 2026, mandating smart meters for all customers in areas with communication networks.

In this context, we are actively collaborating with stakeholders at both central and state levels to deploy smart meters across our cities, which will enhance operational efficiency, optimize energy costs, and enable more granular, scalable billing mechanisms. Moving up to update on 5G networks. The installed base of 5G BTSs now stands at close to 531,000. As large-scale deployments stabilize, rising data demand and network densification are giving the need for incremental capacity on existing infrastructure, supporting sustained loading-led revenue growth.

Over time, this is also expected to be complemented by selective expansion of the tower footprint. Backed by strong customer relationships and a robust operating platform, Indus Towers is well-placed to capitalize on these opportunities and support the evolving requirements of next-generation networks. As per the latest TRAI report, the total 5G subscription base in India stood at over 391 million by the end of December 2025, growing by 30 million in Q3 FY 2026. India's data consumption momentum remains robust, driven by the continued migration of users towards 4G and 5G. As per TRAI's latest publications, total data consumption and average monthly data usage per user grew by 29% and 21% year-on-year, respectively.

According to TRAI, 5G usage alone grew 21% quarter-on-quarter, accounting for 40% of the total data traffic in Q3 FY 2026, up from 35% in Q2 FY 2026. Continued growth in data usage is encouraging operators to enhance capacity across existing infrastructure. With a pan-India presence, with expansive tower portfolio and a strong execution track record, Indus Towers remains well-positioned to partner with customers in meeting their evolving network requirements. In terms of operational performance, we registered strong colocation additions during the quarter, driven by pickup by the customers' network expansion and our ability to capture a major share of the customer sellouts.

We added 4,892 macro towers and 6,192 corresponding colocations during the quarter, translating into a year-on-year growth of 6.5%, 6.1%- 5.6% in tower and colocation base, respectively. As a result, total macro tower and colocation stood at around 264,500 and 428,000, respectively. On a full year basis, tower and colocation additions were around 15,200 and 22,500, respectively. Our industry-leading tenancy ratio was stable at 1.62%. Our colocations of linear towers stood at more than 14,000. Including linear towers, our portfolio stood at approximately 442,000 at the end of the year. I will now provide an update on our key KPIs. We remain committed to reducing diesel consumption by transitioning to cleaner sources of energy. We added close to 2,500 sites with solar access during the quarter, taking the overall sites to about 42,400.

Diesel consumption on our sites reduced by about 7% year-on-year in Q4 FY 2026. This is despite 6% year-on-year increase in co-locations and continued equipment loading on the sites. Navigating extreme weather conditions, the dedication and perseverance of our teams on the ground helped us deliver an industry-best uptime of 99.977% in Q4 FY 2026. Let me now move to our strategic pillars: market share, cost efficiency, network uptime and sustainability.

On market share, we continue to strengthen our position. We remain preferred partner for our key customers that enables us to capture a significant share of the network rollout. Network expansion was robust across major customers, allowing us to improve our market share in new deployments. Our ability to deliver reliable service at competitive rates, supported by strong execution and stringent quality standards, has been central to this performance.

Targeted technical interventions and customized product offerings have further contributed to cost optimization and improvement in overall delivery. In our non-tower segment, we achieved leadership position in the IBS space in Q4. Our DAS business also saw a pickup with increased deployments in metros, tunnels, and highways. With a focus on build-to-suit solutions and continued technological advancement, this segment is well-positioned for further growth. Cost discipline and operational excellence are embedded in our ways of working, with a continued focus on improving efficiency, enhancing predictability, and structurally resetting our cost base.

We made targeted interventions across tower tendering, civil and electrical works, supply chain-led cost optimization, and partner scope rationalization, while ensuring site safety and service reliability. Energy efficiency is a central driver of our cost reduction efforts. During the year, we scaled deployment of energy efficient solutions, including broader solar integration and accelerated deployment of advanced battery technologies.

Over the last two years, as mentioned earlier, we have ramped up our solar deployment and provided solar access to about 28,000 sites during this period. We have also progressively increased the share of lithium-ion batteries across our portfolio. These initiatives are structurally reducing diesel dependency, improving uptime, and supporting a more resilient and lower cost energy framework.

We also continue to strengthen our approach towards CapEx management by enhancing cost discipline, standardizing tower costs, and tightening execution controls across tower deployments. Thirdly, service reliability remains a core priority with continued focus on maintaining industry-leading standards across our operations. We are leveraging advanced digital tools and data platforms to enhance service delivery by the way of enabling faster issue resolution, implementing a more proactive data-driven approach to address customers' needs. FY 2026 marks a step up in our digital and AI-led transformation.

For example, over 85% of our sites are now digitally connected, covering key systems such as fuel sensors, backhaul monitoring, smart meters, and equipment, among others. The deployment of AI and machine learning capabilities have enabled proactive identification of outages, automated root cause analysis, and improved resolution effectiveness. Initiatives such as AI-based voice agents for technician calling and computer vision-led validation of preventive maintenance activities have enhanced field productivity, standardization, and compliance, while delivering high levels of accuracy. Energy management, as mentioned earlier, remains an important area to focus with the implementation of an end-to-end automated fuel management platform enabling real-time planning of diesel usage, logistics optimization, and field validation. These interventions are improving cost efficiency and operational control.

In parallel, we have progressed our digital twin journey through site service image platform, enabling planning teams with a unified view of site to optimize asset utilization and improve civil and electrical planning. We are progressing well on our ESG agenda as well. During the year, we undertook a double materiality assessment and a comprehensive climate risk assessment across our operations, enhancing our understanding of physical and transition risks and embedding resilience into long-term planning. Following the approval of our near-term and net zero targets by Science Based Targets initiative, SBTi, we have formulated a decarbonization roadmap to guide progress towards these commitments. On the workplace, gender diversity improved from 16.2% in FY 2025 to 18.3% in FY 2026. During the year, we launched our Digital Leap program to advance digital and AI capabilities across the organization.

We also launched Prerna, a women-led mentoring program to inspire and uplift women employees. We undertook campaigns and targeted training focused on road safety and technicians working at heights. In CSR, as part of our flagship program, Saksham, in association with the Bharti Airtel Foundation, we have supported over 30 Satya Bharti schools and 1,100 government schools across multiple states and union territories under the Quality Support Program. Additionally, our digital transformation van has touched over 646,000 lives in FY 2026. As part of our other flagship program, Pragati, we conducted disaster relief measures across the nation, positively impacting close to 3,000 households. Through these programs, we managed to touch around 33 million lives by end of FY 2026. On the governance front, we maintain high levels of governance, integrity and transparency.

To drive ESG adoption across our sub-value chain, we instituted the ESG Pathfinders Awards with the objective of recognizing who have demonstrated meaningful commitment towards advancing sustainability initiatives. Our CSR efforts throughout the year were recognized by multiple bodies as the company was awarded the Mahatma Award for CSR excellence and recognized for sustainable and responsible business amongst the others. I will now provide a brief update on our progress on Africa expansion.

We are making steady progress on our Africa foray, with key operational and structural building blocks largely in place across our target markets. In Zambia, we have secured the operating license and are now advancing on ground execution. In Uganda and Nigeria, we are in the last stages of getting regulatory approvals. Commercial frameworks are largely established with the primary customer, and initial orders are in place.

In parallel, we have made good progress in setting up supply chain ecosystem and strengthening operational readiness, positioning us well for efficient and scalable deployment. We expect the rollouts will begin soon and will ramp up progressively as approvals come through. Overall, our strategy in Africa remains, it's a long-term strategy and remains to create differentiation through better cost per tower, delivering better SLA uptime, and higher energy efficiency. By doing this and remaining competitive commercially in line with the local market, we believe in long-term to be a major player in Africa tower business. Geopolitical developments due to the war in West Asia have created near-term supply-side disruptions, impacting tower availability, deployment timelines, and cost structures, primarily through energy supply constraints and input cost inflation.

We continue to monitor the situation closely. Mitigating actions are being taken in line with the evolving geopolitical and market conditions. With regards to rewarding the shareholders, we are pleased to announce that the board has recommended a final dividend of INR 14 per share, reflecting our commitment towards returning cash to shareholders. As was informed earlier, the board considered and decided to resume shareholder payouts while remaining aligned with a disciplined capital allocation approach and ongoing investment priorities. The endeavor would be to follow a steady and progressive distribution. I would now request Vikas to take you through our financial performance for the quarter and year ending March 31, 2026. I look forward to your questions. Over to you, Vikas. Thank you.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you, Prachur. Good afternoon, everyone. I'm pleased to present our financial results for the quarter and year ending 31st March 2026. FY 2026 saw strong co-location additions supported by continued customer network expansion. Sustained business momentum and positive developments at our customer's end underpinned our financial performance. In terms of financial performance for quarter four, FY 2026, total revenues were at INR 81 billion, growing by 4.8% year-on-year. Core revenues from rentals stood at INR 53.1 billion, up 5.4% year-on-year, driven by healthy co-location additions. Please note that quarter four of last year had one-time reconciliation benefits. I had explained in quarter four, FY 2025 earnings call that the benefits added about 2.1 percentage point to the sequential growth in core revenues.

With regard to quarter four, FY 2026, our reported gross revenues were 0.6% lower quarter-on-quarter due to lower energy revenue, which is an outcome of both our cost optimization and seasonality, driven reduction in the energy cost. Core revenues increased by 0.6% quarter-on-quarter. Impact of one-time settlement in quarter four and network optimization by our customers weighed on the overall growth in revenue. On profitability, reported EBITDA was at INR 44.6 billion, growing by 1.6% year-on-year and declining 1% quarter-on-quarter. The EBITDA margin was lower by 1.8 percentage point year-on-year and 0.2 percentage point quarter-on-quarter at 55.1% for quarter four, FY 2026.

I would like to remind you that quarter four, FY 2025 included write-backs of approximately INR 2.3 billion related to collection of overdue receivables from a major customer. Quarter four last year also included accounting impact of towers acquired from Airtel amounting to INR 1.7 billion towards operating expenses and depreciation. Adjusted for the write-back and accounting impact, EBITDA was up 4.5% year-on-year. The sequential decline in EBITDA was partially due to higher network costs, which increased primarily due to higher maintenance activities on our aging and growing tower portfolio. Our energy margins were at negative 3.6% in quarter four, FY 2026, compared to - 5.2% in the same period last year. We continue to undertake cost optimization initiatives, particularly around energy management.

This includes structural reduction in diesel dependence through increased adoption of renewable energy solutions, battery augmentation, and continued focus on our operation efficiencies. These efforts are complemented by technology-led monitoring and disciplined execution, enabling a more predictable and efficient energy cost profile. Our profit after tax grew by 0.8% year-on-year and 0.9% quarter-on-quarter to INR 17.9 billion. The moderate year-on-year growth is a result of higher base due to one-time reconciliation benefits in quarter four last year, as I had explained earlier. Moving on to full year performance for FY 2026. Our reported gross revenues stood at INR 325 billion, growing by 7.9% year-on-year, while core revenues were up 9% year-on-year to INR 209 billion.

Reported EBITDA was INR 180 billion, down 13.8% year-on-year, and profit after tax stood at INR 71.4 billion, a decrease of 28.1% year-on-year. Finally, note that the FY 2025 included a substantial write back of INR 51 billion relating to collection of overdue receivables from a major customer. On a normalized basis, excluding one-offs, EBITDA and PAT grew by 11.4% and 13% respectively. Our return ratios remained largely stable, with reported pre-tax return on capital employed and post-tax return on equity standing at 20.2% and 19.8% respectively on a trailing 12-month basis. We had significant free cash flow generation of INR 11.1 billion in quarter four and INR 37.6 billion in full year FY 2026.

Subsequently, the board has recommended final dividend of INR 14 per share, reflecting improved visibility on cash flows and our commitment to reward shareholders. To conclude, FY 2026 reflects strong financial performance underpinned by healthy colocation additions and disciplined execution, and our ability to capture a major share of roll-outs by our key customers. Ongoing demand momentum and consistent collections, along with our focus on cost optimization and operational efficiencies, provide strong visibility into future cash generation. With this, I will now hand it back to the moderator to open the floor for questions. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you very much, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer interactive session for all the participants who are connected to audio conference service from Chorus. Due to time constraints, we would request if you could limit the number of questions to two to enable more participation. Management will take only two questions per participant to ensure maximum participation. Participants who wish to ask questions may please press star and one on their touchtone enabled telephone keypad. On pressing star and one, participants will get a chance to present their questions on first-in line basis. To ask a question, participants, you may please press star and one now. The first question is from the line of Rishabh from HSBC. Please go ahead.

Rishabh Chugh
Analyst, HSBC

Yeah. Hi. Thanks for the opportunity and congrats to management for dividend distribution. We have paid around 100% of this year's free cash flow. How should we think about the additional free cash flow we had received or generated last year, which was on account of reversal of dues from VI. If I'm not mistaken, they were also supposed to be made available for distribution. Secondly, I would like to understand more about the CapEx going forward. Understand the green CapEx company is making and higher maintenance required on the aging portfolio. If you can have some guidance over the next couple of years, how should be the CapEx spend as it directly impacts the free cash flow and dividends?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Sure. Maybe I'll answer the first part, then you can take up the CapEx one, Vikas. The board evaluated the FCF situation and the debt levels that we want to maintain and decided accordingly to distribute the FCF of FY 2026. As I mentioned, the endeavor will remain to follow steady and progressive distribution going forward. That's the thinking behind the dividend. Maybe, Vikas, you can touch base on the CapEx one.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah. Thanks for the question, Rishabh. I think on the CapEx, just to give you the big picture, and as we have also explained earlier, 70% of the CapEx that we spend is growth oriented, which basically leads to growth in our revenue and bottom line. And just about 25% is basically something that goes towards replacement, maintenance, and so on. I think, as long as there is growth and there is, basically, you know, tower build order, et cetera, I think the CapEx will sort of, you know, be steered towards that.

As far as the future guidance is concerned, I think we still have a very healthy order book. While we don't give any sort of forward-looking numbers, broadly speaking, I think, we are sort of looking at a very good order book, and we continue to see, you know, growth-oriented CapEx going forward.

Rishabh Chugh
Analyst, HSBC

Just couple of follow-up. On the free cash flow and debt that you had mentioned, like ex these liabilities, we are sitting on net cash, right? Is there anything that the management is foreseeing on major investment area so that we want to maintain our debt levels? You have mentioned the order book remains healthy. Does this order book includes expansion in Africa as well, or is it just India?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I think what Vikas Poddar is referring is primarily to the order book of India. As I mentioned in my commentary, I think the Africa expansion is just starting. It's a long-term strategy, the portion of CapEx for Africa is not going to be that significant to start with. I think its order book that he's referring to is primarily on the India side. As far as the, you know, debt and FCF situation is concerned, I think keeping capital allocation in mind and all the growth opportunities coming up, that's where the board decision came to distribute the FCF for FY 2026.

Rishabh Chugh
Analyst, HSBC

Okay. I'll go back to the queue. Thank you.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sachin Salgaonkar from Bank of America. Please go ahead.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

Hi. Thank you for the opportunity. I have two questions. First question, Vikas, I just wanted to clarify on the dividend policy. While Prachur did mention on steady and progressive distribution, is there a dividend policy or is it more ad hoc, where every year the board will consider based on the cash flows and plan and give dividend? If there is a dividend policy, then can you clarify what is the dividend policy?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah, sure, Sachin. The dividend policy is first of all available on our website. Broadly, what it says is the company and the board will consider distribution of the free cash flow of the company at the year-end, subject to the working capital requirements of the company and subject to a few other conditions. Based on that, even for this year, the free cash flow of the company, the financial results, et cetera, was presented and the board decided to distribute the full cash generation of this year as a dividend, which is what is reflected in the INR 14.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

No minimum day payout kind of an amount which is out there. Every year the board will consider that.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

That's right. That's right.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

Got it. Second question. One of your major customer contract has expired, and from what we understand, that customer has not renewed the contract. Can you give some color and updates here? If the customer decides not to renew contract, then what kind of impact would we see?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Sachin, first of all, I think there is, we have contracts for each tower, right? I think there is no broad contract expiry. I think there are certain tenancies which fall under that bucket. It's not the entire portfolio. Secondly, I think if you look from our portfolio point of view, over the last three, four years, we have built quite a bit of resiliency by deploying large scale towers and co-location.

That portfolio is actually The expired portfolio is actually very small portion of the entire portfolio. While we continue to work with the customer to see how we can continue to provide the stickiness by providing high levels of service. Over the last three, four years and continuously, what we are doing, we are trying to mitigate any such risk that is there, right? We'll keep the situation, we'll keep monitoring the situation and keep growing the portfolio across other customers as well.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

Got it. You know, when I look at your tenancy ratio for last three, four years, it has come down and continues to come down. Directionally, that's a trajectory we should think about going ahead as well, right?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I would not give you an outlook in that format because last few years was determined by deploying tenancies, towers for one major customer. As the second customer comes on board and sharing and giving a co-location on existing tower is beneficial for both customer and us in terms of what the cost efficiency brings. As the second customer comes and get their network expansion going, I would not say the trend will continue in that direction. However, it is depending on the pace on how the second customer comes on board.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Sorry, I'll just add, Sachin, I think if you look at the trend for the last five or six quarters, we have been very stable, which basically means, you know, there is basically more tenancy or more co-location addition than the tower additions, right? I think, the stability is a good thing. Going forward, as the second customer comes on board, we might actually see some improvement also.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

Lastly, one small follow-up out there. You did mention on Africa, you know, you're in talks with primary customer. Beyond the primary customer, are you in talks with some incremental customers out there? As of now the focus is only on one customer out there?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No. I think, Sachin, we are talking to other customers as well. As I said, I've said in the previous call as well, is our long-term strategy is to get started and establish ourselves with the anchor customer. I think as we'll be present in the market, of course, if we are offering better competitive prices, sorry, cost, SLA and efficiency, the second customer would also be attracted to come towards us. I think the discussions are far more advanced with the anchor customer, and the other customers are being engaged depending on where we are getting the set up done.

Sachin Salgaonkar
Analyst, Bank of America

Got it. Thank you and all the best.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Vivekananda Subramanian from Ambit Private Limited. Please go ahead.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Yeah, thank you for the opportunity. If I look at the rental income growth adjusted for some of the one-offs, my inference is that the revenue growth is around 4.7% year-on-year. Could you help us understand the key drivers of this in terms of, let's say the escalation, revenue increase contribution from escalation, then new towers and tenancies and negative effect of discounts, if any?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

I'll take that, Vivekananda. I think, see, I guess you're referring to the growth, full year growth of 9% that we've reported. Am I right? Service revenue.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

I was referring to the 4Q FY 2026 rental income, and I just took out some of the one-offs that were there in the base period, and also the inorganic on the tower purchases that you had done. I stripped that revenue out as well from both periods to arrive at 4.7%.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Well, I think I'll just maybe explain the number that we have reported. I don't know how the 4.7% is being calculated. Maybe we can take that offline. For the quarter, we have reported service revenue year-on-year growth of 5.3%. As you can see, that's largely driven by the colocation growth. If you look at our colocation numbers year-on-year, you would see a growth of 5.6%.

The other growth drivers are typically the annual escalations that we have on our sites as and when they complete the anniversary. Also bear in mind, like I explained in my narrative, there was a one-time settlement benefit in the same quarter of last year that added 2.1 percentage point to our growth. Broadly, I mean, if you know, adjust for that, then we are closer to 7% growth in the quarter, year-on-year, 7%, 7.5%.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Right. But then, the 7.5% growth is also because you acquired towers from Airtel at the end of the quarter, right? Last year.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yes

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

In the first quarter now.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

There was an inorganic element in that. Yeah, that's right.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Yeah. the organic growth will be close to 5% still, right?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah, 5.5% . That's right. That's right.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Okay. Just to drill further on this, the 5.5% growth, if I look at it against the backdrop of colocation growth of 5.6%, annual escalation of 2.5%, why is the growth so muted compared to 10%, 6% growth prior periods?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Like I explained, there was also, just like we had a reconciliation, one-time settlement benefit in the same quarter of last year, this year, we had some impact. As a result, the growth was also slightly muted because of that, and it is not fully reflecting the growth in the footprint.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Fair enough. Understood. And your prognosis in terms of the order book visibility and organic growth adjusted for some of these factors, how should we think about it, let's say for FY 2027 or 2028, if you have any color on that?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Vivekananda Subramanian, I think, I would hesitate in giving numbers because, as you know, we really don't give any forward-looking numbers. Broadly, I think, in terms of the rollout momentum and all, of course, the, while I mentioned that the order book is healthy, but at the same time, we need to also take into consideration the fact that, there is a, you know, a supply chain disruption that, we are facing, because we are in the middle of a geopolitical situation. I think Prachur can elaborate that maybe later on. You know, we need to be a bit cautious when we talk about forward-looking views.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I think as Vikas was mentioning, there is a strong order book looking ahead as well for the next few quarters. However, I think given the situation, and there is a little bit of a tightness in the market in terms of tower supplies, because that is dependent on LPG availability. Having said that, we have managed to mitigate some of those things by planning, by supply chain, working with the partners, et cetera. Hence, looking forward, there are some factors which are not, you know, entirely predictable, but at the basis of it, the order books look strong. Whatever supply chain disruptions happen, we are putting efforts to mitigate them and continue to deploy towers to meet the order book.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Okay, great. My last question is on the dividend. At the time of the board resolution that you had sought to acquire towers from Airtel, you had mentioned that the funding of those towers will happen using debt. Also the commentary in prior periods had suggested that there will be some element of distribution of fiscal 2025 cash flow also, cash accruals also, which the management perhaps at a certain point of time, maybe last year the management had taken a view that it was in the best interest of conservatism to hold on to that cash. Why has that cash not been released and only the cash flow generated for FY 2026 been decided to earmark as dividends?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Honestly speaking, I don't think the board compartmentalized the cash flows in that category. I think what the board did is they evaluated the full FCF, looked at the debt levels that we want to maintain, and decided to distribute the FCF by 2026. As I said earlier, the board is committed to distribute the FCF to the shareholders, and we try to maintain the steady and progressive distribution going forward. Anything else, Vivekananda Subramanian?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

No, I think it's a very holistic view one needs to take. I mean, see, we are in a very dynamic situation, right? Basically, given the current situation, the current debt levels, et cetera, I think, the board has fully considered all aspects and, finally decided to distribute, you know, dividends to the extent of about INR 37 billion, INR 38 billion.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Mm-hmm.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Which, whichever way you look at it, you just can't compartmentalize all these things within, let's say, how much is pertaining to that particular transaction and how much is from this year's cash and so on. Broadly, how we are looking at it is, the cash flow for full year has been fully distributed.

Vivekananda Subramanian
Analyst, Ambit Private Limited

Okay, got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Sanjesh Jain from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Thanks. Thanks for the opportunity. I have a few of them. First, on the maintenance part which you spoke, which has led to a higher cost, Vikas, in your opening remark. Just wanted to understand, was this a one-time exercise or you think because the towers have been aging now, this will be an annual phenomenon for us and hence the cost base has got reset?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No, Sanjesh, I don't think that is the case. If you look at typically historically as well, I mean, Q4 is typically marked by two things. One is, you know, this is the Q3 and Q4 are the quarters where we have a clear weather. So lot of the operational and tower maintenance activities are scheduled in this part of the quarter because the weather supports it. Secondly, in Q4 as well, what we are doing is we are preparing for the coming season. I think typically the network maintenance activities are lopsided towards Q3 and Q4.

If you remember in Q1 call itself, what we have done is we have taken a conscious effort to spend, you know, certain part of cost on improving the tower, doing more tower maintenance strengthening activities as the portfolio is at a certain age. It is not a structural cost that is gonna permanently increase. There are some parts which are routine activities that is going to be continuously done with the rigor of making sure it is done. I don't think we. I would say the cost base is fundamentally reset. I think our cost per tower still remains, you know, in line. Actually, if you look at the holistic picture from the last three, four years, our cost per tower has actually gone down. There are certain elements of cost, on absolute cost, that show up. Just look at the tower count and look at the cost with that mirror.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Sanjesh, I just want to add one thing for perspective. I mean, while you are looking at a three-month, but what is also important is to look at the full year, right? Sometimes you have basically activities skewed towards a particular quarter. From a full year perspective, what you will see is the tower cost or maintenance cost increase is not even reflecting the volume increase because we are offsetting a lot of these increases, either due to volume or aging portfolio, et cetera, through the various efficiency initiatives that we are driving.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Because it's more like a seasonality, it sounds like a seasonality rather than a maintenance-

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

In a way, you could say seasonality because, Sanjesh, operations is never binary in that sense. I think seasonality, portfolio maintenance, I think all this come together, and that's what Vikas is saying. You have to look at the full year. You have to look at the volume, of towers being added and look at the cost from that perspective.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Clear. Clear. Just second question on the single-tenancy towers. The assumption was that as Vodafone scales up, the single-tenancy towers will come down. We don't have data for this quarter, but if I analyze the data for Q3, it appears that we have added more single-tenancy tower, not just accommodating Bharti, but also accommodating Vodafone. Will this trend continues, and what is driving additional tenancy addition for Vodafone? I thought we have covered well pan-India during the Bharti rollout.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I'm not very clear on the question. Let me try to answer. At the end of the day, both in Q3 and Q4, if I'm not wrong, correct me if I'm wrong, our co-location additions have been higher than the tower additions. Fundamentally, there are single-tenancy towers that are getting converted to multi-tenant towers. That is the first point. Secondly, for any customer to expand, they have their own network expansion strategy. While bulk may come through second as a co-location addition, there will be some single-tenant towers as well being added. Any customer when expands look at both. The first priority is to come as a second tenant and then, the network requirements or their network design will be based on the addition of a tower, whether it's a single-tenant or a multi-tenant.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Yeah.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I would leave it that, at. Yeah.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

No, no. Just let me probably clarify on that question. Last quarter, we added 3,800 new towers. Bharti site count went up by 1,150, 1,200. That means we added around 2,000 more towers in previous quarter than what Bharti has added, which I would attribute it to Vodafone, which was appear to be quite a large number from a fresh tower addition for Vodafone. The base assumption was that considering both have an 1,800 MHz frequency RF planning. A lot will overlap each other's network, but it appears that we will require to add more tower when Vodafone-

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Mm-hmm.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

rollout starts.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Sanjesh, I think there is a correction. I think the assumption that every single tower, that the difference that you mentioned between 1,100 and 3,000 is coming from the other customer, I think there is some gap to that because there are certain towers we also add for either customer. While they may not see a net addition in their portfolio, it is typically at the end of the tenure, they move certain towers from other incumbents to Indus or the other way, right? I think it is not a direct subtraction that total Indus minus one customer is equal to the other customer. I think there is a big element of movement of tower from one tower company to the other, which is not a net addition for a customer.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

No, that's fair enough. Got the point. Just one last question on Africa. When should we expect operations to start? Probably six months down the line will be a fair assumption?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

As I mentioned earlier, I think, we are at a very close stage of starting our first tower deployment in Zambia. I think six months is more than a fair estimate. I think it's probably earlier than that. We are, we've got the license and we are on the ground now. Yes, we are looking to put our first tower very soon.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Got it. Got it. We have set up north and all, right, in Africa? We will do it through India?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I think we will find a solution. I think we will have to depend whether we manage from here or whether we do it locally. I think we'll have to see. Right. I think, as of now, the focus is to deploy the towers.

Sanjesh Jain
Analyst, ICICI Securities

Got it. Got it. Thanks, Prachur. Thanks, Vikas, for all those answers, and best of luck for the coming quarters.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you. Thank you, Sanjesh.

Operator

Thank you. A reminder to all the participants that you may please press star and one to ask questions at this time. We'll take the next question from the line of Arun Prasath from Avendus Capital. Please go ahead.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Thanks for the opportunity. Vikas and Prachur, my question once again, going to the sequential drop in the EBITDA that we have said. Okay, if I, if I put it on a per tower basis, how we are looking at is that there is a drop in EBITDA per tower on a sequential basis, roughly around INR 1,500 per tower per month. Not everything is coming from the same maintenance, 'cause again, on a per tower basis, on a reported basis, it is just contributing 30 percentage of the decreases coming from the maintenance. It seems large part of the EBITDA per tower decrease on a sequential basis is coming from the revenue per tower or sharing revenue per tower. Can you help us reconcile this difference?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Arun, I think, you know, there's more than one reason for this. Of course there is, like I explained, there is some one-off sitting in the revenue, which is because of the settlements that have happened in quarter four. That's impacting the top line as well as the EBITDA. Apart from that, if you see the other lines, I think, even the network maintenance, as we were explaining, is growing 5.6% quarter-on-quarter, which is largely driven by the activities, maintenance activities, et cetera, that we undertook in quarter four. That has impacted. Apart from that, if you look at the other expenses, we had some one-off there also.

That is also basically showing a big quarter-on-quarter increase because of the one-off benefits sitting in the previous quarter. There are basically two, three reasons why EBITDA sequential performance in quarter four has been slightly worse off than the previous quarter. Broadly, I mean, we are still talking about a 55% EBITDA margin, which is quite healthy. From a full year perspective, I think we are pretty much in line with our expectation of 55%+ sort of an EBITDA level.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Okay. The one-offs that you are saying, you are saying that is there in the Q3 or. On a revenue side, you are saying that the negative one-off is there on the revenue only on the Q4, but on the cost side.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

You are saying that, one-off is there in the Q3 costs.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

That's right. There is a positive one-off in Q3, and there is a negative one-off in Q4. Somewhere the impact of that is getting more pronounced in the EBITDA.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Okay. Okay, okay, no problem. I'll take this offline separately. My second question, again, I don't want to look at it from the Q4 basis, but if I look at from the second half basis, I see two trends. One is that our exits in the second half is twice that of our usual annual run rate. I'm talking about second half of 2026. Second, our energy margins in second half is again better than either the first or the second half in the previous year. This is something that is, you know, how should we look at this?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah. I think, see, I'll answer both of them one by one operationally, and then you can comment on the numbers. See, as far as the exits are concerned or the churn is concerned, I think it is, I mean, most of these churns are BAU, business as usual kind of a churn. I think typically, if you look at, they typically get replaced by a relocation tenancy, and it is typically done because of safety reasons or landlord renewal. The number is not that concerning for us because typically these are offset by a relocation site that we make, right? From a net tenancy point of view, there is no loss, right? This is an operational churn that we, in a large portfolio like this, we expect this to happen.

On the energy margin, you know, we have discussed this earlier as well. H2 seasonally is much better than H1. By default, the operating cost or the impacts or the variations that we see are lower in the second half than in first half. If you look historically H2 is primarily driven by a seasonal improvement, and H1 is primarily impacted by a seasonal impact so I think unless.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah. No, I don't think there's anything major, something different that I have to say. I think what is very important to bear in mind is H1 has clearly more weather-related impacts and weather disruptions in our operation. H2 is generally better from that perspective, and hence most of the maintenance and safety activities that we undertake are more skewed towards H2, which basically means as and when we build new towers and try to relocate from unsafe towers and so on, you see more exits in H2 than H1, right? There's always a seasonality angle in our business.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Energy margins in H2 is even lower than the last year's H2. That is like to like comparison, right? How do we explain that?

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

See, energy margin, Arun, I would suggest, see, one is energy margin is a function of revenue and cost and how we settle the differences, right? The seasonality will clearly show you the cost trend, and you will see the cost trend is better in H2 versus H1. The margin trend is a function of when you are settling things, and if you are settling things more in H2, then to that extent, I think, you know, it is a function of how things are getting settled or the timing of settlement, right? So I would suggest don't read too much into the margin. When it comes to margin, you know, timing-wise, things could vary. Look at full year. When it comes to cost, look at seasonality.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah, I think look at the margin on a year-on-year basis. If I'm not wrong, I think the margin this year is same or even slightly better than last year. I think look at a full year from an energy margin perspective.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

While we are on this energy margin topic, just hypothetically, if the diesel price or grid electricity price has to go up, our margins on a absolute margins, as a percentage, will it remain same and hence our absolute negative margin and energy will go up? The other way around, the negative energy margin remains same, but as a percentage it will reduce.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

See, at the end of the day, the change in-

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Price

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

When it happens as a price, it impacts revenue and cost, right? It impacts both revenue and cost on almost a similar basis. From a reconciliation perspective, I think the percentage may change because there will be some sort of an absolute difference, but it will not be a material change from a percentage margin point of view. Of course, the cost and revenue will change accordingly.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

That, so my understanding is if percentage remains same, then increase in price will further push down.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

I would not say exactly same.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Yeah.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah, I would not say exactly the same. I think there will be an impact on the margin itself, but the larger impact will be seen on the absolute revenue and absolute cost.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Okay, okay. One final accounting clarification. I think earlier we were talking about the annual escalation rate reflecting as part of the revenue growth. My understanding is the revenue equalization standards would ensure that escalation should not be contributing to the, at least on an annual revenue growth, right? On a particular basis.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Yeah. This is Arun, there are a lot of nuances in this in terms of the lease accounting. I would suggest we take this offline. We can take you through the workings offline.

Arun Prasath
Analyst, Avendus Capital

Okay. Understood. Yes. Thank you very much.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Saurabh Handa from Citigroup. Please go ahead.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

Thank you for the opportunity. These are actually both follow-ups to previous questions. Firstly, just back on the question of your tower additions, say, which have averaged close to around 4,000 odd over the last three quarters, and one of your large customers has been adding 1,500, 2,000. You said the difference could be partly because of new tower additions for other customers, as well as some potential churn that happens. Would one of these two factors have a higher bearing than the other? Just trying to get a sense of which one could be a bigger contributor.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No, I would not put a number because it varies by quarter. At the end of the day, it's a net tenancy addition to Indus, so it does impact the revenue positively. That is the main takeaway. The split is not a fixed number I'd say.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

Okay. Where I was coming from is because obviously there's a lot of this, you know, chatter about renewals for one of your, the third customer, and if that could lead to churn for you. The point I was trying to add is there a potential offsetting factor? Do these cancel each other? I mean, I know you said that there are a lot of considerations if a tenant chooses to move out of, to move from one tower core to the other. I was just trying to get some more granularity on that.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

See, I If I was you, I would primarily look at the net additions of the tower portfolio tenancies. I think that's where churn gets offset by relocation. It's not a net tenancy addition, but it's not a net loss. However, if we get a tower from somebody else where the current operator is operating with someone else and moves to Indus, that's a net addition to Indus. I would look at the overall net addition of towers and tenancies to Indus to make your own trends.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

This is where you're saying that so far the order book out pipeline is quite all right for the coming.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

... few quarters. Okay, thank you. My second question was on the energy margins. Now, with the 50% increase in bulk diesel prices, how does that impact your energy costs? Is there a lead lag impact where maybe it hits you first and then you pass it on? If you can just, you know, provide some sort of color on this.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No, there is no lag. I think we bill actually on actual. As I mentioned, I was explaining earlier, the same question was earlier, that once the retail pricing, if the retail pricing has an impact, it will impact both our revenue and cost on an equal basis. The net margin may have a slight impact towards negative side, but the major impact comes on the revenue and cost on equal basis, right? There is no lag. We bill as it actually happens.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

This actually did happen in March because bulk diesel prices were increased quite sharply.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

That was industrial. No, that was industrial diesel price. It was not the retail, which we buy retail diesel.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

Oh, I was under the impression that tower companies use bulk diesel. That's not the case, is it?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No, no. No, no.

Saurabh Handa
Analyst, Citigroup

Okay, great. Thank you for the clarification. Thank you.

Vikas Poddar
CFO, Indus Towers

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll take the last question for today, which is from the line of Vedant Sada from Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited. Please go ahead.

Vedant Sada
Analyst, Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited

Thank you for the opportunity. Am I audible, sir?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah, yeah.

Operator

Yes.

Vedant Sada
Analyst, Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited

Just to clarify on our renewals, since your contracts are structured tower-wise or site-wise, as you said, with respect to Reliance Jio for the tower-wise contracts that have expired, has there been any non-renewals or site exits from Jio?

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

No, I mean, for all the customers, we always have a portfolio which are non-renewed, and we work with them, and they get renewed. Yes, even for Jio, there are certain tenancies that have expired, which are still operating and some churn have happened which we report. I think it's not one or the other way. It's not that all the non-renewed have expired or have been churned. That's not the case. In fact, very minor percentages have been churned.

Vedant Sada
Analyst, Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited

Okay. The contracts which may have renewals happened, so that are at the same commercial terms as earlier contracts. No incremental discount or price concession we have given to them.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Yeah, if the renewal doesn't happen, I think we continue operating the same way.

Vedant Sada
Analyst, Nirmal Bang Securities Private Limited

That's helpful. Thank you so much.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you, sir. At this moment, I would like to hand over the call proceedings to Mr. Prachur Sah for final remarks. Thank you and over to you, sir.

Prachur Sah
Managing Director and CEO, Indus Towers

To conclude, FY 2026 reflects consistent execution across our strategic priorities, with our core business continuing to demonstrate resilience and steady growth, supported by healthy colocation additions and sustained customer network expansion. Our plan to expand into Africa is a testament to our agile approach to growth, which will also be enabled by our investments in digital and AI-led capabilities. Given our proven execution track record, focus on efficiency and long-term capital discipline, we remain confident in our ability to deliver sustainable growth and create long-term value for all our stakeholders. Thank you and have a good day.

Operator

Thank you, members of the management. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes the conference call. You may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

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