Mallcom (India) Ltd
Q2 FY25 Earnings Call Analysis
Industrial Products
fundraise: No informationcapex: Yesrevenue: Category 2margin: Category 3orderbook: Yes
💰fundraise
Any current/future new fundraising through debt or equity?
- There is no explicit mention of any current or planned fundraising through debt or equity in the provided transcript.
- Shyam Sundar Agrawal stated that the Sanand facility expansion was fully funded through internal accruals without any borrowing.
- The company seems focused on internal funding for capacity expansions and new projects.
- No indications or discussions about raising external capital via debt or equity were highlighted during the call.
- The emphasis is on organic growth, operational efficiencies, and targeted CAPEX funded internally.
🏗️capex
Any current/future capex/capital investment/strategic investment?
- Completed trial runs and commenced commercial operations at Pro-tech unit in Sanand, Gujarat from July 1, 2025, with Rs.95 crores already spent.
- Additional CAPEX of up to Rs.10 crores planned this year for increasing synthetic gloves and helmets production capacity at the Sanand unit.
- Phase-II expansion of Chandipur unit completed, adding a 70,000 sq. ft. facility for industrial safety shoes with Rs.25 crores CAPEX; expected turnover Rs.25-30 crores this year.
- Plan to set up 3-4 more production lines at Sanand with an additional Rs.10 crores investment to scale turnover up to Rs.100 crores by FY27.
- Ghatakpukur unit in West Bengal targeting Rs.50 crores turnover next year.
- Phase-I of Sanand infrastructure and machinery expansion underway; full investment planned to support Rs.100 crores turnover target by FY27.
📊revenue
Future growth expectations in sales/revenue/volumes?
- Mallcom targets a growth rate of 20%-25% for FY26 and FY27, aiming to maintain or exceed this range.
- The newly set up Sanand facility is expected to ramp up production, targeting Rs.100 crores turnover by FY27.
- The Ghatakpukur shoe unit in West Bengal projects around Rs.50 crores turnover on a full-year basis.
- Domestic market growth is driven by better policies, increasing occupational safety focus, product category expansion, strengthened distribution, and heightened demand.
- Export markets in the Middle East, Africa, Europe, and Australia are also seen as growth avenues despite US tariff challenges.
- New product introductions, such as helmets, and full product suites are expected to improve market penetration and customer wallet share.
- The company is focusing on adding new customers across different segments including first-time buyers, converters, and brand switchers.
📈margin
Future growth expectations in earnings/operating earnings/profits/EPS?
- Mallcom targets a strong growth rate of 20%-25% for FY26 and FY27, maintaining or exceeding current momentum.
- The newly operational Sanand facility is expected to ramp up from Rs.15 crores turnover in FY26 to around Rs.100 crores in FY27, driving revenue growth.
- The Ghatakpukur unit is projected to contribute about Rs.50 crores turnover on a full-year basis.
- Despite scale increase, overall margins (EBITDA) are expected to stabilize around 14%-15%, as operating leverage plays a limited role due to a cost structure dominated by raw materials.
- The company plans continued investment in growth, including inventory and capacity expansion, which might moderate margin expansion.
- With these factors, earnings and EPS growth are expected in line with top-line growth, supported by margin stability and operational efficiencies.
📋orderbook
Current/ Expected Orderbook/ Pending Orders?
- Export orderbook visibility varies by product and customer.
- Some customers provide annual projections or rolling forecasts.
- Orders are placed based on deliveries.
- Generally, the company maintains an order book covering 2.5 to 3.5 months.
- About 60% of exports are contracted orders, and 40% are spot orders on average.
- Order visibility depends on product categories and customer specifics; some orders are one-off.
- The company manages demand through a mix of contracted and spot orders to balance supply chain and production.
