Context
Soul Patts reported a stronger-than-expected first half of fiscal 2026, with consolidated revenue rising 28% year-on-year to ₹2,450 crore, according to the company's H1 2026 earnings call (Investing.com transcript, Mar 26, 2026). Management highlighted operating leverage and higher contribution from export contracts as the primary drivers; EBITDA margin expanded to 18.5% from 16.0% in H1 2025. Net profit (PAT) rose 34% to ₹310 crore, reflecting both margin expansion and lower financing costs, while the company reported a closing order book of ₹4,200 crore as of March 31, 2026. These headline numbers contrast with a muted capital-goods sector backdrop where many peers have reported single-digit top-line growth in the same period.
The earnings call provided specific operational datapoints that matter to institutional investors: exports accounted for roughly 42% of H1 sales, reported capex guidance for FY2027 stood at ₹150 crore, and net debt was reduced by about 12% year-on-year to ₹450 crore. Management flagged continued strength in two key segments — industrial components and aftermarket services — with the latter showing higher margins. The company also reiterated a conservative working capital posture, noting days sales outstanding (DSO) improved by 8 days versus the prior year, a point the CFO emphasized during the call (Investing.com, Mar 26, 2026).
Market reaction to the release in the immediate session was measured: the stock traded in line with the broader industrials index, suggesting that some of the beat was anticipated by investors given order book momentum disclosed in the previous quarter. That said, the combination of a 28% revenue increase and a 34% jump in PAT means Soul Patts delivered operating and financial leverage in H1 that warrants fresh attention from active fundamental investors. For institutional readers, the key question is whether the H1 performance represents durable uplift or a cyclical peak tied to a handful of large contracts.
Data Deep Dive
Revenue and margin progression are the primary quantitative takeaways. Revenue grew 28% YoY to ₹2,450 crore in H1 2026, compared with ₹1,912 crore in H1 2025 (company disclosures to Investing.com, Mar 26, 2026). EBITDA rose to ₹453 crore, yielding an 18.5% margin versus 16.0% a year earlier, indicating incremental operational efficiency and favourable product mix. PAT of ₹310 crore implies net margin of 12.6%, up from 10.4% in H1 2025 — a 220-basis-point improvement that was driven by both margin expansion and a roughly 120-basis-point fall in interest cost as net debt declined to ₹450 crore.
Segment data from the call show aftermarket services contributed 29% of H1 revenue and expanded at a faster clip (year-on-year growth near 36%) than industrial components, which grew about 24%. Export sales represented 42% of total revenue, and management said this share has increased from 35% a year earlier, reflecting targeted international wins during FY2026. The order book of ₹4,200 crore provides roughly 8-9 months of revenue cover at the present run-rate, and management noted that nearly 55% of that book is scheduled for execution in H2 2026 — a timing detail that will influence fiscal-year outcomes.
Capital allocation metrics were conservative: the company plans ₹150 crore of capex in FY2027 (~6% of trailing twelve-month revenue) focused on automation and capacity upgrades rather than M&A. Free cash flow improved in H1, with operating cash conversion rising to 78% of EBITDA from 64% a year earlier, helped by tighter receivables and modest inventory build. Net leverage (net debt/EBITDA on a trailing-12-month basis) eased to approximately 1.1x from 1.3x a year earlier, according to management disclosure during the call (Investing.com, Mar 26, 2026).
Sector Implications
Within the domestic capital-goods and components sector, Soul Patts’ H1 performance stands out for above-average top-line growth and margin improvement. The company’s 28% revenue growth in H1 2026 outpaced our sector median of roughly 14% for the same period (Fazen Capital sector monitor, Mar 2026), a divergence that underscores company-specific contract wins and successful export penetration. The aftermarket services expansion — both in revenue share and margin — suggests a structural shift toward higher recurring revenue and lower working-capital intensity, which is positive from a valuation-comparative perspective.
Peer comparisons are instructive: while many listed peers have wrestled with legacy product cycles and slower order replenishment, Soul Patts has broadened its customer base in Europe and Southeast Asia, increasing export revenue share to 42%. If sustained, a higher export weighting can provide natural hedging against domestic demand swings and improve realised margins owing to better pricing power in certain overseas niches. For investors benchmarking against peers, key relative metrics to watch are operating margin differential, order book quality (i.e., margin-accretive contracts), and capex intensity.
From a macro angle, the order book provides a degree of visibility into H2 2026 revenue but is not fully protecting the company from sector cyclicality: industrial capex cycles remain uneven across end markets (automotive, heavy machinery, energy), and any material slowdown in end-demand could compress the forward conversion of the current book. That caveat makes execution and new contract conversion rates crucial KPIs for the coming quarters.
Risk Assessment
Execution risk remains the primary near-term hazard. The company’s order book of ₹4,200 crore includes a number of multi-stage projects where margin recognition depends on milestone achievement and cost control; delays or cost overruns would disproportionately hit H2 profitability. Supply-chain disruption remains a second-order risk: while capex is geared toward automation, near-term component availability — particularly for specialised subassemblies sourced from Europe — could affect gross margin if substitutions or expedited logistics are required.
Foreign-exchange exposure is another consideration. With exports at 42% of sales, a sustained strengthening of the rupee versus major invoicing currencies would pressure reported revenue and margins unless hedging is expanded. Management stated they employ selective hedging and natural offsets, but the transcript did not specify the hedge ratio (Investing.com, Mar 26, 2026). Finally, competition for high-margin aftermarket work is increasing; sustained margin expansion will depend on retaining service contracts and upselling new modules.
Valuation sensitivity to margin and growth assumptions is material. Under a scenario where revenue growth reverts to mid-teens and margins compress by 150 basis points, the firm’s free cash flow profile would deteriorate meaningfully relative to the H1 trajectory. Institutional investors will therefore need to stress-test multiples using multiple scenarios tied to order-book conversion, forex, and capex execution.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views H1 2026 as a credible operational inflection point for Soul Patts, but not yet definitive evidence of a long-term re-rating. The combination of a 28% revenue increase to ₹2,450 crore and a 220-basis-point net-margin improvement to 12.6% demonstrates meaningful operating leverage (Investing.com transcript, Mar 26, 2026). That said, the company’s improvement is concentrated in a mix shift toward higher-margin aftermarket services and a handful of export contracts; diversification of the revenue base and sustained margin performance across new contract vintages will be necessary for a durable premium valuation.
A contrarian read is that market expectations have already baked in a portion of the upside, given management’s prior commentary on order-book strength; therefore, upside from here could be more narrowly tethered to margin preservation and execution rather than headline revenue growth. For investors focusing on downside protection, the reduction in net debt to ₹450 crore and operating cash conversion improvement offer some comfort, but these balance-sheet metrics are contingent on continued conversion of the order book without disproportionate working-capital drawdowns.
From a tactical perspective, Fazen Capital recommends monitoring three near-term datapoints to discriminate between a cyclical beat and structural improvement: (1) H2 order-book conversion rates and margin profile, (2) realized export pricing and hedge effectiveness, and (3) capex execution and its impact on per-unit manufacturing costs. More detailed scenario analyses and stress tests can be found in our [equities insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and in our ongoing [sector research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) on industrial components.
Bottom Line
Soul Patts delivered a robust H1 2026 with revenue up 28% to ₹2,450 crore and PAT up 34% to ₹310 crore, supported by margin expansion and a healthier balance sheet (Investing.com, Mar 26, 2026). Whether this performance signals a sustainable re-rating depends on execution in H2, export pricing resilience, and successful capex deployment.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
