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Inox India Q4 FY26: Explosive 24% Revenue Surge and Record ₹1,514 Cr Order Backlog


1. At a Glance

The cryogenic industry isn’t just about cold storage; it is about the infrastructure of the future. Inox India has positioned itself as the indispensable backbone for everything from ISRO’s space launches to the global transition toward Green Hydrogen and LNG. The latest numbers for FY26 tell a story of aggressive scale, with total revenue hitting ₹1,632 crore, up significantly from the previous year.

However, investors must look past the top-line glory to see the evolving risk profile. The company’s order book has swollen to a record ₹1,514 crore, but execution is becoming a complex game of global logistics and high-stakes engineering. While the 63% export contribution to the order book is a testament to global dominance, it exposes the firm to the brutal volatility of international trade tariffs and geopolitical shifts.

Despite a 24.2% jump in Q4 revenue, the Adjusted PAT margin saw a slight compression, sliding to 15.1% compared to 17.2% in the same quarter last year. This is the classic “growth pain” of a company scaling its massive Savli plant, where employee costs and depreciation are front-running the actual production ramp-up. The business is currently in a high-utilization phase, but the mismatch between capacity investment and immediate margin realization is a red flag that demand must not just stay high—it must accelerate.

The story here is simple: Inox India is betting the house on being the world’s cryogenic factory. With ₹257 crore in free cash and a debt-free balance sheet, they have the muscle to play this game. But as they move into high-value, complex projects like the Bahamas Mini LNG Terminal, the margin for error shrinks. Are they becoming a global titan, or are they overextending in a cyclical capital goods market?


2. Introduction

Inox India Limited is not a newcomer; it is a 50-year-old engineering powerhouse that has reinvented itself for the 21st-century energy transition. The company specializes in cryogenic equipment—systems designed to operate at temperatures as low as -196°C.

If you want to move Liquid Natural Gas (LNG) across an ocean, store Liquid Hydrogen for a rocket, or keep biological samples frozen for decades, you likely need a tank made by Inox. Their reach is massive, serving over 1,255 domestic and 254 international customers.

The company operates out of three primary facilities in India: Kalol, Kandla SEZ, and Silvassa, with a new high-tech facility at Savli now coming online to handle the overflow and new product lines like beverage kegs.

Management’s strategy is clear: dominate the domestic market (where they hold a 70-75% share) while aggressively capturing high-margin export markets. In Q4 FY26, exports accounted for 61% of total revenue, proving that “Made in India”

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