Angel One Q4 FY26 Concall Decoded: 431 Million Orders, 45% Margins Whispered — Is This a Broker or a Compounding Machine?
1. Opening Hook
While most brokers were busy blaming regulations, volatility, wars, tariffs, lunar cycles and maybe Mercury retrograde, Angel One came to the call flexing 431 million quarterly orders and talking like an AI company moonlighting as a broker.
Apparently, 80% of wealth platform code is AI generated, margins are crawling back above 44%, and they’ve now decided broking, wealth, AMC and credit weren’t enough — so why not become a lender too?
Of course, every management team says “platform” these days the way startups once said “disruption.” But this one came with numbers.
And things get fun later — especially when management casually drops “higher than 45% margins” like it’s normal cocktail chatter.
Read on. The vadapao gets spicier.
2. At a Glance
Revenue up 10% QoQ – Growth returned and apparently forgot the regulation panic memo.
PAT up 19% QoQ – Profits finally woke up from a long derivatives hangover.
431 million orders – Traders clearly did not get the “markets are risky” circular.
“We are building a unified technology-led financial platform.” (Translation: Please stop valuing us like a brokerage. We’re trying very hard to become a fintech octopus.) 😏
“More than 50% of development is augmented by AI.” (Translation: Engineers now have algorithmic interns who don’t ask for bonuses.)
“80% of Ionic Wealth codebase is AI generated.” (Translation: Even the coders may be diversified assets now.)
“You should look for higher than 45% margin on broking and distribution.” (Translation: We said it. Please don’t build DCFs too aggressively.) 😏
“No FLDG whatsoever in credit distribution.” (Translation: Yes we want loan growth, no we don’t want surprise NPA horror sequels.)
“Customers should have the ability to raise credit against securities.” (Translation: Why let your stocks just sit there when they can also borrow money?)
“People overestimate AI in the short term and underestimate it in the long term.” (Translation: We’re spending now, monetization sermon later.)
Big picture commentary had three themes:
Core broking rebounded harder than feared F&O share gains, cash share stable-ish, orders at six-quarter high. Management clearly wanted the “market share stagnation” narrative buried.
New businesses no longer decorative PowerPoint objects Wealth crossed ₹100 bn AUM. Credit expanding. AMC still toddler-sized, but walking.
Operating leverage is back This mattered. Q1 noise, regulatory overhang, one-offs — all used as bridge to a cleaner margin story.
Sarcasm aside, management sounded unusually confident. Dangerous. Or bullish. Sometimes same thing.