Search for stocks /

Remus Pharmaceuticals H1FY26 Concall Decoded: “When 47 Crores Feels Like 400 — The Global Hustle of a Pharma Nomad”


1. Opening Hook

Remember when Indian pharma companies were called “copycats”? Remus is out here proving they’re the export hustlers. The company doesn’t even bother making drugs in-house — they just own the IPs, brands, and global distributors like it’s a chess game. With a footprint in 40 countries and ambitions in every continent that still uses paracetamol, MD Arpit Shah sounds more like a travel blogger than a pharma exec. Latin America calls him “Señor Generics,” and Africa’s next on his map.

By the time you reach the B2C vs B2B saga, you’ll wonder if Remus is building a pharma empire or just outsmarting the global supply chain — read on, it gets spicy.


2. At a Glance

  • Revenue up 47% (₹400 Cr): CFO insists it’s growth, not arithmetic error.
  • EBITDA +28% (₹27 Cr): Still smaller than MD’s air miles.
  • Margins at 6.75%: Because 80% comes from a low-margin U.S. unit — capitalism strikes again.
  • PAT +21% (₹22 Cr): Profit grew, but so did the CFO’s Excel tabs.
  • Standalone Revenue ₹47 Cr (+24%): The domestic child outperformed its global parent.
  • PAT Margin 25.6% standalone: Proof that “small but desi” still wins in pharma math.

3. Management’s Key Commentary

“Our formulations reach over 40 countries.”
(Translation: The sun never sets on Remus’ invoice trail. 😏)

“95% of exports are advanced and niche formulations.”
(Translation: We sell fancy pills in fancy packaging.)

“B2C business grew from 4% to 13% this half.”
(Translation: We finally realized consumers pay better than distributors.)

“We don’t do African tenders — margins there are a myth.”
(Translation: Let others race to the bottom; we’ll sip lattes in Latin America.)

“We expect PAT margin to rise from 5% to 8-10%.”
(Translation: Assuming Excel, gods, and global inflation align.)

“We’re light asset — we don’t manufacture, we brand.”
(Translation: No factories, no headaches — just invoices and IPs.)

“MD travels 180 days a year to inspect markets.”
(Translation: He’s literally the traveling salesman of pharma. ✈️)


4. Numbers Decoded

MetricH1FY26YoY GrowthCommentary
Revenue (Consolidated)₹400 Cr+47%Mostly powered by U.S. subsidiary (80% of total).
EBITDA₹27 Cr+28%Margins 6.75%; dragged by volume-heavy U.S. ops.
PAT₹22 Cr+21%Margins 5.4%; CFO promises better blend ahead.
Standalone Revenue₹47 Cr+24%India ops growing faster, higher profitability.
Standalone PAT₹12 Cr+31%PAT margin 25.6% – now that’s real medicine.
B2C Share13%vs 4% YoYAim: 20-25% in next 18 months.
EBITDA Margin (B2B vs B2C)32-33% vs 35%+Proof that brands make fatter margins than bulk orders.

👉 The U.S. Espee subsidiary is a high-volume, low-EBITDA play — the culprit behind blended margins. But management claims they’ve already recovered 90% of the acquisition cost. Pharma math never fails to surprise.


5. Analyst Questions

Q: Why chase Africa if local players have cost advantages?
A: “We prefer 20% of a premium market over 80% of penny tenders.” (Translation: Pride over price.)

Q: How confident are you in margin expansion without factories?
A: “We have IPs, brands, and trademarks — who needs machines?” (Translation: Paper > Plant.)

Q: What’s the growth outlook for B2C?
A: “From 13% to 25% in 1.5 years.” (Translation: Pray for regulators and customs clearance.)

Q: Why are margins low despite B2C?
A: “Because 80% revenue comes from our U.S. subsidiary.” (Translation: We make money in rupees, report in dollars. 💸)


6. Guidance & Outlook

Management expects PAT margins to climb to 8–10%, powered by an increasing B2C mix and expansion in Latin America and Africa (private markets only — no penny tenders). The

Join 10,000+ investors who read this every week.
Become a member
error: Content is protected !!