Search for Stocks /

Vikram Solar Q3FY26 Concall Decoded: Revenue up 8%, profits up 4x — sun finally rising, margins smirking

Spotted a factual error — a wrong number, date, or fact? Tell us and we will check the source.

1. Opening Hook

After a year where Chinese module prices behaved like meme stocks and ALMM rules kept everyone guessing, Vikram Solar calmly walked in and dropped a mic. Revenue nudged up, but profits decided to go full IPL mode — four sixes in a row.

While most solar players are still explaining why margins will improve next quarter, Vikram Solar chose violence and delivered it this quarter. EBITDA grew faster than Twitter opinions after a policy draft. PAT exploded like a WhatsApp forward nobody verified but everyone believed.

Debt stayed low, capacity went up, and management suddenly sounds very confident about batteries — always a sign of ambition, sometimes of expensive PowerPoints.

Read on, because behind the sunshine and ESG badges, there’s capex, execution risk, and a balance sheet that’s about to be stress-tested by very large dreams. Things get interesting from here.


2. At a Glance

  • Revenue up 7.8% – Growth took the stairs, not the elevator.
  • EBITDA up 142% – Operating leverage finally remembered its job.
  • PAT up 416% – Last year’s base quietly crying in a corner.
  • EBITDA margin at 19% – From “manufacturing pain” to “manufacturing flex.”
  • Modules sold 796 MW – Volumes showing up with intent.
  • Order book 10.6 GW – More than 1× current capacity, confidence included.
  • Debt/Equity at 0.08× – Balance sheet still behaving responsibly.

3. Management’s Key Commentary

“EBITDA margins expanded to 19% driven by scale and operational efficiency.”
(Translation: Fixed costs bowed down, finally. 😏)

“We commenced operations at our 5 GW Vallam facility.”
(Translation: Capex is no longer a PowerPoint slide.)

“Our entire manufacturing is now N-Type focused.”
(Translation: PERC is old news, and we’re not waiting

Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →
EduInvesting runs entirely on reader support — ₹360 a year keeps the lights on.
Become a member
Already a member? Log in
Read Full 16 Point breakdown. Continue reading →