APL Apollo misses volume mark. Should investors worry?

April 03, 2026 · 2:48 pm IST

APL Apollo Tubes Ltd’s March quarter (Q4FY26) performance undershot expectations. Consolidated volumes rose 9% year-on-year to 925 kilo tonnes (kt), but fell well short of management’s 20% growth guidance that would have taken volumes past the 1 million tonnes milestone. The miss pulled full-year volume growth down to 11%, with total volumes at 3.5 million tonnes.

The stock has slipped about 5% since the 1 April earnings announcement.

Two factors explain the shortfall. First, the war in West Asia, accounting for roughly 10% of volumes, weighed on output. Port bottlenecks and softer regional demand meant the Dubai plant operated at only about 60% utilization in Q4. Second, natural gas shortages at Raipur forced a 10-20% cut in galvanized pipe production, though the company has since switched to LNG and furnace oil.

The quarter also saw some slippage in product mix. The share of value-added products (VAP) fell 315 basis points year-on-year to 55%. At the same time, domestic hot rolled coil (HRC) prices, a key input, spiked amid the ongoing conflict, raising concerns on margins. That said, the broader business context suggests that these are likely one-off operational disruptions, rather than the start of a sustained downtrend.

APL’s structural strengths remain intact. The company commands roughly 55% of India’s steel tubes market, supported by an expansive distribution network.

That scale advantage is difficult for competitors to replicate, and remains the backbone of APL’s pricing power and market-share resilience. Thanks to this pricing power, Nuvama Institutional Equities expects Ebitda per tonne to remain healthy at over ₹5,500.

Importantly, this is no longer just a volume-led story. Over the past decade, the company has steadily shifted towards higher-margin structural applications and expanded its SKU portfolio to over 5,000 products, deepening its presence across housing, construction, infrastructure and renewable energy.

Moreover, capacity expansions provides a clear multi-year growth runway. Installed capacity is expected to increase from 5 million tonnes at the end of Q3FY26 to 8 million tonnes by FY28, with greenfield additions across eastern and western India and debottlenecking at existing plants.

HDFC Securities expects it to deliver revenue and Ebitda CAGRs of 13% and 24%, respectively, over FY25–28, driven by about 13% volume CAGR, broadly stable Ebitda/tonne of about ₹5,000, and a VAP mix improving to roughly 70% by FY28.

Meanwhile, export optionality is gradually improving. The Bhuj coastal facility, combined with overseas warehouses in Europe and the United Arab Emirates manufacturing presence, is aimed at lifting exports from about 3% of revenue currently to 10% by FY28.

That said, the West Asia war remains a variable that investors cannot ignore. Add to that, the usual uncertainties around input costs and fuel availability, and quarterly throughput could continue to see some volatility. The recent dip in the VAP mix also deserves a closer look if it persists.

With the stock already trading at roughly 34x FY27 estimated earnings, according to Bloomberg consensus, the room for execution missteps is limited.

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