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Our portfolio companies reported revenue growth of ~ 20% YoY during the quarter, ahead of the broader benchmark. Importantly, this growth continued to translate into stronger profitability, with portfolio-level gross margins tracking above benchmark levels for the last seven consecutive quarters.

This sustained margin outperformance, despite an uneven demand environment, highlights our focus on owning businesses that are able to convert incremental revenue into earnings through operating leverage and pricing power.

Portfolio Performance Overview:

Taken together, earnings delivery this quarter continues to reflect a pattern we have observed over the past few periods — growth remains concentrated in businesses with stronger pricing power and operating leverage. In an environment where demand recovery is uneven across segments, this distinction continues to play an important role in how we construct and position the portfolio.

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*PAT is adjusted for one of the portfolio companies which went through an operating deleverage due to inventory destocking   Note: For year-on-year (YoY) comparisons, we have used a rolling four-quarter format – Q4FY25 to Q3FY26 compared with Q4FY24 to Q3FY25. The sum of portfolio weights would not total up to 100%; remaining would be our cash holdings.

Gross Margin Performance:

Over the past several quarters, portfolio-level gross margins have consistently remained above benchmark levels. This reflects our preference for businesses with either pricing power or fixed-cost absorption benefits, where incremental revenue growth translates into a disproportionate expansion in profitability.

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Exhibit 1: Gross Margins for Itus Portfolio over the last 8Q

Sector Exposure:

Sector exposure continues to reflect our preference for businesses where earnings  visibility  is  supported  by  operating  leverage,  supply-side rationalization, or pricing power. Our overweight in sectors is driven by our assessment of relative earnings growth visibility over the medium term.

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* Green shading indicates overweight positions; Red shading indicates underweight positions relative to benchmarks

Exhibit 2: Top 10 sectors for Itus by weight against benchmarks

While our overweight exposure to Mining contributed positively to performance during the quarter, supported by favourable commodity price movements, we recently reduced our exposure from a risk management perspective. Given the inherently cyclical nature of commodity-linked earnings, periods of price stability  often  coincide  with  peak  operating  leverage  —  warranting  a reassessment of position sizing even as near-term earnings remain supportive.

Divergence in Consumption Trends:

Demand conditions across consumption-linked sectors continue to remain uneven, with a clear divergence emerging between premium discretionary and mass-market segments.

High-ticket discretionary categories such as travel, hospitality, and jewellery have demonstrated resilience through the quarter. Industry-wide hotel average daily rates (ADRs) rose ~14% YoY to ₹10,300 in 3QFY26, with occupancy levels improving to ~73%. Similarly, air travel demand has remained robust, with Indigo  sustaining  a  volume  CAGR  of  ~11%  over  FY2024–26  alongside consistently high load factors of ~85%. Passenger vehicle volumes also recovered during the quarter following multiple periods of muted growth.

In contrast, demand across everyday discretionary categories continues to exhibit signs of softness. Same-store sales growth for value-oriented retailers such as VMART, DMART, and Trent has moderated to low single digits over recent quarters, suggesting continued pressure on volume-led consumption.

Organized jewellery retail remains a notable exception, with players such as Titan and Kalyan maintaining resilient same-store sales performance, aided in part by gold price movements and premium consumption trends.

Taken  together,  these  trends  indicate  a  continuation  of  a  bifurcated consumption environment, where premium and aspirational spending remains relatively stable, while mass discretionary demand continues to lag.

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* Trent in recent quarters has given qualitative range for SSSG. The above is based on that commentary

Exhibit 3: Consumption growth trends across sub-sectors

In the absence of a broad-based recovery in consumption, earnings growth is likely to remain concentrated in businesses with pricing power and exposure to premium discretionary demand — reinforcing our preference for companies with stronger margin resilience over volume-led growth. In parallel, funding conditions across the banking system continue to shape the transmission of credit into real economic activity.

Credit Conditions and Deposit Dynamics:

System-level credit growth accelerated to ~14% YoY during 3QFY26, following a period of relatively moderate growth in prior quarters. The pickup was led by MSME and corporate lending, while retail credit growth was supported by a recovery in vehicle loans and continued strength in gold loans.

Deposit growth also improved during the quarter to ~13% YoY; however, it continued to lag credit expansion. As a result, the system credit-to-deposit (CD) ratio remained elevated at ~81%, indicating sustained competition for deposits across the banking system.

In such an environment, the ability to consistently mobilize low-cost retail deposits becomes increasingly important in protecting funding costs and preserving margins. Banks with weaker deposit franchises or higher reliance on bulk funding may face challenges in sustaining net interest margins as competition for deposits intensifies.

Conversely, institutions with stable retail deposit bases and the ability to deploy incremental credit into higher-yielding loan segments are better positioned to grow without materially compromising profitability.

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Exhibit 4: Drivers of credit growth (5Q)

 

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Exhibit 5: Credit-Deposit Ratio (12M)

Portfolio Illustration: City Union Bank

One such example from our portfolio is City Union Bank, which reported ~21% YoY growth in both credit and deposits during the quarter, alongside a 31bps expansion in NIM to ~3.9% in Q3FY26. The bankʼs credit growth strategy is supported by its focus on MSME, gold loans, and secured retail segments.

Alongside demand and funding conditions, supply-side developments across export-oriented sectors such as chemicals remain an important monitorable.

Chemicals: Gradual Recovery

We highlighted an early pickup in revenues and margins within the chemical sector in our previous communications. This trend has broadly continued into Q3FY26, with Nifty 500 chemical companies reporting revenue growth of ~10% YoY and EBITDA margins holding at ~19%.

However, recovery within the sector remains selective rather than broad- based.  Pricing  pressures  and  competitive  intensity  from  Chinese manufacturers continue to persist across several product categories. Despite this, certain companies have been able to demonstrate earnings resilience through a combination of product mix improvements, capacity investments undertaken during the downcycle, and increasing participation in specialty and contract manufacturing segments.

Key drivers supporting earnings improvement for select players include:

  • Capacity additions undertaken during the downturn now contributing to operating leverage.
  • Rationalisation of production capacities in China, particularly in refrigerants.
  • Import substitution opportunities across advanced materials and gas segments.
  • Increasing offtake in CDMO-linked businesses.
  • Launch of dedicated product lines for innovator-led demand.

These factors have enabled certain businesses to sustain revenue growth and protect margins despite ongoing pricing pressure across commodity-linked segments.

Portfolio Illustration: Navin Fluorine

One such example within our portfolio is Navin Fluorine, which operates across refrigerants, specialty chemicals, and CDMO segments within the fluorochemical value chain. During the quarter, performance was supported by specialty chemical exports, while tailwinds within the refrigerants segment remain linked to supply-side rationalisation in China.

Looking ahead, a key monitorable for the sector is China’s proposed ‘Anti- Involution’  policy,  under  which  export  rebates  across  several  chemical categories are expected to be removed effective April 2026. This policy action is aimed at rationalising overcapacity and improving domestic margins, which may in turn increase procurement costs for international buyers and potentially create opportunities for Indian exporters over the medium term.

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Exhibit 6: YoY revenue growth & EBITA margin of Nifty 500 chemical companies

 

Portfolio Implications and Watchpoints:

Earnings delivery during the quarter continues to reflect a broader pattern of concentration, with growth remaining skewed towards businesses benefiting from pricing power, operating leverage, or exposure to premium discretionary demand.

Key positioning takeaways:

  • Preference for businesses with pricing power and operating leverage
  • Selective exposure to premium discretionary demand segments
  • Continued focus on banks with strong retail deposit franchises
  • Selective overweight in specialty- oriented chemical companies
  • Active reassessment of cyclical exposures where operating leverage may be near peak

Key watchpoints:

  • Signs of recovery in mass discretionary consumption
  • Deposit growth trajectory relative to credit expansion
  • Sustainability of premium discretionary demand
  • Policy developments impacting global chemical supply chains
  • Margin trajectory across portfolio companies in a tight liquidity environment

Portfolio Summary:

Our stock selection and sector positioning reflects this dynamic. To summarise, the below table gives an overview of the health of our portfolio as of Q3FY26 (with the snapshot as of January 2026).

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Note: The sum of above weights would not total up to 100%; remaining would be our cash holdings.

Team Itus

Disclaimer:

The performance-related information provided in this newsletter/blog is not verified by SEBI. The content is intended solely for internal circulation and general informational purposes. It does not constitute investment advice or any form of financial recommendation.

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