TCS – Tata Consultancy Services – Q4 FY26 Financial Results – 9-Apr-26

2–3 minutes

👉 Also see: TCS – Q4 FY26 Earnings Call – 9-Apr-26


🔍 Observations

  • Q4 Mar-2026 Net Sales reached ₹70,698 Cr, with EBITDA at ₹19,276 Cr and PAT at ₹13,784 Cr — the strongest quarter across all five periods shown.
  • EBITDA margin held steady at ~27.27% in Q4, broadly in line with the prior three quarters, while annual EBITDA margin improved from 26.40% (FY25) to 27.11% (FY26).
  • Net Profit Margin for FY26 came in at 18.52%, down from 19.11% in FY25, despite higher absolute PAT.
  • Exceptional items of ₹4,526 Cr (restructuring, labour codes, legal provisions) weighed on FY26 PBT and PAT. Equity share count remains unchanged at 362 Cr shares.



🧮 Profit & Loss Statement

🧮 Balance Sheet

🧮 Cash Flows Statement


🟢 Green Flags

  • Accelerating revenue momentum: Sales YoY growth reached 9.65% in Q4 — the highest in the dataset — after several quarters of sluggish 1–5% growth. This suggests demand recovery is gaining pace, not plateauing.
  • Expense discipline improving: FY26 expenses grew only 3.57% YoY versus 6.41% in FY25, while revenue grew 4.58%. The narrowing gap signals improving operating leverage — the company is scaling revenue faster than costs.
  • EBITDA outpacing sales growth: FY26 EBITDA grew 7.40% YoY against 4.58% revenue growth. Margin expansion from 26.40% to 27.11% annually points to genuine cost efficiency, not just top-line tailwinds.
  • Clean Q4 rebound: With no exceptional charges in Q4, PAT surged 28.58% QoQ to ₹13,784 Cr — underlining the underlying earnings power when one-time items are absent.

🔴 Red Flags

  • Exceptional items obscure true earnings quality: ₹4,526 Cr in exceptional charges dragged FY26 PBT growth to near-zero (0.24% YoY) despite 7.73% operating profit growth. While management attributes these to restructuring and legal provisions, their recurrence across two quarters (Q2 and Q3) raises questions about how “one-time” they truly are.
  • Net margin compression at the annual level: FY26 NPM of 18.52% trails FY25’s 19.11%, meaning shareholders received a smaller slice of each revenue rupee despite the business growing. A structurally higher interest burden (₹1,227 Cr vs. ₹796 Cr in FY25) is a contributing driver worth monitoring.
  • PBT growth structurally decoupled from operations: Annual PBT grew just 0.24% while EBIT grew 7.73% — a 7.5 percentage point gap driven by exceptional items and rising interest. If interest costs continue climbing, this wedge between operational and reported profitability will widen.

💡 Investment Outlook

TCS’s operational engine is clearly accelerating — revenue growth is inflecting upward and margins are expanding at the EBITDA level. However, the FY26 story is one of strong operations meeting a noisy reported P&L. Investors must decide whether the exceptional charges are genuinely non-recurring or a pattern of periodic resets. Until that question is answered, the gap between operational excellence and shareholder-level returns remains the central tension to watch.


Disclaimer: This post features ChartAlert-AI-generated financial content which may contain inaccuracies or errors. This commentary is strictly for informational purposes and does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Investors are responsible for performing their own due diligence; always consult with a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.


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