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Indian Company Investor Calls

Yatra Expects FY27 Second-Half Surge After MICE Disruption

June 1, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Yatra Online Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (quarter ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “most profitable year in the company’s 20-year history”, “resilient performance”, and “remain optimistic” despite geopolitical disruption.
  • They frame the conflict impact as “a short-term blip” and expect “second-half of FY27 to be materially stronger”.
  • Confidence is reinforced with medium-term targets: “medium-term growth CAGR of 20% RLSC… and 30% adjusted EBITDA.”

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Profitability + operating leverage despite headwinds
  • FY26: revenue +27% YoY to INR 10,065m; gross margin (RLSC) +24.5% to INR 4,824m; adjusted EBITDA INR 917m.
  • Corporate travel traction as the core engine
  • FY26 added 163 new corporate customers (annual billable value ~INR 9,568m).
  • Retention highlighted as ~97%, with online penetration in managed business travel still <25% (headroom).
  • Geopolitical disruption concentrated in MICE + international groups
  • Q4: MICE and international corporate group bookings cancelled/deferred into FY27, weighing on Q4 results.
  • Management expects recovery via domestic substitution and “revenge travel”.
  • Margin improvement narrative tied to mix shift + enterprise tilt
  • Air margins improving structurally (air gross margin improving from ~2.7% FY24 to ~4% FY26).
  • Hotels: standalone hotel margins improving (7.7% → nearly 9%).
  • API-led distribution + Google Cloud migration
  • Claimed to improve distribution of hotel content to partners; expected to scale as a margin-accretive business.
  • AI as a strategic moat (B2E-first)
  • AI focus: automation, personalization, and agentic readiness (MCP/LLM integrations discussed in Q&A).
  • Management downplays AI threat to OTA economics, especially on enterprise/B2E.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: MICE disruption magnitude, drivers, and recovery

  • Core questions
  • How much of MICE is international vs domestic, and why was Q4 MICE hit worse than expected?
  • What is the recovery trajectory and where is demand shifting?
  • Management response
  • MICE international transaction values are ~1:3 to 1:3.5 vs domestic → disproportionate impact.
  • Specific disruption window: Dubai/Abu Dhabi heavy pickup after Eid/Ramzan, but March period got disrupted.
  • Airfare rise from conflict hurt MICE economics (fixed selling vs rising input costs).
  • Recovery signals: Southeast Asia pickup, domestic pickup, and Q1 run rates ~20% above Q4.
  • Assessment
  • Strongly explanatory and specific on timing and mechanics (cancellation/deferment + airfare cost pressure).
  • Still largely framed as temporary; no quantified “how much will return” beyond run-rate optimism.

Theme B: Corporate concentration risk (IT services exposure)

  • Core questions
  • How much of B2E is driven by IT services companies (and thus potentially exposed to AI-driven procurement changes)?
  • Management response
  • IT services share has fallen materially: from ~20% in FY24 to ~10–11%, and ~7% of total B2E when including Globe/MICE.
  • Diversification into consulting, pharma, automobile, etc.
  • Assessment
  • Clear numeric answer; reduces perceived concentration risk.

Theme C: Air economics: take rate, discounting, and model shift

  • Core questions
  • How do economics/take rates change with offer-and-order vs GDS?
  • Why did discounting % of gross take rise (to ~48–49%)?
  • Any target “ideal” discount ratio?
  • Management response
  • Take rate improving due to enterprise mix: airlines prefer enterprise; enterprise spend ~50% higher per ticket.
  • “Optical” discounting rose, but net take rate and net margins improved.
  • Gross take improved (approx 7.7% → 8.1%); air gross margin improved to ~4%.
  • Discount ratio expected to trend toward ~45% as mix shifts further.
  • Q1 FY26 anomaly explained by Operation Sindoor/Pulwama + Air India crash → B2C disruption lowered discounting.
  • Assessment
  • Mostly credible because they reconcile optics (discount %) with net margin/take rate improvements.
  • “Ideal ratio” is directional, not a hard target.

Theme D: Value-added services adoption (Expense management / Recap)

  • Core questions
  • Progress on expense management adoption and whether it displaces incumbents.
  • Expected revenue contribution.
  • Management response
  • Expense management launched; in Q3 recap became fully sellable; 8 new logos added; 4 already live.
  • Upside framed as stickiness/retention more than immediate revenue.
  • Prior call (Q3 FY26) had guided INR 5–7 cr revenue in FY27; in this call, they emphasized adoption and retention rather than repeating the number.
  • Assessment
  • Strong on adoption narrative; weaker on near-term monetization quantification in this call.

Theme E: Corporate restructuring / holding company simplification timeline

  • Core questions
  • Status/timeline for collapsing Cayman/Cyprus layers into India structure.
  • Whether further stake sales/dilution expected.
  • Management response
  • Process still ongoing across India, Cyprus, Singapore, Cayman.
  • THCL sold ~1.8% stake to fund legal costs; management says liquidity should cover costs.
  • No further market sale expected “in the near future.”
  • Timeline not provided beyond “progress” and complexity caveat.
  • Assessment
  • Clear “no further sale” stance, but timeline remains evasive.

Theme F: AI threat to OTA economics + agentic integration (LLMs/MCP)

  • Core questions
  • Is agentic AI a threat to booking/ads revenue?
  • Are they integrating with LLMs / building MCP?
  • Management response
  • B2E: booking process sits behind enterprise “walled garden” and policy complexity → not easily displaced.
  • B2C: traffic may shift from Google/Meta to bots, but ad revenue is “not material”; they plan to offset via sponsored listings/partner models.
  • MCP protocol already worked on for ~1 year; expect announcements in weeks; focus on API readiness and end-to-end automation.
  • Assessment
  • Directly addresses threat; however, “ad revenue not material” is qualitative and not quantified in FY25/26 here (they declined to break out ad revenue).

Theme G: Hotels: realization drop, discount jump, and targets

  • Core questions
  • Why did hotel realizations and gross margins drop QoQ/YoY?
  • What drives discounting changes and what should discount levels be when normalized?
  • Management response
  • Realization drop due to mix shift: more affiliate + domestic vs disrupted MICE/international (higher transaction values).
  • Discounting jump also mix-driven; MICE/B2E discounting minimal.
  • Discount-to-revenue/gross margin ratio: ~75% last year vs ~85% currently, expected to revert to ~75% or lower in 2H.
  • Assessment
  • Mix explanation is consistent with earlier MICE disruption narrative.
  • Provides a normalization framework (75% target range), though still not a precise KPI.

Theme H: Working capital / ROCE linkage

  • Core questions
  • How much of receivables improvement is structural vs quarter-specific?
  • Any ROCE guidance milestone?
  • Management response
  • Receivable days improvement is structural: automation + streamlined cycles; focus on ROCE determinant.
  • ROCE: last year ~4%, now ~6%; if no disruption, would be 7–7.5%.
  • Medium-term internal milestone: “high teens” ROCE in 3–4 years.
  • Assessment
  • More concrete than prior quarters; still conditional on disruption normalization.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Medium-term CAGR (reiterated)
  • RLSC growth: 20%
  • Adjusted EBITDA growth: 30%
  • FY27 directional outlook
  • “Second-half of FY27 to be materially stronger than first half.” (qualitative, but tied to timing)
  • ROCE milestone (qualitative-to-quantitative)
  • Expect ROCE to reach “high teens” in 3–4 years (explicit target level, timeframe given).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Q1 FY27 likely muted: “already seen two months… would remain a bit muted.”
  • Recovery drivers
  • Domestic substitution for international programs
  • “Revenge travel” effect
  • MICE expected to benefit structurally in 2H
  • AI roadmap
  • “MCP protocol… very near term” and “innovations… in a matter of a couple of weeks”
  • Continued investment in automation and AI-powered servicing

5. Standout Statements (direct quotes where useful)

  • Profitability claim
  • It’s the most profitable year in the company’s 20-year history.
  • Conflict framed as non-structural
  • does not reflect a structural change in underlying travel demand trends… It is a short-term blip
  • MICE disruption mechanism
  • Several Q4 MICE and international travel group bookings were either cancelled or deferred into FY27.
  • Recovery timing
  • We expect the second-half of FY 27 to be materially stronger than the first half.
  • Enterprise mix as margin engine
  • we are… the only one… consistently improved their take rates” (enterprise tilt explanation)
  • AI threat minimization
  • Advertisement revenue… is relatively small… not really… material
  • ROCE trajectory
  • we want to get to a high teens kind of number… in the next three to four years
  • Corporate restructuring
  • We do not expect to come back to the markets anytime in the near future” (no further stake sale)

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Clear linkage between mix shift → margin improvement (air/hotel) and enterprise traction → take rate stability.
– Specific operational explanations for MICE disruption (timing + destinations + airfare cost mechanics).
– Diversification away from IT services concentration (IT services share down to ~7% of total B2E).

Red flags / uncertainties
No quantified “return rate” for deferred MICE/international bookings—only run-rate optimism.
Timeline for holding-structure simplification remains vague (“difficult… concrete”).
– AI discussion includes several qualitative claims (e.g., ad revenue “not material”) without FY breakdown in this call.
– Q4 EBITDA decline is acknowledged, but the narrative leans heavily on “temporary blip” without hard downside scenarios.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls provided)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current call (Q4 FY26): More Optimistic
  • Stronger “landmark year” framing and confidence in FY27 2H rebound.
  • Prior call (Q3 FY26, Feb 12 2026): Neutral-to-Optimistic
  • Still optimistic, but more emphasis on “on track to deliver revised guidance” and seasonality.
  • Shift drivers
  • Q4 introduces a heavier disruption narrative (conflict-driven cancellations/deferments), but management offsets with stronger FY26 profitability and clearer medium-term CAGR reaffirmation.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Expense management monetization
  • Prior call (Q3 FY26): guided FY27 revenue INR 5–7 cr from expense management.
  • Current call: emphasizes adoption (8 new logos; 4 live) but does not repeat the FY27 revenue range⏳ Delayed / not reiterated (not necessarily missed, but not confirmed).
  • Corporate card adoption
  • Prior call (Q3 FY26): corporate card adoption “late 20%” and still early.
  • Current call: corporate credit card initiative discussed; product readiness expected within a quarter or two.
  • No updated adoption % given → ⏳ Delayed / not quantified.
  • MICE disruption recovery
  • Prior call (Q3 FY26): expected MICE largely to transact in Q4 with some slippage to Q1.
  • Current call: conflict caused cancellations/deferments into FY27❌ Missed / worse than earlier “rollover” expectation (though the cause is new geopolitical shock).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “air disruptions/operational events” to “geopolitical conflict impacting MICE/international”
  • Q3 FY26: disruption described as airline operational constraints (duty travel limits).
  • Q4 FY26: disruption attributed to West Asia conflict with destination-specific effects.
  • AI narrative becomes more “agentic-ready”
  • Q3 FY26: AI framed around DIYA and corporate concierge/personalization.
  • Q4 FY26: adds MCP protocol, LLM integration, and “agentic ready/headless SaaS ready” language.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium-term growth targets remain consistent
  • 20% RLSC / 30% adjusted EBITDA CAGR reiterated.
  • Margin story consistent
  • Repeated emphasis on mix shift and enterprise tilt improving net margins despite discount optics.
  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: detailed operational explanations and consistent medium-term targets.
  • Weakness: reliance on “temporary blip” for geopolitical impacts without quantified recovery assumptions; some guidance items (expense management revenue, corporate card adoption %) not updated.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand
  • Stable underlying India corporate demand; disruptions framed as episodic.
  • Increasing emphasis on domestic substitution and revenge travel.
  • Margins
  • Continued improvement in air/hotel margins; Q4 EBITDA down due to disruption, but gross margin resilience emphasized.
  • Expansion
  • Corporate online penetration headroom (<25%) remains central.
  • Mid-market sales team investment (started Q3 prior year) now showing early contribution (Q4 FY26).
  • AI
  • Moves from “AI-powered servicing” to “agentic integration + MCP + automation across touchpoints.”

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Working capital management is becoming a core “strategic lever,” not just a finance metric
  • Q3 FY26: working capital impacted by MICE deferments and amalgamation.
  • Q4 FY26: management ties receivable optimization directly to ROCE and highlights corporate credit card as a lever—suggesting they view balance sheet efficiency as a competitive advantage.
  • MICE is increasingly treated as both a moat and a volatility source
  • They defend MICE differentiation (execution capability) but acknowledge it can swing results materially when disruptions hit specific destinations/time windows.

End of report.