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Indian Company Investor Calls

Lemon Tree Targets FY28 Margin Recovery as Costs Normalize

June 3, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Lemon Tree Hotels Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (May 29, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management called FY26 “the best year in Lemon Tree’s history” and Q4 “the best ever fourth quarter.”
  • They repeatedly emphasize structural demand tailwinds and confidence in margin recovery: expense heads “reduce to approximately 3.7% of revenue by FY28… leading to corresponding expansion in EBITDA margins.”
  • Even when discussing near-term uncertainty (war, aviation disruptions, GST), responses focus on active mitigation (pricing strategy, cost control) rather than retreat.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Strong operating performance despite headwinds: FY26 revenue +13% YoY; occupancy 73.5% (highest ever full year); Q4 occupancy 78.5%.
  • Margin pressure explained as “investment cycle” + GST normalization:
  • FY26 EBITDA margin 48.1% vs 49.4% (down ~126 bps).
  • Drivers: “significant step-up in renovation expenditure,” “technology,” and “GST-related change.”
  • Clear narrative that these are temporary and should normalize by FY28.
  • Debt reduction and lower cost of debt: borrowings down to Rs. 1,500 crore; cost of debt 7.42%.
  • Asset-light growth engine continues: pipeline inventory 22,581 rooms across 268 hotels; FY26 openings 20 managed/franchised hotels (1,523 rooms) and signings 55 (4,912 rooms).
  • Fleur (PropCo) demerger as strategic unlock:
  • Post-scheme: Lemon Tree becomes “debt-free, high-margin, high ROCE” fee/brand/digital platform; Fleur becomes growth-oriented ownership/leasing platform.
  • Fleur growth plan: target ~5,600 rooms and pipeline execution in top cities; multiple project milestones (Nehru Place approvals, Aurika Naldehra blocks, Varanasi license deal).
  • Near-term demand management: in response to airline capacity cuts/war uncertainty, management shifted emphasis to occupancy over price, maintaining “occupancy premium.”

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Demerger mechanics, brand/operator flexibility, and fee economics

  • Core questions
  • How will Fleur manage assets if Lemon Tree is not the operator? Any “arm’s length” constraints?
  • Does this imply Lemon Tree loses management fees?
  • Management response
  • Brand-agnostic but “Lemon Tree should not be discriminated against.”
  • If economics favor Lemon Tree, Fleur will use it; otherwise, Fleur can choose other operators.
  • Acknowledged fee loss risk: “Yes. But Lemon Tree must be able to deliver best results.”
  • Provided an example of bidding for a 5-star via NCLT where they didn’t win due to an ultra-HNI outbid.
  • Assessment
  • Not evasive, but the answer is conditional (“if economics make sense”)—analysts may view this as soft protection rather than contractual certainty.

Theme B: Brand performance divergence (Aurika vs Keys) and RevPAR drivers

  • Core questions
  • Why Aurika RevPAR growth lagged Keys (e.g., “Aurika only 3% while Keys 16%”)?
  • Can Aurika catch up? Is it structurally lower-end growth?
  • Management response
  • RevPAR growth is micro-market dependent; Aurika has only 2 hotels (Mumbai, Udaipur) with different seasonality.
  • Cited specific disruptions: IndiGo shutdown and war impact affecting discretionary/airport-linked demand.
  • Provided full-year comparison: “Aurika… FY25 to FY26 full year… 19%” and Keys 20%.
  • Assessment
  • Stronger than typical: they reframed the metric (quarter vs full year) and gave specific event explanations.

Theme C: Near-term demand/occupancy outlook under airline capacity cuts and war

  • Core questions
  • How to think about occupancy/RevPAR for next 2–3 months and FY27 if capacity cuts continue?
  • Management response
  • Strategy shift: “focusing on occupancy growth rather than price growth.”
  • Adjust pricing to keep occupancy premium; maintain YoY price levels (avoid “dropping prices ridiculously”).
  • Reported unusual strength: “Occupancy has hit some form of a ceiling… average rate growth… more or less flat.”
  • Assessment
  • Clear operational playbook; however, they did not quantify FY27 RevPAR/occupancy.

Theme D: Signings vs openings conversion and slippage risk

  • Core questions
  • Signings (55 hotels/4,912 rooms) vs openings (20 hotels/1,523 rooms); what does it imply for FY27–FY28?
  • Risks of slippage given ~4,500 Keys openings in future?
  • Expected management fees if openings are on track.
  • Management response
  • Explained that management contracts are often under construction, so openings lag signings.
  • Used a “3-year benchmark” logic: signings 3 years ago should open roughly then; delays possible due to owner financing.
  • Refused to give fee guidance: “No. I do not want to give guidance.”
  • For openings: reiterated expectation of “opened about 2,000 rooms” (Neelendra).
  • Assessment
  • Partially evasive on fees (explicit refusal), but conversion logic is consistent and detailed.

Theme E: Cost normalization plan (GST, renovation, tech) and margin trajectory

  • Core questions
  • How will GST/renovation step-down offset margin pressure?
  • Any renovation slippage into FY28?
  • Status of renovation inventory shut/rooms completed.
  • Management response
  • Quantified expense ratios:
    • GST impact rising then easing: FY26 GST tech/renovation 5.8% → FY27 4.8% → FY28 3.7% of revenue.
    • Renovation: FY27 “1.9%” then normal “1.2%–1.4%” (assume ~1.3%).
    • Tech: stabilizing around 0.6%–0.7%.
  • Renovation status: in Q4/Q1, “400 rooms” and “400–500 rooms” shut; heavy renovation ~85% done for targeted 4,000 rooms.
  • One-off savings: ex-gratia/property tax/Labour Code impacts “disappear from P&L from FY27.”
  • Assessment
  • Most quantitative and credible section of the call; still relies on assumptions (price hikes, no further shocks).

Theme F: Lemon Tree standalone margin and steady-state flow-through

  • Core questions
  • Why pro forma Lemon Tree margins are ~60% vs expectation ~70%+?
  • How does it reach 70%+ EBITDA and PAT 60% in steady state?
  • Management response
  • Current pro forma is not steady state:
    • Corporate expenses up (tech + hiring).
    • This is pro forma… not steady state.”
  • Reiterated steady-state EBITDA flow-through: “steady state flow-through will be 70%+” and “PAT… 60%” (via tax assumptions).
  • Assessment
  • They corrected a prior misunderstanding (PAT vs EBITDA) and gave a plausible bridge, but it’s still model-dependent.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Expense ratio normalization
  • reduce to approximately 3.7% of revenue by FY28 and onwards” (renovation + tech + GST-related expense heads).
  • Debt
  • Borrowings reduced to Rs. 1,500 crore; cost of debt 7.42% (current state, not forward guidance).
  • Renovation / tech / GST ratios
  • FY26: “5.8% of revenue” on GST tech and renovation.
  • FY27: GST impact “from 1%… to 2%”; tech “0.9% of higher income”; renovation “1.9%”.
  • FY28: tech “0.6%–0.7%”; renovation “1.2%–1.4%” (assume ~1.3%).
  • Lemon Tree steady-state
  • steady state flow-through will be 70%+” (qualifies as EBITDA flow-through).
  • PAT… 60%” in steady state (tax-driven).
  • Openings
  • FY27 openings: “opened about 2,000 rooms” (Neelendra).
  • Demerger timeline
  • CCI approval received; SEBI/shareholder approvals pending; “outer limit” could extend to 18 months from now depending on NCLT timing.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Pricing strategy: if war uncertainty persists, they will continue occupancy-led strategy; rate growth may remain “flat.”
  • Demand resilience: management repeatedly states occupancies have improved despite war/uncertainty (“occupancies have improved, not diminished”).
  • Execution confidence: signings/openings conversion expected to follow historical lag; slippage possible if owners run out of finance.

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • Performance peak claim:FY26 was the best year in Lemon Tree’s history… and Q4 FY26 was the best ever fourth quarter.”
  • Margin explanation + timeline:margins were impacted by 580 basis points… GST… only had a half year impact… will have a full year impact going forward,” but “GST impact will decrease YoY” and expense heads “reduce… by FY28.”
  • Occupancy ceiling / pricing flat:our Occupancy has hit some form of a ceiling… average rate growth… more or less flat.”
  • Fee guidance refusal (credibility test):No. I do not want to give guidance” on management fees FY27–FY28.
  • Demerger operator flexibility:brand agnostic but with one caveat that obviously Lemon Tree should not be discriminated against.”
  • Steady-state economics framing:steady state flow-through will be 70%+… then… PAT… 60%.”
  • Capital deployment capacity (Fleur):potential to deploy up to Rs. 3,000 crore in the next 12–18 months” (contingent on deals).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Conditional demerger protection: Lemon Tree’s operator role is not guaranteed; it’s “economics-based” and “brand agnostic,” which can pressure fee certainty.
No quantitative FY27–FY28 fee guidance despite analysts asking—may indicate uncertainty or desire to avoid downside.
Near-term demand uncertainty acknowledged (war, airline capacity cuts) but guidance remains mostly qualitative (occupancy premium, rate flat).
Execution risk acknowledged indirectly: openings lag signings; slippage if owners “run out of finance.”

Positive signals
Clear cost normalization math (expense ratios and step-down plan to FY28).
Concrete renovation progress (85% of heavy renovation done; specific room shut counts).
Debt reduction and lower cost of debt.
Operational resilience narrative (occupancy improved even during war months; May “surprisingly good”).


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (May 29, 2026): Optimistic—“best year,” confidence in FY28 margin recovery, and active demand management.
  • Prior (Feb 10, 2026 Q3 FY26): Also optimistic but more focused on “highest ever” quarter and expectation that expense heads reduce to ~3.6% by FY28.
  • Shift: Current call adds more explicit demerger execution and more detailed FY27/FY28 expense ratio bridge. It also shows more caution on near-term pricing (rate flat, occupancy ceiling) than earlier calls that were more renovation-benefit-forward.

Classification: No Change / More Cautious on near-term pricing, but overall still optimistic due to FY28 normalization plan.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Renovation completion expectation
  • Prior (Feb 2026 Q3): renovation spend heads expected to reduce by FY28; portfolio renovation progress discussed.
  • Current: heavy renovation “about 85% done” and shut-room counts provided; suggests progress is on track rather than delayed.
  • Status: ✅/⏳ (directionally on track; no major slippage admitted, but still ongoing into FY27).
  • Demerger timeline
  • Prior (Feb 2026): demerger process “in next 3 months” / listing by end of next calendar was implied.
  • Current: timeline extended due to SEBI/NCLT procedural steps; “outer limit” up to 18 months.
  • Status: ⏳ Delayed (more conservative timeline now).
  • Management fee growth / conversion
  • Prior calls repeatedly emphasized signings > openings and expected fee acceleration.
  • Current: still signings strong but openings lag; management reiterated conversion logic and refused fee guidance.
  • Status: ⏳ Delayed/uncertain on fee visibility (openings lag remains a recurring theme).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “renovation-driven ARR upside” to “occupancy-led pricing defense” in the near term:
  • Earlier calls leaned more on repricing post-renovation.
  • Now, under war/airline cuts, they explicitly say occupancy ceiling reached and rate growth flat.
  • Demerger becomes central:
  • Earlier calls discussed demerger as a plan; now it’s operationalized with pro forma financials and detailed operator flexibility.
  • Cost narrative becomes more quantified:
  • FY26 call provides a more granular FY27/FY28 expense ratio bridge than earlier calls.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • High credibility on cost normalization: consistent messaging across calls that renovation/tech/GST are temporary and should normalize by FY28.
  • Lower credibility on demerger timing: timeline has become more conservative (procedural delays acknowledged).
  • Fee guidance discipline: refusal to give quantitative fee guidance can be seen as prudent, but also reduces analyst confidence.

Overall credibility: Medium (strong on operational/cost math; weaker on timeline certainty and fee quantification).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand tailwinds: Stable structural optimism (mid-market demand outpacing supply) persists.
  • Margins: Deterioration in FY26 framed as investment cycle; improving trajectory to FY28 emphasized more strongly now with explicit ratios.
  • Expansion pipeline: Consistent signings strength; openings lag remains unchanged.
  • Demerger/regulatory: Theme has intensified and become a major driver of narrative.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • A subtle shift toward “defensive revenue management”: occupancy premium strategy and rate flatness suggest management is preparing for a longer period of macro volatility than they previously implied.
  • Execution risk is being “normalized” in language: slippage risk is acknowledged as “owner finance” rather than company control—this may indicate that conversion variability is not expected to disappear soon.
  • Fee certainty is increasingly dependent on EBITDA incentive mechanics: management explains fee growth sensitivity to EBITDA margins (incentive fees), which ties back to renovation/GST margin volatility—creating a feedback loop analysts may worry about.