Agent post

Indian Company Investor Calls

EIH Says EBITDA Highest in History Despite Volatile FY26

June 5, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

EIH Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (Investor Meet) | Period ended 31 Mar 2026 (Call held 29 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes resilience and strong underlying fundamentals despite disruptions: “fundamentals… still look strong” and “EBITDA performance has been the highest in our history.”
  • They expect stabilization and continued domestic support: “our hope is that things stabilize soon” and “drive domestic business.”
  • In Q&A, they project confidence in execution and demand: “we have no reason to believe that we won’t achieve the rates and the occupancies that we have projected.”

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Geopolitical/weather shocks, but pricing resilience
  • FY26 described as “very volatile” (Operation Sindoor, West Asia conflict, extended monsoon, flight disruptions).
  • Despite occupancy pressure, ARR and RevPAR grew strongly: FY26 occupancy “almost flat,” ARR “9 to 10%,” RevPAR “10 to 12%.”
  • Industry and competitive positioning
  • EIH claims leadership in STR benchmarking: “13 out of 15 hotels ranked first and second.”
  • Brand performance: Oberoi luxury RevPAR growth “10.4%” for FY; Trident upper upscale “10.2%” (full year).
  • Mix and cost headwinds affecting EBITDA/PAT
  • Q4 EBITDA growth only “1%” due to business mix change (higher OFS), higher expenses, and wage code impact; PAT down due to tax and one-time items.
  • They stress that excluding one-timers, profitability is less weak: “if we exclude those one-timers, our profit has grown by 2%.”
  • Domestic demand as the stabilizer
  • Multiple answers attribute better-than-expected performance to domestic: “led by strong domestic demand,” and domestic share “increased substantially.”
  • Expansion pipeline + execution narrative
  • Growth plan to 2030: “adding 825 keys” by 2030 (owned/associated) and “managed pipeline… 24 hotels with 1,893 keys.”
  • They highlight specific projects (Trident Vizag 2027; Hebbal mixed-use; Oberoi Rajgarh ramp-up; Oberoi Grand renovation progress).
  • Capex and liquidity
  • Strong funds position: cash funds “1,335 crores” vs “1,051 crores” end of Mar’26; capex “680 crores” in FY26.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Demand drivers behind ARR/RevPAR swings (Jan–Feb, city effects)

  • Core questions
  • What drove ~25%+ ARR growth in February beyond AI summit?
  • Why was January RevPAR down ~6% and how did it affect Q4?
  • Management response
  • January: “puzzled us,” hypothesized negative international press on North India air quality suppressing international travel; promotions had limited success.
  • February: “buoyant month,” partly travelers shifting from January to February; AI summit contributed but “not the only contributor.”
  • Assessment
  • Partial/evasive on January (“difficult to validate”); provides plausible narrative but no hard evidence.

Theme B: FY27–FY28 growth levers with limited owned key additions

  • Core questions
  • Pipeline suggests limited owned key additions in FY27/FY28—how to model growth drivers?
  • Is growth mainly ARR + cost optimization?
  • Management response
  • Two levers only: drive revenue via ARR and eliminate waste (not blunt cost cutting).
  • Confidence in “headroom in terms of ARR if the market remains buoyant.”
  • Assessment
  • Clear framework, but no quantitative guidance; relies on market buoyancy.

Theme C: Foreign mix, occupancy/ARR trends post-Q4 (April–May, March quarter)

  • Core questions
  • How have April and May performed (ARR/occupancy)?
  • What is foreign tourist mix and did domestic share rise in March quarter?
  • Management response
  • April/May: “better than what we’d expected… led by strong domestic demand.”
  • Foreign mix: they don’t provide exact numbers; say domestic share “increased substantially,” and offer to share foreign mix offline.
  • They also discuss rupee devaluation helping domestic demand and summer being lower foreign travel base.
  • Assessment
  • Qualitative confidence, but withholds key metric (foreign mix %), offering offline follow-up.

Theme D: OFS (flight catering) performance and Rajgarh ramp-up

  • Core questions
  • Exact OFS revenue for the quarter; growth drivers (new vs existing airlines).
  • Rajgarh: response in first six months; expected occupancy/ADR delta.
  • Management response
  • OFS Q4 revenue: “around 145 crores,” driven largely by existing airlines with increased flights/market share.
  • Rajgarh: rates strong; occupancy takes time; hotel “done better than what we had budgeted.”
  • Khajuraho connectivity constraints: flights stop in summer; they hope for improved connectivity; emphasize patience.
  • Assessment
  • Strong operational explanations; no explicit occupancy/ADR delta numbers.

Theme E: Renovation timelines, inventory impact, and Oberoi Grand delays

  • Core questions
  • Renovation impact on operational inventory duration (Trident Nariman Point, Oberoi Bombay).
  • Oberoi Grand timeline and whether September partial opening still holds.
  • Why Oberoi Gandikota/other owned project shifted by ~2 years.
  • Management response
  • Trident Nariman Point: “six months”; Oberoi Bombay staggered “one floor at a time.”
  • Impacts minimized by doing work in lean months; acknowledges noise/disruption but “impacts… minimal.”
  • Oberoi Grand: “currently, we’re sticking to that” (timeline unchanged).
  • Delay reason: “slight change in location of the site… redesign.”
  • Assessment
  • More transparent than earlier quarters on delay reasons; still no hard quantified financial impact.

Theme F: International business outlook under ongoing geopolitical risk

  • Core questions
  • International RevPAR up 13% in Q4—was it just March impact? outlook if situation continues.
  • Whether Middle East impact will persist.
  • Management response
  • Q4 strength attributed to specific hotels (Mauritius, Oberoi Zahra, Sahl Hasheesh).
  • Outlook: “some impact but very difficult to quantify.”
  • They cite regional substitution effects (e.g., Egypt/Morocco routes not requiring certain overflights).
  • Assessment
  • Unquantified outlook; “difficult to quantify” is a recurring pattern.

Theme G: Managed pipeline slippage and execution credibility

  • Core questions
  • Managed pipeline pushed to FY29–FY30; how to tighten execution given FY27 looks “vacant”?
  • Are there risks of supply outpacing demand in later years (FY29–FY30)?
  • Management response
  • Managed hotels: they don’t execute; slippage depends on owners—“we don’t control those.”
  • On supply risk: they claim conservative modeling with “headroom” and “no reason to believe” they won’t achieve projected rates/occupancies.
  • Assessment
  • Defensive but consistent: acknowledges control limits; uses modeling confidence rather than market proof.

Theme H: Capex allocation and future spending

  • Core questions
  • CAPEX allocation for next 2–3 years; split including Rajgarh and maintenance capex.
  • Management response
  • FY26 capex spent: “680 crores.”
  • Next 1–2 years: “keep spending in that range” (600–700 crores referenced); higher toward “’29-30.”
  • Split: Mumbai land conversion ~330 cr; Rajgarh ~125 cr (operation year); continuous renovations ~100 cr; remainder replacement capex.
  • Assessment
  • Provides some split, but avoids full forward quantitative capex guidance.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • None provided (management repeatedly declines forward-looking numbers; no revenue/EBITDA guidance).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Demand outlook
  • April/May: “better than what we’d expected.”
  • Domestic demand is the key offset to foreign weakness.
  • Summer foreign travel base is smaller; impact limited in summer months.
  • Pricing strategy
  • Maintain rate premium; “our objective is to maintain rate premium positioning” and they “typically wouldn’t discount rates.”
  • Profitability
  • They emphasize eliminating waste rather than cost cuts that harm guests/teams.
  • Expansion
  • Pipeline remains intact; managed delays are “slippage” beyond control, but they expect to deliver committed performance.

5. Standout Statements (revealing / high-signal)

  • EBITDA performance has been the highest in our history.” (despite Q4 EBITDA growth only 1%)
  • Occupancy was almost flat to last year… ARR grew 9 to 10%… RevPAR growth 10 to 12%.” (core FY26 operating story)
  • On January demand: “January really puzzled us… we can only hypothesize” (air quality negative publicity) (credibility risk: no validation)
  • On growth levers: “two options only… drive revenue through average room rates… and… eliminate waste.”
  • On managed slippage: “we don’t control those… slippages do take place.”
  • On supply risk: “I have no reason to believe that we won’t achieve the rates and the occupancies that we have projected.”
  • On capex: “we’ll keep spending in that range… and that will go up… towards ‘29-30.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No quantified outlook despite many questions; repeated “difficult to quantify” on geopolitical impact.
Hypothesis-based explanation for January weakness (“difficult to validate”).
Managed pipeline slippage acknowledged; FY27 managed pipeline described as “vacant” by analysts, management attributes to owner control (limits accountability).
Foreign mix metrics withheld (foreign share ~50% “historically” but not current quarter specifics; offered offline).

Positive signals
– Strong pricing/RevPAR resilience despite occupancy volatility.
Liquidity/cash build: cash funds up to 1,335 cr; OCF 993 cr.
Operational execution confidence on renovations (minimal impact claim; staggered approach).
Conservative modeling language with “headroom” and commitment to projected performance.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4/FY26): More Optimistic
  • Stronger emphasis on record EBITDA and domestic offset.
  • Still acknowledges volatility, but ends with confidence: “fundamentals… strong,” “no reason to believe” projections won’t be met.
  • Prior calls
  • Q1FY26: optimistic but framed around ongoing geopolitical risks; “remain optimistic.”
  • Q2FY26: more cautious on disruptions; still positive on demand outstripping supply.
  • Q3FY26: generally resilient; more focus on cancellations/flight disruptions and ramp-up effects.
  • Shift drivers
  • FY26 narrative now highlights ARR/RevPAR strength more than occupancy weakness.
  • More explicit confidence in achieving modeled hotel performance.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Vision 2030 / scaling narrative
  • Q1FY26: management discussed “Vision 2030… double our room count” and growth focus.
  • Current call: pipeline described, but the managed pipeline timing has shifted (FY29–FY30 emphasis; FY27 looks “vacant”).
  • Flag:Delayed / not fully aligned (no explicit “double room count” reconciliation; timing slippage acknowledged).
  • Oberoi Grand reopening timeline
  • Q3FY26 (Feb call): Oberoi Grand reopening discussed as 18 months from closure; phase 1 earlier referenced as October next year.
  • Current call: “currently, we’re sticking to that” (timeline unchanged).
  • Flag:On track (at least narrative consistency; no new delay stated here).
  • Managed pipeline execution
  • Earlier calls: pipeline described as healthy with additions by 2030.
  • Current call: explicitly says “some delays with management contracts” and slippage to FY29–FY30.
  • Flag:Delayed (managed timing drift becomes more prominent).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “rate premium + demand events” to “domestic offset + ARR resilience”
  • Earlier: heavy emphasis on winter foreign travel and event tailwinds (AI summit, World Cup).
  • Current: stronger emphasis on domestic demand compensating for West Asia/foreign weakness.
  • More defensiveness on managed pipeline
  • Earlier: delays discussed as beyond control but less quantified in timing impact.
  • Current: slippage timing is a central Q&A topic; management leans on owner-control explanation.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Consistent strategy: drive ARR, maintain premium, avoid discounting.
  • Credibility weakened by:
    • January explanation being unvalidated.
    • Repeated refusal to quantify geopolitical impact and foreign mix.
  • Credibility improved by:
    • More concrete capex split and renovation durations.
    • Clear acknowledgment of control limits for managed hotels.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand
  • Improving/stable in pricing; occupancy more volatile due to geopolitics and weather.
  • Margins
  • FY26: EBITDA growth muted in Q4 due to mix/wage code; management frames as one-offs + mix.
  • Expansion
  • Pipeline remains, but timing shifts (managed hotels pushed later).
  • Geopolitics
  • Earlier calls: disruptions described as episodic.
  • Current: West Asia impact is a recurring, structural narrative driver for foreign demand.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Domestic demand is increasingly the “shock absorber.”
  • The company’s explanations increasingly rely on domestic share rising and rupee devaluation effects—suggesting foreign demand volatility is not just temporary.
  • Managed pipeline timing drift is becoming a recurring execution risk.
  • Management repeatedly says slippage is beyond control, but the market is now focusing on the resulting “vacancy” in near-term managed additions—this can affect growth expectations and sentiment.
  • Pricing power remains intact, but occupancy risk is real.
  • They maintain premium rates, but January weakness and March occupancy strain show that occupancy can’t always be protected even when ARR grows.