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Indian Company Investor Calls

Sterling’s Q1 optimism amid geopolitics-driven FY26 drag

May 18, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Thomas Cook (India) Limited — Q4 & FY26 Earnings Call (held May 13, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Neutral (leaning Optimistic)

  • Management repeatedly frames FY26 as “not a normal operating environment” due to geopolitical shocks and timing of peak seasons, which explains weaker consolidated EBT.
  • Despite that, they highlight resilience and growth pockets (India operations, Financial Services, Sterling, and parts of B2B travel) and express confidence in recovery (e.g., “cautiously optimistic” / “extremely optimistic and confident” for Sterling and Q1 FY27).
  • However, they also acknowledge subdued long-haul demand, wait-and-watch in MICE, and DEI losses/slow recovery, keeping the tone from being fully optimistic.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Geopolitical + macro disruption as the dominant FY26 driver
  • Pahalgam attack / “Operation Sindoor” (April 2025), and “US-Iran-Israel conflict” causing airspace disruption, weaker sentiment, higher costs, and pricing pressure.
  • Explicitly notes seasonality truncation: peak travel windows were “lost or severely shortened.”
  • Performance split: 9M FY26 vs Q4 FY26
  • 9M: “7% increase in top line” with EBITDA “improved marginally.”
  • Q4: “revenue stood at INR 17,707 million… 10% decrease” YoY—described as the “full weight” of external environment.
  • India resilience and segment diversification
  • India operations: “maintained EBT for FY 2026” and “grew by 16% in Q4,” led by financial services, short-haul outbound, corporate travel, inbound, and MICE.
  • Financial Services strength via omnichannel + digital
  • Retail forex growth and digital penetration: app transactions up, WhatsApp engagement up, quick commerce expansion.
  • Forex float cited as stable/large (e.g., “float… about INR 16 billion”).
  • Travel segment margin pressure tied to overseas geopolitics
  • Travel & related services: FY EBIT down “11%” to INR 2,218m; margin “3.3%,” attributed largely to overseas subsidiaries.
  • Long-haul weakness and westbound route airfare surge (“30% to 50%”).
  • Strategic restructuring: resort demerger
  • Board granted in-principle approval for demerger of resort business into Sterling Holiday Resorts (value-unlocking narrative; capital structure simplification).
  • Sterling: strong operating leverage + confident outlook
  • Sterling delivered record Q4 and expects continued scale (95 resorts / 4,500 rooms in 2027).
  • DEI: cost optimization underway, but recovery dependent on Middle East
  • DEI described as heavily exposed to Middle East; March was worst; management expects “50% to 60% recovery towards the end of the year.”

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Sterling occupancy/room additions and Q1 outlook

  • Core questions
  • Whether Sterling expects like-for-like occupancy improvement in Q1 and current Q1 status.
  • How occupancy/ARR will hold despite continued room additions.
  • Management response
  • Extremely optimistic about Q1,” “no headwinds.”
  • Occupancy target: “65%… closer towards 70%” for the year; Q1 expected healthy.
  • Explained occupancy resilience despite supply growth (61% → 64% even with increased supply).
  • Assessment
  • Strong confidence, but largely range-based (no hard numeric guidance for Q1 occupancy/ARR).

Theme B: Travel demand recovery (short-haul vs long-haul) and MICE timing

  • Core questions
  • Why India DMS grew only 3% and domestic B2C declined 14% despite war impact being “evident.”
  • Whether Q1 FY27 shows industry recovery.
  • Corporate/MICE slowdown risk in Q1 and new partnerships.
  • Management response
  • Domestic decline attributed to Pahalgam/Operation Sindoor and Kumbh timing (prior year had Kumbh; current year didn’t).
  • Short-haul and domestic expected to grow “double-digit”; long-haul subdued.
  • MICE: “wait-and-watch,” but corporates don’t cancel—expect timing shift into Q2/Q3.
  • Assessment
  • Partially explanatory but still qualitative on recovery magnitude; relies on “postponement not cancellation” logic.

Theme C: Financial Services margin vs revenue mix

  • Core questions
  • Why gross turnover rose but reported revenue declined slightly—margin pressure vs market-share strategy.
  • Whether Travel segment EBIT margin guidance (5%) still holds given short-haul shift.
  • Management response
  • Denied margin-trading: revenue reported on net basis; mix shifts affect reported revenue.
  • Retail/wholesale margin ranges reiterated (retail ~2% to 2.2%; wholesale ~0.6% to 0.7%).
  • Travel margin: “5%… objective… not getting disturbed,” though arithmetic may look lower due to short-haul unit value; tactical pricing/cashbacks may pressure margins temporarily.
  • Assessment
  • Directly addressed margin concern; answer is structured but still leaves room for “temporary setbacks” due to geopolitics/cost pressures.

Theme D: Capital allocation / net cash deployment

  • Core questions
  • How net cash (~INR 800–1,000 cr) will be deployed; whether debt paydown/tech capex/acquisitions.
  • Management response
  • Tech/software capex emphasized (automation, technology investment).
  • Debt paydown possible over “next couple of years.”
  • Potential inorganic growth if returns meet criteria.
  • Assessment
  • Clear priorities; no specific amounts/timing beyond general horizons.

Theme E: RBI forex regulation impact

  • Core questions
  • Whether revised RBI norms are positive/negative for forex business.
  • Management response
  • Called it “big positive”: AD2 license allows capital account/trade-related transactions up to INR 25 lakh.
  • Also claims no new FMC licenses—restricts new entrants; expects benefit.
  • Assessment
  • Confident regulatory interpretation; acknowledges “fine line still needs to be defined.”

Theme F: DEI recovery plan and whether losses are “done and dusted”

  • Core questions
  • Whether DEI’s Q4 loss is behind them and what prevents recurrence.
  • Management response
  • Not “done and dusted”: March was too late; cost corrections take “30 to 60 days.”
  • Expects cost improvements quarter-by-quarter; recovery forecast “50% to 60%” by end of year.
  • Uses AI/IT optimization and overhead reductions; top line still dependent on Middle East footfalls.
  • Assessment
  • More cautious than other segments; explicitly admits recovery is not immediate.

Theme G: Demerger timeline

  • Core questions
  • Timeline for demerger completion.
  • Management response
  • Board approval: 12–15 months; expects completion by Q1 FY28 (and says original timeline was Q1 FY28).
  • Assessment
  • Straightforward; no slippage mentioned.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Sterling
  • Expect to cross 95 resorts and 4,500 rooms in 2027.
  • Occupancy “approximately 65%… closer towards 70%” (annual framing).
  • DEI
  • Middle East recovery: “approximately a 50% to 60% recovery towards the end of the year.”
  • Demerger
  • Completion expected by Q1 FY28.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Group / Travel
  • Q1 FY27: management expects short-haul and domestic growth; long-haul remains subdued.
  • MICE: “wait-and-watch” but demand should return in Q2/Q3 (timing shift, not cancellation).
  • Financial Services
  • Continued omnichannel expansion and digital penetration growth implied (app/WhatsApp/quick commerce momentum).
  • Capital allocation
  • Net cash will be used primarily for technology/software and debt paydown, with selective acquisitions if returns fit criteria.

5. Standout Statements (most revealing)

  • On FY26 being structurally abnormal
  • 2026 did not play out in a normal operating environment” and peak windows were “lost or were severely shortened.”
  • On consolidated profitability impact
  • FY26 EBT “14% lower than last year” due to geopolitical crisis.
  • On Travel margin objective
  • 5%… is our objective to get to” and “long-term trajectory on margin remains intact,” while admitting tactical pricing may pressure margins.
  • On Sterling confidence
  • We remain extremely optimistic and confident for the year ahead, including Q1 of FY ’27.”
  • Sterling expects “incremental growth is increasing margins and cash.”
  • On DEI recovery realism
  • It is not done and dusted” and corrections “won’t happen overnight.”
  • Recovery forecast: “50% to 60% recovery towards the end of the year.”
  • On demerger timeline
  • We expect this process to get completed by Q1 of FY ’28.”
  • On net cash deployment
  • Tech/software capex and debt paydown prioritized; acquisitions only if returns meet criteria.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
DEI profitability deterioration acknowledged with explicit admission that cost actions take time and top line depends on Middle East conditions.
MICE demand uncertainty: “wait-and-watch” and quarter-to-quarter timing shifts.
Long-haul weakness: “volumes… subdued” and “complete drop in volumes in UAE and CIS” (Q4 context).
Margin guidance framed with caveats (tactical pricing/cashbacks may pressure margins temporarily).

Positive signals
Financial Services momentum: strong retail forex growth, digital adoption expansion, and stable float.
Sterling operating leverage: record quarter, debt-free balance sheet, strong cash reserves, and clear scale plan.
Regulatory tailwind narrative for forex (RBI norms interpreted as limiting new entrants and enabling new transaction types).
Demerger timeline reaffirmed (no slippage).


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Earlier calls (Q1/Q2/Q3 FY26): tone was more “resilience + operational efficiency,” with optimism around recovery and technology rollout.
  • Current call (Q4 & FY26): tone shifts to more explanatory and cautious due to “geopolitical and macro” truncation of peak seasons, plus explicit acknowledgment of subdued long-haul and DEI losses.
  • Classification vs prior calls: More cautious (not fully pessimistic) because management now provides recovery ranges (DEI) and admits timing uncertainty (MICE).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Sterling H2 stronger than H1 (previously guided)
  • Prior: Sterling said H2 would be stronger than H1.
  • Current: “H2… enabled H2 revenues to outperform H1 revenues by 21%.”
  • Delivered
  • DEI technology rollout / WeC implementation benefits
  • Prior (Q2 FY26): WeC rollout underway; expected benefits over time.
  • Current: WeC “100% live” and automation/cost optimization underway; still losses in Q4 due to March/Middle East.
  • Partially delivered (operational improvements claimed, but profitability still impacted by external demand shock)
  • Travel margin objective (5% EBIT guidance)
  • Prior (Q2 FY26 call): management avoided hard forward margin guidance but emphasized margin management and long-term objectives.
  • Current: reiterates “5%… objective” but frames arithmetic effects and tactical pricing.
  • Not clearly delivered (no quantitative FY27 margin guidance; relies on “objective” language)

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “recovery building” to “season truncation + wait-and-watch”
  • Earlier calls emphasized improving sentiment and forward booking momentum.
  • Now, management emphasizes lost/shortened peak windows and MICE timing delays.
  • DEI narrative becomes more loss-focused
  • Earlier: DEI described as improving profitability via cost efficiencies and technology.
  • Current: DEI explicitly reports negative EBIT in Q4 and frames recovery as dependent on Middle East easing.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: management consistently attributes segment outcomes to identifiable drivers (seasonality, specific geopolitical events, Kumbh timing, DEI Middle East exposure).
  • Weakness: some guidance remains qualitative (e.g., “cautiously optimistic,” “objective,” “tactical calls”), and recovery is framed with ranges rather than firm targets—especially for DEI and travel demand.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand
  • Improving pockets (short-haul, domestic, India inbound) vs persistent weakness (long-haul westbound, UAE/CIS).
  • Margins
  • Financial Services: stable/high EBIT margins.
  • Travel: margin under pressure; management tries to preserve long-term margin trajectory.
  • DEI: margin deterioration acknowledged; cost actions ongoing.
  • Expansion
  • Sterling expansion plan becomes more concrete (95 resorts / 4,500 rooms in 2027).
  • Regulatory
  • RBI forex norms become a new explicit tailwind theme in this call.

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Float accumulation as a sentiment proxy
  • Current call highlights float stability (“customers are not traveling and spends are not happening”), reinforcing that demand weakness is not just operational—it’s reflected in customer behavior.
  • MICE “committed costs” logic
  • Management’s framing suggests corporates delay timing rather than cancel; however, this also implies quarterly volatility will persist, which aligns with their “wait-and-watch” language.
  • DEI recovery forecast is conditional
  • Unlike Sterling’s confident outlook, DEI’s recovery is explicitly tied to Middle East easing and operational corrections taking time—suggesting higher earnings uncertainty in that segment.