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Indian Company Investor Calls

No New Supply for Next Two Years Drives Optimism

June 1, 2026 10 mins read Firehose Gupta

Viceroy Hotels Limited — Q4 & FY ended 31 Mar 2026 (Earnings Call: 25 May 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management acknowledges a “relatively softer operating environment” in March due to “geopolitical tensions” and “inflationary pressures,” but repeatedly emphasizes resilience and execution.
  • Strong confidence in structural demand and execution: “performance remained resilient,” “long-term outlook… continues to remain encouraging,” and “robust growth” language.
  • Forward-looking statements are assertive (e.g., ADR recovery, supply constraints, margin/EBITDA improvement), with limited quantification on near-term guidance.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Demand resilience despite near-term softness: March impacted by “West Asia conflict” and travel sentiment disruptions; however, portfolio momentum remained “healthy.”
  • Growth driven by portfolio expansion (inorganic):
  • Marriott Executive Apartments, Hyderabad consolidated in Q4 FY26; management attributes the bulk of Q4 revenue growth to this addition.
  • Asset enhancement / renovation as the core value lever:
  • INR 100+ crore phased investment across properties.
  • Phase 1 (Courtyard Marriott Hyderabad) completed and already contributing; Phase 2 (Marriott Hyderabad renovation) underway; Phase 3 targeted for FY28.
  • Margin improvement supported by efficiency + mix:
  • Q4 EBITDA margin up 183 bps to 31.4%, attributed to cost control and renovation backend completion; also mix benefit from executive apartments being “full rooms play.”
  • Hyderabad remains a “high-conviction” market:
  • Premium branded hospitality demand supported by corporate base, MICE, and limited supply narrative.
  • Debt/interest cost acknowledged but framed as contained:
  • Finance costs rose due to acquisition financing; management says “We don’t see any further increase.”

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Distressed asset acquisition (NCLT)

  • Core question(s):
  • Are there specific NCLT distressed opportunities under evaluation?
  • How do you assess risk/return?
  • Management response:
  • Many opportunities reviewed; distress is “a little lesser” than earlier years.
  • Evaluation based on “asset built, performance, and location.”
  • Expression of interest… but nothing has materialized as of yet.
  • Assessment (evasive/strong/partial):
  • Partial: no named opportunities; relies on generic evaluation framework.

Theme B: Customer mix & segment prioritization

  • Core question(s):
  • Breakdown of customer mix (corporate vs transient vs group).
  • Which segments are prioritized for growth?
  • Management response:
  • With executive apartments, “client base is slightly wider.”
  • Previously group-heavy due to convention center; now more direct corporate relocation and transient demand.
  • Groups (airlines/armies) are “cyclical” with weddings/events seasonality.
  • Assessment:
  • Reasonably specific qualitative mix explanation; no numeric mix disclosure.

Theme C: Sustainability of revenue/ADR and margin drivers

  • Core question(s):
  • What drove 35.3% Q4 revenue growth and is it sustainable?
  • Was EBITDA margin expansion structural or temporary?
  • Why PAT fell despite revenue/EBITDA growth?
  • Management response:
  • Revenue growth mainly from Marriott Executive Apartments added on 1 Jan (75 rooms; “north of INR 50 crores” yearly revenue).
  • EBITDA margin expansion from:
    • mix benefit (executive apartments higher EBITDA margin),
    • completion of phase one renovation backend efficiencies.
  • PAT decline due to:
    • deferred tax element booked last year (loss recoup accounting impact),
    • additional financing for acquisition.
  • Assessment:
  • Strong: clearly attributes PAT decline to accounting + financing.
  • Sustainability: acknowledges Q4 jump is largely inorganic; implies double-digit growth but does not quantify FY27.

Theme D: ADR/RevPAR outlook & pricing power

  • Core question(s):
  • ADR trends for FY27 after Q4 softness.
  • Initiatives to drive RevPAR (dynamic pricing/bundling/loyalty).
  • Management response:
  • ADR dip due to war; management claims other business offsets and expects demand recovery with weddings/domestic corporate events.
  • Belief that supply is constrained: “We don’t foresee any new supply coming… next couple of years.”
  • RevPAR initiatives:
    • long-stay weekend packages,
    • new spa + rooftop restaurant + “secretariat” expected to contribute over “six, eight months.”
  • Assessment:
  • Qualitative confidence; “no new supply” is a key assumption but not evidenced with data.

Theme E: F&B contribution, margins, and convention center ramp

  • Core question(s):
  • F&B share and guidance for FY27/FY28.
  • F&B margin and whether F&B share/profitability will rise.
  • Convention center expansion impact, break-even timeline.
  • Management response:
  • No quantitative revenue/EBITDA guidance; but provides mix ranges:
    • Marriott/Courtyard: rooms 55–60%, F&B 35–40%
    • Executive apartments: rooms 64–65%, F&B 32–33%
  • F&B margin: “about 45% to 50%” and gross margin “close to 85%.”
  • F&B profitability expected to improve once convention center is back; room upgrades also improve room profitability.
  • Convention center renovation: finish by end of year; recoup in ~1.5 years (management’s stated target).
  • Assessment:
  • Strong on mix and margin ranges; no explicit FY27/FY28 topline/EBITDA guidance.

Theme F: Debt servicing, leverage, and interest cost

  • Core question(s):
  • Plan to manage debt servicing; further interest increases?
  • Target leverage ratio and comfort with debt levels.
  • Management response:
  • Interest cost spike due to debt loaded for acquisition (~INR 215 cr consideration).
  • We don’t see any further increase.”
  • Borrowings confusion in Q&A; management clarifies consolidated borrowings at INR 264 crores as of 31 Mar 2026.
  • Leverage target not clearly stated; management says “very comfortable… wish to maintain this at this level.”
  • Assessment:
  • Partial: leverage ratio target not provided; comfort statement substitutes for metrics.

Theme G: Occupancy dips due to renovation

  • Core question(s):
  • Courtyard occupancy drop from 72.6% to 52.2% in FY26; corrective measures and normalization timeline.
  • Management response:
  • Dip due to “massive renovation”; “already back to normal” and visible “this year.”
  • Assessment:
  • Strong but lacks supporting numbers in the answer.

Theme H: Renovation ROI / measurable improvements

  • Core question(s):
  • Measurable improvements from INR 100+ cr renovation (ADR/occupancy/guest satisfaction).
  • Expected benefits reflecting in financial performance.
  • Management response:
  • Phase 1: new rooms occupied “almost all the time… 95% to 99% occupancy.”
  • Spa revenue “more than doubled.”
  • Convention center renovation: recoup in “one and a half year.”
  • Assessment:
  • Relatively strong with specific occupancy and revenue impact claims; guest satisfaction not quantified.

Theme I: Dividend timing

  • Core question(s):
  • When will dividends start?
  • Management response:
  • By the end of this year… expect to give you a good outcome from next year.”
  • Assessment:
  • Vague: no dividend policy or payout ratio.

Theme J: Supply outlook and ADR impact from sector expansion

  • Core question(s):
  • With 25 new star hotels planned by 2032, impact on Hyderabad supply/ADR?
  • Management response:
  • Timeline pushed out: “FY ’30- FY ’31” rather than earlier.
  • Demand expected to rise and “catch up” or exceed supply.
  • Also argues many projects won’t open due to cost/debt management.
  • Assessment:
  • Assumption-heavy: relies on delayed openings and demand catching up.

Theme K: Channels & Marriott contract structure

  • Core question(s):
  • OTA vs direct channel mix; preferential Marriott management contracts; other brands?
  • Management response:
  • Direct channel growing; Marriott Bonvoy occupancy currently “about 65%” and target “80–85%.”
  • Favorable Marriott contracts acquired with the 2023 acquisition; leverage as multi-property owner.
  • Open to other brands but currently “very comfortable with Marriott.”
  • Assessment:
  • Specific target (80–85% direct/loyalty contribution) is a positive signal.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Renovation investment plan:
  • invest 100 plus crores” across three phases.
  • Phase 1 (Courtyard) completed.
  • Phase 2 (Marriott Hyderabad) commenced early April; “expected to be completed during FY ’27.”
  • Phase 3 targeted “completion during FY ’28.”
  • Convention center renovation economics:
  • Recoup investment in “one and a half year.”
  • Seasonality / occupancy expectations:
  • Q3–Q4 best: Courtyard & Marriott Executive Apartments “reach the 90% mark.”
  • Q1: Marriott “60%–65% occupancy.”
  • Portfolio: Q1–Q2 “70%”; Q3–Q4 “80% and north of 80%.”
  • ADR growth targets (stated by management):
  • Organic refurbishment minimum: “5% to 7%” annually.
  • Marriott/Courtyard refurbishment-driven ADR growth: “at least 20% to 22%.”
  • Combined expected ADR growth: “anywhere between 25% to 30%.”
  • Target ADR level: “7,000 odd… target… 9,000 to 9,500” (near-term); long-run “closer to the 10,000 mark.”
  • F&B margin:
  • about 45% to 50%” (F&B margin), gross margin “close to 85%.”
  • Debt/interest:
  • No further interest increase expected (“We don’t see any further increase.”) — qualitative but tied to cost outlook.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • FY27 demand recovery expectation: management expects demand to return as weddings/domestic corporate events resume; “ADR will go back to the earlier numbers.”
  • Supply constraint belief:We don’t foresee any new supply coming… next couple of years.”
  • Margin expansion narrative: executive apartments and renovation backend efficiencies should “further strengthen” positioning; management expects robust growth and “properties… at full throttle” in the next year.
  • No formal FY27/FY28 revenue/EBITDA guidance: management explicitly declines to share projections (“can’t share… projections”).

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • Q4 growth attribution (inorganic):The main contributor for the revenue increase is the adding of the portfolio of Marriott Executive apartments… purchase was done on 1st January… that’s why the Q4 numbers added up.”
  • PAT decline explanation (accounting + financing):deferred tax element… booked our losses” and “additional financing… to acquire the Marriott Executive Apartments.”
  • Supply constraint assumption:We don’t foresee any new supply coming into the next couple of years.”
  • ADR recovery expectation:once the wedding season… domestic corporate events start coming back… ADR will go back.”
  • Executive apartments margin/mix advantage:mostly… room revenue… EBITDA percentages will always be higher.”
  • Debt cost outlook:We don’t see any further increase.”
  • Renovation impact claims:new rooms being occupied almost all the time… 95% to 99% occupancy” and “spa revenue has more than doubled.”
  • Direct channel target:target… take that up to 80%-85%” from Marriott Bonvoy members.
  • ADR growth math (aggressive):expect anywhere between 25% to 30% growth in ADR” and target ADR “9,000 to 9,500.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
No hard FY27/FY28 revenue/EBITDA guidance despite multiple quantitative targets (ADR, occupancy, ADR growth %). This limits external validation.
Supply constraint narrative (“no new supply”) is central to ADR confidence but not supported with market data in the call.
Leverage ratio target not provided; management only states comfort and clarifies borrowings after confusion.
Dividend timing remains vague (“good outcome from next year”) without policy.

Positive signals
Clear reconciliation of PAT decline to deferred tax and financing—improves credibility vs vague explanations.
Operational proof points: occupancy (95–99%) and spa revenue “more than doubled.”
Channel strategy specificity: Marriott Bonvoy occupancy target 80–85%.
Debt cost containment claim: “no further increase” in interest expense.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4/FY26): Optimistic, but with more explicit acknowledgment of near-term geopolitical softness.
  • Prior calls (Q2/H1 FY26, Q3/9M FY26): tone was strongly upbeat on tourism upcycle and demand recovery; less emphasis on geopolitical disruption.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic / No Change (overall), but with slightly more caution in Q4 due to March softness.
  • What changed:
  • Q4 call leans more on execution + mix from acquisitions (executive apartments) and renovation phase completion.
  • Still maintains the “Hyderabad supply constrained” thesis, but now adds geopolitical impact.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  1. Courtyard renovation completion / room availability
  2. Past statement (Nov 2025): Courtyard phase one to complete by end of Q3 FY26; rooms operational by end of month (Nov 30) and target portfolio EBITDA margin >30%.
  3. What happened (current call): Courtyard phase one “completed successfully” and already contributing; occupancy dip due to renovation “already back to normal.”
  4. Flag: ✅ Delivered (at least operationally; occupancy normalization claimed).

  5. Marriott convention center expansion timeline

  6. Past statement (Nov 2025): Convention center expansion to 20,000 sq ft by December ’26 (phase 2).
  7. Current call: Phase 2 renovation “expected to be completed during FY ’27”; convention center renovation started “first week of April” and finish “by end of this year” (implies FY27 completion).
  8. Flag: ⏳ Delayed / timing softened (from Dec ’26 to FY27/end-of-year framing).

  9. EBITDA margin trajectory

  10. Past statement (Nov 2025): target EBITDA margin north of 30% near term; 40% long term.
  11. Current call: Q4 EBITDA margin 31.4%; FY26 EBITDA margin 29.8% (slightly below 30% on full-year).
  12. Flag: ⏳ Partially delivered (Q4 achieved >30%, FY full-year slightly under).

  13. ADR growth expectations

  14. Past statement (Nov 2025): ADR improving; premium new rooms expected 25–30% higher ADRs.
  15. Current call: ADR softened in Q4 due to March geopolitical tensions; still “full-year encouraging” and executive apartments showing ADR/RevPAR growth.
  16. Flag: ✅/⏳ Mixed (full-year encouraging; Q4 softness indicates volatility).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “renovation-driven ADR/occupancy” to “acquisition + renovation + mix”:
  • Earlier calls emphasized Courtyard completion and Marriott upgrades.
  • Current call adds a major new pillar: Marriott Executive Apartments driving Q4 growth and margin mix.
  • F&B emphasis persists but becomes more tactical:
  • Earlier: F&B growth via banqueting expansion and new outlets.
  • Current: F&B profitability tied to convention center restoration and specific new outlets (spa/rooftop/secretariat).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility improved on accounting explanations (deferred tax + financing) vs earlier calls where deferred tax was discussed but not tied to PAT movements as explicitly.
  • However, some targets remain highly optimistic (ADR growth 25–30%, ADR level 9,000–9,500) while management also admits Q4 softness and “none of us know exactly where this is heading” (war uncertainty).
  • Overall credibility: Medium (good transparency on PAT drivers; weaker on market assumptions and lack of FY guidance).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand & macro: Stable “India tourism upcycle” narrative; Q4 adds geopolitical disruption as a near-term headwind.
  • Supply constraints: Consistent thesis across calls; used to justify ADR resilience.
  • Capex/renovation: Continues as the