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Indian Company Investor Calls

Apeejay Surrendra Targets 6,000 Keys by FY30 Despite Disruptions

June 3, 2026 9 mins read Firehose Gupta

Apeejay Surrendra Park Hotels Limited (ASPHL) — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (FY ended Mar 31, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes resilience and “positive” outlook despite disruptions (e.g., “things have stabilized now,” “outlook remains positive”).
  • Strong confidence in long-term growth plan and targets (e.g., “surpassing 6,000 keys by FY30,” “remain confident about our long-term growth prospects”).
  • Even when acknowledging issues (war/cancellations, margin impact), responses are framed as temporary and expected to improve.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Resilient demand + pricing/RevPAR strength: FY26 delivered revenue growth and RevPAR growth; management highlights “pricing strength” and “healthy operating momentum.”
  • Premium differentiation + occupancy leadership: “year-round occupancy at 91%” and RevPAR leadership in upper upscale; Park Calcutta “achieved occupancy of 100%.”
  • F&B as a core profit engine: FY26 F&B revenues crossed INR 300 cr; ~43% of total revenues; experiential formats and awards reinforce brand strength.
  • Asset-light expansion with capital discipline: Balanced mix of owned/managed/leased; target to scale asset-light growth and maintain “disciplined and capital-efficient growth.”
  • Development pipeline progress + real estate cash flow: EM Bypass Kolkata service apartment sales exceeded expectations; cash flow improvement highlighted; other projects (Vizag, Juhu, Kolkata residential/hotel blocks) progressing.
  • Technology/AI as revenue optimization lever: Nor1 AI-driven upselling and SAP S/4HANA; “people-first and AI-first” narrative.
  • Flurys scaling with operational model changes: Continued store expansion; “ramp-up will be significant” and leadership appointment (COO) to support growth.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Hotel demand disruptions, cancellations, and ARR/ADR softness

  • Core questions
  • Why did ADR/ARR show sequential decline in Q4 and only ~3% YoY growth—was it cancellations?
  • Full-year growth vs earlier “mid-teens” guidance—what was missing?
  • Management response
  • Cancellations attributed to geopolitical situation/war in Middle East; “things have stabilized now” and conditions expected to improve.
  • FY26 growth shortfall vs mid-teens explained by two disruptions:
    1) “Operation Sindoor” in Q1
    2) Middle East war starting end-Feb through April; “settlement has not yet happened”
  • Emphasized domestic strength and expects improvement post-stabilization/ceasefire.
  • Assessment
  • Partial/defensive: explanation is plausible but relies on external events; no quantified impact or clear bridge to “mid-teens” besides “disruptions.”
  • Strong confidence language (“definitely,” “expect”) but limited hard evidence.

Theme B: Flurys expansion pace, store mix, and execution model

  • Core questions
  • Flurys outlet count lower than previously guided—any challenges?
  • Achievable expansion plans for next 2 years; store mix (cafes vs kiosks).
  • Central kitchen execution concern—did they change strategy?
  • Management response
  • Outlet growth: committed to adding 30 outlets in next 10 months (to ~140); expansion largely in Delhi NCR, Pune, West Bengal, Hyderabad, Bangalore.
  • Mix: “largely… cafes,” with “one or two flagship stores” per market; cafes seen as “most promising.”
  • Central kitchen: dropped the idea of a Delhi central kitchen; now outsourcing manufacturing to a vendor with standardization/quality control to speed rollout.
  • Assessment
  • Unusually strong: “dropped the idea” is a clear pivot; management frames it as execution improvement and faster expansion.
  • No segment EBITDA disclosed; they refuse segment analysis (“We do not share the segment analysis”).

Theme C: High occupancy claims (Park Calcutta 100%) and measurement

  • Core questions
  • Meaning/calculation of “100% occupancy” given rooms appear bookable on website.
  • Management response
  • Defined as “all the rooms are occupied on all days… full all the time.”
  • Explained website availability timing (“open… right up to midnight”) and emphasized revenue management + repeat customers (claimed 30% repeat).
  • Assessment
  • Potentially evasive/unclear: they provide a definition but not the exact accounting methodology (e.g., how they treat sold-out vs inventory held back, comp rooms, cancellations, or booking engine availability).
  • Strong marketing rationale (repeat customers, entertainment destination) but measurement transparency is limited.

Theme D: Kolkata market outlook and ARR headroom

  • Core questions
  • Kolkata outlook after government change; supply constraints; ARR headroom given near-100% occupancy.
  • Management response
  • Supply limited: “only 5,101 keys” and “~1,702 keys expected over next five years.”
  • Government change framed as positive for stability and investment.
  • ARR headroom: argued that Park Calcutta has exceptionally high T-RevPAR (~Rs. 24,000) and strong banqueting/nightlife; expects ARR gains via demand-supply mismatch and refurbishments.
  • Assessment
  • Strong narrative with some quantification (T-RevPAR claim), but again limited explicit ARR uplift range.

Theme E: Capital intensity, interest cost control, and capex funding

  • Core questions
  • How keep interest costs under control with capital-intensive work?
  • Capex scale and funding plan; landbank availability in Kolkata.
  • Management response
  • Interest cost “at present is 8.35%… expected to remain under that level.”
  • Capex funding: ~Rs. 1,500 crores demand cited; mostly funded through internal accruals; line of credit and cash buffer.
  • Explained interest treatment: acquisition financing interest hits P&L; project financing interest treated as IDC.
  • Assessment
  • Credibility-supporting: provides a financing logic and interest/IDC distinction.
  • Still light on sensitivity (what if project delays extend funding needs?).

Theme F: Project timeline delays (Vizag, others) and acquisition close timing

  • Core questions
  • Why Vizag timeline moved (early 2029 → early 2030)?
  • Clarify Malabar House acquisition timing and FY27 owned hotel launch.
  • Request for leased hotels blended ARR/occupancy.
  • Management response
  • Vizag delay due to environmental clearance timing; now in place; other permissions “virtually on the way.”
  • Malabar House acquisition: bank permission delayed documentation; expected to close in June (with “room” to be safe).
  • Leased ARR/occupancy: refused blended consolidated; offered to email; provided individual ARR figures from memory.
  • Assessment
  • Admission of delay is clear, but “permissions not largely in our control” is standard deflection.
  • For leased ARR/occupancy, they partially comply but avoid consolidated transparency.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY30 keys target: “surpassing 6,000 keys by FY30”
  • Development pipeline / expansion:
  • Over next four years: double hotels from 42 → 85; keys 2,677 → 6,635
  • FY27 plan: add 12 hotels totaling 472 keys; 8 asset-light; total keys past 3,000 by FY27
  • FY27 Flurys: not explicitly quantified in this call, but near-term plan includes 30 outlets in next 10 months (to ~140)
  • EM Bypass cash flow expectations:
  • Second block expected launch Sep–Oct 2026
  • “From EM Bypass sale, we expect additional cash flow improvement of close to 70 crores during the course of this year.”
  • Flurys store additions: “plans to add more than 30 outlets over the next 10 months
  • Flurys outlet targets (medium-term):
  • Take from 110 to 140+ outlets (near-term)
  • Add 40–50 outlets over next four years to 2030
  • Project timelines (qualitative but time-bound):
  • Juhu boutique property ready “within a year”
  • Vizag opening timeline: “open in 2030” (given reschedule)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Demand normalization expectation: after ceasefire/settlement, “conditions to further improve starting now.”
  • ARR growth strategy: focus on ARR via renovations and demand-supply mismatch; “focus is going to be on ARR.”
  • Margin improvement intent: “sustained margin improvement” and “enhancing profitability,” but no new margin guidance numbers.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • On FY26 growth miss vs prior “mid-teens” expectation:
  • “considering there were two disruptions… Operation Sindoor… and the second… war in the Middle East… still the settlement has not yet happened.”
  • On cancellations:
  • “Large significant cancellations did take place in Delhi as well as in Hyderabad… But things have stabilized now.”
  • On Flurys execution pivot:
  • “We have dropped the idea of making a central kitchen at New Delhi. We are going to be outsourcing the manufacturing…”
  • On Park Calcutta occupancy definition:
  • “100% occupancy means all days and the hotel is full all the time.”
  • On EM Bypass cash flow:
  • “Cash flows have improved by over 11 crores… From EM Bypass sale, we expect additional cash flow improvement of close to 70 crores during the course of this year.”
  • On Vizag delay cause:
  • “delay… environmental clearance… got a little delayed… permissions are not largely in our control.”
  • On interest cost control:
  • “interest cost at present is 8.35%… expected to remain under that level only.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Measurement transparency risk: “100% occupancy” explained without detailed methodology; website availability contradiction not fully reconciled with accounting definition.
Segment disclosure gaps: refusal to share Flurys EBITDA and leased blended ARR/occupancy; relies on “email it” or individual numbers.
Guidance credibility: prior “mid-teens” top-line expectation referenced by analyst; management attributes shortfall to disruptions but provides limited quantified bridge.
Project timeline slippage: Vizag rescheduled to 2030; multiple pipeline delays have occurred across calls (see consistency section).

Positive signals
Cash flow visibility improving: EM Bypass apartment sales exceeded expectations; explicit cash flow improvement numbers.
Operational levers clearly identified: renovations to drive ARR; Nor1 for upselling; revenue management + loyalty.
Capital discipline narrative supported by funding logic: internal accruals + IDC treatment explanation for interest cost control.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3–4 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Q1 FY26 (Aug 2025): very optimistic; “best-ever Q1,” strong confidence in high-teen growth.
  • Q2 FY26 (Nov 2025): optimistic and confident; “best ever second quarter,” outlook “very positive.”
  • Q4 FY25 (May 2025): optimistic; super-cycle narrative; confident guidance for FY26.
  • Current Q4 FY26 (May 29 2026 call): still optimistic, but more defensive in Q&A around disruptions (war/cancellations) and guidance slippage.
  • Classification: More Optimistic / No Change / More Cautious? → More Cautious
  • Evidence: more emphasis on “stabilized now,” “settlement not yet happened,” and explaining misses rather than purely projecting upside.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Flurys store growth guidance (earlier):
  • Past (Q1 FY26): target “200 stores by 2027” and annual cadence discussed (e.g., 40 stores in FY26, 60 next year).
  • Past (Q2 FY26): store guidance reduced to 130 for FY26 and 150–160 for FY27 (in Q2 call context).
  • Current (Q4 FY26): management says “plans to add more than 30 outlets over the next 10 months” and expects to reach 140+ from 110; implies FY26 end count is not at the higher earlier trajectory.
  • Flag:Delayed / below earlier implied pace (management doesn’t clearly reconcile “lower than guided before” besides execution/model changes).
  • Project timeline delays (pipeline):
  • Past (Q2 FY26): EM Bypass start Jan 2026; other projects “on track.”
  • Current: Vizag timeline pushed to early 2030 due to environmental clearance delay; multiple delays referenced by analysts.
  • Flag:Delayed (pattern of permission-related slippage continues).
  • Top-line growth guidance (mid-teens):
  • Past (Q4 FY25): confident “high-teen growth” for FY26.
  • Current: FY26 revenue growth is 12% YoY; management attributes to two disruptions.
  • Flag: ❌/⏳ Missed vs implied guidance (no revised guidance; explanation is external but still a miss).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “pure growth” to “growth despite disruptions”:
  • Earlier calls leaned heavily on super-cycle and execution.
  • Current call adds more emphasis on geopolitical disruptions and “settlement” timing.
  • Flurys strategy shift becomes explicit:
  • Earlier: central kitchen concept discussed; now outsourcing manufacturing replaces it.
  • Occupancy narrative becomes more “definition-driven”:
  • Current call faced direct challenge on “100% occupancy,” leading to a more technical defense.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: management provides concrete numbers on cash flow, capex funding logic, and project causes.
  • Weakness: repeated reliance on external disruptions for performance gaps; limited transparency on segment metrics; project timelines continue to slip.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro: Stable “favorable” narrative persists, but geopolitical disruption is now explicitly a recurring explanation.
  • Margins: Still targeted improvement, but no new quantitative margin guidance; margin impact acknowledged (war, depreciation/finance costs).
  • Expansion: Asset-light growth remains central; however, execution risk shows up via timeline delays and Flurys pace adjustments.
  • Technology/AI: Nor1/SAP S/4HANA narrative remains consistent and increasingly central.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Risk build-up around execution timelines: Multiple calls show permission/clearance delays; current call confirms Vizag environmental clearance delay and pushes opening to 2030—suggesting a structural execution risk rather than one-off.
  • Defensiveness in Q&A increases: More time spent explaining “why we missed” (ADR/ARR, top-line growth) vs earlier calls where questions were more about upside and operational levers.
  • Segment transparency remains constrained: refusal to share Flurys EBITDA and blended leased metrics suggests investors may not get the granularity needed to validate margin claims.