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Indian Company Investor Calls

Leela Palaces Targets Double-Digit Growth Despite Geopolitical Hit

May 6, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Leela Palaces Hotels & Resorts Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (Apr 28, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “strong… performance,” “resilience,” “outpaced the industry,” “best-in-class” margins, and a “compelling” outlook.
  • Even when discussing geopolitical disruption, they stress mitigation and recovery (e.g., “occupancy in April to recover…”, “expect… high single digit or early double-digit growth”, “May and June… very exceptional good performance months”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Resilience to geopolitical disruption (West Asia war):
  • March occupancy hit due to international travel disruption, but ADR growth remained strong and domestic demand offset.
  • Management frames impact as contained to international and expects normalization.
  • Pricing power + market share gains:
  • FY26: ADR +13%, same-store RevPAR +14%, RevPAR index 150, and RevPAR premium ~INR 6,000 over India Luxury segment.
  • Operating leverage and margin expansion:
  • FY26 operating EBITDA +19% with margin expanding 167 bps to 49%; “over 60% of incremental revenue converted to operating EBITDA.”
  • Aggressive but disciplined expansion / asset management:
  • FY26 fastest expansion pace: +23% growth in keys; portfolio visibility to 966 additional keys.
  • Value-accretive initiatives: ARQ membership club rollout, F&B refurbishments, retail relaunch, spa/wellness upgrades, villa conversions.
  • Balance sheet strength enabling capex flexibility:
  • Net debt reduced 50%, net debt/EBITDA 1.6x, “meaningful financial headroom.”
  • Non-room revenue engine (F&B + experiences):
  • F&B revenues +15%; non-resident covers rising; non-resident covers 54% of city hotel cover mix.
  • Pipeline execution confidence (greenfield + managed ramp-ups):
  • Construction milestones “advancing on plan” across multiple sites.
  • Managed hotel example: Hyderabad ramp to ~62% occupancy and ADR 1.24x peer set.
  • Dubai risk acknowledged but treated as manageable:
  • They state plans unchanged, no major cost overruns, and argue muted new supply supports long-run fundamentals.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: March/April/May demand trends under geopolitical disruption

  • Core questions
  • Why was March occupancy sharply down if war impact should be limited?
  • What are April and May trends (RevPAR/occupancy)?
  • Management response
  • Impact primarily on international from key source markets; domestic not impacted.
  • Despite March disruption: 15% ADR growth and 6% RevPAR growth YoY for the quarter.
  • April occupancy recovering to “similar levels as last year”; expects high single digit / early double-digit RevPAR growth in April.
  • May and June “very exceptional good performance months”; quarter expected double-digit growth in revenues and EBITDA.
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • They avoid exact March occupancy/RevPAR numbers and instead give directional ranges.
  • Strong confidence on near-term months (“exceptional good”) without hard metrics.

Theme B: MICE/event cancellations and recovery

  • Core questions
  • Any meaningful cancellations/postponements in MICE due to geopolitics?
  • Are events deferred or lost?
  • Management response
  • March MICE cancellations occurred; they issued credit notes and deferred bookings 6–9 months, expecting a “very high percentage” to return in coming quarters.
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • “Very high percentage” is not quantified.

Theme C: Coorg acquisition economics + stabilization timeline

  • Core questions
  • Initial response to Coorg; when does stabilized revenue occur?
  • What ARRs/room rates are implied?
  • Does stabilized revenue include Phase 1 (19 villas)?
  • Management response
  • Early guest feedback positive; rebranding expected end of this quarter / early next quarter to enable distribution.
  • Stabilized revenue assumption: INR 165–175 crores includes the 19 villas.
  • Revenue target achieved in year four when 19 villas contribute.
  • Capex for 19 villas: ~INR 38 crores.
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • ARRs are discussed qualitatively; no explicit ARRs provided despite the question.

Theme D: Capex/cost inflation and construction schedule risk (Ayodhya/Agra/Ranthambore; FY27–FY28)

  • Core questions
  • Any delay (shift from FY28 to CY28)?
  • Any construction cost escalation?
  • FY27/FY28 capex outlook?
  • Management response
  • Approvals and funding already in place; construction “on pace.”
  • No escalation: “capex numbers… remains the same.”
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • They confirm no escalation but do not provide numerical capex guidance in the transcript.

Theme E: Dubai asset risk, write-offs, and refurbishment plan

  • Core questions
  • Any cost overruns affecting margins?
  • Possibility of write-offs if uncertainty persists?
  • Status of refurbishment/Leela rebrand timeline.
  • Management response
  • No major cost impact: operator manages till end of year; handover 1 Jan 2027, refurb by end of that year, rebrand 1 Jan 2028.
  • Write-offs: “We are evaluating… but we don’t see any such possibility,” underwriting was “conservative.”
  • Plans unchanged; argue new supply muted and potential market share capture on recovery.
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • “We don’t see any such possibility” is conditional (“too early… evaluate it”)—risk is acknowledged but downplayed.

Theme F: Revenue mix drivers (rooms vs F&B vs HMA)

  • Core questions
  • What drives double-digit revenue growth when RevPAR is only +6%?
  • Contribution from F&B vs management fees/HMA?
  • Management response
  • Rooms impacted by occupancy drag (~6%); ADR strong.
  • F&B contributes ~40% of hotel revenue; F&B grew double-digit; banquet >10%.
  • Managed hotel income improved (Hyderabad ramp); HMA fees grew double-digit due to ramp-up and contract terms.
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • For exact Q4 room/F&B/HMA numbers, they offer a separate call rather than providing figures in-session.

Theme G: Cost structure and margin protection

  • Core questions
  • Why are costs inflated as % of revenue vs last year?
  • Are there steps to cut costs to protect margins?
  • Management response
  • Mostly inflation; main exceptions: sales & marketing/commissions due to Expedia/Agoda charging gross basis; also share of GHA revenue increased.
  • Employee cost: impact from accrual for new labour code (leave encashment + gratuity) and added employees for “value drivers” (simulations/training).
  • Flow-through: “over 60%” incremental revenue to EBITDA; EBITDA margin 49%, 167 bps better YoY.
  • Expect payroll cost % to normalize: “It should… go down.”
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • They provide a plausible explanation for employee cost but still do not give a full quantified cost bridge.

Theme H: ARQ franchise model and membership targets

  • Core questions
  • ARQ revenue model; membership vs initiation fees; targets for 27–28.
  • Membership count target.
  • Management response
  • Initiation fee model: INR 45 lakh + GST, invite-only; run-rate annual fee.
  • Membership terms: 10-year or lifetime.
  • Target stabilized number: ~2,000 members once all clubs open (Bengaluru, Delhi, Chennai, and looking at Mumbai).
  • Evasive/partial/strong points
  • They do not provide explicit revenue expectations for ARQ in FY27–FY28, despite the question.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative / semi-quantitative)

  • April RevPAR growth: expects high single digit or early double-digit growth (vs same time last year).
  • May & June:very exceptional good performance months.”
  • Near-term quarter performance:double-digit growth in revenues and EBITDA” for the quarter (Q1 FY27 implied by context).
  • FY27 occupancy (blended):early 70s
  • City hotels: mid-70s
  • Resorts: mid-60s to late-60s
  • Coorg revenue (first operating year): INR 65–70 crores (FY27 first full year)
  • Coorg stabilized revenue: INR 165–175 crores, achieved in year four (includes 19 villas)
  • Coorg capex for 19 villas: ~INR 38 crores
  • Net debt/EBITDA: expect ~1.6x next year; then down to ~1.4x and “closer to one” as assets generate EBITDA.

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Domestic demand expected to remain a strong opportunity, especially into holiday season.
  • International recovery expected post stabilization; Leela expects to be “first to pick up and bounce.”
  • Dubai: plans unchanged; they believe no major cost overruns and no write-offs currently expected; long-run fundamentals supported by muted new supply.
  • Cost normalization expected: payroll cost % should decline as one-offs (labour code accrual) fade and value drivers ramp.

5. Standout Statements (direct / revealing)

  • On March disruption and mitigation:Our domestic business has not been impacted at all… some part of our international business has been impacted…”
  • On near-term recovery:In April, we have seen the pace come back to same time last year levels…”
  • On seasonality confidence:May and June will be very exceptional good performance months for us…”
  • On margin quality:Over 60% of the incremental revenue converted to operating EBITDA…”
  • On turnaround: “record profit after tax of INR 403 crores… decisive turnaround from INR 48 crores in FY25.”
  • On Dubai risk stance:We don’t see any such possibility” of write-offs, while also saying “it’s too early… evaluate it.”
  • On ARQ model:initiation fee model… memberships are currently either for 10 years or for lifetime… overall goal… 2,000 members.”
  • On Coorg stabilization timing: stabilized revenue achieved in year four when the 19 villas come into play.

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Limited numeric transparency in Q&A:
– No exact March occupancy/RevPAR bridge; exact Q4 room/F&B/HMA figures deferred to another call.
High confidence language on near-term months (“exceptional good”) without hard metrics.
Dubai write-off risk not ruled out absolutely (“evaluating… too early”), though they downplay likelihood.
MICE recovery quantified only qualitatively (“very high percentage”).

Positive signals
– Clear operational explanations for performance variance (ADR strength offsetting occupancy drag).
– Strong margin/operating leverage narrative supported by specific metrics (49% EBITDA margin; 167 bps expansion).
– Balance sheet strength: net debt down 50%, net debt/EBITDA 1.6x.
– Concrete capex/cost control claims for pipeline (no escalation; approvals/funding in place).
– ARQ membership funnel described with initiation fee economics and member target.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis

Note: No previous transcripts were provided (“No documents matched the configured filters”), so historical comparison cannot be performed.

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Not assessable (no prior call transcripts available).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Not assessable (no prior commitments/transcripts provided).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Not assessable (no prior narrative baseline).

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Limited assessment: within this call, management provides coherent explanations (ADR vs occupancy; domestic offset; cost one-offs), but credibility vs prior periods cannot be judged.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Not assessable across calls.

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • Not assessable without prior transcripts.

If you share the previous 3–4 call transcripts, I can complete the historical consistency/credibility and “missed expectations” sections rigorously.