Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to Jupiter Life Line Hospitals Limited Q4 and FY 2025 earnings conference call. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during this conference call, please signal an operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this conference is being recorded. This conference call may contain forward-looking statements about the company, which are based on the beliefs, opinions, and expectations of the company as on date of this call. These statements are not a guarantee of future performance and involve risks and uncertainties that are difficult to predict. I now hand the conference over to Dr. Ankit Thakkar, ED and CEO of Jupiter Life Line Hospitals Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.
Thank you. Good morning, everybody. Thank you for joining us on our earnings call to discuss the business and financial performance of the last quarter and FY 2025. I hope you all had a chance to view the financial results and investor presentation that were uploaded on the website and the stock exchange. I'm accompanied by Mr. Anand Apte, our Chief of Business and Strategy; Mr. Nitin Patodi, our Head of Finance; and Ms. Suma Upparatti, our Company Secretary and Compliance Officer. I'm also joined on the call with our Investor Relations Advisors, SGA, so we have consistently communicated that our post-listing initial objective was to establish 2,500 beds and expand our networks from three to six hospitals. We believe that we could achieve this milestone by leveraging our existing cash reserves and internal accruals.
I'm pleased to report that this first target of 2,500 beds in the Western India region is now within sight. Over the next four or five years, as these hospitals become operational, we are confident that the operating cash flows generated should be sufficient to fund this CapEx and their ongoing operations. However, while six hospitals represented our initial target, they are certainly not the final destination. We are exploring some opportunities in addition to the above six, which could be greenfield or in the form of an acquisition. With this in mind, we have raised additional debt to fund these new projects. The board has carefully considered this and is comfortable with a prudent and responsible level of leverage to optimize our growth in both scale and speed. The broad contours of this debt structure are detailed in the investor presentation, but I will reiterate some key aspects.
Let me begin with our subsidiary, JHPPL, which operates our Indore hospital. Following our listing and primary equity raise, we had extended loan to our Indore subsidiary to facilitate the repayment of their bank obligations and also to fund some of their CapEx initiatives. We have now raised a INR 250 crore debt within our Indore subsidiary to repay our intercompany loan. Importantly, this Indore subsidiary now possesses sufficient cash flows to service this debt, and the debt repayment benefits the listed entity directly because this amount represents equity in our books. Consequently, this money becomes available to either pursue a land purchase or a strategic acquisition, depending on the opportunities that may materialize. Turning to the listed entity, we have secured a sanction of INR 350 crore loan, which is earmarked for CapEx. Of this sanction amount, we have drawn INR 75 crores.
We have the option to utilize the remaining INR 275 from this debt facility to fund our CapEx plans, which could be anywhere: Dombivli, Pune, or something else. This strategic move means that our surplus internal accruals, which are also reflected as equity, will be available for future expansion initiatives. The cost of carrying this loan is expected to be less than 1%. We have proactively availed this loan so that we are well-positioned to act swiftly should a compelling opportunity present itself, without the need of last-minute fundraising. As you see on our balance sheet today, our cash position stands at about INR 600 crores, comprising of INR 325 crores from the new debt and INR 275 crores from our existing cash reserves. In this financial year, we have also undertaken several significant brownfield CapEx initiatives. Let me provide you an update on some of these, starting with our Indore facility.
We executed a substantial expansion project, adding two additional floors to the existing hospital building, resulting in 78 new beds. These beds were commissioned on 1st January 2025. Furthermore, we have constructed an 11-bed ICU, which is now ready for commissioning but will be operationalized based on occupancy demands. We have also pursued multiple expansion projects in our Thane facility this year. To begin with, we have received approval from the municipal corporation to develop the building in accordance with the new UDCPR regulations. This could potentially entitle us to increased FSI, allowing us to add an additional floor to the Thane hospital. However, this is contingent upon obtaining environmental clearances and some other necessary statutory permissions. We will keep you updated about the potential size and scope of future expansions at the Thane facility as and when these approvals are received.
In the interim, we have undertaken some CapEx activities to cater to the current clinical needs. We decommissioned our 22-bed economy ward and strategically reconfigured certain areas to create two new operating theaters, a second MRI machine, a second cardiac cath lab, an expansion of our daycare and chemo suites from 14 - 22 beds, and a new OPD cluster. We have also undertaken a comprehensive overhaul of some of our aging engineering infrastructure, including chillers and cooling towers. The Dombivli Hospital construction is progressing as per plan, with an expected commissioning within a year in Q1 of FY 2027. The new Pune hospital is at the excavation stage after receiving all the environmental clearances. The construction is expected to begin post-monsoon.
In Mira Road, the land has been acquired, and we are at the post-purchase regulatory stage of 7/12 updation, etc., and we will start working on the architectural drawings for that project shortly. Coming to the numbers, Q4 of this year versus last year, the total income this quarter stood at INR 326.7 crores, an increase of 12.1% year-on-year. The EBITDA was INR 78.3 crores for this quarter. The EBITDA margin was 23.9%. The PAT stood at INR 44.9 crores in this quarter, a decrease of 0.9% year-on-year on account of increased depreciation in this quarter. The PAT margin stood at 13.7%. For the whole year, the income is INR 1261.5 crores, an increase of 17.5%. The EBITDA for the year is INR 296.6 crores, an increase of 22.5% year-on-year, and the EBITDA margin is 23.5% for the financial year 2025. The PAT for the year is INR 193.5 crores, representing a margin of 15.3%.
The ARPOB has increased by 10.4% to INR 60,600 in this year. The ALOS is at 3.89 days. The average occupancy for the year is 65.3%, an improvement of 150 points year-on-year. The breakup is 72.1% occupancy for Thane, 65.5% occupancy for Pune, and 54.9% occupancy for the Indore hospital. The overall volume has increased 11.2% to 9.8 lakhs in the financial year. The payer mix split: insurance stood at 55.8%, self-payers 42.9%, and government schemes at 1.3%. With this, I open the floor for questions.
Thank you very much. We will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone phone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we'll wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Ameya from JM Financial. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thank you so much for taking my question, and congrats to Ankit and the management on a good set of numbers. Ankit, first question I have, although you mentioned some details at the end of your speech regarding ARPOB, but for the quarter, is it possible to give ARPOB and occupancy how it has been and how it has performed for year-on-year?
You want the ARPOB for the quarter?
Yeah, yeah.
ARPOB for the quarter is INR 65,453.
Okay, and the year-on-year growth is around 10% or similar to?
Yeah, around 10%, I think.
Yeah, so you expect this 10% year-on-year ARPOB growth to continue? And if yes, then what will be the levers for next year?
No, I don't expect 10% to continue. As I was saying, the projection for ARPOB growth should be inflation-linked. Thane and Pune both are mature hospitals, so besides inflation, there is no other lever for ARPOB growth. Indore may be slightly higher than inflation because for maybe one more year, it has a second lever that is of case mix optimization that is more tertiary work. So Indore may have an extra lever for maybe another year or so. But apart from that, I think if you want to extrapolate ARPOB, it is the safest to extrapolate it in line with inflation.
So then the volume growth has been around 10% as well for us on the IPD, OPD side. So that has resulted into something like 17%, 18% year-on-year growth on the revenue side. So how does that shape up next year, considering the ARPOB is going to fall a bit and the volumes for the existing hospital might not remain at around 10% level, right?
So ARPOB is not going to fall. It will rise in line with inflation. The volume in Thane should be stable. In Pune and Indore, we could expect some growth in volumes as well.
Sure. The second question I have on the Thane, you said that you will get permission to add one more floor in Thane, so the current restructuring you have done where you have removed the economy ward, is it keeping that thing in mind or?
Yeah, so we needed now what is happening is that, as you are seeing across the board, the length of stay for specific procedures and diseases is going down year-on-year with advancement of technology and medical science. So the supporting infrastructure is becoming more important and necessary. So we thought that we were in need of more operating rooms. We were falling short of our cath lab space, so we added one more there. We were also struggling on the imaging side with MRIs, so we added one there. Doctors' offices were becoming a challenge, which necessitated a need for another OPD cluster. So these supporting services were becoming more necessary because just adding beds is not going to solve all the problems.
Right. And once this added floor, whenever it gets completed, it's functional, do you expect there is a little scope to improve your margins on Thane Hospital? Because the incremental cost would be lower, right, for the incremental beds?
Yeah, ideally. If and when this floor does come up, we definitely think that it should contribute on a unit level a little more to the EBITDA margins because most of the fixed costs are taken care of. And the added capacity in terms of manpower, power, etc., does not need as much fixed cost now. So yes, we think it should contribute well to the bottom lines.
Sure. Thank you so much. I will join that.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Moksh Ranka from Aurum Capital. Please go ahead.
Hello. We are doing a greenfield CapEx in Pune, right? Could you please provide some color on the CapEx amount which you'll be investing in it? And actually, we are doing a greenfield CapEx.
Greenfield CapEx here in Pune.
Yeah. And could you give me some details about the amount you would be investing in it and the timeline for this? And it's actually a very good location, I would say, because I just live near there. So yeah, I would just like your comments.
Thank you, Moksh. So the new Pune hospital is supposed to be 500 beds in size. We think that the CapEx incurred for that project should be somewhere to the tune of INR 500 crores excluding land.
For the land, we have got some favorable terms. Is that my understanding correct?
So the contours of the land deal are that currently it is on a lease for 10 years without any escalation for the whole tenure. And after the third year is completed, we have a right to purchase the land. So those are the terms of the land.
Okay. That's it from me. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Before we take the next question, we would like to remind the participants to press star and one to ask a question. The next question is from the line of Abdulkader Puranwala from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah, hi sir. Thank you for the opportunity. So firstly, on the Thane, you spoke about an addition of new floor. So any timeline you would like to provide on the quantum of bed you will add at this facility?
Hey, Abdul. So no, I don't have a timeline, honestly, at this stage. It will depend on the regulatory framework. Currently, the environmental committee for the state and for this region is not very active. So once those committees start getting active and Thane starts coming back on the fold of the permission stage, we will move the applications. And then whenever those applications come through, we will keep you updated. So today, I don't have an exact timeline to share with you.
Ladies and gentlemen, we seem to have lost the participant. Participants may press star and one to ask a question. The next question is from the line of Bino Pathiparampil from Elara Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning, all. Thank you for taking my question. Ankit, just in your speech, you had mentioned about the occupancy rates separately for each hospital. One, could you please repeat that once? And was that for Q4 or the full year? And if it is full year, do you mind giving the Q4 numbers? Because we used to give it in the presentation earlier.
This is for the whole year. Thane 72.1%, Pune 65.5%, and Indore 54.9%. For the quarter, we have Thane 71.1%, Pune 61.1%, and Indore 42.1%.
Got it. And any reason why it's lower in Indore for the quarter?
It's an expanded base. So we added 78 more beds. So in percentage terms, there is a dilution effect.
Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Prisha Rathi from NMK Securities. Please go ahead.
Good morning, sir. I have only one question. Could you please? Hello?
Yes, yes, Prisha. Go ahead.
So I have only one question. Could you please provide an update on the restructuring or the rationale behind the Medulla Healthcare scheme?
So Medulla is a wholly-owned subsidiary. It was activated during the COVID period where we were trying to create a separate entity to build and run our IT services. It was at that time IT engineers, etc., were in a different mode. And they were not very keen to work with hospitals. And some of them who were maintaining our unit at that time were wanting to commercialize healthcare software. So with that view, they wanted to spin it off and create a new entity. This activity lasted for probably a year or so. I'm not sure. But we never really ended up going down that route of commercialization. We have some team restructuring and realignment of thoughts. And we said that that is not the road we want to go down under. So now this Medulla is not a functional entity. We are just carrying it on the books.
So we thought that we should merge it and stop carrying one more entity. So that is the reason Medulla is being merged.
Okay, okay. Got it. Thank you very much and all the best.
Thank you. Participants may press star and one at this time to ask a question. The next question is from the line of Abdul kader Puranwala from ICICI Securities. Please go ahead. Hello. Mr. Abdul? You may go ahead.
Hello.
Yes, Abdul.
Yeah. So when we talk about growing inorganically, are we trying to look for certain brownfield expansion? And in terms of the kind of asset would we look at, would it be the same 500-bed kind of facility setup you have been adding to your network so far?
Yes. So there is no change in thought process on any front. A, to begin with, Western India remains the focus. B, full-service flagship hub model continues to remain the focus. C, greenfield continues to remain a preferred choice. D, on the acquisition and brownfield front, like we have always said, if a good opportunity at a good value does present itself, we are not averse to it. But we will insist that the quality of asset and the value at which we are able to acquire it seems justifiable in our mind. If that does happen, we will look at an acquisition.
So any target multiple in terms of the acquisition value or the kind of amount you would be ready to spend, any color on that would be also very helpful.
No, there is no target as such. It's dynamic, right? I mean, you are willing to spend different things for different value for different things. So I don't want to close my mind and just give you some number. The only thing I want to tell you is, as long as it makes sense in our view, and we will do it. We will not do it just in a mindless race to add numbers and add speed. If it makes sense, we will do it.
Understood. Thank you. I wish you all the best.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Himanshu Binani from Anand Rathi. Please go ahead.
Thank you, sir, for taking my question. So if you can help me with the ARPOB number for Q4 for Thane, Pune and Indore?
So ARPOB number for Q4 consolidated is INR 65,453. We are not giving ARPOBs.
Okay, so unit-wise, ARPOB we are not giving.
No.
Got it, sir. And sir, secondly, can you please help me explain the second phase of this Indore expansion of 111 beds? By when this would be coming?
See, so like I just answered sometime back, if you look at the occupancy for this quarter in Indore is 40%, 45%, right? Once this number reaches 60%, 65%, we will start thinking about expansion.
Got it. Got it. Okay. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Aashita Jain from Nuvama Institutional Equities. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning. I just only have one question on Thane Hospital. So your competitor's team started its IT services soon, and even Max has announced the new Thane Hospital. So have you seen any impact on your senior doctors in this facility so far? And also, with Thane attracting more hospitals in the future, how do you plan to minimize such impact in the future?
Hi, Aashita. So yeah, so far, not a single one of our senior doctors has moved out and stopped association with us. So we continue to report zero attrition at the senior consultant level. Going forward also, I don't perceive that to be a major risk factor. As I have said, we have fortunately developed strong and sticky teams in all the locations where we are operating. So attrition at the doctor side has not been a big problem. However, with answering your question completely with new hospitals coming in, the supply of doctors in Thane is also extremely high, as is the population of Thane, which is extremely high and growing at 3 million people. So I don't think that even if there is zero attrition from our side, the new hospitals will struggle in building teams. They will be able to build teams also.
With the population, I think on the demand side, there should not be challenge for any of the three hospitals.
[audio distortion] Is it possible, can we provide ARPOBs on an annualized basis for the three units? I know you're not sharing for the quarter.
No, unit-wise, we are not sharing. Total, if you want me to repeat, I can. INR 60,600 is annualized, and INR 65,000 is for the quarter.
Sure, sure. Okay. Thank you. Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Rohit Mehra from SK Securities. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi sir. Thank you for the opportunity. My first question is regarding our Thane hospital that with the restructuring of the hospital in place, what is the expected increase [audio distortion] ?
Yeah, Rohit, so I have not done that math, and I have not done this restructuring purely from the lens of ARPOBs and revenue. It is predominantly from the occupancy and clinical needs. So it should have theoretically some impact. What impact it will have, maybe we'll see over the next couple of quarters. But I have really not done the math. I don't have an answer to that question, unfortunately.
Okay. No problem, sir. Okay. My second question is considering our cash balance of approximately INR 600 crore, are you planning any acquisition or any such opportunities under consideration?
Yes. As I said, we are open to both greenfield opportunities and an acquisition as long as the broad criteria that we have is met: Western India flagship and a logical CapEx plan.
Okay. Got it. That's it from my side. Thank you, and all the best.
Thank you, Rohit.
Thank you. Participants who wish to ask a question may press star and one at this time. To ask a question, please press star and one now. The next question is from the line of Harshal Patil from Mirae Asset Markets. Please go ahead.
Good morning, sir. Just most of the questions are answered. Just one thing I wanted to know, you've been quite alluding to even pursuing inorganic opportunities and targets for expansion. And at the same time, we've been quite focused on the western part of India as of now. So any thoughts, just purely qualitative, coming from your side? Maybe you would be looking to go beyond the western part of India, or is there any targets that you are kind of looking at evaluating or something? So any qualitative comments just from an understanding perspective?
Yes, Harshal. So currently, there is absolute clarity that we will not go beyond the western part of India for now. And on the acquisition side, again, it is just to complete the whole story that greenfield remains the first choice. But if there is a sensible acquisition opportunity, we are not averse to it. So that is about it.
Okay. Okay. That's helpful, sir. Thank you. Thank you, and all the best.
Thank you. The next question is from the line of Ashok Shah from Eklavya Invesco Family Office. Please go ahead.
Thank you for taking and allowing me. Sir, can you just inform or say about just this occupancy level can be increased at the Thane hospital still by 10%-15% or 20%?
Thane hospital occupancy is at 72% currently. Anything in mid 70% is, in our view, peak occupancy because we measure it at midnight. There isn't too much scope to increase occupancy in Thane at current levels.
Okay. So are there any plan to open a tertiary center near Pune area or near Thane area towards central suburb towards the other area till so we can get more and more elite patients for our hospital?
Yeah. So as I said, towards the other area is great. They need healthcare there. The challenge remains land availability and cost of land. So if something sensible presents itself, we are definitely open to doing things in Mumbai and near Thane is Dombivli where we are doing a hospital. We are also doing a second hospital in Pune, so I hope that answers your question.
Okay. So any tertiary care or something like only OPD opening and then all the other requirement can be done at Thane hospital, is it possible or not feasible?
So only OPD we don't do. We are into full-service tertiary care only. So wherever we are present, it is tertiary care. And that is the model that we are following. We are not doing only OPD kind of satellite basic.
So my question was, since the availability of land is very difficult, so that's why this can be a second view or something similar thing happens in the eye care hospital?
Certainly, that can be one view. And a lot of people have very successfully done hub and spoke and things like that. And like you alluded, single specialty eye care has done it very successfully. Our model is more hub-focused. So it does not suit our model.
Sir, second point is we are doing a major expansion at two or three places over the next two to three years. Sir, with the expansion at full capacity, what can be our total turnover after three years?
I wouldn't want to get into financial specific guidance after three years. But on the occupancy front, I can give you some color to understand that next financial year, Dombivli should get inaugurated, and that should add about 250 odd beds to our capacity in phase I, which can be ramped up over the next couple of years as the capacity expands. And then Pune, a couple of years after that. So within three years, we should have two more functional hospitals which should add to available bed capacity, and it should start contributing on the financial front as well.
Dombivli will be 250, and how much will be Pune beds?
So both are 500 beds. Phase I will be around 250, and then we will ramp it up as per need.
So in first phase, total 500 beds will be opening, and second phase, we can have a look at next 500 beds.
Correct.
Thank you, sir. Thank you. That's all from my side. Thank you. Very best wishes to you. Thank you.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you. As there are no further questions from the participants, I now hand the conference over to the management for closing comments.
Thank you, everyone, for joining on Monday morning. I hope the questions were answered satisfactorily. However, if there are any further questions or you need any more clarifications, please reach out to us through SGA, and we'll be happy to take them up. Thank you and best wishes.
Thank you. On behalf of Jupiter Life Line Hospitals Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines.