Global Health Limited (NSE:MEDANTA)
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May 12, 2026, 3:29 PM IST
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Q3 25/26

Feb 5, 2026

Operator

Ladies and gentlemen, good day, and welcome to Global Health Limited Q3 FY 2026 Earnings Conference Call, hosted by JM Financial Institutional Securities Limited. As a reminder, all participants' lines will be in 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 touchtone phone.

I now hand over the conference to Mr. Amey Chalke from JM Financial Institutional Securities Limited. Thank you, and over to you, sir.

Amey Chalke
Pharma Research Analyst, JM Financial Institutional Securities Limited

Hi, Kapari. Good afternoon, and warm welcome to all the participants on Global Health Limited Q3 FY 2026 earnings call, hosted by JM Financial. Today on this call, we have with us from the management, Dr. Naresh Trehan, Chairman and Managing Director, Mr. Pankaj Sahni, Group CEO and Director, Mr. Yogesh Kumar Gupta, Chief Financial Officer, and Mr. Ravi Gothwal, Head of Investor Relations.

I will now hand over the call to Dr. Trehan for his opening remarks. Thank you, and over to you, Doctor.

Naresh Trehan
Chairman and Managing Director, Global Health Limited

Thank you. Good afternoon to everyone, and welcome to Medanta's Q3 FY 2026 earnings conference call. I hope all of you have had the opportunity to review the results and presentations that were released yesterday. At Medanta, our primary focus continues to be on delivering high quality, patient-centric care across our network, supported by strong clinical governance, robust processes, and continuous investment in medical expertise and infrastructure. During the quarter, the company remained firmly committed to strengthening its clinical program, expanding across tertiary and quaternary care, and ensuring consistent clinical outcomes across its hospital network. As doctors, we remain deeply concerned about the rising cancer burden in India, where early detection continues to be the most effective intervention. In this context, we launched a large-scale cancer awareness program during the last six months, focusing on breast and prostate cancers.

The initiatives were aimed at dispelling prevalent myths, promoting self-examination, and encouraging timely medical intervention. To meet the growing demand for advanced oncology care, our Gurugram facility commissioned its first SGRT radiation oncology machine, significantly enhancing treatment capacity and adding some of the latest technology to this field. I would like to acknowledge the dedication of our doctors, clinical teams, and support staff, whose collective expertise and commitment remain central to maintaining the highest standards of care while delivering personalized, patient-centric outcomes across our hospitals. Our recently commissioned Noida Hospital completed its first full quarter of operations during this period.

The hospital made encouraging progress across clinical onboarding, outreach initiatives, and infrastructure activation, thereby laying a strong foundation for the ramp-up of business operations and the delivery of high quality healthcare services, not only to Noida City, but also across Western Uttar Pradesh. I am also pleased to share that Medanta, Lucknow, has received the prestigious Joint Commission International, short form JCI, quality accreditation in January 2026. Medanta, Lucknow, is the first hospital in the region to be accredited by JCI. This certification reaffirms our commitment to deliver the highest global standards of clinical quality and patient safety in the region where we operate.

With that, I will now hand over the call to Mr. Pankaj Sahni, our Group CEO, who will take you through the financials and operational performance in detail. Thank you.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Thank you, Dr. Trehan. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us today for our Q3 FY 2026 earnings call. Let me begin with the financial performance for Q3 FY 2026. Total income for the quarter stood at INR 11,428 million, delivering a robust 19% year-on-year growth, driven by sustained momentum across all our hospitals and continued improvements in operating metrics. EBITDA, excluding Noida, grew by 11% year-on-year to INR 2,814 million, with healthy margins of 25.4%, underscoring the resilience and operating leverage of our balanced portfolio. EBITDA, including Noida, stood at INR 2,494 million, with margins of 21.8%, reflecting the expected impact of early-stage operating losses from our newest hospital.

Medanta, Noida, which commenced operations in September 2025, completed its first full quarter of operations during Q3. The hospital generated INR 3,343 million in revenue and reported an EBITDA loss of INR 320 million, in line with the investment required to operationalize a facility of this scale and high standard. At Noida, we accelerated the ramp-up with addition of 102 beds, taking total bed count to 328 beds, with nine new operating theaters added this quarter, taking the total count to 14 operation theaters. This is also supported by significant strengthening of our clinical teams. We remain confident of steady improvement in utilization and financial performance over the coming quarters.

Consolidated profit after tax stood at INR 950 million, impacted by higher depreciation and finance costs related to Noida, initial operating losses, and a one-time statutory impact of INR 366 million, arising from the implementation of new labor codes classified as an exceptional item. Adjusting for labor codes impact, profit after tax was INR 1,224 million. We also saw encouraging momentum in international business. International patient revenue grew by 30% year-on-year, to INR 703 million, driven by higher volumes, while our OPD pharmacy business grew 30% to INR 465 million. Operationally, the quarter demonstrated strong traction across the network. We added 144 beds, including 42 beds in Patna and 102 beds in Noida.

Inpatient volumes grew by 14%, while outpatient volumes increased by 20% year-on-year. Our average length of stay reduced to 3.02 days, a 7% year-on-year improvement, while occupied bed days increased by 7%, translating into an occupancy of approximately 59% on expanded bed days. ARPOB increased by 10% to INR 67,361, supported by improvements in ALOS and case- mix. Moving on to mature and developing performance update. Our mature hospital, consisting of Medanta, Gurugram, Indore, and Ranchi, delivered steady performance with revenue of INR 7,020 million, up 9% year-on-year, and EBITDA of INR 1,675 million, up 7%, with margins of 23.9%. Mature margins during the period were impacted due to increase in employee costs and other operating expenses, including repairs and maintenance.

Our developing hospitals, excluding Noida, continued to outperform, recording 22% revenue growth to INR 3,651 million, and EBITDA of INR 1,156 million, growth of 13%, with strong margins of 31.7% in Q3 FY 2026. If you look at 9-month performance, both Lucknow and Patna facility continues to deliver double-digit growth in revenue and EBITDA, with Lucknow margins registering over 150 basis points improvements year-on-year, while Patna margins remain stable. Developing hospital, including Noida, stood at INR 3,994 million, up 33% year-on-year, while EBITDA stood at INR 836 million, with margins of 20.9%, reflecting the expected drag from early-stage operations in Noida.

Inpatient volumes across developing hospitals increased by 27% year-on-year, with overall occupancy at 62% and ARPOB rising 8% to INR 56,853. Project update. During the first nine months of FY 2026, bed capacity increased by 18% year-on-year, with addition of 537 beds, comprising 99 beds at Patna, 110 beds at Ranchi, and 328 beds at Medanta, Noida. We continue to have meaningful headroom for growth within our existing network, with the potential to add 496 beds through brownfield expansions, including 193 beds at Lucknow, 81 beds at Patna, and 222 beds at Noida. These additions are expected to drive near to medium-term growth with minimal incremental CapEx. On the expansion front, our pipeline continues to progress well.

In Guwahati, barricading is complete, and drawings have been submitted for approvals. In Mumbai, land acquisition is complete, additional FSI approvals have been received, and drawings submitted for approval. In South Delhi, construction activities are underway following the completion of site surveys and soil testing. Pitampura project is going through the regulatory approval phase. Overall, nine months of FY 2026 reflect disciplined execution across the organization. Our core hospitals remain stable, developing hospitals continue to scale efficiently, and Medanta, Noida, is progressing in line with expectations during its ramp-up phase. We remain confident that these investments will create sustainable value for all stakeholders.

With this, I would now request the operator to open the line for questions. Thank you.

Operator

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 touchtone telephone. 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 will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. The first question is from the line of Tushar from Motilal Oswal Financial Services. Please go ahead.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Yeah, thanks for the opportunity. Sir, firstly, on the clarification, like, in your opening remarks, you highlighted about Lucknow and Patna margins. If you could just, you know, spell out again?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. Should I go ahead, or do you have another question, Tushar?

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Yeah, first, if you could address this, and then I'll take the second one. I'll add—I'll have the second question.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So if you look at our developing hospitals performance, if you look at the presentation on the investor presentation, I think it is on slide 16. You will see that we have seen a income growth of 28% from the nine-month period. This is excluding Noida, where the revenue has grown from INR 812 crore to INR 1,040 crore. And if you look at the margins, that has also increased. In fact, the margins have increased from 30% to 31.1%, excluding Noida. And then if you factor in Noida, that is because of Noida loss, so that is coming to 25%. So I hope that is the question which you are asking, Tushar .

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Sir, on Lucknow, particularly, how has been the margins scale-up?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

On Lucknow, we have done very well. Over the course of the last nine months or so, as I mentioned in the opening remarks, we have seen a margin expansion of over 150 basis points when you look at it on a nine-month-to-nine-month basis.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Got it. Secondly, now with respect to Noida, we've almost onboarded 220 doctors. What is the—like, are we more or less now done, in terms of onboarding doctors? Or what is the sort of target, as far as doctors are concerned, and how has it been, like, maybe, maybe the initial feelers with respect to Noida hospital?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So, you know, as you're aware, we don't stop hiring doctors even after several years. But of course, the hiring to be able to start the services is more or less underway. There are some departments which are still not active in Noida. So some of the departments which are not active in Noida as at December 31, would be the pediatrics department, the obstetrics department, liver transplant department, some of the departments in some of the more niche specialties like vascular surgery. So we are still continuing to look at these departments and hiring. But I would say that the majority of the hiring has been undertaken, including adding in some of the talent to support the key teams.

So we now expect that, you know, most of that hiring is finished. But like I said, if we do find that we need to bring in more talent, we will not stop that hiring. That will continue. And wherever the departments are not there, as I mentioned, that hiring will take place. I don't know whether it will happen immediately in the next few months, or whether that will happen subsequent to March thirty-one, but that will be as per our availability of beds and our availability of talent and our, you know, plans as we move forward.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Got it. And just lastly, now that it's, like, three-four months into operation, so broadly, what kind of ARPOB is like as a starting point, so to say? Of course, this will further improve with the change in case mix, payer mix, but currently, if you could share what kind of ARPOB we are there having at Noida hospital.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So ARPOBs are, in Noida hospital, are coming currently much higher than Gurgaon. But I would not necessarily use this as a proxy for extending out into, you know, many months into the future, because, you know, we have just started. We have now signed up about four or five major insurance contracts. Other insurance contracts are coming on board. We have not yet taken any of the panels in Noida that may come on as we move forward, in line with our broader philosophy of serving every strata of society and every category of patients. So I don't-- I mean, right now, the ARPOBs are, you know, similar to Delhi ARPOBs, but I just caution that we should not assume that that will maintain as we move forward.

Once we have a more balanced, you know, revenue mix, then you will see a slightly more balanced ARPOB as we move forward.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Got it, sir. Thank you. That's it from my side.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Devarsh Shah from Sunidhi Securities. Please go ahead.

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Yeah. Hello, sir. Thank you for the opportunity. So I wanted to understand, like, could you typically state the employee to bed ratio for the hospital? Because as per my understanding, the employee to bed ratio varies for the different specialty. So, so on the overall basis, what would it be for your hospital?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So we don't look at—I mean, I'm not very sure, Devarsh, where you are getting these baselines from. We don't normally look at employee to bed ratios in any one area, because it varies very drastically depending on the nature of the specialty. So neither have we ever, ever published it, nor do we—nor can I tell you that this is a standard number for a hospital. Just to give you a sense, a liver transplant department may have fewer beds, but very high number of clinical talent. Whereas a internal medicine department may have a high number of beds and very few number of doctors. So it is not a very meaningful metric for us to look at in terms of any of the operational parameters. So unfortunately, we don't have anything which we report out, which I can share with you.

I'm not sure if you have, something deeper in mind in the question I can try to assist, but this metric as such, we don't report.

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Okay, sir. And the second question was, like, could you tell the total census beds for each unit?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

The total census beds in each unit?

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Yeah.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

I think that was in the investor deck. Let me see if I can find it. So Noida census beds right now is 187. Right, let me just pull out the census beds for our total is about 2,427. And maybe I can get this--

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

2,600.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

2,665 as at December. Maybe I can get this sent across to you from our investor relations team, so we don't waste everybody else's time on the call. Each of the units will get the beds sent to you.

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Sure, sir.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. Gurgaon is about 1,220. I remember that number. I think Lucknow currently is operating at around 500-600.

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Okay, sir.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Patna, our other big facility, is 569. Sorry, 386 is the census beds. But we will get this sent to you. I think it's in the deck also.

Devarsh Shah
Analyst, Sunidhi Securities

Yeah. Okay, sir.

Operator

Thank you. To ask a question, please press star and one now. Participants who wish to ask a question may press star and one this time. The next question is from the line of Bansi Desai from J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.

Bansi Desai
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

Yeah, hi. Thanks for taking my question. So firstly, on Noida, how should we think about the losses from here on? I'm assuming these would be the peak kind of losses that we report in the quarter, given, you know, we've added, you know, doctors and, you know, large part of commissioning expenses would be sitting in this quarter, and therefore, as the unit ramps up, you know, should we see losses coming down? And also, you know, given the fact that we are expected to add, you know, another 200+ beds here over the next one year, how should we see the loss trajectory?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So, you know, I mean, I hope so, that we've seen the peak of the losses. You're right. If you look at our scale-up of clinicians, we've added in a whole bunch of clinicians from September to, you know, November. And even within this quarter, if I was to really see, you know, the performance really was more in terms of volumes growth, more started towards the second half of this quarter. So you don't even see complete three months of, you know, run rate. So we are seeing now, especially, December and as we move into January, a better run rate trajectory on the revenue. So of course, that will help with the loss containment. I don't know exactly when it will be fully concluded.

One thing I just want to clarify for one of the earlier questions I had mentioned on the specialties. One thing which I forgot to mention is our radiation oncology and our nuclear medicine department, which is on board in terms of the talent and the machines. That hasn't started yet, so that is another thing I forgot to mention, that the department, which is currently missing. But you're right. As we scale up, we should see now the business coming in, our insurance contracts coming on board, our corporate entitlements coming on board. And really now the question is, you know, getting down and actually ensuring that we are able to service the people of Noida and Western UP.

So much of the initial work is done, although some of the project work is still undergoing, but the hospital is fully functional now, subject to the departments that I mentioned.

Bansi Desai
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

When we think of adding 200 beds here, you know, I would assume those would largely get absorbed, you know, with these 300 beds, you know, ramping up by that time.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yes. So the additional beds would largely get absorbed with the teams which we have, plus some element of the teams which we are adding. So I can tell you, for example, that we are already underway of creating our dedicated transplant unit. So although it was not completed and commissioned by December 31, that is one area which we will be having, and so some of these additional beds will come into that. So with the exception of really transplant, which has dedicated infrastructure and maybe obstetrics or pediatrics, the rest of the infrastructure will more or less just scale up as and when the need is there and will be part of the existing clinical team. So we don't see that there's any real need to hire new departments for filling those beds.

Bansi Desai
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

All right. That's clear. And my second question is on the mature units. You know, we've seen significant decline in ALOS there, 2.9 days. Is it a quarter phenomena or, you know, do we expect, you know, structurally, ALOS, you know, you know, coming off there and, you know? So that's one. And the second is, you mentioned on margins, you know, we had higher employee costs and certain maintenance-related expenses. So with those behind, should we expect, you know, the overall unit to see improvement in margins, you know, from the upcoming quarter, you know, from the next quarters as you see your revenues growing?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So, let me take that in two parts. First, you know, when you look at the ALOS, I think, just picking up one or two quarters may not be always appropriate because there is some effects of how the seasons play out, how the Diwali holidays play out, how the, you know, certain seasonal diseases like dengue, et cetera, play out. Sometimes it's more in September, sometimes it's more in October. So I would, I would, you know, suggest we look more at an annual or a nine-month basis at a minimum, rather than quarter-on-quarter, just to get the numbers correct.

That being said, the ALOS reductions are also driven a lot by, you know, the increasing work for cancer, and given the growth which you'll see on the, on the sales mix, and I think it's phenomenon across the country, where cancer treatment and cancer detection is increasing. So a lot of the cancer work is in the nature of radiation oncology or medical oncology, which has a daycare component to it, so there is an increase in daycare. There is also some amount of difference this year versus last year, with respect to patients who are more in the dengue and some of the other respiratory diseases, which tend to have a slightly longer length of stay vis-a-vis some of the shorter procedural departments.

Other than that, I don't see any very significant structural change. I mean, we already have a very aggressive length of stay. That being said, we continue to work, especially in some of the units like Patna and maybe even in Gurgaon, to actually ensure that we are optimizing our length of stay. And we will continue to try to see if we can, you know, convert a lot of the work from night stay to day care. So we want to work on how we also do things like improving discharge processes, streamlining the, the discharges for patients who are credit patients. So, I mean, there is still some operational efficiencies I think we can bring in, but I think the three days length of stay for our ecosystem, as complex as ours, is very, very robust.

Bansi Desai
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

Just to then, just on margin, you know, are we done with, you know, our investments into, you know, maybe adding, you know, employees and, you know, maintenance expenses, or we expect that to recur?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So I don't think that there is any kind of, I mean, obviously, the employee costs are recurring costs. They incur every month. But I think if you, you know, if you go back to last three, four quarters, I had been mentioning that, you know, there is some amount of war for talent that is coming, is likely to come. We are also aggressively hiring across the unit, so there'll be some amount of optimization and balancing out of this as we stabilize our hiring, as well as how other hospitals look at hiring in the market.

We'll also look at operational efficiencies, where we can bring about as much as possible both on the manpower cost as well as on the some of the other expenses. Some of these are cyclical in nature. So, you know, for example, we do notice in our P&L that repairs and maintenance costs is whenever we have annual maintenance contracts coming up, which is out of warranty, new equipment comes out of warranty after maybe three-four years of procurement, you know, those come in, and then they balance out over time. So depending on which horizon you're looking at, they more or less balance out.

I don't see any very significant structural issues on the margins. I do believe there are efficiencies, especially in some of the older units, that we can eke out, and we will work towards that. You will see some of those efficiencies are already playing out on some cost items. So material costs have been, are currently in the process of being optimized as we move, and we've seen some of that captured in the numbers so far. We hope that will continue. So, you know, there'll be some up and down across cost items, but overall, I think that we'll be looking at trying to see whether we can get a couple of hundred basis points of efficiency out of the system as well.

Bansi Desai
Analyst, J.P. Morgan

All right. I have more questions. I'll join back with you.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Sure.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Manish Poddar from Invesco AMC. Please go ahead.

Manish Poddar
Analyst, Invesco Asset Management

So, just one question. I heard that, you know, you said, "I hope so," for the peak losses to be behind. For Noida, how are you thinking actually of the ramp-up, the other way around, you know, let's say, you know, versus the initial expectation, versus what you would have seen in the last few months? You know, how are you think about getting to utilization, let's say, 40%, 50%, 60%, and, you know, how is the journey faster than earlier expectation? Just any color on that will be helpful. Thanks.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So I think, Manish, the journey is very much as per our expectations. I think that as we look at getting, you know, everything settled, not only operationally but also some of the project teams moving out of the system. You know, we started out this hospital while it was currently being constructed as well. So some of these things will stabilize, you know, like I mentioned, just as an example, our radiation oncology doctor is on board, but the machine is not yet live because we are waiting for the approvals from AERB. So there will be some teething issues around this next couple of weeks, maybe months, but I think that, you know, for the most part, we are now ready to fire on full cylinders.

What that timeframe exactly will be, I'm not sure, but I don't think that we have seen anything happen in Noida, which is totally counter to what our expectations was, either on the, you know, hugely negative side or on the hugely positive side, more or less moving in line with what we expected.

Manish Poddar
Analyst, Invesco Asset Management

Okay, thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Damayanti Kerai from HSBC. Please go ahead.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Hi, good afternoon, and thank you for the opportunity. My first question is again on Noida, where you mentioned it's ramping up as per your expectations. So just to clarify, the additional bed addition plan which you have, that will only be done once you have achieved cost breakeven at the existing bed set, right? Or--

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

No.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

How do you think?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Right. No, I don't think that's the right way to think about it. You know, again, without getting into too much specifics, our Noida facility is a single tower facility, as opposed to Gurgaon, Lucknow, and Patna, where we had two towers, where we were able to build one tower, then wait and sell it, then operationalize the second tower. Because of the structure of this building, we intend to complete the project work as and when the project teams are able to do it. We will not actually demobilize and start again once the occupancy increases. We will continue to build out throughout. It just ends up being more efficient that way, and while it may be beds coming in, you know, a few months before we need it, we feel it's the most efficient way.

We would not stop the build-out, is the answer to the question that you had.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Okay. So both will happen simultaneously, right? T he ramp up from the existing bed, yeah, yeah.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Correct. So we'll ramp up the adjacent beds. We will build out. Now, you may not hire every department, you may not hire the nurses for running one ward if the ward doesn't have patients. But the infrastructure and CapEx and the fit outs and all, we will conclude, and then we will see as and when we, we move out. We may also have, you know, some things in the back pocket for maybe one floor or so, depending on whether we need more ICUs or more OTs. You may need to optimize there. We are now seeing this after about four years' performance in Patna. We are actually realizing that we may have a demand for additional procedure rooms.

As opposed to beds. So we may actually redeploy some of the spaces which were allocated for beds to procedure rooms. So today, I believe Patna has about 560 beds. So from the remaining 80-100 beds, I may choose to redeploy some beds to procedure areas, or we are trying to find if we can optimize there. So barring these small adjustments, we will continue to build out Noida.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Got it. My second question is on the update, which we heard on the CGHS rate revision sometime back. So anything you are picking up on that part in terms of your operations?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So CGHS rate revision has, of course, been beneficial for the industry. It has been a long demand after many, many years. There has been a positive movement across the group, on that in terms of tariff increases. We have captured some of that in the nine-month numbers that you see. I think, you know, high single digit, in terms of growth, is the impact on that. And, you know, hopefully, some of that will fall to the bottom line also. As we roll out, because these increases, I think, came middle or late Q2, so it's not even a full 12 months of impact yet. So if I remember correctly, it was maybe sometime around October.

And then, you know, also what happens is some of the other, institutional companies that follow CGHS rates, they then follow up with their own orders, like the Railways will follow up saying, "We, we also will activate these rates," and so on and so forth. And also we are working with our partners in Bihar, that those rates are where we have PPP, those rates also get adjusted. So the full year impact of this, I think, is not yet played out, but so far it's been positive.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Did you mention some high single-digit impact or?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

That's right. I think Yogesh will correct me if I'm wrong, I think it's somewhere in the range of INR 7 crore-INR 10 crore of impact in nine months. Am I right?

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Oh, INR 7 crore-INR 10 crore. Okay, that's--a nd my last question is on your plan for price increase, which is obviously not your focus, but, as you focus more on the volume growth. But, in terms of taking price hike for some of your units where you haven't taken price hike for long, are those done?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So, if I remember correctly, from our last call in September till December, I think no real price increases have been taken, except maybe in, in Patna. Patna, we haven't taken. Gurgaon and Lucknow we have taken. But I think more important than that, is that some of the insurance contracts which were not renewed for almost two to three years, they are now getting renewed across the group. So there will be some potential benefit for those price renegotiations as we move forward. So I think, you know, probably when we come to maybe June or September of next year, you will see more of a realistic picture of a full year of pricing impact across CGHS, our increases, and insurance negotiations.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Okay. Just a clarification on these rates which you renegotiated with your insurance partner. What kind of, you know, hike you might have got? Just some indication. Say, compared to the last contract, when you signed the new contract, what is the difference?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So let me put it this way: when we, when we sign up the contracts with the insurance companies, they were on a, on a tariff list, which I think was somewhere around, two years or three years ago, 2024 tariffs, I think, or 2023 tariffs. So now when the insurance companies negotiate, they negotiate it with our 2025 tariffs, which was what we had done last year.

So depending on how those tariffs increase, we kind of renegotiate basis that. So it would be different in different units, depending on when the insurance company signed up, but typically insurance companies will sign up for a two-year timeframe. And now it's already been little over two years, so you can say about two years plus of increases. And then insurance companies ask for, you know, different levels of support in terms of discounting, et cetera. But on the whole, I think it will be a positive benefit for us from a tariff point of view.

Damayanti Kerai
Analyst, HSBC

Sure, Pankaj. Thank you. I'll get back in the queue.

Operator

Thank you. Before we take the next question, we would like to remind participants that you may press Star and One to ask a question. The next question is from the line of Ashutosh Nimani from JM Financial Office. Please go ahead.

Ashutosh Nimani
Analyst, JM Financial

Yeah. Thanks for the opportunity, sir. My question is, on the earlier answer you told that war, war of talent coming up in the next three-four years. So I wanted to understand more about it. Like, in particular, what locations do we see this doctor supply, nurse supply more severe as compared to other on a national level? If you could just take a highlight on that.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

I mean, I'm not fully an expert to tell you at a national level in which city there will be more or less work or talent. I think this is a phenomenon the industry is facing, to the best of my knowledge, across the board. I can tell you in the regions where we operate, which is more on the northern side, there are two ways in which we look at it. One way is where there are existing facilities, where there are lots of doctors, and there's lots of demand for talent. There it is a little bit driven by, you know, some forms of competitive intensity. Doctors are trying to get poached by other hospitals. Obviously, we would be also looking at hiring doctors from other institutions. Some amount of retention also.

We have been very lucky, we've been able to retain most of our senior doctors, if not all, even after years in Gurugram. And then when you come to units which are in cities where there may be a slightly shorter, you know, tail of talent in terms of super specialists, we've been able to get in doctors from other cities. Sometimes you have to pay for getting doctors to move into certain locations, or you're actually looking at building up a talent base over there, vis-à-vis taking time to build that specialty. So just to give you an example, if I bring in a very talented, say, robotic surgeon from one part of the country, they may not have a patient base, say, in a Bihar or in a UP.

They build up that, so that takes a little time to build up. So these are the kinds of things that we have seen. From my conversations with colleagues in the industry, I think this is a phenomenon everybody's facing. Obviously, there's a lot of talk about hospitals, so everybody getting very excited. One thing, though, we have seen is that I think clinical talent understands the value of strong brands and strong institutions. Medanta has been very lucky to be a kind of what we believe is a preferred employer for clinicians. So we've been lucky on this front. But I do believe that given the talent is scarce, this is something that the industry and the country will face for, you know, some years to come. I don't think this is something going to get solved in the next quarter.

Ashutosh Nimani
Analyst, JM Financial

Understood. My second question is: in the next two-three years, what should be the, like, ARPOB growth that you could assume for Medanta?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So, you know, again, next two to three years, I don't know how things will play out, but we have always maintained that, ARPOBs growth will be 5%-7% a year, as opposed to what we have seen maybe, you know, in the last three, four years, where we've seen much higher growth. Again, ARPOB is little bit dependent on length of stay and case mix, but we don't project anything more than, five percent to, if you're very enthusiastic, maybe a 7% growth in ARPOB on an annual basis. In fact, Medanta typically projects much lower, 3%-5% is what we try to think about. But again, that's more on, for us, on tariff or realization side. ARPOB, again, if you optimize length of stay, then ARPOB will grow.

But I think those days of 10%-15% ARPOB growth, or realization growth, which we were seeing maybe a year and a half ago, that has already stabilized. You can already see it in the results of all companies. Last maybe 12-18 months, you will see a significant slowing down of the ARPOB growth that was there two, three years ago. So I think 5%-7% is a reasonable number to project out if you're thinking about building a model. I would not go more aggressive than that. Definitely not single digits, I would keep it to, not double digits, I would keep it to single digits.

Ashutosh Nimani
Analyst, JM Financial

Okay. Thanks a lot, sir. That was very helpful.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Rahul Jeewani from IIFL Securities Limited. Please go ahead.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Thanks, sir, for taking my question. Sir, on the Noida hospital for, let's say, these 300 odd beds which we have operationalized, what kind of an exit occupancy we would have seen either for the December month or the January month? And, if you can also talk about the occupancy, which you, which you need to achieve to, let's say, hit, EBITDA breakeven on these 300 beds.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So, you know, we don't normally look at occupancy from a breakeven point of view because of the fact that, we believe more, much more in the volumes and the procedures rather than the midnight occupancy. So at least Medanta doesn't necessarily look at that. That being said, I think normally what we find is, in a big system, somewhere in the range of 40%-50% or maybe +40% occupancy typically breaks even, on a long-run basis for the kind of fixed cost model that Medanta employs. It may be very different in, other industries. Our goal is very simple in Noida. Our goal is that we have put everything that is required to deliver the highest standard of care. That is investment in infrastructure, the technology, the clinical talent, the processes, the IT systems, et cetera.

Our goal is to drive this occupancy through and through. So, to drive these volumes and this business through and through. Once we do that, whatever occupancy falls out of that, it falls out of that. Our focus is that we must be ensuring that we invest to deliver the highest standard of care. We have done that. Based on the trajectory we see in the last few months, including post-December, we are pretty happy with how things are moving and pretty confident of the success of this institution. So whether this occupancy will break even at 30% or 40% or 50%, I don't know. It's also not a percentage number which we are chasing. Our goal is to ensure that we are able to drive as much patient volumes into the system.

And we are pretty confident, given our track record, these things will then work out well.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Sure, sir. For, let's say, these another 200 beds which you would commission at Noida, how many incremental doctor hirings would we need to do, given that obviously for the initial phase of 300 beds, we have already onboarded 200-odd doctors?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So not many. As I mentioned, I think in response to an earlier question, we have some departments which we may add, so they of course are not linked to beds. They would have additional. So Obs, Peds is an example of that, which is a totally new department. The rest of the departments, all the seniors or most of the senior talent is already there. So when you add in beds, it's really more of the junior staff who need to, you know, do more of the maintenance, management, and taking care of the care. Nurses, of course, will get added and other staff. But the senior doctors, I don't think, are necessarily linked to the two bed addition.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Sure, so then-- Okay, so the incremental OpEx for these another 200 beds obviously would then be lower?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yes, correct.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Sure, sir. And sir, last question from my end. In terms of the mature hospitals, where we have seen some sort of a margin pressure this year, while you alluded to higher employee and maintenance costs, is the Ranchi Medanta Hospital also led to some sort of a margin drag for the mature units?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

I mean, definitely the new Ranchi hospital also has a little bit of impact. I'm not sure it will play out in the numbers which you are seeing, because it's very small. It's only about 100 beds on a, you know, 2,000-3,000 bed overall base. So I don't think it has an impact as to what you see. Of course, it is a drag, but I don't think it's significant or material on the financial, on the absolute rupee amount.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Okay, sure, sir. Thank you. That's just to mention.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Just, I mean, just to let you know, obviously, Ranchi, Indore margins are of course lower than, you know, Gurgaon and Lucknow. So, Gurgaon, sorry, Lucknow is coming in developing state. But other than that, I don't think it's a very significant drag.

Rahul Jeewani
Analyst, IIFL Securities

Okay, sure, sir. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Nitin Agarwal from DAM Capital. Please go ahead.

Nitin Agarwal
Analyst, DAM Capital

Thanks for taking my question. On the, you know, over the last few months and quarters, we've had multiple sort of media items, news flow around, you know, increased difference between doctors and hospitals and insurers. I mean, two questions here. One is, is there a change in relationship between insurers and corporate hospitals, in the sense as insurers become larger in scale? And two, what kind of implication does it have for, you know, for rates and business as we go along?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So I think maybe I'll you know, give three, four specific points on this. I think, first of all, you know, as with many things, the media likes to sensationalize things much more than they are in reality. So I wouldn't always necessarily go with either the substance or the tone of what we hear in the media. That's point number one. Point number two, just again, at a higher level, see, every player in this industry, whether it is a provider like us, whether it is an insurance company, or whether it is even the government authorities, including at every level of government, they all understand that our collective responsibility is first and foremost towards the patient. Neither can we survive without the insurance companies, neither can the insurance company survive without the providers.

And by the way, the same logic applies to the pharmaceutical and medical device companies, which are also part of this ecosystem and also part of some of these conversations that you're alluding to, right? So I think we all get it, and everybody is reasonably mature in that. That being said, there is always a commercial negotiation and a commercial discussion that happens between, any two parties engaged in a commercial conversation. Now, we have so far been very, very clear on our approach, that we are open and ready to talk to anybody, and we have. We have been successful with those activities. And all conversations in good faith between two parties, in a professional and in a non-collusive manner, are something that we stand for, and we have been successful in moving that forward.

Of course, if I would like to pay INR 10 and you would like to pay INR 5, or I would like to charge INR 10, you would like to charge INR 5, of course, we will negotiate on that price. Nothing wrong with that. We've been successful in closing out many of these contracts and many of these negotiations. We—I think that we could have been faster and more efficient. I think that some of the players in the industry who are maybe trying to project that, you know, we'll, we'll only talk as one body or that we-- that, you know, only—it's only the hospitals that are making money and the insurance companies are make, not making any money. I think these are facts which are being a little bit manipulated one way or the other. I think the truth is obviously somewhere in the middle, as with most cases.

We do realize that the insurance companies have challenges, but many of those challenges are also linked to their operating model and some of the issues in the industry. Similarly, I think they understand that, while you look at EBITDA many times, but the real money at the bottom line coming on the profit after tax, which is the money that has to go into CapEx refresh and investing in all of these areas, is required for hospitals to be able to grow and for, frankly speaking, people like us to invest in places like Patna and Bihar and Ranchi and Northeast. And the government also understands that, that it's very important that they encourage private investment in all these areas, because that's how the care will get delivered.

So I, frankly speaking, see that there is no long-term relationship impact between the two parties. We have been very comfortable interacting with everybody, but of course, we will negotiate on price. I don't see that stopping this year, next year, or anytime in the future. As any entity has, feels they have more power, they would like to be stronger in a negotiation position. It is exactly the same thing that I would do with my suppliers, so it's normal. I think some of it is blown out of proportion, and some of it has few stakeholders in the ecosystem on both sides, are probably, you know, mischaracterizing, misusing one party or another party on their side of the industry, for their own personal benefits, which is also not correct.

Nitin Agarwal
Analyst, DAM Capital

Thanks. That's very helpful. And secondly, sorry if I missed it, did we guide to a time period when we expect to break even on EBITDA?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

No, we don't guide on future earnings as a policy. All I did allude to was the fact that, you know, we are pretty hopeful that we are now in a position to see strong positive momentum into the system. I do not know when that break even will happen, but you know, we are not worried that it is, you know, all slipping south or something like that. It's very much as per our expectations on how the ramp-up of these units will do.

Nitin Agarwal
Analyst, DAM Capital

It's fair to say that this quarter EBITDA loss is kind of close to the peak EBITDA loss we'll do on the asset?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

That is the question which I said, I hope so. I don't want to commit to you one thing or the other, but I leave that to you guys to figure out. But yes, we are feeling confident that things are moving in the right direction.

Nitin Agarwal
Analyst, DAM Capital

Thank you so much.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Naman Bagrecha from IIFL Capital Services Limited. Please go ahead.

Naman Bagrecha
Analyst, IIFL Capital

Hello.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Hi. Please, please.

Naman Bagrecha
Analyst, IIFL Capital

Thanks. Thanks for the opportunity. Sorry to press on the mature hospital margins again. So if you look, earlier, we pushed to make almost around 24.5%, kind of margins. But is it because of now the incremental costs or war on talent, et cetera, one should look at, let's say, lower margins structurally, let's say around 100 basis points lower versus what was established earlier for mature hospitals?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

No, you know, I think that-- I mean, so I wouldn't necessarily agree with that, right? I mean, if you look at the margin profile, which we have in the nine-month period and the mature facilities, it's just under 24%. We have maintained for a long time, and I have maintained for a long time, that, you know, anything in the range of 22%-25% is, is very strong performance for a system like this, especially such a big system like the ones which we have. I think that, you know, 100, 90, 80 basis points swing here and there, especially in one period over the other, is fairly insignificant. I mean, in our industry, you have to look over this, you know, three-four years, not nine months or even one year.

And even within the nine months, the swing to me doesn't seem very significant. So I don't think there is a structural difference. There was a structural reset post-COVID, which we have talked a lot about on various calls. I think we are now in a fairly balanced way around that. I also had always maintained that I don't see this margin profile jumping up every year, 30%, or 300 basis points to head towards the 30% margin. I had always said that those were expectations that were being incorrectly set in the market. This is a fairly balanced range, you know, 22%, 23%, 24%, 25%. This number is a very balanced range. You do a little bit better, it could go up, but I don't think there's any big structural issue between one period or the other. You try to eke out as much in efficiencies as you can.

We will see this, you know, stabilize in these ranges only. I don't, I don't think that we're going to change significantly. The only thing in Medanta's case, in this, how we report out, is, which is a little different, just so that you're aware, is all our corporate costs are loaded in our Gurgaon unit. So what you see as the margin of the individual units is a little bit deflated because of the corporate costs. Probably, if you took out those corporate costs and you allocated them across, you would see a slightly more balanced margin profile between all of the bigger units, at least in, in our group.

Naman Bagrecha
Analyst, IIFL Capital

Fair. Thanks. Thanks. And just, one quick question: What would be our net cash position as of December?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Net cash as at December?

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

INR 600 crore.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

About INR 600 crore. Go ahead, Yogesh.

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

We have a loans of about INR 600 crore and a cash position of about INR 500 crore. So net cash is about INR 600 crore.

Naman Bagrecha
Analyst, IIFL Capital

All right. Thanks. Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Abin Benny from JM Financial Institutional Securities. Please go ahead.

Abin Benny
Analyst, JM Financial

Hi, sir. Thank you for the opportunity. Am I audible?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yes.

Abin Benny
Analyst, JM Financial

Hi, sir. Yeah. So, sir, while you did allude to the kind of ARPOB growth that we can be expecting, but my question was regarding the newer clusters. While we add more complex facilities, while we add on to the newer ones, what kind of dynamics do you see regarding the kind of ARPOB that can change in these specifically? And if you can give some color on that dynamics.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So, I mean, I don't have a number for you, but let me just give you a little bit of perspective, right? So one of the things the industry has been commenting on for the last couple of years, or maybe, you know, six quarters, is this entire shift to, say, robotics. Now, robotics means a higher realization, but also potentially a lower length of stay, because the patient gets to go home faster. So obviously, that has a disproportionate increase on ARPOB, because your ALOS will fall and your realization will increase both. So it's one example of something that may boost up when you look at it at a ARPOB level rather than a ARPP level.

The second thing, as I said earlier, was that when you get into increasing work in cancer, especially if it is cancer work in the daycare nature, like radiation oncology, where you may not admit the patient, or medical oncology, where the patient just stays for one day for treatment, you will find a disproportionate growth to ARPOB because the occupancy is not that long, as opposed to, say, somebody coming in for cardiac surgery. So I think that these things are actually in favor of ARPOB growth because ARPOB is a derived measure. I think if you look at it and step back towards realization, which is what the patient bill actually is, I think as I mentioned earlier, you will see a more balanced realization growth. There will be some growth towards realization because of complex work.

Some amount of increase in complex work across our newer units in Patna and even in Noida, as that gets ramped up to some of the services, including transplant and things like that. We are also starting to see some of this complex work coming into places like Indore, with robotic surgery happening there now reasonably well. So you will see some of this, and then some of the changes of the CGHS rates, as I mentioned earlier, which happened in October, and the tariff increases will play out over, you know, maybe the course of the next six to 12 months. So you will see some positive trajectory towards this. But I think, again, it will be measured. I would not assume you would see 10%.

I would say single digits is a fair number to be looking at.

Abin Benny
Analyst, JM Financial

Got it. Thank you. And, sir, if possible, can you give us the kind of expectations on CapEx outlay for next year, given that majority of the expansion will be there?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah, I think there was a slide, correct me if I'm wrong, Yogesh, on the CapEx plan in the presentation. Slide 23, I think, lays out the CapEx. We have been somewhere in the INR 1,000 crore range, I think on next year CapEx. So this is--

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

Next year.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

INR 3,000 crore over the next five years.

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

Yeah.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Next year, maybe a bit less actually, now that a lot of the costs were in Noida.

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

Already, Noida is already--

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

So last year we had, I think, announced about INR 1,000 crore CapEx in the year, out of which almost INR 600 crore -INR 700 crore was Noida, if I'm not mistaken. Correct me if I'm wrong. I don't see that this year's--t his FY 2027 CapEx will be of that range. It will be much lower than INR 1,000 crore. Maybe some maintenance CapEx in the new unit, in the older units, some CapEx on the margin in Noida. There will be not much CapEx on the other units because they're still in the digging and construction phase.

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

Right.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

A lot of the CapEx in the new projects is back-ended towards maybe two-three years from now. Next year, CapEx is probably, I don't know, maybe below INR 500 crore, I would say.

Yogesh Kumar Gupta
CFO, Global Health Limited

Below INR 500 crore .

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Below INR 500 crore would be our estimate.

Abin Benny
Analyst, JM Financial

Sure, sir. Thank you. Thank you very much.

Operator

Thank you. The next question is from the line of Chirag Gupta from Allegro Capital. Please go ahead.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Yeah, thanks for taking my questions. I just wanted to understand why the margins in your developing facilities are higher than your mature facilities?

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Yeah. So I mentioned, I think, to one of the earlier speakers, one reason, of course, is that our corporate costs are fully loaded in Gurgaon, which is part of the mature facility, right?

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Yeah.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

The second question, if you look at our historical performance, is that our Lucknow unit and our Patna units have been doing a exceptionally good performance right through and through, barring, you know, one or two quarters in Lucknow. So what we've actually seen is a good amount of growth, a good amount of operating leverage come in. So just to contextualize for you, Lucknow is about a six-year-old asset. Patna is about four years old now. And we've continually been adding beds to these facilities. So what you're seeing in these facilities, in addition to the, you know, strong growth in these regions, you're also seeing improvements in newer specialties getting added. Just to give you an example, we have added three or four robots, including orthopedic robots, in Lucknow, so we are getting more complex work.

We have, we're adding more complex work into our facility in Patna, and you are also seeing the benefits of operating leverage kick in. Depending on which year you are looking at, in after a couple of years, Patna would have kicked in, Lucknow would have kicked in. Plus, we would have added, I think, last maybe year or 18 months ago, we added almost 200 additional beds, taking Lucknow from about 400, 500 to about 700 census beds. So those beds, operating leverage also kicks in after some months. So I think these are the three, four reasons why there's a difference between the developing and the mature.

And then the last reason, although it may not be very significant in absolute terms, is that our mature units also include Indore and Ranchi, which are significantly smaller scale and have a significantly lower margin profile.

Chirag Gupta
Investment Banking Associate, Allegro Capital

Okay. Thanks a lot.

Operator

Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, due to time constraints, that was last question for today. I now hand over the call to management for closing comments. Over to you, sir.

Pankaj Sahni
CEO, Global Health Limited

Thank you. Thank you everyone for your questions and for joining us today. Please feel free to reach out to our Investor Relations team in case you have any questions that remain unanswered. I know there's one question on census, but we'll get that information out to you. But if you have any other questions, please feel free to reach out to the team. Thank you once again, and we look forward to speaking with you all soon.

Operator

Thank you. On behalf of JM Financial Institutional Securities Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your lines. Thank you.

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