Nishant Singh and I welcome you all to the Q2 FY 2026 earnings call of Narayana Hrudayalaya Limited. We'll discuss our performance and address all your queries today. First, Mr. Viren Shetty, our Vice Chairman; Dr. Emmanuel Rupert, our CEO and MD; Mr. Sandhya Jayaraman, our Group CFO; Mr. Venkatesh, our Group COO; Dr. Anesh Shetty, our MD of our overseas business; Mr. Ravi Vishwanath, CEO of NHIC; and Vivek Agarwal, Senior Manager in the function. Before we proceed with this call, we would like to remind everyone that the call is being recorded, and the transcript of this same shall be made available on our website, as well as on the stock exchange, at a later date.
We would also like to remind you that everything that is being said on this call, that reflects any outlook for the future, or which can be construed as a forward-looking statement, must be viewed in conjunction with the uncertainties and the risks that they face. We would also want to highlight that for U.K., we will not be in a position to answer any of the questions for this quarter. We will consolidate the numbers by Q3, and then we can have a call on the U.K. asset as well. For the acquisition matters, we have already had a call in the recent past, so we would just request to skip any questions on U.K. for now. With that, now we would start the Q&A session. I request everyone to please use the raise hand feature to start posing their questions. Thank you. Start with me.
Sorry, Prithwip Goel.
Can we have some good set of numbers? Let me begin with Cayman first. Anesh, this seems to be doing exceptionally well, you know, with 70% kind of revenue growth. So if you have to look at insurance, the revenue has doubled compared to the previous quarter. Could you explain how the product is being received, what is the market size, and what are we aspiring for with the market share in the medium term?
Yeah, Prithwip. So the response to the insurance product has been very, very good. We have most of the large employers who have already moved to us or are actively considering moving. That is why we are seeing the very aggressive revenue growth. It will take some time for us to decide on what is the market share and where we want to stabilize. We may take a calibrated call depending on how the insurance product is integrating with the hospital. Maybe in about two to four quarters, we will have a view on what the steady state will look like. For now, it is progressing very well.
Is it possible to quantify the market size in Cayman for the insurance?
That information is available on the monetary authority website. It will be approximately, including the government and private sector, it will be closer to about 300-350 million or so. That does include the government insurance as well. An adjustment needs to be made for that, which can be done. Yeah.
Understood. Now, if you have to look at the insurance losses, losses have come down significantly in this quarter. Given the way the scale-up is happening, should we expect the insurance business to break even in Q3 and move to profits from Q4?
A bit tough to say. As the size of the book grows larger, definitely the underwriting performance will stabilize. Having said that, quarter-on-quarter movements in loss ratio is a little unreliable in the insurance business. Let's look at a rolling three to four quarter performance and then take a call. Yes, as the size of the book is growing, it is stabilizing, definitely. Too early to say whether this will be the last that we will break even and then profits from Q4, given the variation quarter-on-quarter for underwriting performance.
Okay. On the hospital side, after commissioning of the new hospital, the revenue went up from $25 million to $40 million at this point of time. Are we largely done with a complete scale-up, and then should we expect only high single-digit growth rate on this base, or do you think there is some more room for higher growth in the next few quarters before getting moderated to high single-digit?
Between pre and post-Kamenabey Hospital, just if you look at the volume terms, we're looking at a 50% increase in discharges, a little more than that in outpatients and daycare, etc. We have seen a significant jump post the commissioning. I think there is still a couple of quarters of growth left before it starts to moderate, and we focus on restoring the profitability to where it was. Let's see how it plays out. We have started a few services more recently. They're still playing out. Let's reevaluate maybe in a quarter or two. As we've always said, it will go into a sort of a high single-digit. Earnings growth will be different because we have some levers to improve our cost structure still. From a revenue side, let's take a call in one or two quarters.
Okay. So just a follow-up on this. When you say some more levers to increase the cost structure, I think the hospital margins are roughly around 40%-43%. Do you see a further upside to the margin number?
It will depend on where we stabilize from a revenue standpoint because right now we have certain costs to grow business and to add new services, etc., which we are incurring the cost, and the revenue is not yet playing out. Maybe in two quarters or so, we'll be able to have a better view on this. Once we've sort of commissioned all the services, we know the trajectory they're heading. They're in sort of steady state with just incremental growth. Then we can consider that.
One way to check that, [Foreign language] , they can tell you that they have some revenue going on.
Damayanti, could you go on mute, please? Sorry, sorry, Prithwip. Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah. Okay, fine. Moving on to the India business, even here, we are seeing a decent scale-up in the clinics and insurance revenue. For the last couple of quarters, losses have been declining. Can we expect this trend to continue going forward, and hopefully, FY 2027 will be a much lower loss number for the clinics and insurance?
Ravi, if you can start.
Sure. Yeah, thanks, Prithwip. Yeah, we've had good momentum on both the clinics and the insurance business. I think on the insurance business, while our retail business is growing, we've also had a lot of incoming interest on our SME offering, which integrates our clinic and our insurance offerings. We expect that to grow. Obviously, with insurance as we grow, we would be seeing better overall results and so on and so forth. In terms of clinic business as well, yeah, the clinics themselves are performing well. I think it'll be a balance between the profitability of the existing clinics versus future growth and investments in those growth because clinics do take a little bit of time to break even. I think you'll see a balance of those two things in the coming years and quarters.
Yeah, I do expect that, I mean, luckily, touch wood, the momentum is heading very much in the right direction. We are hoping that that trend will continue.
Okay. Just one last question on the Mumbai hospital. Are we still just breaking even, or did we start making profits, and any update on the conversion of the hospital?
I'll answer the update on the conversion. Venkatesh can talk about the performance. We are in discussions with the trust. We do get here and there a few children who have grown up, and they had congenital conditions, but when we operate them, they are adults. Those few cases have been done here and there, and we'll slowly start opening up the birthing program. As of now, it is something we're working slowly towards on the breakeven, Venkatesh.
Yeah. See, for Mumbai, it has been a little bit of up and down in terms of its performances. It was somewhere in the early single-digit negative EBITDA for this quarter. What we have seen is in October, the trend has improved, and the performance has been very good in October. Hopefully, with the trend continuing as it is indicated in November, we should have a much better and a positive Q3 in Mumbai.
Thank you. That's all from my side.
Hi, Nithin, can you go ahead?
Hi. Thanks for the quick question. And congratulations to the team for a pretty solid set of numbers. Within only on the India business, I think we've had a 20% EBITDA growth this quarter, which is quite remarkable. In a broader sense, I think we've been able to do our growth is coming through despite not really adding too many beds literally over the last few quarters. Two things. One is, A, I mean, what really is driving this? Our ability to grow profitability without adding capacity. How much scope do we have? I mean, is there enough scope still left in the current network to really make it to extract more juice out of it from a profitability perspective?
Nithin, just to clarify, we've reduced the total number of beds we run in India from the time we listed till today. On the scope for capacity, I'll ask Venkatesh and Dr. Rupert to answer.
Yeah, we are continuing to work on our optimization, right? From the last six to eight quarters, we've been working hard on that, and things are working out well for us, and we continue to do that. What we have seen here in this particular quarter is that in our flagships, we've seen the impact of our transformation initiatives, which we have been working on in the last two years. It's kicking in positively. We witnessed patients opting for higher configuration beds, resulting in increasing in the realization, keeping the occupancy intact. Plus, coupled with technologies, we also worked on case mix, high-end work, robotic cardiac surgeries to keep us apart and define new benchmarks, which has also led to higher realization and revenue achievements.
Even with the volume being the same or stagnated at this point of time, realizations have actually helped in substantially increasing on the EBITDAs. Even for the rest of the regions, rest of the units across the group, we have been focusing constantly on the payer mix optimization. With this payer mix optimization, we've seen improved realization across hospitals. While we're still working on catching up on these numbers to improve payers, the substantial incremental realization which we've got from these payers actually have boosted up your realization, and that has improved the EBITDAs by a big amount. Our endeavor will be to maintain on these margins and even try to improve, obviously subject to cyclical issues and advents which may come up, but we remain positive from this.
Doctor, from a capacity which we have in the current network, I mean, is there, I mean, do we have enough to really continue to grow in the business both through the optimization measures that you have for the next couple of years before a new set of beds begin to come through?
Yeah, Dr. Rupert will answer this.
Yes. Just like what Venkatesh had mentioned, we have been slowly ramping up the niche work and mainly the subspecialty. Venkatesh did mention about the robotic cardiac surgery. In the month of September, we did 97 robotic cardiac surgery, and the whole quarter we did around close to 200. This is a very large number, and all this pushes the niche work that keeps going up. This is just one example of a subspecialty work that is constantly growing and increasing number. We are slowly ramping this up across the entire network. We are fairly confident this ability for us to do more and more niche work will always be there within the existing bed capacity and the existing infrastructure that we have built.
Okay. Thank you so much.
Thanks, Nithin. Nayana, if we can have your question.
Yeah, thank you so much. I'm speaking from behalf of Chola Securities. I just have one question. This is relating to the Cayman Islands operations that are there. Like it's been reported for the India business, the margin is about 23.8% for this quarter. Would you be able to talk a bit about the margins that are seen in the Cayman Islands business?
Yeah. So that information, you should be able to derive by looking at the console and adjusting for the India margin, which is separately reported. Just to give you some broader guidance, the hospital does about 43%-44% here and there in that range every quarter. That's the hospital business. The insurance company is yet to break even, or just slightly broken even this quarter. We've separately disclosed that in a footnote on the same slide. You'd be able to derive a console figure for that. It's a little tricky to derive, I mean, to talk about a console because they're two very different businesses, the insurance and the hospital. If you add it up, you should get to what you're looking for.
Got it. Thank you so much.
Benna, can we have your question, please?
Yeah. Sorry. Just wanted one thought. When I'm looking at your slide number eight, your ICU occupied days have gone up, ICU bed occupied days, and your patient footfalls have also gone up while the ALOS is the same. Yet your average revenue per patient is also more or less the same as Q1. Is that the efficiency kicking in? Is it more high-ticket surgeries getting done in the same time? What exactly is driving this?
Yeah, I mean, all of the points we mentioned are all kicking up here because some of the niche work obviously has less length of stays, but also there are certain very complicated work which increases the overall length of stay. Though we have marginally come down on the length of stay, a major impact will be there. We are pushing more and more for short stay and the day case surgeries. You would have seen that significant number of even our coronary angiograms are done as a short stay. That means they get moved out of the hospital within four to six hours. We are constantly working towards wherever it is possible for us to keep the patients safe, at the same time reduce the length of stay to constantly move towards in that direction.
There are a certain subset of patients, especially the elderly and those who need medical management who do require a long length of stay. When you start averaging it out, the movement of length of stays, the ALOS will not be moving in a very substantial manner like that. Our hope is that we should be coming down to somewhere around 3.9 or something like that.
Yeah, but I'm a little intrigued by the average revenue per patient remaining the same with such a great increase in your revenues.
Between the quarter, we do not take much by way of price increases. Every patient who comes for a high-value procedure has to be balanced out against those that are very, very affordable. We cater to nearly 18%-20% of our revenues to government patients. The reimbursement for that has not changed in more than 11 years. When you average it out, it does have a bit of a flattening effect.
Okay, just last question on I can see some international business returning. Where exactly is it coming from?
Venkatesh?
The operation.
On the international, our focus will continue to be there on the domestic only. We've done very well in the last eight quarters on the domestic business, and we are very confident because we've seen a lot of tractions. International business is not our main area of focus at this stage. There has been a lot of fluctuations, and the issue started from last year, Q3. As we see, we should look at somehow stabilizing in terms of the volumes in Q3 of this year, from which we can see and set a base for that. Having said that, we will continue to focus on our domestic numbers going forward for growth.
Yeah, international business is primarily Bangladesh, but this is a business we're looking to wind down over the next couple of years.
Yeah, that's why I was a little surprised by the 27% QoQ increase in international this.
That's purely on Bangladesh.
Okay. Thank you very much. All the best for your H2.
Thanks, Benna. Om Prakash, can we get your question?
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. I have mainly a question around this Cayman area, right? This quarter, we have seen excellent growth in terms of revenue and EBITDA margin as well. If it is possible for you to give some guidance on how this is going to be panned out in next, maybe not just in short-term, maybe in medium terms as well. What the question is also on, in a comparative basis of the population as given in India domestic business, there are a lot of population where that would be a bit of limited in that reason. I just want to understand that how this growth is going to be sustainable in medium to long-term basis.
Yeah, Om Prakash. The first part is related to the hospitals that we've said before as well. We've commissioned the new hospitals, so we've seen this tremendous revenue growth. After a few quarters, we will have a better view of where that will settle down and slow down to a single-digit sort of steady-state growth. The insurance business is still in the early days. The market is, we're just getting started. There is substantial room to grow. Having said that, we will take a call after a few quarters whether we want to keep growing that business, the insurance business, or we want to maintain it at a particular level. That will depend on the strategic fit with our consolidated integrated care plan in that market. There is room to grow in the insurance business.
Like I said, the market size is about INR 350 million or so, including the government insurance, and we're still in the first three quarters.
Got it. Thanks, Anesh. All the best.
Thank you.
Thanks. Shivam, can we have your question?
I have a question regarding the acquisition we are doing. It is more related to finance rather than operations. Are you okay answering it?
Did we do the acquisition in Q2? It was done after the Q2. Yeah. I'll tell you what, let's finish all the Q2 performance-related questions, then we can come back to this if we have time. Would that suit?
Yeah, yeah, sure. Thank you.
Thank you. Rajith, your question?
Yeah, thank you. Just a small question on the digital transformation initiatives. There is a mention of service rendering management rolled out in Kenya and Saudi compliant patient portal enabled. I mean, are we looking at doing something more in these regions? How did these two regions happen? Can you throw some light on this?
Yeah. We've created two SPVs called Medha AI and Athma Healthtech. These are for commercializing the investments that we've made in our significant software expenditures. As part of the work, a lot of hospitals come to us and ask if we can roll out the systems that we have in their clinics as well. The Kenya and Saudi are these small contracts that we've taken. The revenue is not that material. This is a business that we like to encourage and grow because we do have very good technology, and those that want to adopt it, we would not say no to that. I wouldn't say that this would be a massive and significant contributor to the overall top line.
It's something we will pursue, but running the hospital is our main business, and building extremely good technology for our doctors and nurses is the purpose of our ventures.
Right. So it was more like an inward query rather than any sales personnel reaching out to these hospitals in these regions? I'm just trying to figure out how did these two regions happen, and if we are looking to expand within Africa or within the Middle East or something like that, even if it just means these two products.
Yeah. No, we are looking to expand. Obviously, any business is good business. We've developed quite a reputation for having extremely good and affordable technology that scales quickly, is built on the latest platform, and a lot of people who have worked for us have moved into those regions, and they know how good our software systems are. So they inform the CIOs and CEOs of those hospitals, and they come and we do POCs for them. There is a slight amount of effort that we take in doing the POCs and explaining the products, but it will grow very slowly.
All right. Thank you. Just one more request. Even I had one question on the acquisition of Practice Plus. At the end of it, if you may allow that.
Yeah. Yeah. Sure. Thanks. Dikshant, any questions relating to Q2?
Yeah. So firstly is on payments. Is it right that we have actually seen $ 1 million of dip in our revenues, 42.6 versus 41.6? What would be the reason for this dip in the revenue?
Dikshant, are you referring to the hospital revenue quarter on quarter?
Yes, sir.
Yeah. No. So I mean, quarter on quarter, as if you've been following Cayman for some time, there will always be variations like that. We recommend looking at a rolling three- or four-quarter average to get a sense of the trend. Specifically, Q2 is the season for school holidays, summer vacations, etc. Even historically, every year, if you see, that tends to be a slower quarter. $1 million-$2 million up or down is, we don't think, indicative of any long-term trend. Please consider a rolling few quarters.
I completely understand, but the reason for asking this is last quarter, we have just ramped up our second hospital in Cayman, and ideally, we should now start seeing that top line kicking in just because of some sort of utilization being better. Is that a fair assumption for us? I understand there's seasonality to it. I know what he's on that. We are still doing very well. What is the indicative outlook that we should have for the coming, let's say, two to three quarters?
Yeah. So the new hospital was operational from January 2025. Q4 actually is when you would have seen the first big jump in hospital revenue. I mean, Q1 and Q2 is that continuing. We've commissioned 90% of the departments in the new hospital, a little more than that. There are a few that have just been commissioned recently that will start ramping up. We obviously will, the biggest jump you would have seen is from December of last year to January, February, March of this year. After that, the quarter on quarter trend that we are seeing will continue until these new services start growing into a maturity phase.
Is it fair to say that this sort of we are now being operationally more efficient, and now it's directly falling into our net profits? From now on, whatever we see, our larger operating margin will inevitably be an outcome. Does that make sense?
Yeah, we'll try to refrain from giving that kind of definitive statement, but we still do have room to grow in the hospital revenue front. It just won't happen in the 30%-25% quarter-on-quarter increase, obviously, that we saw the first time we commissioned the hospital. There is still room to grow on the revenue front in the core hospital business. Operational efficiencies relating to margin, obviously, will continue. It is a profitable asset, a highly profitable asset that we'll continue to do. Once the revenue starts sort of getting into a steady state, we will focus on maintaining or trying to increase those margins with further optimization. We're not yet there. We're still a while away from tapping out on growth.
Great. Second, there is only insurance revenues and total business. You have mentioned that we are now reaching that breakeven. In fact, we have a separate breakeven in the fourth.
Sorry, Dikshant, there's quite a bit of disturbance at your end. I'm not able to hear you very clearly.
Is this better, sir?
Okay, go ahead.
Sorry. On the insurance revenues front, is this the $9 million? Is this the breakeven that we should consider on quarterly? What has been the sort of acceleration that we are seeing? Because we have mentioned that we have started to push. What sort of outcomes are we seeing on our insurance business now that we are ramping up on sales?
Yeah. To the first question on the breakeven, please do not consider any one-quarter performance in insurance as indicative of a trend. Claims, there is a lot of volatility in high-value claims or in loss ratios quarter on quarter. We highly recommend looking at only a rolling three or four-quarter period to get a sense of the loss ratio, of a sustainable loss ratio of the business. That is tricky to do now because every quarter we are seeing significant growth in the size of the book. It is still very early quarters. I do not think it will be reliable for some time. It is still a very dynamic, growing business. We will take a call in a few quarters if once we have a better idea of where things settle down, and then we will be able to answer that question.
Sir, but on our sales front, now that we have started to accelerate our sales, what kind of response are we seeing, and what is the total policies you would enforce right now?
Yeah. So I mean, I can only give you broad subjective guidance that we have a lot of interest from the large employers. We've moved many marquee accounts, and we continue to have a good, strong sales pipeline. We'll stay away from commenting on any hard GWP number quarter by quarter because that's not helpful. You will, every quarter, we can discuss the further outlook, but there's still room to grow, considerable room to grow. We will take a call every two quarters about when we decide to slow that down if we want to.
Sir, sorry to harp on this again, but we have been giving out the number of total policy infos up till the last two quarters.
No, I don't think we say that. We talk about the GWP, the revenue. I don't think that maybe you're mixing the India insurance integrated care business with Cayman. I can hand over the question to Ravi to talk about it.
No, I'll answer this. Yeah. Cayman is entirely employer-sponsored insurance. So the companies take it as a large book. In India, it's mostly retail. That's why the numbers may be confused.
Yeah, but we definitely do not disclose the number of lives covered or the number of policies for Cayman. What we do disclose is the number of subscribers and number of policies, I think, in India.
Okay. Got it, sir. Can I ask one more question for Q2?
Yeah, please.
The 100 beds that we are seeing now in Bangalore that might be coming up, what's our progress on that? Because it seems like we are near completion, and can we see it in FY 2026 itself?
Yeah, it's progressing as planned, and I think we should be able to commission by quarter one of FY 2027.
Perfect, sir. Thank you so much. Best of luck.
Thanks, Dikshant. Nithin, you had a follow-up?
Yeah. I just quickly want to check on, since you mentioned the government scheme part of it, have you guys done some work on what is the possible impact of the CGHS rate hikes and which likely would be followed by other central agencies on our business?
Yeah. Venkatesh, can you answer that? The CGHS rate hike impact?
Yes. The CGHS and a few of the other corporates which follow the CGHS rate, I mean, the pure CGHS out of those account for around 60%. The rate revisions have come into force. What we have seen is that we expect around a 30% benefit on the packages because of this revision. On the non-package part, we would not see any benefit beyond 12% because most of the component on the non-package part is the medicines consumables, which is around 55% of the numbers. We will not see any impact because it is on cost to cost. All in all, we could see because of this improvement around a 1% benefit on the monthly revenues and maybe 70%-80% of it flowing through into the EBITDA. Of course, we also expect the revisions of these corporates, which also follow CGHS, eventually in due course of time.
Venkatesh, what would be a ballpark absolute revenue impact that you can look through based on the central government schemes that we have right now?
Nishant will.
The ballpark number from pure CGHS will be roughly in the range of INR 20 million-INR 25 million per month. If we have others also to follow up with this, the other payers like PSUs, then probably that number may increase a bit. For us, for now, the ballpark number is INR 25 million per month increase in pure revenues.
About like a INR 30 core-INR 50 crore impact on the revenues, including the other schemes, somewhere in that ballpark?
Yeah, that's more or less right. That is when all of them come in line. That may happen by, say, Q2 of next year. Yeah, roundabout that, but there are many moving parts in this overall thing. We will have to wait and see how things flow in. As of now, this is what it looks like.
Okay. Thank you so much.
Thanks. Naveen, you have a question?
First of all, I want to start off by saying how deeply fulfilling it is to be invested in a company that's trying to help people. I want to double-click on the footfall number and specifically the patient footfalls that is stabilizing in India, right? I see that the rev per footfall is increasing, but how do you see the footfalls stabilizing?
Venkatesh can take this one.
What we have done over the last few quarters is we have been continuing our efforts on focusing more on improving payer mix and case mix. As we have already spoken about, when it comes to case mix, trying to see how we do the high-end surgeries and take us apart from the others and set high benchmarks. At the same time, we're also trying to improve our payer mix to get better payers into the system against few where we have concern in terms of the receivables, the recovery part. It's an ongoing exercise where we are still working hard in terms of catching up with those where we have rationalized on the schemes or the poor payers. It's going to continue, and in a very short period of time, we'll catch up on those numbers and stabilize on this growth.
Eventually, from the next two quarters onwards, we will see positive growth in the volumes alongside the incremental realizations, which we have already seen due to this payer mix. As we speak, we are more or less stabilizing on these numbers and on which we will continue to grow going forward.
Thank you. Also, do you see an upside in terms of a nationwide branding? Because still, the hospitals are known by their legacy names. Do you think a good recollection in terms of a nationwide brand will help?
It will help, definitely. The thing is, we have taken a lot of hospitals under O&M arrangements that were operating under previous names. For example, in Delhi, we've taken over the Dharamshila Cancer Hospital. Everyone knows we run it, but it's still called that. Similarly, the Kolkata hospital, Rabindranath Tagore, was a name that predated the creation of the brand. That is what it is known as. As long as they know that it's affiliated with us and we've invested a fair amount in doing up the websites and creating a common identity, these things do take time.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks, Naveen. Can we have Nayana for the next question?
Hello, sir. I do not know if Mr. Viren Shetty is there or not. My high regards to you, the way you guys have been managing the hospital and taking care of the health of a lot of people, commendable. I still remember an interview from you on a nationwide news channel where the anchor asked you, "Sir, how much do you look for profits?" You said, "Profits is not the agenda. We want to help people." That creates an organization with a purpose and happy to be invested here for the organization with the purpose. Great to see these numbers after a few quarters. Now, the only question that I have is, why do we come a lot late in terms of results, published results? I think we are the last few. We are of the last few.
Is it the offshore business for us? That means the Cayman accounting that takes time, or what happens? Why are we not early in terms of reporting quarterly?
Narayan, thank you so much for your kind words on why our results are not published earlier. I'll pass it on to Sandhya.
Yeah. Thank you, Narayan, for that feedback. We are also trying to accelerate the speed at which we can publish results. We have across countries, also we have to consolidate, and also we have to align all the stakeholders before we publish the results. That takes a little bit of time. This is a very, very meaningful feedback. We are also internally goaling that we should start pulling the timeline of our results forward. We will definitely work on this.
Sure. Thank you that you took the feedback positively. Any specific reasons that we are not able to collate the balance sheets or prepare the consolidated? What are the problems that you come across when you are trying to do this? Do you have any problems, or it's just that we want to be at this time of the quarter disclosing our results?
No, no. It's that we, as an organization, we do follow the highest standards of compliance, both in terms of the accuracy of the numbers as well as the proper accounting of all our receivables and the government accounting that comes in. We have top-tier auditors who also scrutinize everything we have line by line, and we have a large amount of data to sift through. We are in the process of moving towards a more automated system to help out with a lot of these systems there. As to why it should take so long when other people are able to do it in a much quicker way, I can only say that maybe we're doing a little too much work in presenting the numbers. A lot of that can be automated, and that's something we're going to invest in going forward.
Thank you. That helps. No more questions. Congratulations on the good numbers.
Sure. I guess if there are no other questions on the Q2 results, I think.
Do you have a question from Rajith now?
Yeah, Rajith, go ahead.
I'm sorry. I just raised my hand for a question on Practice Plus.
Okay. I guess we can take that up. Actually, the question that came before you was from Shivam. I believe it was on the debt financing. Sorry, Shivam, could you clarify?
Yeah, yeah. So actually, we financed GBP 150 million of it. And those were years. The remaining shortfall, are we planning to fund it via India, or is that entity going to support itself, stretch it out, or something like that?
Sure.
Shivam, the GBP 190 million is approximately the cost of the trust. About GBP 40 million has gone in as equity, and GBP 150 million has gone in as debt. The GBP 40 million equity has been funded from Cayman. Cayman has reasonable cash balances, and we have been able to fund it from the accruals of Cayman itself. The GBP 150 million debt will be serviced by the target.
Ma'am, we have acquired at a 9.2 EV to EBITDA. The net profits will not be enough to service it.
We have clarified that in the presentation that we have given. There is a one-time loss impact, which is in the current results because of a new center. If you adjust for that, there is adequate cash flow in the business to service. There is another part that we have done a structured debt with the lenders to synchronize it to the cash flow of the target.
Okay. Thank you, ma'am.
Thanks. Rajith, your question?
Yes, sir. Sir, I went through the transcript of that call as well. Now, you had mentioned that there will be operational efficiencies brought in, and your learnings from Cayman and India will be implemented. The question is on the demand side. One of the rationale is that the private payer mix will go up in that region. What are the first one or two steps that you intend to take to increase the footfall from such patients?
Anesh, will you be able to take this up?
Yeah. I think we've just completed the acquisition a few weeks ago. We're still understanding the post-closure formalities and getting settled in there. The team already had put in place the resources, the certain initiatives to increase their private payer mix. This was not something that we had exclusively initiated. They were already aware of this, and they're work in progress on a few initiatives. We're just going to accelerate those. We're not in a position to tell you when we will start seeing results because we need to get ourselves acclimatized here and understand more about the market. This is just something that the company and the management, which is in place before and now, was already on track to do. In a few quarters, we will have more information about what that outlook is looking like.
Right. So may I just have a follow-up on this?
Yeah, sure.
The reason I'm asking is, I believe now I could be wrong, that U.K. territory will behave in a somewhat different manner because the way hospitals could probably differentiate in India or in Cayman, those levers are different in U.K. The competition, obviously, is huge. That is why I was just trying to understand how do we build that customer base. I'm not asking for outlook or as such. What are your initial thoughts as how this will progress in, let's say, years to come?
Sure. Let's look at the absolute base case where the bulk of the revenue, which is 90%-93%, is contracted long-term secure revenue by the NHS. These are long-term evergreen contracts, as they call them here. There is no volatility we expect in that revenue base. The cost structure is what has already been priced in in the deal. We know those financials. Now, with our software platform, with our technology, with our group synergies like what we have seen in Cayman, we have a high degree of confidence that we will be able to make a meaningful movement in the cost structure of this organization here, predominantly driven on the back of our software and technology. It is not dependent on taking any people from India or anything that is not fungible. This is just with our overall technology digital capabilities, and we have already proven this out in Cayman.
That's the base case for that. Now, any movement we see on the payer mix is extremely incremental because on a like-for-like basis, private patients, whether cash or PMI, pay anywhere from 20%-30%, sometimes 35% more than the NHS. What gives us comfort that we can make progress there? If you look at peers, we are at about 78% private mix. The next lowest private mix is as high as 30%-32%, which is Ramsey. Then the others best in class are 60%-70% or higher, 75% private. Even in the market, compared to the others, we're starting from a very, very, very conservative low base for the private patient mix.
Right. Thank you. Just one quick question. Do the insurance companies there have tie-ups with all the hospitals in the same fashion, or will you have separate insurance companies, or will you have tie-up with some different companies, and the top guy will have a tie-up with some other companies?
No, it's somewhat similar to India, actually quite similar to India. There are very few insurance companies, health insurance companies of scale. They generally tie up with, they're incentivized to give their members choice across the nation. They generally are willing to reimburse with most providers. It's a question of the patient choosing to come to us versus going somewhere else.
Right. Thanks. Thanks a lot.
Thanks, Rajith. Dikshant, do you have a question?
Sir, two questions. One is on our U.K. business and one on India. For India, there seems to be a lag on our Mumbai operations. What is the update on our Mumbai operations, and how do they plan to scale them up now? I can go to the U.K. operations.
Yeah. The Mumbai one, we answered already. The Mumbai hospital started as a children's-only hospital, and it operates at the very highest standards of excellence and treating patients from across the spectrum. However, we found that being able to attract sufficiently large volume of patients was not able to be achieved, and the inbound cost structures are very high. We are in talks to slowly start transitioning this hospital from pediatric-only towards a heavy pediatric focus along with adult programs. That transition will take a few quarters to get through, but this is something we'll keep rolling out to improve the performance of Mumbai.
Sir, the reason I ask this is because Mumbai is a very good market for your insurance business, but if there isn't coverage, then why would a person want to insure? That's a critical problem statement right now.
Sorry, what's the question in there?
The question is that what would be the timeline here because the timeline has been going forward for some time. We have been rolling out again and again.
Agree. Our performance in Mumbai compared to the performance of most other Mumbai operators has not been good. It has been very difficult for us with our way of operating a hospital to be able to run it in a break-even manner. The fault lies with us entirely, and this is something we are looking to address. It'll be very hard for us to give a timeline for when exactly the hospital turns around.
Okay. Got it, sir. It comes from a place of a love for the brand. Please do not take it otherwise. We really love the brand, and we want to see you expand and grow and give great healthcare.
We understand, Dikshant. Thanks.
On U.K., particularly, sir, we see that there is a major lag on the weeks that it takes for a person to get operated. We see that the opportunity is clearly there. How long do you think it will take us to integrate our systems and our people into this new acquisition? When can we start seeing the first results for us? When is it that we can see the first results?
Yeah, I can.
Yeah. Anesh, go ahead.
Yeah. Sorry, can you hear me, Viren?
Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah. No, Dikshant, sorry, I missed, there was an interference.
Okay. I'll answer that.
Yeah, go ahead, Viren. Yeah, go ahead.
Yeah. The question was, how long will it take to integrate? How long will it take to turn it around? How long will it take for it to start contributing meaningfully? This is very hard for us to see at this point. We have a tremendous amount of confidence in the U.K. market as a whole. We have tremendous confidence in the growth of private healthcare in the U.K. We have tremendous confidence in the management of Practice Plus, and we know that this is the right-sized acquisition for us to make a significant difference to the performance of this hospital.
Us coming in with a highly efficient operating model with world-class technology and a world-class management team, we know that if applied to a well-running, highly efficient business that operates almost 93% on government patients and slowly uses that to change the payer profile, as well as improve the cost structure and grow and expand, we can turn this into a significant lever of growth for our business overseas. Timeline, guidance, all of that, the usual caveats apply. It is not something that we do, and it will be very hard for us to see at this point, given that we just finished the transaction a few weeks ago.
Usually, you have said that it takes us six to nine months to sort of put in our business once the structure is in place, the hospital is in place. Is that the right sort of—I am not asking for guidance, but I am asking for—is that the right sort of thought process that it will take us two to three quarters to start giving out guidance and seeing that, okay, where we are right now? Is that the right mindset for us?
No, it wouldn't be—yeah, I'll answer that, and Anesh can add on. It wouldn't be because we know how to run hospital in Cayman now. We know how to run hospital in India. We apply that to U.K., it'll be a disaster because the circumstances are very different. Payers are very different. The way in which they operate is very different. It is a collaborative learning process in which we work with the management to see where we add value and a lot of failed experiments along the way. We may find that certain tech implementations that take three weeks in India may take three months over there, whereas certain things that take three months in India may take three seconds in the U.K. Those are part of the discovery process we'll have to go through.
Thank you for the clarity, sir. Wish you the best.
Thanks, Dikshant. Hanesha, you have a question?
Hello. Yeah, thank you for the opportunity. My only question was that in Q1, you had mentioned that you have deployed INR 250 crore out of the INR 450 crore of investment guidance that you had given. In this quarter, have you deployed any more of the funds?
See, this quarter, there is less outflow of cash, but all of that is going to come in the next quarter. These projects will always have a spillover. Whatever we had projected, we will end up spending that and maybe a bit more. There may be spillover that the March end may flow to the April beginning. We are on track in terms of our cost and the time estimates.
Okay. Thank you.
Thanks. Do we have any other questions on the group? Otherwise, I can move on to the chat. Yeah, Rajith?
Yeah. Regarding the transaction cost of the acquisition, will it be in the range of INR 70 crore-INR 80 crore, and will it be debited to the Indian books or amortized in the U.K. books? How do you plan to treat that?
Yes. The costs will be in the U.K. books. We have a parent entity in the U.K. which has made the acquisition and which is incurring the transaction cost. The typical transaction cost range is about 5%. We are in that range, though we are still finalizing all the costs, and therefore, we'll be able to give the correct number when we report out at the end of the quarter.
Thank you, ma'am.
Thanks, Rajith. Chat. First question is on whether we'll rebrand the U.K. assets. Although we do have a strong brand in India and Cayman, it's not as strong in the U.K. So we will continue with the existing brand. The question that was asked about NH as a unified brand, that I think we had answered. We have created Narayana Health as a unifying brand: Narayana Health Insurance, Narayana Clinics, Narayana One Health. But it will take time for it to see the public consciousness. Anesh, the next two questions are on the ARPP for Cayman hospitals.
Yeah. Yeah, we felt, I mean, ARPP always for Cayman was not really a relevant metric, and we wanted to add information breaking out the insurance and the hospital separately. We felt that was much more relevant and useful now. So we've dropped the ARPP, and we've replaced it with the insurance revenue quarter on quarter.
Yeah.
There's a question on that.
Can you please provide revenue mix for this quarter and going forward with—by this quarter, I'll assume he means Q2?
What is the revenue mix of—sorry, we didn't follow that question, Aniket. Can you?
Can you mention it?
Can you help us understand?
Would you be able to get on the mic and explain to us the question, please?
Hello.
Yeah, please go ahead.
Yeah. I was just asking for the revenue mix from the core hospital business and the insurance.
In the question, given as part of our investor deck itself, the revenue of the core hospital segment is given, and the insurance and clinic revenue is given separately. Covered in the.
Okay. Okay. Okay. What are the margins for both?
For core hospital, margin has been given again as part of the investor deck.
Slide number six.
Slide number six. As far as integrated care is concerned, it is still not making margins. The cash burn also is given in the integrated care slide on our investor deck.
I wasn't put in.
Okay. The question over there is, can you share the console CapEx guidance for FY 2026 and 2027? FY 2026 CapEx guidance we'll give closer to once we reach Q1 of—sorry, FY 2027 we'll give once we're closer to the end of this year. We had guided that over the next three years, we have a plan to spend about INR 3,000 crore in India in a mix of greenfield, brownfield, O&M, and acquisitions. The exact mix will come as and when we start disclosing different transactions. The breakup of the individual hospitals are there in the investor slide where we have broken it up project by project and told you about the status and when they will be coming online.
Question now because it's given to the management directly. Question is from Mandar Pensay. It says, "I believe NH has one of the best set of promoters, management and doctors. It is evident that management is driving a lot of efficiencies in operations, taking out juice. As an investor in NH, while I believe these driving efficiencies will not be at the cost of patient treatment, even one unfortunate incident will put all the juice to waste. Just need a confirmation that the management is on the same page.
Dr. Rupert will clarify. At no point do we ever compromise.
Yeah. We have one of the strongest governance structures here, both clinical and non-clinical. From the clinical standpoint, we also recently got the award for the best clinical governance from the International Hospital Federation and the Association of Hospital Executives of the U.S. We do have a very strong audit and oversight on all of our units. We monitor more than 500 metrics for clinical outcomes. We have a very strong department of quality, and quality is a way of life. It's not just a quality department, but the entire clinical team and the non-clinical team participate in all the aspects of it. We have a very strong governance on not only clinical outcomes, but also all operations that affect the clinical outcomes.
We take a very strong view of that, and we keep a very strong oversight on that, both from the corporate and from the leadership on the regional side.
Thanks, Dr. Rupert. Thanks for the last question. Narayan, did you have anything?
Yes, sir. On previous phone calls, I had heard that we are trying to make best use of patient data that we have and that would help us in our insurance, health treatment endeavor also. We are trying to use software systems and including artificial intelligence there. Just wanted to understand, have we made any breakthroughs on creating any AI models that would help us there or even clinical diagnosis, early clinical diagnosis? Where are we on those innovation fronts?
Yeah. From a clinical analytics point of view, we are constantly working with the clinical teams as principal investigators to work on different areas of interest for the different clinicians. As far as from a public health perspective is concerned, you would have seen our numbers of the health checkups and various other data which we can analyze. That is something which is prevalent in the community, and we know exactly what is the prevalence. That is the data which you were mentioning that can be used for our clinics program or for the other insurance and other things. These are some of the things that we do work together from a public health as well as from a strong clinical analytical point of view as to how to work together with clinicians to see the AI use in actual clinical work.
From an inpatient journey, we are able to do many of the tasks through coordinated clinical workflows so that there is a strong guidance for the clinical team as to the next course of action to be done. Early warning systems, not only from a risk for morbidity and mortality, but also from a suggestive plan for the clinical pathways that need to be followed, which is vetted by the clinical working group across the network. These are all incorporated within the apps, whether it is a doctor app called AADI or the nursing app called NAMAH. We are able to integrate that. It is a work in progress, and we are constantly working on that to make it better and better. Thanks. I think we have two minutes left.
Yeah, sir. Happy to have that answer. Just wanted to say that that's the place where, as a Narayana, as a proactive management, we can really make a difference. So I'm happy that you guys are already doing it. Maybe with some more rigor, that would help all of us, the part owners also. Thank you.
Thanks, Narayan. Two minutes left. I'll answer the last few questions that are on the chat. The question is, which of the Indian entities have started contributing to margins? We wouldn't attribute it to anything specifically. We've seen a sharp increase in performance across all our hospitals, especially the hospitals in East India. A lot of these are volume-driven and changing the case mix and payer mix. These do have a contribution to margins. Obviously, the flagships, given their huge size relative to the overall hospital group, any movement in the flagship hospitals in Bangalore and Kolkata will have an outsized impact on the margins. The next question is on the financial and HR implications of robotic surgeries with respect to OpEx and CapEx. Robotic surgeries, while they are the future, are extremely expensive.
They have a huge front-loaded cost as well as a significant operating cost. For the first couple of years, as a hospital, we will have to bear the cost of training the doctors, as well as the patients will not be able to absorb the full cost of doing robotic surgeries. We do those nearly at break-even or sometimes at a loss. Over time, once we become better at doing these procedures, the patients are able to absorb some of the cost of doing the robotic surgeries, both in terms of general surgery, oncological surgery, cardiac surgeries, and so on. This definitely is the future, and an investment in this is something that will separate us from all the other hospitals that are out there. The next question on professional fees to doctor that have come to 15.5%, and do we see it stabilizing?
I'll leave it to Dr. Rupert to answer.
So this essentially what hospital is new, and the patient flow has not yet been established. For that individual hospital, it tends to be on the higher side, expecting very large minimum guarantees. Over time, as the volume picks up, then the professional fee as a percentage of the overall revenue starts to moderate and go down. This will be more or less in line with the payer set. Maybe there will be some advantages for certain hospitals over others, but in the end, it averages out.
Also, the number you're looking at is the console number. That factor is also there. You should look at the standalone number.
Yeah.
The other one last question which is there is, is the volume pickup, is the growth in EBITDA coming from pricing? It's not coming from pricing per se because our pricing change happens only in low single digits at the beginning of the year. The volume pickup is not being seen because of the payer mix correction. As you can see, we have done a lot of improvement in that payer mix, and the incremental revenue is coming through better-paying payers. That is contributing to top line in addition to all the factors we spoke about: efficiency, throughput, as well as higher-order procedures.
There are no more questions. We would like to conclude our session. Thanks, everyone, for the active participation as always. Thank you.
Thank you, everyone.