Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the Q3 FY 2026 earnings call of Leela Palaces Hotels & Resorts Ltd., formerly known as Schloss Bangalore Ltd. As a reminder, all participant lines will be in the listen-only mode, and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions after the presentation concludes. Should you need assistance during the conference call, please signal the operator by pressing star, then zero on your touch-tone phone. Please note that this call is being recorded. I now hand the conference over to Mr. Divakar Pingle from Ernst & Young IR. Thank you, and over to you.
Thanks, Ryan. Good evening, everyone. Welcome to the Q3 results of Leela Palaces Hotels & Resorts Ltd., India's only pure-play luxury hospitality company. The company has published its results and has uploaded the investor presentation on the exchanges earlier today, and you can also find it on the company's website. Before we start, a disclaimer: some of the statements made in today's earnings call may be forward-looking in nature. Such forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, which could cause actual results to differ from those anticipated. These statements are based on management's beliefs and assumptions made by information currently available to management. Participants are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements while making investment decisions. To answer your questions today and to take you through the story, we have the management participating with us today in today's conference call. We have Mr.
Anurag Bhatnagar, Full-time Director and CEO, and Mr. Ravi Shankar, Head of Asset Management and CFO. Without further ado, I'd like to hand over the call to Mr. Bhatnagar. Thank you. Over to you, Anurag.
Thank you. Hello, good evening, everyone. Wish you all a very happy and prosperous 2026, and thank you for joining us for our third global earnings call for the quarter and nine months ending 31st December 2025. I'm joined today by our CFO and head of asset management, Ravi Shankar. Let me begin with the highlights for the quarter. I'm pleased to report our third quarter results. In this quarter, we have continued our outperformance versus the luxury industry and delivered 20% year-on-year RevPAR growth and operating EBITDA growth of 23% year-on-year, driven by a strong 17% uplift in ADR. This growth is enabled on the back of Leela brand's unique positioning in the industry, proprietary sales and distribution network, and ability to consistently attract high demand and price premium over competitors. Our room revenues grew by 20%, anchored by higher contribution from retail and accelerated growth in website performance.
Nearly 153% growth in revenue came from the website performance. Given our continued focus on food and beverage quality and experience, our revenue grew 29% year-on-year, driven by both restaurant and banqueting. This performance was primarily fueled by a 17% growth in non-resident footfalls across our restaurants. Further, our operating EBITDA margins during the quarter were at 52%, which is one of the best in the industry. This was our best-ever quarterly performance and the fifth consecutive quarter of double-digit growth in both RevPAR and EBITDA. Driven by the strong performance in the first nine months of the financial year, we are well positioned to exceed our earlier guidance of mid to high teens EBITDA growth for FY 2026. The luxury consumption story in India continues to play out strongly, and Leela continues to outperform the luxury industry within the sector.
We have been consistently gaining market share in the luxury industry, and for the period April to November 2025, our market share increased by 15 points, and this quarter, our RevPAR premium year-on-year increased from 141 to 162, underscoring our consistently superior performance against the Indian luxury market. We continue to maintain a premium of approximately INR 5,000 in RevPAR over the rest of the luxury segment in India. This sustained leadership reinforces our strong market positioning and our ability to deliver superior value. The Leela RevPAR growth has consistently outperformed the Indian luxury segment growth by more than two times over the last three quarters. Our strategy is clear. We offer a holistic luxury ecosystem that drives total revenue premium across rooms, F&B, wellness, and luxury experiences.
As a case in point, during the quarter, we comprehensively repositioned the Leela Palace Jaipur to attract more domestic and foreign leisure tourists. We have completely revamped and upgraded the F&B offerings at this property, introducing the all-new Aravalli Dining Room as our signature all-day dining, Jamavar, our iconic and globally recognized signature specialty restaurant, the Peacock Lounge, a day lounge that transitions into a Mediterranean dining experience by evening, and the Ambar, a rooftop bar overlooking the Aravalli Hills. Just as an anecdote, Jamavar has delivered 40% revenue growth since its relaunch in November 25, and we expect other restaurants to follow a similar trajectory. Beyond F&B, we are elevating the guest experience with the introduction of an exclusive Kids Club, a reimagined spa with bespoke wellness offerings under Aujasya, and the conversion of select villas into premium villas for multi-generational travel.
This transformation strengthens Jaipur's positioning as a prime luxury destination and marks the completion of the commitment we had articulated at the time of our IPO. Overall, on the back of these investments, our RevPAR in Jaipur grew by 27% in Q3 FY 2026, highlighting the importance of a holistic luxury ecosystem for the luxury traveler. Similar to Jaipur, we continue to enhance our other properties and elevate guest experiences. Looking ahead, we reiterate our confidence in sustaining mid to high teen EBITDA growth over the next two, three years, driven by ADR and occupancy expansion, new F&B and spa outlets, launch of our members-only club, Arq, in three new cities, and cost optimization initiatives. In this quarter, we have continued our progress on strategic capital-efficient growth. We have closed the Dubai transaction and now own 25% equity stake in the asset with an upcoming management contract.
As a reminder, our total equity investment, including the upfront investment and the future capex that we plan to do, is USD 70 million. This is expected to be fully recovered in two to three years through sale of our brand new residences, making this effectively an asset-light investment. Furthermore, the 25% equity stake and the HMA contract are expected to generate INR 180 crores in stabilized earnings. We are also pleased to announce that we have signed a management agreement for a marquee 80-key luxury hotel in Jaisalmer. This hotel is scheduled to become operational by the end of this calendar year and will enhance our existing Rajasthan circuit. This brings us to three luxury hotels that we have added since IPO: Mumbai, BKC, Dubai, and Jaisalmer.
These luxury hotels will contribute to nearly INR 340 crores of stabilized earnings on an attributable basis, with a net capital outlay of only INR 1,650 crores, making this extremely accurate. Overall, our expansion strategy remains firmly on track, supported by a pipeline of nine luxury hotels at this point in time, totaling over 1,000 keys, and we continue to evaluate opportunities that further complement our portfolio. Over the long term, we reaffirm our EBITDA target of INR 2,000 crore by FY 2030 through a combination of same-store growth and expansion. Before we dive into the operating performance, I would like to touch upon the overall macroeconomic trends. Macro trends: India's luxury segment is entering a multi-decadal growth phase, and Leela's exclusive focus on pure luxury positions us uniquely to capitalize on these dynamics and sustain a clear competitive advantage. The demand-supply fundamentals are extremely attractive.
The funnel of customers for luxury consumption in India continues to expand on the back of strong economic growth in the country. The international travel demand remains a potential upside for the luxury sector. While the demand for luxury is growing at double digits, the supply in our micro-markets remains muted, allowing Leela to capture outsized market share, presenting a strong runway for both occupancies and rates to increase, resulting in both near-term and long-term same-store growth. On the back of this context, now let's dive into our operating performance. The Leela continues to be the preferred luxury brand underpinned by our commitment to excellence, our services, which is reflected in our industry-leading voice of guest and NPS score of 86.
This quarter, our brand strength was further reinforced as several of our hotels were the first choice of high-profile weddings and global and marquee events, reaffirming our leadership in luxury hospitality. For the nine months FY 2026, RevPAR has increased by 18% year-on-year to 15,626, supported by a 13% growth in ADR and 3 percentage points improvement in occupancy to 68%, highlighting resilient luxury demand and our premium pricing power. Growth remains broad-based, with both city and resort portfolios delivering strong double-digit RevPAR growth in third quarter FY 2026 as well as for the nine months of FY 2026. The Leela's commitment to excellence was reaffirmed through multiple global recognitions. The Leela Palace Udaipur is recognized as the best in India by Robb Report Hong Kong, Best of the Best 2026 Travel. Michelin keys were awarded to three of our palaces in New Delhi, Jaipur, and Chennai.
Outstanding recognition in Condé Nast Traveler's Reader's Choice Awards, with 40% of our portfolio featured, including our hotels in Kovalam, Udaipur, Jaipur, Chennai, and New Delhi. Our strong operational and financial performance is underpinned by a highly engaged talent base and industry-leading development initiatives, which have earned us Great Place to Work recognition this quarter with an 88% response rate, while continuing to strengthen organizational capability and support an 82% retention rate for nine months FY 2026. ESG remains an integral focus to our strategy. Today, 65% of our energy consumption comes from green sources. Importantly, this transition is also delivering financial benefits, with our Q3 financial year power cost down 3% year-on-year and improved long-term operating efficiency. During the year, we upcycled 2.2 metric tons of flower waste and sourced 48% of our tea consumption from carbon-neutral estates, reinforcing our commitment to responsible luxury.
I will now hand over the call to Ravi Shankar, our CFO and head of asset management, to take you through the financial highlights for the quarter and the nine months ended 31st December 2025.
Thank you, Anurag. Good evening, everyone. First, starting with the quarterly performance, Q3 FY 2026 once again underscored the strength, efficiency, and scalability of the Leela platform, combining strong top-line growth with disciplined capital management and a sharp focus on returns. In line with our strong RevPAR growth, operating revenues increased by 21% year-over-year to INR 457 crores, while operating EBITDA rose 23% year-over-year to INR 238 crores, resulting in the best-in-class EBITDA margin of 52% and improvement of 61 basis points. Room revenue continued to deliver double-digit year-over-year growth, driven by an 18% increase in the retail segment and a robust 45% growth in the group segment.
PAT increased from INR 56 crores in Q3 FY 2025 to INR 148 crores, driven mainly by EBITDA expansion and a reduction of finance costs, making our fifth consecutive quarter of positive PAT. Turning to nine-month performance, we delivered strong growth with operating revenues increasing 16% year-over-year to INR 1,043 crores. Operating EBITDA rose 22% year-over-year to 477 crores. EBITDA margin expanded by 231 basis points to 46%, with over 60% of incremental revenue converting to EBITDA, reflecting robust operating leverage and disciplined cost management. In terms of financing, during the period, we further renegotiated our term loan with our bankers, bringing down the interest rate from 9.1% to 8.25%. This allows us to benefit from the soft interest rate environment, lowering our borrowing cost and enhancing the PAT while maintaining a strong balance sheet with ample headroom to fund future growth.
Before ending, Anurag, I would like to express our gratitude to our incredible team of associates for their commitment to excellence, hard work, and their constant endeavor to delight all our guests. Further details on our third quarter results can be found in our earnings release we issued earlier today. We can now open the floor for questions.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Anyone who wishes to ask a question may press star and one on their touch-tone telephone. If you wish to remove yourself from the question queue, you may press star and two. Participants are requested to use their handsets while asking a question. Ladies and gentlemen, we will wait for a moment while the question queue assembles. We take the first question from the line of Binay from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Hi team.
Congratulations for another strong quarter. I have two questions. First is on the demand side. If you could comment a little bit about demand trends that you are seeing, because some of the data that we see at the city level is a little bit mixed, like Mumbai has been showing weakness, whereas markets like Delhi, Bangalore, and all are quite strong. So could you comment a little bit about that? What are the trends that you're seeing across cities?
Thanks, Binay. From our perspective and based on the data that we have, we see the continuation of high double-digit growth demand across all the segments and across all the cities, both in city hotels as well as leisure destinations.
I mean, if you take a step back and look at what's happening in India, if you look at the macroeconomic indicators, the growth in GDP, the economic value, the number of households that are coming into luxury consumption, and the total addressable market, and the growth of the upper funnel in terms of luxury consumption, we are at the beginning of a multi-year, multi-decadal demand growth in India. And we have not seen this impact across any of our hotels. If you look at our city hotels, the demand is growing in high double digits. The funnel for our resort destinations is also very high. So we have not seen that being impacted anywhere, especially on the luxury side, as we have always maintained luxury consumption is relatively inelastic versus other sectors and other segments. And we expect this trend to continue.
Thanks for that.
Team, and typically for you, March quarter tends to be the strongest, right? We see a sizable jump in the past between December occupancy to March. So the similar trends are continuing for you.
Absolutely. Absolutely. And if you see, every quarter on quarter, we have been growing in high double digits when it comes to RevPAR growth, led by both our ADR as well as occupancy growth, which shows that the demand is spread across all cities.
So Binay, just to add, we are looking for a double-digit growth, at least in the ADR and RevPAR in the quarter one of this year.
Thanks. And secondly, when I look at F&B revenues and management fees, F&B has accelerated from mid-teens to almost 29% growth this quarter. Management fees have been around 7%. Could you talk a little bit about what's happening over there, and especially the F&B bit?
Is this a sustainable run rate? Was there any one-off that is driving this high growth in December quarter?
Two part. One is, Binay, on the HMA. HMA, actually, our HMA fees have grown by year-over-year 17%. We had some one-off adjustment in last quarter, same time. As a result, we got a 7% increase. There was a huge banqueting event we had done for the Mahika wedding. That revenue, and including that adjustment, we would be around a 17% by year-over-year increase on the HMA fees. Our all-managed hotels also did a double-digit ADR and RevPAR growth.
And on FNB, Binay, we have opened two new restaurants in this quarter, which will further give us results across the next 12 months and forward as well. We opened two new restaurants in Jaipur, the Ambar Terrace, the rooftop restaurant that I was alluding to earlier, and the Peacock Lounge.
And I also want to remind you that the restaurants that we repurposed and renovated in the previous quarters stabilized in this quarter. For instance, the Le Cirque in New Delhi has shown a 40% growth in revenue year-on-year. The Qube, which was a three-meal atelier in the Leela Palace, New Delhi, has seen a 27% growth. And Jamavar, that I mentioned, a new restaurant in Leela Palace, Jaipur, has seen a 40% growth. FNB is a big part of our focus and our commitment to excellence in terms of creating value and offering and experiences for our customers. And we expect these trends to continue going forward into the few years.
Thanks, team. I'll come back in the queue.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Karan Khanna from Ambit Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, Anurag. Hi, Ravi.
Thanks for the opportunity and congrats on a very strong quarter. My first question to you, Anurag, 20% RevPAR growth in the quarter seems very strong given that the industry faced some headwinds in December. Two things. One, what were the numbers for October and November combined versus December? And secondly, with results seeing nearly 30% viable RevPAR growth, how much of this can be attributed to one-off MICE activity that you had witnessed during the quarter?
Thank you, Karan. I think, as I mentioned earlier, the growth has come across both city hotels as well as resorts. We have seen, vis-à-vis the resorts, that this is typically the season of celebrations and high-profile events and marquee events. So there has been an upside both in terms of, as I mentioned, certain global events that have happened in Jaipur and in Udaipur, and we have seen this upside in resorts.
But we have seen the similar high double-digit growth in our city hotels as well. And the ADR, this is a season of extremely high demand. And Leela being our focus on revenue and asset management, our dynamic pricing, our focus on quality and assurance as well as service delivery allows us the way with it to be able to yield higher and optimize on this high demand in this particular season. And Karan, just to give you a specific number, our city hotels also have done almost 17% RevPAR growth, which is included in the 20%. Even if you look at nine months, our RevPAR for city hotels are 16%. So it shows our escalated growth both for our city and resort hotels.
And then, Ravi, just a number on October, November combined RevPAR versus what you're seeing in December?
So, October, November, if we combine, then we will do almost a 21% growth on ADR and 24% growth on RevPAR. And occupancy will go by 1.6%.
Sure. Second question for the BKC property in slide 13 of the presentation. I'm doing some math around the numbers. Is it safe to assume that you have been sitting in total stabilized revenue of around 480 or gross at 32,000 ARRs and 80% occupancy? And firstly, when do you plan to achieve this number? And secondly, do you see any risk to the relatively high ARR expectation for this property?
So I'll tell you, Karan, first, we are on track on this property. We already are paying lease premium on time, and design is already in progress.
The numbers that we are seeing, this will be in the second stabilized year that numbers you are speaking on, we will be able to achieve in our second stabilized year the occupancy of 80%.
And we don't see any risk, Karan, because, as you mentioned earlier, I mean, this market is so grossly underserved in terms of luxury supply and in terms of the inventory coming in. The last supply that came in this micro market was in 2011. It's been nearly 15 years since there was a supply in this market. So we are actually quite excitedly awaiting the opening of this hotel, and there's no risk or any, I mean, any such thing that we foresee in the future.
Sure. And the next question, Anurag, we have seen about two large private equity deals happening in the past couple of weeks in the hospitality sector.
From your perspective, can you talk about the acquisition landscape and if you're seeing any large acquisition opportunities that may be nearing completion? And if yes, is there a debt cap that you will not close, especially given that the Dubai acquisition will have substantial debt attributable to Leela?
Sorry, Karan, I couldn't hear you very clearly, but what I could make out of it, I mean, look, I can't really comment on the strategy and the business objectives of the other organizations. As far as Leela is concerned, we have pure focus on luxury. We are very, very strategic about our business growth and development.
We are always seeking opportunities that are value-accretive and create shareholder and stakeholder value and create a network impact on the luxury side for our hotels, as we have seen a hugely accretive opportunity that we capitalized on in terms of Dubai and in BKC, and we continue on the same path. If you see, every quarter, we have added keys. I mean, if we started in FY 2025 with 3,500 keys, we added 250 keys in BKC acquisition in first quarter of FY 2026. We added 546 keys of Dubai in second quarter of FY 2026 and 80 keys of Jaisalmer in the third quarter, and this is at this point in time.
This is, like I mentioned earlier, we have a strong pipeline and lots of discussions that we are actively engaged in and very much on track for the INR 2,000 crore EBITDA that we have given as a guidance for FY 2030.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Murtuza Arsiwalla from Kotak. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi, sir. Congratulations on fantastic numbers. Just one question on the reported numbers. Anything that we should read as maybe non-recurring or excessive in the other expenses this quarter? They seem to be higher, and we could have had an even higher margin profile, but for this larger other expense. So anything on the expense side that needs to be called out? And the second is on Dubai. As we understand now, you've taken over the hotel.
How should we think in terms of the milestones in terms of converting the brand to a Leela brand? When do the management fees start sort of coming on board? And how should we think about the timelines in terms of the window sale, etc.? Just the roadmap to how that entire transition for the Dubai hotel would happen. So clarity on that.
So perhaps I can comment on the Dubai, and Ravi will give you some more specifications on the financials that you brought up. Dubai, we closed the transaction on 26th of November. So the current operator will be managing the hotel till 26th of December or so for this year, Q4 within this year. We have a planned upgrade and a rebranding, which is planned in 2027.
We start operating the hotel from 2027, and we should be rebranding very much on track of rebranding the hotel as a Leela in 2028, and we start earning management fees. It's a large asset, if I was to remind you, over 23 acres with four zones. We'll be very efficient about our upgrading and our planning.
Okay. All of these, when you say the Leela brand in 2028, I'm assuming you're talking calendar year 2028.
That's right.
Okay. In terms of the window sale, would that happen anytime earlier, or how should we think of that?
The progress on that is already initiated, and I would say that this will happen over the next two or three years. Okay. Fantastic. Thank you.
Murtuza, on the other expenses, yes, there were some one-time expenses in this quarter, but if you look at the entire nine-months quarter, we had an upflow through of more than 60% and a very healthy profit in spite of having those one-time expenses. We had a 52% EBITDA margin, which is still healthy, and we were able to have a margin expansion as well.
What do you want to quantify the one-time in this quarter?
If I remove there were INR 5 crore, INR 6 crores, if I remove the INR 6 crore, INR 7 crores, we'll be almost 26% expense.
Okay. Thank you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Abhay Kaitan from Axis Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thank you for the opportunity, and again, congrats on a good set of numbers. My question is again on the demand side.
So I know you in the presentation you have given out growth by leisure and groups, but within that, if you can help me bifurcate for the city hotels, how much of the growth has come from the leisure side and how much of the growth has come from the corporate side? Just some color on that would be really helpful.
So city hotels, just to remind you that we have grown by 17%. And if I talk of specific segments, our city hotels are between 60%-70% of the businesses from the corporate side, and that's a significant number. And within the segments, we have seen individual corporate travel increase. Everything has grown by double digits, high double digits. We have seen the corporate MICE increase, and we have also seen the growth in terms of events. So it's a very broad-based growth.
For instance, our retail segment has grown by 18%. Our group segments have grown overall by 45%. And our direct, which is a brand.com, which is the most efficient, and that shows the pull factor of the Leela brand has grown by 153%.
Got it. This is really helpful. And my second question is on the Jaisalmer property, which is under the managed contract. So when can we expect the fees to start coming in, and how much is the expected quantum in FY 2027 and months of stabilization?
So the hotel is undergoing an extensive fit, although it's a ready-to-kind of ready-built hotel across 30 acres of land and beautifully positioned. But we are enhancing the product along with the ownership to make it an absolute luxury Leela and complete our Rajasthan circuit and strengthen it further.
We are expecting the work to be completed by the season end of this year. And the fees once stabilize, we are expecting close to, I mean, if you look at our trends, we are looking at close to six odd crores of fees in a stabilized year. Understood.
Thank you. This is very helpful. I'll get back to you.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Achal Kumar from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks for taking my question. First of all, on your balance sheet, so basically, just wanted to understand about where are you in terms of comfort level. So now you said Jaisalmer, and it looks like it's going to be on the management contract. Had there been an option, would you have preferred to buy it?
On that, I mean, just extending to that, I mean, what kind of growth we can see in terms of owned properties? Are you still comfortable if you're getting an opportunity? Would you prefer to buy it? Would your balance sheet allow you to do that? So if you could give a bit of a color on that, please.
If you had an opportunity to buy Jaisalmer, you could have put equity, but it was the HMA contract. Owner had enough funds, and they already constructed the property. I would give an entire halo effect to our brand with the network impact in Rajasthan hotels. We went with the HMA contract.
But if there are good deals available, which we are evaluating, which have good return metrics, yield on cost and ROE as per our benchmark, then we would be keen to invest with high ROIC if the deal justifies that economically.
Just to confirm, I guess you confirmed previously that you are looking at some of the markets like Goa and all. Are you still looking at it? Are you still looking to buy some properties out there?
Yes. We are still evaluating deals in the key cities and resort hotels.
Okay. Fair. That's perfect. Thanks. My second question was on the demand again. So basically, on slide 37, you mentioned that there is a huge gap between the demand and supply, which definitely points to the very healthy equation.
But I mean, how confident are you that despite the fact that the demand-supply equation sits in your favor, you could still continue to increase your ARR? I mean, looking at your ARRs, your resort and city ARRs, over 38,000 and so all that, don't you think it's a very high ARR? I mean, are you really confident that you can increase your continuity to increase your ARR despite that demand-supply balance?
I'll break it into two points, and thank you for this question. I was kind of hoping somebody would ask us that. Firstly, in the hotels in the cities where we are located, there is no real demand actually coming in our micro market in most of the locations where we are located. That's point one.
The iconic nature of our hotels, the built quality of our assets, and the market dominance that we have gives us a huge competitive advantage, as we have seen, as you mentioned yourself, to be able to command a pricing power. All the tailwinds are there to grow demand across all segments, and we have seen that year on year, quarter on quarter, across all segments. From 70 million households, which could have consumed luxury in 2019, estimates are that there are going to be more than 200 million households by FY 2030 in India that can consume luxury. And India, as a country today on the luxury side, is severely and grossly underserved and underpenetrated with less than 29,000 keys on the luxury side. So there is definitely a big delta between demand and supply.
Demand is expected to grow at a macro level between 11%-14%, and the supply is in mid and low single digits. So that's point number one. Secondly, our brand and product, which is backed by incredible service, which you have seen from our high Net Promoter Scores, allows us to create that experience that allows us to charge at higher rates because of the overall value proposition that we offer to all our guests. The holistic luxury ecosystem that we have refined and fine-tuned over the years enables us to charge that premium, and we have seen that across not just this season and this quarter, but even the previous quarters as well.
The third data point I would like to bring to your attention, the events that impacted the sector, I would say, in the last nine months, whether it was Operation Sindhur, whether it was that airlines that happened with a particular airline, did not impact Leela and Leela as a segment, and as a brand, has been resilient to all of these. So that kind of reinforces our thesis that luxury is relatively inelastic compared to other segments in the sector. It reflects the psyche of the luxury consumer.
Okay. Perfect. Thanks. My final question was about the first quarter. Although your full year guidance points to how you're thinking about the Q4, just want to understand because the Q4, we will have sort of on the headwind side, probably you had last year, you had Mahakumbh and all, and so the demand was strong.
Of course, you're not present in some of those cities, but of course, overall demand was strong. But then on the other side, you have sort of the T20 World Cup and AI conference in Delhi and all. So on the balance, how do you see the quarter Q4? I mean, do you see exceptionally strong because of these, or do you see because of headwinds? Probably we could see some balance growth. How do you see the Q4?
The Q4 also will have a great quarter, Jan to March. And if I tell you, we'll be looking at a double-digit growth on both ADR and RevPAR side. That's all. And
okay. Fair enough. Okay. Fine. Fair enough. I think that's it from my side.
And typically, historically, if you look at the trends, Q4 is even stronger in absolutes than Q3 if you look at as a cycle as well.
Yeah. Absolutely. No. Perfect. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, if you wish to ask a question, please press star and one. We take the next question from the line of Sumit Kumar from JM Financial. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good evening, Anurag and Ravi. Congratulations on a very good quarter. My first question relates to the growth investments. There was a sort of capital outlay for certain asset management initiatives outlined in the RHP. That was roughly about INR 450-odd crores, which includes expansion of certain rooms, upgradation of amenities, and some solar parks. So what is the status on that INR 430 crores if that's being spent, and how much of that is still remaining?
The second is if you can give an update on the construction status of your five assets, excluding Dubai and BKC, the ones that are coming up elsewhere in Ayodhya, and so on and so forth.
Thanks, Sumit. Thanks for the question. So the CapEx that we are in the prospectus for our value drivers that already been invested, majority of it, if you see a lot of our value drivers are already operational. Arc in Bangalore is already operational. Delhi is getting operational in March. Chennai will get operational in April. So most of the CapEx has already been invested. The new restaurants in Jaipur have come in operation. Delhi, we have the conservatory, which is coming in the next quarter, plus the new rooms, the five rooms at Jaipur. They are already operational. Spa in Jaipur is operational.
So almost all the CapEx has been spent, and almost 10% is remaining that will be spent in this quarter, Sumit. Okay. And on the construction update for those five assets? All the five-odd, the good part and the good news is that we have got approvals for all the five hotels, and we have already started the construction for each one of the hotels. The most difficult approval was Agra because the hotel was near to us. That approval also we have received in November, and the construction has started. So all five hotels, construction is already in swing.
Okay. And the second question on Leela Arc, how much have you collected in these, say, in the last quarter for the club business?
And is there any revenue contribution coming in 3Q from that? So we have already launched Bangalore Leela Arc soft launch.
first January only, we'll start generating revenues from the Leela Arc. We have already signed a good number of members because it's only invite only. We are not trying to reach and sign every member. So very selective list of members have been enrolled into. Once we have Delhi and Chennai, then it will be more of a networking pack where you can enroll more members to give services on an all-India basis rather than on a one-club basis.
Okay. Cool. Thank you. That's helpful.
Thank you and all the best. Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Deepak Saha from Nirmal Bang Institutional Equities. Please go ahead.
Hi. Thanks for the opportunity. Congrats on the great set of numbers.
So my first question is on the F&B side, if you can highlight how much of this 29% growth would be driven by high-profile events and just trying to understand how much would be sustainable going ahead.
Sorry. Come again. Can you just repeat the question, please?
I'm asking for the F&B growth of 29% that we have seen for the quarter, how much of that would be driven by high-profile events that we had for the quarter? And basically, we're trying to understand whether this kind of a growth rate sticks out for the coming quarters, especially Q4. So just on the sustainability of the F&B side.
Delhi, 70% of the growth has come at a run rate. And even the see, events happen every year for the Leela.
Every year in season, in peak season, we have either global delegations coming in or heads of state visits or some big marquee events or a wedding celebration. So I won't say there's any specific delta that has been created this particular quarter. It's actually run rate business as usual for us. But to your specific question, nearly 70%-75% of this alpha has been created through our restaurants, lounges, and bars. And the balance has come from events and banqueting. And the new restaurants that I mentioned to you. But the impact of the new restaurant has been basically just for one year. So the next whole year and the next future, you'll see the impact of the new restaurants that we have launched.
Just to add, this will give us a recurring increase in our FMB revenues because we are enabled to increase our APCs by almost 12% in this quarter. And 17% growth in our footfalls. On non-resident gu ests. On non-resident guests.
Got it. That's helpful. And Ravi, if you can just a little bit help us understand what's the gross debt position, is there any difference compared to where we were in H1, FY 2025, FY 2026, and where we are currently?
So if I tell you on the debt position, we are right now at INR 1,400 crores of gross debt, and cash, we have around INR 600-700 crores of cash sitting with us. So that's the gross and net debt position. We have used around INR 400 crores to pay for the Dubai acquisition.
Got it. That's helpful.
Coming to the pipeline of owned assets, excluding BKC, I mean, just an extension to the previous question, anything if you could pinpoint out of this Srinagar, Agra, Ranthambore, Bandhavgarh, and Ayodhya, which one likely to come early FY 2028, say, first half, and which one, say, second half? Anything if you can share?
I think if you were to structure the opening of these hotels, Srinagar is more advanced today than Agra. We have already, because it's already kind of a brownfield work for us. The demolition work is finally executed. The design approvals have been received. Our property management teams are on site. Agra, we have broken ground. So we expect Srinagar to come in first.
Bandhavgarh, we believe, will also come in very early in FY 2028 because Bandhavgarh, the number of villas and the tents that we are putting out on the luxury side would also come in earlier. The Mumbai, the Waterstones, the Leela luxury residences, we are expecting that to come towards the end of this calendar year for FY 2026. Jaisalmer I've already spoken about. I can see that even in FY 2028, all our assets are spread in such a way so that we can open hot. In Leela, our turnaround time, and given the fact that most majority of these hotels are owned by us, we have the advantage and the opportunity to put up a pre-opening team, sales, distribution, which actually saves us six-odd months in terms of ramp-up time of these hotels.
Got it.
So last question from my end, a little bit on a longer-term basis, given the entire industry seeing such heavy pipeline, from talent retention and sourcing point of view, do you see any challenge? What's your view given such a strong pipeline is there for us, for the industry? What's your view on talent sourcing? Sorry. On talent sourcing? Talent.
I think talent has been a very big focus for us and continues to be so. Like I have always said that we have institutionalized both our talent retention, upskilling, and development to ensure that we always have the best talent serving our guests. And that is reflected in two data points. One is our highest Net Promoter Score, which is 86, which is not just the highest in India, but also amongst the highest in Asia-Pacific. Second is our retention rate of 82.
Now, this is what we focus on, and we are looking forward. This year, we have also been recognized as a Great Place to Work. Talent remains a very open and very strong focus for us, and we are having this talent across all cohorts of our service excellence. We will be announcing very soon our focus in terms of further institutionalizing what we want to do with our talent.
So I get it. What I was trying to understand, are we seeing any challenge as far as the sourcing part is concerned?
Not really. I mean, we recently launched our fourth batch of our management trainee Leela Leadership Development Program. For 35 positions that we have in the company, we have received more than 1,350 applicants, eligible applicants and qualified applicants. We see that across every position that comes up.
While there's a lot of focus in terms of developing talent from within, but when we need to source talents, and right now, we have three likely openings going forward into the next year, and we are seeing a very active demand coming in in terms of talent acquisition. Supply, actually.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Nikhil from Kizuna Wealth. Please go ahead.
Yes. Thank you for giving me the opportunity, and congratulations on a very good set of numbers, so my first question is, for a stable hotel, what is our targeted occupancy over there?
Sorry, which hotel?
I'm sorry. For a stable hotel, like in our stable city hotel and a stable leisure hotel, what is the targeted occupancy that we target?
So in a city hotel, it depends upon the location. You have an airport hotel or a CBD.
Generally, you tend to do 75%-78% occupancy in a stabilized year. Resorts should be in the right location. You do around 65% occupancy.
Okay, sir. So that's good to know. And sir, on the ADR front, I would also like we have seen a good growth in ADR. So can we assume that going forward with the luxury demand thesis in play? So can we assume that we are going to have a double-digit ADR growth? Is it going to be likely on the lower teens or mid-teens that we target?
With the asset and the service culture, the NPS scores that we have, the distribution system, we do target 9%-10% of ADR growth year on year. That's our target.
Okay, sir. So that's really great to hear. That's it from my side. Thank you, and all the very best.
Thank you.
We take the next question from the line of Sreetika Ray Mohapatra from JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Thank you for the opportunity, and congratulations to the team on a very good set of numbers. My question is regarding your strategy around building the circuits and microcluster that you have managed to build. I think you've highlighted that well in your presentation as well, where you now have a very clear set of hotels across Delhi, Jaipur, Udaipur, and now Jaisalmer also coming in. Are there any such opportunities that you are currently seeing around your existing portfolio, any particular region that may potentially emerge as such circuits or clusters in future?
Thank you for this question. And you're absolutely right.
The way we have seen travel trends, especially from international travelers coming into India, we have seen the average length of stay between eight to 10 nights at the Leela hotels. So hence, the circuits and the clusters that you have talked about work very well. The Leela Palace Trail, an itinerary-based program and an experience program that we had launched in 2023, has been extremely popular in our international markets, and that allows the guests to stay across three Leela hotels over a span of between seven to 10 days. So we have, and we are strengthening the circuit with the inclusion of Leela Palace Agra, which is there in our pipeline. Likewise, we have a Leela Palace Trail for the south of India, giving us spread and portfolio across Bangalore, Chennai, Hyderabad, Kovalam, and Ashtamudi.
We definitely expect that with the properties coming up in Jaisalmer, this Rajasthan circuit to get further strengthened, plus the new foray of luxury experiences, the wildlife. The wildlife segment attracts a completely different clientele who would travel only to experience our wildlife destinations. With both Bandhavgarh and Ranthambore getting added on to our portfolio, we definitely expect this segment to grow. So we are growing on heritage between Agra and Ayodhya. We are focusing on wildlife, and all of this presents opportunities of building a circuit.
Got it. Thank you. Also, just since you mentioned the international traveler visit being structured across a longer period through your hotels and your in-house program as well, are you seeing any changes or improvement to the international visitor mix in your portfolio? Are there any early signs?
Because we are still seeing a lag and a weakness in the FTA numbers that are reported. Of course, we get these numbers with the lag. But are you seeing any material changes or any significant pickup when it comes to your portfolio hotels?
So our business hotels are in line with what they were earlier. So to give you an example, nearly 70% of our business mix in Leela Palace, Bangalore, is from international markets. In Chennai, it's 65%. In Leela Palace, New Delhi. But on the leisure hotels, we have not seen the typical seasonal uptake that would have happened from international markets. And we all know the reasons. But that being said, the domestic has grown phenomenally to take care of that requirement. Overall, as the mix at the H1 average, we were at a 50/50 mix of international and domestic business.
In quarter three, what we have seen is the international mix is close to 51% or 52%. So a marginal shift. But you are absolutely right. We really expect that this international business presents an opportunity, and Leela is best placed, given our global recognition, the awards that we have won at a global platform, and historically, our propensity to do this kind of luxury business. We are very well placed to capture this demand as and when it represents.
Thanks, Anurag. Just one final question from my side. You, of course, the Sofitel Dubai acquisition has been an international foray for you. But any other geographies which are under consideration or maybe at advanced stages that could potentially come up in the coming two fiscal years?
You know very well that we cannot say that right now, but thank you.
Look, we are actively almost all good opportunities that come to us. India is so grossly underpenetrated when it comes to luxury focus, and our performance is also giving a lot of confidence to our counterparties. We are working on several expressions of interest as we speak. Hopefully, going forward in the future quarters, we'll be letting you know. India remains a very big focus for us because there are several opportunities that we are evaluating as we speak.
Okay. Thank you so much. That's all from my side.
Thank you. We take the next question from the line of Achal Kumar from HSBC. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hi. Thanks. Sorry. My question was already answered, but since I've been given the opportunity, I just want to check. So you mentioned that you have gained 15 points market share.
On that point, what is your current market share, if I may ask, please?
Our current market share for Leela is 147 RGI index. So we are 47% more than the market. The luxury market in India was 100. And that's from STR, April to November.
Okay. Perfect. Thanks. The rest of my questions were answered. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Ladies and gentlemen, with that, we conclude the question and answer session. I now hand the conference over to the management for their closing comments.
Thank you, everyone. And this being the first call for the new year, once again, I wish you and your families a very happy new year. We are extremely happy with the performance, and especially thank all our associates who are striving ceaselessly to deliver our commitment to excellence and these phenomenal performances quarter after quarter.
And as India continues to grow, the focus on luxury, we definitely believe that we are very well poised for the next few quarters as well. Thank you all.
Thank you. On behalf of Leela Palaces Hotels and Resorts Limited, that concludes this conference. Thank you for joining us, and you may now disconnect your line.