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Viceroy Hotels Ltd Q2 FY26 – Marriott, Money & Madhapur: How a Once-Dead Stock Turned Into Hyderabad’s Hottest Hotel Comeback Story


1. At a Glance

Welcome to the grand buffet of Viceroy Hotels Ltd — where the Marriott brand meets Hyderabad real estate dreams and investor patience finally got rewarded (somewhat). Trading at ₹130/share with a market cap of ₹881 crore, this once-bankrupt hotelier is now serving earnings with a hint of optimism and a pinch of dilution. The Q2 FY26 quarter brought ₹30.8 crore in sales and ₹4.38 crore in PAT, though profits plunged 92.7% QoQ like a five-star soufflé left in the oven too long.

The P/E stands at 53.7, Book Value ₹36.4, ROE a jaw-dropping 41.7%, and Debt-to-Equity just 0.20, making it look healthier than most of its hotel peers who are still post-COVID dieting. But before you pop the champagne, note that sales growth was just 2.39%, while profits fell off a cliff this quarter.

And yet — the company boasts 407 operational rooms, a 10,000 sq ft convention centre, and the Hyderabad Marriott running at 70.3% occupancy with ADR ₹6,834 and RevPAR ₹4,804. Those are numbers that would make even Taj and Lemon Tree raise a classy eyebrow.

In short: a Hyderabad royal who lost his kingdom, fought back through the courts, refinanced through a rights issue, and now plans a 200-room Courtyard by Marriott at Madhapur. If this were a movie, it’d be “Marriott: The Resurrection” starring EBITDA and Equity in supporting roles.


2. Introduction

Ah, Viceroy Hotels — the corporate phoenix of Jubilee Hills. Once buried under litigation and debt, it has clawed its way back into relevance through a mix of Marriott muscle, rights issues, and pure Hyderabadi stubbornness.

Back in the early 2010s, Viceroy Hotels was a cautionary tale — heavy borrowings, property disputes, and failed subsidiaries (remember Minerva, Crustum, and Banjara?). Fast forward to FY25, and the company is not only debt-light but also profitable, operational, and eyeing a second innings with a shiny new Courtyard property in Madhapur.

The company’s hospitality assets are operated under the Marriott brand — not a franchise, but a full management agreement. Translation: Marriott takes care of guests, while Viceroy takes care of debt, depreciation, and dilution. The flagship Hyderabad Marriott Hotel & Courtyard complex sits on 4.5 acres near Hussain Sagar Lake, featuring over 400 rooms, multiple F&B outlets, and a convention center that has hosted everyone from CEOs to wedding sangeets.

In FY25, Rooms contributed 54% of revenue, F&B 36%, and Others 10%. The hotel’s operational metrics look sharp — higher occupancy, better energy efficiency, and improved payroll control — proof that management has swapped chaos for corporate discipline.

And now, post the ₹49.52 crore rights issue, the company plans to raise ₹100–120 crore more for expansion. Yes, there’s another round of dilution brewing, but hey — when your RevPAR is rising and your debt ratio is slimming, the Street forgives a little equity buffet.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

In simple terms: Viceroy Hotels owns the Hyderabad Marriott & Courtyard Marriott, two high-end hotels run under Marriott’s management contract. They provide rooms, restaurants, bars, banquets, and events — basically the whole hospitality circus but with better cutlery.

Let’s decode their empire:

  • Marriott Hotel: 295 rooms, 5 F&B outlets, and a 10,000 sq ft convention centre. This is the cash cow. Think weddings, business conferences, and political networking disguised as “corporate events.”
  • Courtyard by Marriott: 168 rooms (56 under construction), 2 restaurants (1 upcoming), and a smaller but sleeker vibe for business travelers who like “premium” without “Taj-level” pricing.

Then there are the subsidiaries — the forgotten cousins at the family dinner:

  • Café D Lake Pvt Ltd runs the iconic Minerva Coffee Shop, Blue Fox, Eat Street, and Water Front.
  • The rest — Crustum Products, Banjara Hospitalities, Minerva Hospitality — are in the “not generating revenue” zone, also known as spiritual subsidiaries.

So, the business model is simple: let Marriott manage, let guests pay, and let shareholders pray.


4. Financials Overview

Quarterly Lock Activated: “Quarterly Results” (Standalone)

MetricSep 2025 (Latest Qtr)Sep 2024 (YoY Qtr)Jun 2025 (Prev Qtr)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue (₹ Cr)30.8032.3125.37-4.7%+21.4%
EBITDA (₹ Cr)7.767.933.75-2.1%+107%
PAT (₹ Cr)4.3859.66-3.02-92.7%Turnaround
EPS (₹)0.655.55-0.45-88.3%Turnaround

The YoY decline looks dramatic because last year’s Q2 had an extraordinary item windfall. On an operational level, margins held strong — OPM at 25.19%, a recovery from the last quarter’s 14.8%.

EBITDA doubled QoQ, suggesting cost controls are working. But PAT fell from the moon to earth, thanks to that one-time base effect. Think of it as comparing Diwali buffet vs leftover khichdi.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range

Let’s break down the value buffet:

  • EPS (Annualised) = 0.65 × 4 = ₹2.6
  • Industry P/E = 37.7
  • Company P/E = 53.7

Method 1 – P/E Approach:
Fair value range = ₹2.6 × (35–45) = ₹91–₹117

Method 2 – EV/EBITDA Approach:
EV = ₹919 Cr, EBITDA (TTM) ≈ ₹36 Cr → EV/EBITDA = 25.5x
If sector median = 20–24x, then Fair EV = ₹720–₹864 Cr → Per share ≈ ₹102–₹123

Method 3 – DCF (Simplified):
Assuming EBITDA CAGR 10%, discount rate 12%, terminal growth 4%, fair range ≈ ₹100–₹130

🎯 Educational Fair Value Range: ₹95–₹125/share

Disclaimer: This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice. If you buy hotels, buy them for the breakfast buffet, not the EBITDA.


6. What’s Cooking – News, Triggers, Drama

The Marriott deal for Madhapur (May 2025) is the biggest plot twist. A 200-room Courtyard on 7,000 square yards, with a 30-year operating agreement, expected to open in 2028.

Add to that:

  • Supreme Court dismissed the Wakf Board’s claim over the hotel land (March 2025). Property dispute? Closed.
  • ₹49.52 crore rights issue completed to fund renovation.
  • Planned QIP/rights issue of ₹100–120 crore for the new hotel.
  • Debt: a manageable ₹49 crore with plans to keep Net Debt/EBITDA ≈ 1:1 post-expansion.
  • EBITDA Target: ₹100 crore after all projects complete.

Of course, drama continues: directors resigned, new ones joined, and the company received a warning letter for disclosure delays — because no Indian corporate comeback story is complete without SEBI gently tapping your wrist.


7. Balance Sheet

Particulars (₹ Cr)Mar 2024Mar 2025Sep 2025 (Latest)
Total Assets
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