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Cineline India Q3 FY26 (Dec 2025) – ₹67 Cr Quarterly Revenue, 491% PAT Jump & Still a Bollywood-Grade Balance Sheet Drama


1. At a Glance – Movie Tickets, Debt Repayments & Kanakia-Level Plot Twists

Cineline India Ltd is that one cinema stock which behaves exactly like a Hindi movie interval block — loud comeback, emotional background music, but you’re still unsure how the second half ends.

As of late January 2026, Cineline sits at a market cap of roughly ₹304 crore, trading near ₹88.8, with a 6.8% single-day jump just to remind everyone that it still exists. Quarterly revenue clocked in at ₹67.21 crore, while PAT shot up to ₹6.21 crore, a spicy 491% YoY growth. Sounds blockbuster? Wait till you see the full film.

The company operates 39 cinemas with 160+ screens across 26 cities, under the MovieMax brand, backed by the Kanakia Group. On paper, it’s a mid-sized multiplex operator trying to play in the same industry where PVR Inox spends more on popcorn than Cineline does on capex annually.

Key ratios flash mixed signals:

  • P/E: 18.4
  • EV/EBITDA: 7.7
  • ROCE: 5.25%
  • Debt-to-Equity: 0.71
  • Interest Coverage: 1.43 (ouch)

Debt has come down, yes. Profits have bounced back, yes. But return ratios are still limping like a post-interval villain.

So the real question:
Is Cineline finally scripting a turnaround — or is this just another trailer that looks better than the actual movie?


2. Introduction – A Cinema Chain That Survived COVID, Debt & Its Own Ambitions

Cineline India has been around since 2002, long enough to experience:

  • single-screen glory days,
  • multiplex boom,
  • OTT apocalypse,
  • COVID lockdowns,
  • and now, a debt-reduction redemption arc.

The company is part of the Kanakia Group, a name better known for Mumbai real estate than cinema popcorn margins. Cineline runs multiplexes under MovieMax and also operates a few single-screen theatres in Tier-2 and Tier-3 towns — the kind where ticket pricing still matters more than recliner seats.

What makes Cineline interesting (and confusing) is that it isn’t just a cinema company. Over the years, it also:

  • owned a hotel business in Goa (now sold),
  • dabbled in wind energy with 2.2 MW total capacity,
  • and carried debt like it was a legacy asset.

FY23–FY25 was all about asset monetisation, selling non-core businesses, and trying not to drown in interest costs. By FY25, the company sold its hotel asset for ₹270 crore and repaid a large chunk of borrowings. That single move changed the entire financial optics.

But let’s be clear — this is not a clean, asset-light, high-ROCE cinema operator. This is a company that survived by selling furniture and is now trying to redecorate the living room.

Is that bad? Not necessarily.
Is that risky? Absolutely.


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