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Juniper Hotels Q3 FY26: ₹295 Cr Revenue, 99% QoQ Profit Jump — But Is 34.4x P/E Serving Five-Star Returns?


1. At a Glance – Champagne Margins, Filter Coffee ROE

Juniper Hotels Ltd is currently priced at ₹244, commanding a market cap of ₹5,400 crore. The stock is down ~1.94% in the last 3 months and ~1.86% over 1 year. So the market hasn’t exactly checked in for a long stay.

But the latest quarter? That’s where things get interesting.

Q3 FY26 (December 2025 quarter) delivered ₹295 crore revenue and ₹65 crore PAT — nearly 99% YoY profit growth. OPM touched 43%. EPS for the quarter stood at ₹2.94.

Stock P/E: 34.4
Industry P/E: 30.9
ROCE: 6.31%
ROE: 2.64%
Debt to Equity: 0.50
Book Value: ₹124

This is a hotel owner with Hyatt branding, IPO proceeds used for debt reduction, and an expansion plan that reads like a real estate developer on Red Bull.

Question is: are we looking at the next hospitality powerhouse — or just a beautifully refurbished lobby hiding average returns?

Let’s swipe the key card and enter.


2. Introduction – The Hyatt’s Favourite Indian Cousin

Juniper Hotels isn’t just another hotel company.

It is the only listed hospitality company in India where Hyatt itself (through Two Seas Holdings) owns half the business. That’s not just brand licensing. That’s family.

The portfolio includes 8 hotel assets with 2,115 keys as of FY25. Of this, 245 are serviced apartments — and not the budget Airbnb types. We’re talking upper-tier, branded serviced apartments in Mumbai and Delhi.

Average occupancy FY25: 74%
ARR: ₹10,988
RevPAR: ₹8,165

Luxury ARR: ₹13,606
Upper Upscale ARR: ₹7,744

So these aren’t wedding banquet halls with plastic chairs. These are high-end, corporate, MICE-heavy properties.

Revenue mix FY25:

  • Rooms: 49%
  • Serviced Apartments: 11%
  • F&B + MICE: 30%
  • Lease Rentals: 4%
  • Other Services: 6%

And here’s the twist: majority revenue still comes from Mumbai and Delhi.

Concentration risk? Maybe.

Brand power? Definitely.

But can this translate into sustained shareholder returns?

Let’s decode the business model first.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Juniper doesn’t “operate” hotels in the traditional asset-light way like Indian Hotels.

They own the assets. Hyatt operates under brand agreements.

Think of it like this:

Juniper = landlord
Hyatt = superstar chef
Guests = rich corporate executives and wedding planners

Revenue streams:

  • Room rentals
  • Serviced apartments
  • Food & Beverage
  • MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences, Exhibitions)
  • Commercial lease rentals

The Grand Hyatt Mumbai alone has ~100,000 sq. ft. of MICE area after refurbishment.

That’s basically a wedding factory.

Andaz Delhi delivered:

  • 16% YoY room revenue growth in FY25
  • 17% YoY EBITDA growth
  • 53% EBITDA margin

Hyatt Regency Ahmedabad had 92% occupancy in Q4 FY25.

These are strong operational numbers.

But owning hotels is capital-intensive.

Heavy depreciation.
Heavy interest.
Heavy capex.

So the real question becomes: are they generating enough returns on those heavy assets?

Let’s look at the numbers.


4. Financials Overview – The Quarter That Woke Everyone Up

Q1 FY26 EPS = ₹0.40
Q2 FY26 EPS = ₹0.76
Q3 FY26 EPS = ₹2.94

Average EPS (Q1+Q2+Q3)/3 = (0.40 + 0.76 + 2.94)/3 = ₹1.37
Annualised EPS = ₹1.37 × 4 = ₹5.48

Current P/E (Recalculated) = ₹244 / ₹5.48 ≈ 44.5x

So effective P/E is actually higher than reported trailing EPS P/E.

Quarterly Comparison Table (₹ Crores)

MetricLatest Q3 FY26Q3 FY25Q2 FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue29525223016.9%28.3%
EBITDA128938337.6%54.2%
PAT653217103%282%
EPS (₹)2.941.460.76
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