EIH Ltd Q3 FY26: ₹873 Cr Sales, 43% OPM, ₹255 Cr PAT — Luxury King Trading at 27x While Peers Flaunt 50x?
1. At a Glance – Champagne Profits, Soda-Valuation?
At ₹331 per share and a market cap of ₹20,690 crore, EIH Ltd is serving five-star margins at three-star valuations. Q3 FY26 consolidated revenue came in at ₹873 crore with PAT of ₹255 crore and a stunning 43% operating margin. ROCE stands at 23.4%, ROE at 18%, and the stock trades at a P/E of 27.2 — well below industry PE of 31.6 and dramatically lower than some glamorous peers quoting 40–50x earnings.
Return over 3 months? -11.5%. Six months? -14.9%. Meanwhile, five-year stock CAGR is 27.6%.
So the market is either bored with luxury or waiting for a bigger party invite.
Debt is modest at ₹250 crore. Cash-positive with ~₹711 crore as of Q2 FY25. Promoter holding steady at 32.8%. No pledge. Dividend yield of 0.45%.
Revenue growth steady, margins juicy, brand iconic — and yet the valuation isn’t screaming excess.
Is the Oberoi crown underpriced, or is the market simply allergic to hotel cyclicality?
Let’s check in.
2. Introduction – The Maharaja of Margins
In the world of Indian hospitality, there are hotels… and then there are Oberois.
EIH Ltd is the flagship of the Oberoi Group, founded by the legendary Rai Bahadur M.S. Oberoi. If Indian luxury hospitality had a hall of fame, this name would have a presidential suite.
The company operates under three brands:
The Oberoi (luxury)
Trident (upscale)
Maidens (heritage)
And unlike certain hospitality groups that spread themselves thin across random geographies, EIH carefully curates high-end destinations. From Udaipur lakes to Moroccan palaces.
As of H1 FY25:
3,772 domestic keys
497 international keys
Pipeline: 20 properties adding ~1,350 keys by 2029.
Meanwhile, owned hotels show ARR of ₹16,940 and occupancy of 73%. Managed hotels aren’t far behind.
These aren’t budget rooms. These are “Sir, your butler will be here in 12 seconds” rooms.
But hospitality is cyclical. One pandemic and the sector goes from champagne to sanitizer.
So is this a sustainable comeback story — or are we just enjoying post-COVID revenge travel?