1. Opening Hook
IndiGo flew more planes, opened more routes, and still managed to earn less—peak aviation irony.
While global oil behaved and demand stayed decent, profits quietly exited through the emergency door.
Management insists this was a “one-off” quarter, which in airline language usually means “please don’t annualise this.”
Capacity was added aggressively, costs stayed stubborn, and forex decided to have fun.
Investors heard “network expansion” and clapped, then noticed PAT fell off a cliff.
Read on—because behind the smiling load factors and shiny aircraft count, turbulence was real.
And yes, labour codes made a cameo appearance at exactly the wrong time.
2. At a Glance
- Revenue up 6.7% – Seats increased faster than ticket pricing discipline.
- ASKs up 11.2% – IndiGo flew more, earned less per kilometre.
- RASK down 4.5% – Pricing power went on vacation.
- PAT down 77.6% – Profits didn’t just fall, they collapsed.
- EBITDAR flat – Core engine running, but no altitude gain.
- Cash pile strong – Balance sheet still wearing a life jacket.
3. Management’s Key Commentary
“We continue to expand our network aggressively.”
(Translation: Capacity first, margins later—maybe.)
“RASK was impacted due to market conditions.”
(Translation: Fares didn’t cooperate 😏)
“Costs were elevated due to forex and disruptions.”
(Translation: Dollar