01 — At a Glance
The Government Hotel Chain That Decided to Be Profitable (Finally)
- 52-Week High / Low₹714 / ₹419
- TTM Revenue₹591 Cr
- TTM PAT₹80.1 Cr
- Full-Year EPS (FY25)₹9.51
- Q3 FY26 EPS₹3.27
- Book Value₹39.5
- Price to Book11.2x
- Dividend Yield0.66%
- Debt / Equity0.00x
- Promoter Holding87.0%
The Auditor’s Poker Face: ITDC Q3 FY26 delivered ₹185 Cr revenue (+28.7% YoY), ₹28.2 Cr PAT (+35.1% YoY), and ₹3.27 EPS. The auditor, however, raised qualified opinions on receivables (₹1,871 lakh outstanding from GSA contracts) and unbilled license fees (₹1,292 lakh). Translation: the numbers look good on paper, but the money hasn’t actually landed yet. It’s like your uncle promising to pay back his loan “next month” for the 47th time.
02 — Introduction
Welcome to ITDC: Where Hotel Keys Outnumber Hotel Keys Sold
India Tourism Development Corporation Limited. Say it out loud. It sounds like the kind of enterprise that was invented by a committee in 1966 and has been trying to prove its existence ever since. Which is exactly what happened.
ITDC is a Central Public Sector Enterprise (CPSE) with “Miniratna” status — which is bureaucratic speak for “we’re not Air India, but we’re government enough that you should take us seriously.” It runs three Ashok Group hotels (New Delhi, Bhubaneswar), operates 14 duty-free shops at ports, manages events for the Ministry of Tourism, runs a travel division, and trains hospitality professionals at its in-house institute. Diversification? Check. Execution? That’s where it gets interesting.
For decades, ITDC was the textbook case of a PSU spinning its wheels. Low occupancy. Aging properties. Management churn. Then, Q3 FY26 happened. Revenue hit 28.7% YoY growth. Profit jumped 35.1%. The Ashok hotel’s occupancy improved to 54% (from 46% in FY25). Room rates climbed. Event management revenue scaled. Duty-free shops hummed. And the stock? Up 61% in two years from a base of ₹275. The market got excited. The auditor got skeptical. You’re about to find out why.
The Real Story: ITDC isn’t trying to be Marriott. It’s trying to be a functional government asset that generates cash for the Treasury while preserving marquee properties and providing employment. Sometimes that works. Sometimes it doesn’t. Q3 FY26 looks like it’s finally working.
03 — Business Model: WTF Do They Even Do?
A Hospitality Octopus That Never Learned to Swim Together
ITDC’s business model is what happens when you ask a government agency to “diversify.” It runs six divisions, each with their own P&L, their own challenges, and their own version of the truth.
Hotels & Catering (58% of FY25 revenue): The flagship. Three owned properties: The Ashok (841 keys, New Delhi), Hotel Samrat (New Delhi), Kalinga Ashok (Bhubaneswar). Total revenue from hotels is 55–70% of consolidated turnover. Occupancy has historically been dismal. In FY24, The Ashok was at 53%. In FY25, it fell to 46% (due to refurbishment). Q3 FY26? It bounced back to 54%. Someone finally hired a VP of Revenue Management, or rooms are simply more full. Either way, ARR improved: Hotel Ashok went from ₹8,763 to ₹9,820 per night. That’s real pricing power in a city full of Five Seasons and Hiltons.
Ashok Events Division (27% of FY25 revenue): The surprise winner. ITDC is the designated events manager for the Ministry of Tourism — meaning all government conclaves, international conferences, award ceremonies funnel through them. Q3 FY26 shows this division scaling properly. Private corporates are also booking. This is actually a high-margin, recurring business.
Ashok Travels & Tours (8% of FY25 revenue): The online portal is coming. Management flagged this as a growth driver. Currently handles air tickets, domestic tours, niche travel packages. Low margins, but scaling.
Duty-Free Shops (7% of FY25 revenue): 14 shops at seaports. Dead zones economically, but steady cash. Minimal capex required.
Hotels58%FY25 Revenue Share
Events27%FY25 Revenue Share
Travels8%FY25 Revenue Share
Other7%Duty-Free & Rest
The Elephant in the Room: ITDC owns four JV hotels (Pondicherry, Ranchi, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh) that are under “disinvestment.” Translation: they’re losing money, and the government is quietly trying to offload them to state governments. They contribute almost nothing to revenue but carry significant land value. This is a liability masquerading as a balance sheet asset.
💬 Quick question: If a government hotel chain improves its occupancy by 8%, does the stock deserve a 61% run? Or is the market just buying the hope that it *stays* improved?
04 — Financials Overview: Q3 FY26
When Government Bureaucrats Accidentally Learn Excel
Result type: Quarterly Results | Q3 FY26 EPS: ₹3.27 | Annualised EPS (Q3×4): ₹13.08 | Full-year FY25 EPS: ₹9.51
| Metric (₹ Cr) |
Q3 FY26 Dec 2025 |
Q3 FY25 Dec 2024 |
Q2 FY26 Sep 2025 |
YoY % |
QoQ % |
| Revenue | 185 | 144 | 118 | +28.7% | +56.8% |
| Operating Profit | 33 | 25 | 19 | +32.0% | +73.7% |
| OPM % | 18% | 18% | 16% | Flat | +200 bps |
| PAT | 28.2 | 20.8 | 16.4 | +35.1% | +72.0% |
| EPS (₹) | 3.27 | 2.42 | 1.92 | +35.1% | +70.3% |
The Annoying Math: Current P/E calculation: ₹442 CMP ÷ ₹9.51 FY25 EPS = 46.5x. Screener shows 47.2x (minor rounding). If we annualise Q3 FY26 at ₹13.08, the forward P/E drops to 33.8x. Which sounds better, but requires ITDC to deliver three more quarters of growth like this. Hotels don’t work that way. They spike, then plateau. Management knows this. The market is buying momentum and hoping for structural change.
The Auditor’s Caveat: The qualified audit opinion is the real story. Receivables from GSA (Government Services Agreement) contracts stood at ₹1,871 lakh — largely unbilled or pending collection. Unbilled license fees: ₹1,292 lakh. These are real revenues on the P&L, but cash hasn’t landed yet. This is typical government business: you deliver, they promise to pay in 60–90 days, and you wait. ITDC has mastered this dance. Wall Street has not.
05 — Valuation: Fair Value Range
What’s a Government Hotel Chain Actually Worth?
Method 1: P/E Based
FY25 EPS = ₹9.51. Hospitality sector median P/E = 28.2x. ITDC’s properties are marquee but underutilised. Fair P/E band: 24x–32x (accounting for monopoly on government contracts and land value).
Range: ₹228 – ₹304
Method 2: EV/EBITDA Based
FY25 EBITDA ≈ ₹93 Cr (OPM 16% × ₹570 Cr revenue). Current EV = ₹3,575 Cr (Market cap minus net cash). EV/EBITDA = 38.4x. Quality hotels trade 12x–18x. ITDC’s brand premium and government backing justify 18x–22x multiple.
EBITDA range (18x–22x): ₹1,674 Cr – ₹2,046 Cr → Per share:
Range: ₹221 – ₹270
Method 3: DCF Based
Base FCF: ₹53 Cr (FY25 Operating CF). Conservative growth: 8–12% for 5 years (based on occupancy and event management scaling). Terminal growth: 3%. WACC: 9.5%.
→ PV of 5-year FCFs at 9.5%: ~₹275 Cr
→ Terminal Value (3% growth / 6.5% cap rate): ~₹1,150 Cr
→ Total EV: ~₹1,425 Cr (plus ₹218 Cr net cash)
Range: ₹210 – ₹290
Fair Min: ₹210
CMP: ₹442 (Way above fair value)
Fair Max: ₹304
⚠️ EduInvesting Fair Value Range: ₹210 – ₹304. Current price ₹442 sits 45–110% above this range. This suggests the market is pricing in consistent future profitability, full occupancy recovery, and successful diversification — all of which are possible but not guaranteed for a government hotel chain. This fair value range is for educational purposes only and is not investment advice.
06 — What’s Cooking: News, Triggers & Drama
When Government Hotels Get a CEO