Forget dull IT earnings—this call had Mission Impossible stunts, Housefull 5 chaos, and Ajay Devgn raiding the box office while Rajinikanth preps for Coolie. PVR INOX managed to cut losses, boost admissions, and even convince students and aunties to show up for ₹99 Tuesdays. But beneath the glamour lies debt, Karnataka tax drama, and popcorn prices that rise faster than fuel. Let’s roll credits on this quarter—it’s more entertaining than half the movies released.
Ad Revenue ₹110 Cr (+17% YoY) – Brands flocked to big-star movies.
Net Debt ₹892 Cr (↓ ₹61 Cr QoQ) – Deleveraging script still on.
3. Management’s Key Commentary
Ajay Bijli: “Bollywood is back with steady performers, not just blockbusters.” (Translation: No Pathaan 2, but enough Housefull 5 to keep seats warm.)
Gautam Dutta: “₹99 Tuesdays brought 1 Mn lapsed users back.” (Read: Discount day = Netflix password sharers finally came out. 🍿)
CFO: “Cost savings from utilities, staffing, solar panels improved margins.” (Translation: Turn off AC when audience count < Avengers lineup.)
Mgmt: “Hollywood collections grew 72% YoY.” (Read: Tom Cruise did what South heroes couldn’t last year.)
Mgmt: “FOCO + asset-light models improving ROCE.” (Translation: Landlords pay, we collect rent in the name of cinema.)
Mgmt: “OTT fatigue is real, consumers want fresh theatrical experience.” (Read: Binge-watchers finally got bored of crime thrillers with the same 4 actors.)
4. Numbers Decoded
Source table
Metric
Value (Q1 FY26)
YoY Change
One-Line Analysis
Revenue – The Blockbuster
₹1,488 Cr
+23%
Ticket sales + popcorn turned up; Bollywood finally pulling weight.
EBITDA – The Comeback
₹114 Cr
vs -₹20 Cr
From interval flop to interval twist—execution improved.
PAT – The Cliffhanger
-₹34 Cr
Better YoY
Still loss-making, but bleeding slowed dramatically.
Admissions – The Crowd
34 Mn
+12%
₹99 Tuesdays worked better than any loyalty program.
ATP – The Price Tag
₹254
+8%
Hollywood/IMAX premium saved average ticket price.