1. At a Glance
Ladies and gentlemen, presenting Viceroy Hotels Ltd – a stock that has done more courtroom drama than most TV serials and still managed to serve you cocktails at the Marriott. With a market cap of ₹789 Cr, a current price of ₹119, and a P/E ratio of just 10.2 in an industry where peers happily flaunt 60–70 like designer handbags, this company is basically the cheap buffet in a 5-star hotel.
In the last 3 months, the stock quietly jumped 18% – which in hotel terms is like getting upgraded from a standard room to a suite because the front desk messed up your booking. On the numbers side: Sales ₹137 Cr, OPM 24.4%, PAT ₹77 Cr (yes, that’s a 56% net margin – hotels usually don’t make that unless they’re charging ₹1,200 for a masala dosa). ROE is sitting pretty at 49.7%, which sounds less like a hotel company and more like a fintech scam. And before you ask – dividend? Nope. Not even a free breakfast voucher.
So here we are: A company that doesn’t share profits, runs hotels under Marriott’s brand umbrella, cleared legal headaches, did a ₹49.5 Cr rights issue, and now wants another ₹100–120 Cr QIP to build a new Courtyard in Madhapur. Grab your popcorn.
2. Introduction
Hospitality is supposed to be glamorous. Plush lobbies, chandeliers, and perfumed air that makes you forget the bill. But when you open Viceroy Hotels Ltd’s financials, it looks less like “The Marriott experience” and more like “Mera Court Case, Mera Adalat.”
For years, the company was stuck in litigation with the Wakf Board, had debt piled up like unwashed plates in a wedding buffet, and investors were wondering if they should check-in or check-out. And then – plot twist – in FY25, PAT skyrocketed 1,288%, debt shrunk from ₹634 Cr (FY22) to just ₹52 Cr (FY25), and suddenly everyone’s like “Arre yeh toh turnaround story hai!”
The irony? The business isn’t even run under their own fancy brand. It’s Marriott’s show, and Viceroy is basically the landlord. It’s like buying Maggi noodles, adding an egg, and then bragging that you’re a chef.
Yet, the financial recovery is so strong that even the most cynical investors are now watching. A 3-year stock return of +274% is better than many “blue chip” darlings. But the 1-year return is -2%, reminding you that hotel stocks too can give you food poisoning after a good meal.
The big question: Is this just a lucky season (IPL effect, weddings, travel boom) or has Viceroy finally figured out the art of running hotels without turning them into courtroom exhibits?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Let’s break this down for the “lazy but smart” investor:
- Hotels under Marriott Agreement – They own the land