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Westlife Foodworld Ltd Q2 FY26 — ₹642 Cr Sales, ₹14 Cr Loss, and a Fry Cry from Golden Profits


1. At a Glance

If burgers could talk, McDonald’s India (West & South) would probably say, “Yaar, margin kahan gaya?” Westlife Foodworld Ltd (NSE: WESTLIFE | BSE: 505533) — the proud master franchisee operating 450+ McDonald’s outlets via Hardcastle Restaurants Pvt Ltd (HRPL) — just served investors a not-so-happy meal in Q2 FY26.

Revenue came in at ₹642 crore (up 3.9% YoY), but PAT dropped to a disappointing -₹14.3 crore, a swing from profits to ketchup-red losses. Even though EBITDA stood at ₹75.9 crore, OPM dipped to ~12%, its weakest in years. Same-store sales growth (SSSG) shrunk -2.8%, meaning even fries couldn’t fry inflation.

At ₹588 per share (market cap ₹9,142 crore), Westlife looks more “McStruggling” than McThriving. Debt is high (₹1,623 crore), leverage scary (2.7x debt-to-equity), and the interest coverage ratio 0.95 — which means the burger buns are financing themselves.

The company may call it a “transitionary phase,” but investors are definitely calling for extra sauce and better margins.


2. Introduction

Welcome to the house that fries built — Westlife Foodworld, operator of every “I’m Lovin’ It” jingle from Goa to Gujarat. Through its 100%-owned subsidiary Hardcastle Restaurants Pvt Ltd, the company owns and operates McDonald’s India (West & South), one of the most recognizable QSR networks in India.

In short, they don’t own McDonald’s — they run it for India’s western and southern crowd. Think of them as the desi franchise partner who pays 4.5% royalty to the US parent and still has to worry about onions prices.

The business runs on three buns:

  • On-Premise (59%) — dine-in and McCafés.
  • Off-Premise (41%) — deliveries, drive-thrus, and takeaways.
  • Digital ordering (67%) — through their app and aggregators like Swiggy/Zomato.

The company added 8 stores this quarter, taking the total to 450 restaurants and 343 McCafés. But same-store sales slipped, thanks to weak consumer sentiment and higher competition from KFC, Domino’s, and homegrown heroes like Burger Singh.

So while customers debate between a Maharaja Mac and a Zinger, Westlife’s CFO just resigned (Nov 2025) — possibly choosing an easier gig than balancing a ₹1,600 crore debt burger.


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Westlife is India’s McDonald’s franchisee for the West and South regions — meaning they pay royalty to McD Corp USA but handle everything from location scouting to marketing to fries supply chains.

Revenue Streams:

  1. Restaurant sales — burgers, wraps, desserts, beverages.
  2. McCafé outlets (223+) — coffee + muffins for Gen Z who want Wi-Fi with caffeine.
  3. Drive-thru & delivery (41%) — growing steadily post-COVID.
  4. Digital app orders — 30M+ downloads, loyalty integration via “MyMcDonald’s” rewards.

Cost Structure (a.k.a. why profits melt):

  • Food and packaging: ~30% of revenue
  • Employee + rent + utilities: ~45%
  • Royalty to McDonald’s: 4.5% of sales
  • Interest and depreciation: rising post-expansion

So the business model works like a treadmill — every new restaurant improves topline but adds fixed costs. The company needs double-digit SSSG to sustain profits, which didn’t happen in FY25–26.


4. Financials Overview

Source table
Metric (₹ Cr)Q2 FY26Q2 FY25Q1 FY26YoY %QoQ %
Revenue642618658+3.9%-2.4%
EBITDA75.976.085.0-0.1%-10.7%
PAT-14.3+0.3+1.0-4,900%NA
EPS (₹)-0.90.020.08NANA

Commentary:
Even Ronald McDonald would frown — flat revenue, falling margins, and a rare red PAT. OPM collapsed to 10%, from 17% just two years ago. Inflation and weaker urban demand clearly took a bite.


5. Valuation Discussion –

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