Business Standard

Lemon Tree Hotels soars 30% on debut

- BS REPORTER

Shares of mid-sized Lemon Tree Hotels zoomed nearly 32 per cent on debut on Monday. The stock ended at ~72.3, up ~16.3, or 29.11 per cent, over its issue price of ~56. Intraday, the stock touched a high of ~73.9 and a low of ~57.25 on the National Stock Exchange.

The impressive performanc­e was despite a lukewarm response to the hospitalit­y chain’s ~10-billion initial public offering (IPO). The offer subscribed 1.2 times, with noninstitu­tional investor segments witnessing just 10 per cent demand for the shares on offer. The institutio­nal investor segment, however, was subscribed four times.

According to market players, follow-up demand from institutio­nal investors amid strong traction in consumerfo­cused stocks led to the surge in the stock price.

Lemon Tree is the country’s largest hotel chain in the mid-priced hotel segment and the third-largest on an overall basis. As on January 31, 2018, Lemon Tree operated 4,697 rooms in 45 hotels (including managed hotels) across 28 cities. Between FY13 and FY17, Lemon Tree’s revenue grew at a compounded annual growth Price on BSE in ~ rate (CAGR) of nearly 18 per cent and operating profit at 33 per cent. For FY17, the company reported net sales of ~4,120 million. It had suffered a net loss of ~72 million.

“At the IPO price of ~56, the EV/Ebitda (enterprise value/earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) multiple works out be 44.5 times Ebitda of FY17 and 38.6 times of its FY18 annualised Ebitda, which appears on the higher side even when compared to large listed players like Indian Hotels (available at 33 times FY18 EV/Ebitda, others are available at 20-25 times),” Angel Broking had said in an IPO note on Lemon Tree.

 ??  ?? Fatigue seems to have set into Indian equities after last year’s rally took the $2.3-trillion market into uncharted territory.
The Sensex may climb 5 per cent to 35,700 in 2018, Surendra Goyal and Vijit Jain, analysts at Citigroup Global Markets,...
Fatigue seems to have set into Indian equities after last year’s rally took the $2.3-trillion market into uncharted territory. The Sensex may climb 5 per cent to 35,700 in 2018, Surendra Goyal and Vijit Jain, analysts at Citigroup Global Markets,...

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