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Hospital sector is seeing better days after more than two years of subdued performance: ICRA

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Tough days were triggered on account of several regulatory measures, including cap on prices of stents by National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority

The hospital sector is seeing better days ahead after more than two years of subdued performance. The tough days were triggered primarily on account of several regulatory measures, including the cap on prices of stents by National Pharmaceutical Pricing Authority (NPPA), cap on prices of knee implants by the NPPA, adverse impact of roll-out of Goods and Services Tax (GST) on profitability, and strict regulatory actions taken by multiple states, including putting restrictions on procedure rates, levying penalties and placing operational limitations on erring hospitals. The performance was also impacted due to the startup cost of new hospitals owing to significant capex done by the entities in the sector and the long gestation period required for the new facilities to ramp up.

Kapil Banga, Assistant Vice President – Corporate Ratings, ICRA, said: “In line with our expectations, the performance of the players in the sector has likely bottomed out, after struggling for more than two years. Nonetheless, the regulatory environment continues to be the overarching challenge for the hospital sector; the wide-ranging regulatory restrictions from multiple authorities had suppressed their margins.”

In terms of performance analysis, in Q4 FY2019, the aggregate revenues of companies in ICRA’s sample set [1] grew by a healthy ~14 per cent on a Y-o-Y basis, from Rs 3551 crore in Q4 FY2018 to Rs 4035 crore in Q4 FY2019. The EBITDA grew by a robust ~33 per cent, from Rs 420 crore to Rs 521 crore, and the EBITDA margin improved substantially from 11.8 per cent to 13.9 per cent during the same period on account of high operating leverage of the business. In comparison, the aggregate revenues of the sample set had grown by 6 per cent in Q4 FY2018 and the EBITDA had dropped by 6 per cent. The revenue growth in Q4 FY2019 was driven by an increase in occupancy as well as the average revenue per occupied bed (ARPOB). The revenues were higher for all six entities covered in the sample and the EBITDA was higher for five out of the six entities. The aggregate number of operational beds increased from 21902 as on March 31, 2018 to 22324 as on March 31, 2019 – growth of only ~2 per cent, reflecting limited bed additions during this period. The occupancy of the sample set improved significantly, from 61.9 per cent in Q4 FY2018 to 64.0 per cent in Q4 FY2019, reflecting better asset utilisation. The ARPOB of the sample set grew by a strong 9.5 per cent in Q4 FY2019 on a Y-o-Y basis, much higher than the five-year compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of ~6.8 per cent. In comparison, ARPOB had grown at a muted 3 per cent in FY2018 and at 3.6 per cent in 9M FY2019.

In FY2019, the revenues of the sample set grew by 10 per cent, to Rs 15891 crore compared to revenues of Rs 14475 crore in FY2018. The EBITDA of the sample set grew by 6 per cent, from Rs 2009 crore to Rs 1891 crore during this period. FY2018 had seen the first fall in EBITDA of the sample set in more than five years, however it increased thereafter, reflecting the bottoming out of the performance of the sector, post multiple headwinds.

[1] Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Limited, Fortis Healthcare Limited, Narayana Hrudalaya Limited, Healthcare Global Enterprises Limited, Max India Limited and Shalby Limited

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