InterGlobe Aviation (INDIGO) — Deep Dive Share Analysis
InterGlobe Aviation (IndiGo)
Under Pressure, But Structurally Intact
InterGlobe Aviation Ltd — the parent of IndiGo Airlines — is India’s largest airline by passengers, fleet size, and daily departures. Founded in 2006 with a single aircraft, IndiGo has scaled into a global low-cost carrier (LCC) with 440 aircraft serving 96 domestic and 44 international destinations as of December 2025. The company crossed the landmark USD 10 billion revenue milestone in FY25 — the first Indian airline to do so.
IndiGo’s business model is a classic LCC framework: a single-cabin A320 family fleet, unbundled fares, high aircraft utilisation, and relentless cost discipline. The airline commands a 62% domestic market share — a position it has expanded consistently since 2007 — and is now pivoting to build a meaningful international presence, including widebody operations on long-haul routes. Moody’s granted IndiGo its first-ever investment-grade rating (Baa3, stable) in FY25, recognising its cost leadership and liquidity discipline.
IndiGo’s stock has been on a remarkable multi-year journey — from an all-time low of ₹691 (Oct 2018) to an all-time high of ₹6,232.50 (Aug 2025) — before a sharp geopolitical-driven correction brought it to current levels.
| Period | Return | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1 Month | −18.8% | US-Iran conflict, ATF price spike, airspace closures |
| YTD 2026 | −22.7% | Geopolitical + fuel cost compounding |
| 1 Year | −22.9% | From mkt cap down 22.9% |
| 5 Years | +528% | Strong structural compounding since COVID lows |
| Since IPO (2015) | +571% | From IPO listing price of ₹600 approx. |
| From ATH (Aug 2025) | −36.7% | Deep correction; approaching 52-week low |
IndiGo’s revenue trajectory has been impressive — growing 17% in FY25 to cross USD 10 billion — but profitability has come under pressure from rising lease costs, currency depreciation, engine grounding-related expenses, and exceptional items in FY26.
| Metric | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 | Q3 FY26 (Dec ’25) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (₹ Cr) | 54,454 | 68,917 | 80,803 | 23,472 (Q) |
| Revenue Growth YoY | +80% | +26.6% | +17.3% | +6.2% |
| EBITDA Margin | 13.4% | 23.7% | 22.4% | ~20.8% |
| Net Profit (₹ Cr) | 2,985 | 8,173 | 3,233 | 550 (Q)* |
| Net Profit Margin | 5.5% | 11.9% | 9.0% | 2.3%* (reported) |
| EPS (₹) | ~77 | 211.7 | 187.8 (TTM) | — |
| PLF (Passenger Load Factor) | 80.3% | 84.2% | 86.0% | ~85% |
| Total Cash (₹ Cr) | ~22,000 | ~35,000 | 48,171 | ~50,000+ |
*Q3 FY26 reported net profit of ₹550 Cr was impacted by ₹1,546.5 Cr in exceptional items including new labour law provisions (₹969 Cr), operational disruption costs (₹555 Cr), and DGCA penalty (₹22 Cr). Adjusted PAT excluding exceptionals and forex was ₹3,131 Cr — up 18.6% YoY.
IndiGo has historically commanded a premium valuation due to its dominant market position and growth runway. At the current CMP of ₹3,943, the stock is trading at ~54x trailing P/E — elevated but partially explained by depressed near-term earnings. Analysts typically value IndiGo on an EV/EBITDAR multiple (9–10x forward), which is the standard for capital-intensive leasing-heavy airlines.
| Valuation Metric | Current Level | Historical Range | Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trailing P/E | ~54x | 20–70x | Elevated; earnings suppressed by exceptionals |
| Price / Book | 17.9x | 10–25x | Rich; asset-light lease model inflates PB |
| EV/EBITDA | ~12–14x | 8–18x | Reasonable for a dominant LCC with 60%+ share |
| EV/EBITDAR (FY26E) | ~9x | 6–12x | Broadly fair; Motilal values at 9x FY28E EBITDAR |
| Market Cap / Revenue | ~1.8x | 1–3x | Moderate for a market leader |
| Dividend Yield | 0.25% | 0.1–0.3% | Minimal; cash retained for expansion |
Despite near-term headwinds, IndiGo’s long-term story remains deeply compelling. The company is executing on three parallel growth vectors: domestic network deepening, international route expansion, and widebody long-haul ambitions.
- Fleet expansion: 440 aircraft → 600+ by 2030. 10%+ capacity CAGR targeted
- International scale-up: 44 international destinations; widebody Boeing 787-9 now deployed on Bangkok route
- Revenue diversification: Cargo, charter, hotel bookings, MRO services adding ancillary streams
- India’s aviation boom: India set to become world’s 3rd largest aviation market; per-capita air travel penetration still very low
- ATF relief: 7.3% ATF cut in Jan 2026; if crude normalises, margins could recover 200–400 bps
- Moody’s Baa3 rating: Enables cheaper international debt financing for fleet expansion
- Revenue CAGR (FY25–28): ~12% (Motilal Oswal)
- EBITDAR CAGR (FY25–28): ~13%
- FY26E EBITDAR: ₹13,700 Cr (Goldman Sachs)
- FY27E EBITDAR: ₹15,900 Cr
- Adjusted PAT CAGR (FY25–28): ~10%
- Next earnings date: May 27, 2026 (Q4 FY26)
- Q2 FY26 capacity guidance: Early teens growth for FY26
Note: Air India and Go First are unlisted. SpiceJet is a turnaround story. Akasa Air is pre-profitability. IndiGo has no truly comparable listed peer in India — the nearest analogues are global LCCs like IndiGo’s regional peers.
| Airline | Domestic Share | Fleet | Revenue Scale | Profitability | Moat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IndiGo (INDIGO) | ~62% | 440 A/C | ₹80,803 Cr (FY25) | Profitable | Scale, cost leadership, Moody’s Baa3 |
| Air India Group | ~27% | ~250+ | Unlisted | Losses (restructuring) | Brand, Vistara merger, widebody fleet |
| Akasa Air | ~6% | ~25 | Unlisted; early stage | Pre-profit | New gen B737 MAX, low CASK |
| SpiceJet | ~5% | ~50 (reduced) | Listed; ₹~8,000 Cr | Deep losses; liquidity stress | Brand awareness; turnaround optionality |
| Global LCC Peers (Ryanair, AirAsia) | Dominant in home market | 400–600 | Comparable scale | Profitable | IndiGo mirrors Ryanair’s domestic dominance playbook |
| Broker | Rating | Target Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motilal Oswal | BUY | ₹5,500 (revised) | Cut from ₹6,100; cites airspace disruption & fuel costs |
| Kotak Institutional | BUY | — | Upgraded to Buy; sees consumer spending proxy |
| Emkay Global | BUY | ₹6,300 | Reiterated; long-term structural positive |
| Jefferies | BUY (cautious) | ₹6,035 | Cut target; near-term earnings at risk from crisis |
| Goldman Sachs | NEUTRAL | — | Flagged higher fuel costs & weak West Asia traffic |
| PL Capital | HOLD | ₹5,186 | 10% Q4FY26 PBT hit if Middle East tensions persist |
| Investec / MarketsMOJO | SELL | — | Rising crew costs, structural risks; minority bearish view |
| Consensus Average | STRONG BUY | ₹6,113 | +55% upside from CMP of ₹3,943 | 19 research reports from 7 sources |
However, the structural story is intact. IndiGo’s 62% domestic market share, investment-grade Moody’s rating, ₹50,000+ Cr cash balance, and a decadal Indian aviation growth runway give it a competitive moat that few global airlines can match. At ₹3,943 — near a 52-week low — the risk/reward skews meaningfully to the upside for investors with a 12–18 month horizon, contingent on geopolitical normalisation.
Key triggers to watch: Q4 FY26 results (May 2026), Middle East conflict trajectory, Brent crude direction, and P&W engine resolution timeline. Patient, conviction investors may find this dip a rare entry into a secular compounder.
as on 31 Mar 2026