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India’s Apollo Hospitals posts higher quarterly profit, divests fertility business

By Thomson Reuters May 20, 2026 | 7:29 AM

By Pranav Kashyap and Rishika Sadam

BENGALURU/HYDERABAD, May 20 (Reuters) – India’s Apollo Hospitals Enterprise posted a rise in quarterly profit on Wednesday, driven by strong demand for complex medical ​procedures and growth in its pharmacy and digital health ‌businesses.

The hospital chain also announced it would sell its fertility and maternity units to Kids Clinic India (Cloudnine) in a deal valued at about 15.5 billion Indian rupees ($160.09 million), while retaining a minority stake.

India’s hospital sector is ‌seeing ​strong expansion, with leading players adding bed ⁠capacity, building new facilities ⁠and pursuing acquisitions to cater to rising healthcare demand.

Apollo, with a network of over 10,900 beds, commissioned four new hospitals during the year and plans to add around 1,500 beds ​over the next 12-18 months.

All three business segments – hospitals, retail health and diagnostics, and digital and pharmacy distribution – posted strong ⁠growth in the quarter, driven by ⁠high-complexity specialties such as cardiac, gastro, oncology and transplants, ​CEO Madhu Sasidhar, told Reuters.

Its core healthcare services division, which contributes ​the bulk of revenue, rose 16% to 32.68 billion ‌rupees ($337.5 million) on steady patient volumes and higher realisations. Overall revenue advanced 18% to 66.05 billion rupees.

The hospital chain expects revenue growth in the mid-teens for FY27, broadly in line with the ⁠previous year.

Hospital occupancy for the three months ended March stood at 68%, compared with about 67% a year earlier, while average revenue per ⁠patient rose 9% ‌year on year, the CEO said.

Of the ⁠proceeds from the fertility unit sale, “half comes to ​us as ‌cash, which can be used to grow ​the diagnostics ⁠and other platforms,” CFO Krishnan Akhileswaran told Reuters.

Consolidated net profit rose 36% to 5.29 billion rupees, beating analysts’ expectations of 4.79 billion rupees, according to LSEG data.

($1 = 96.8200 Indian rupees)

(Reporting by Pranav Kashyap and Rishika Sadam in Bengaluru; Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar, Mrigank Dhaniwala ​and Vijay Kishore)