India’s infrastructure and aviation dreams are increasingly tied to one name—GMR Infrastructure Limited. From operating one of the busiest airports in India to venturing into energy, highways, and SEZs, GMR has become synonymous with large-scale public infrastructure. But the question on every investor’s mind is this: Is GMR Infra’s runway to growth smooth enough for takeoff, or is turbulence on the horizon?
This blog takes you through a full evaluation of GMR Infrastructure from an investment standpoint—its business model, growth triggers, financials, risks, and whether it is priced right.
So, let’s dive deep into the stock history, financial evaluation and how it is performing currently.
What is GMR and How Did It Rise?
Founded in 1978 by Grandhi Mallikarjuna Rao, GMR Infrastructure started as a small agro-based company and diversified into infrastructure in the 1990s. Its real transformation came in the 2000s when it started building and operating major airports through public-private partnerships (PPP).
Key Milestones:
- 2006: Commenced operations at Delhi International Airport (DIAL)
- 2008: Listed on NSE and BSE
- 2010: Added Hyderabad and Istanbul Airports
- 2021: De-merged energy business to create GMR Power and Urban Infra
Today, the group operates under GMR Airports Infrastructure Ltd (GIL) and GMR Power and Urban Infra (GPUIL).
What Are GMR’s Key Business Verticals?
Business Segment | Description |
---|---|
Airports | Delhi, Hyderabad, Goa (Mopa), Crete (Greece), Philippines |
Energy* | Thermal, Hydro and Solar under GPUIL (post demerger) |
Highways | BOT-based toll roads (partially monetized) |
SEZ & Urban Infra | AeroCity (Delhi), land monetization, logistics parks |
*Note: This blog focuses on GMR Airports Infrastructure Ltd (GIL), the publicly listed entity for airports.
How Does GMR Make Money?
It earns revenues from both aero and non-aero sources.
Aero Revenue:
- User development fees (UDF)
- Aircraft landing and parking fees
- Passenger fees

Non-Aero Revenue:
- Retail and food & beverage
- Real estate leasing (Aerocity, Duty-Free)
- Cargo operations
Non-aero contributes nearly 45% of airport revenue, and is critical to future growth.
GMR’s Market Presence: Domestic and Global
Airport | Ownership | Annual Capacity | Status |
---|---|---|---|
Delhi (DIAL) | 64% | 69 Mn pax | Operational |
Hyderabad (HIAL) | 63% | 34 Mn pax | Operational |
Goa (Mopa) | 100% | 5 Mn pax (Phase 1) | Operational |
Crete (Greece) | 21.7% | 15 Mn pax (est.) | Under Construction |
Cebu (Philippines) | 40% | 12.5 Mn pax | Operational |
Delhi & Hyderabad together handled over 110 million passengers in FY24.
(Source: Airports Q3 FY25 Investor Presentation)
Financial Performance Snapshot
Metric (GMR Airports) | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 (Est.) |
---|---|---|---|
Revenue (₹ Cr) | 5,801 | 6,450 | 7,950 |
EBITDA (₹ Cr) | 1,610 | 2,340 | 2,920 |
Net Profit (₹ Cr) | -2,290 | -1,490 | -430 |
Debt (Net) (₹ Cr) | 28,200 | 27,300 | 24,800 |
ROCE | 2.3% | 3.9% | 5.4% (targeted) |
(Source: Screener, BSE, Investor Presentations)
Insight: The company is still reporting net losses but is reducing debt and improving operational performance.
Peer Comparison: How Does GMR Fare?
Company | Market Cap (₹ Cr) | Revenue (₹ Cr) | EV/EBITDA | ROCE (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|
GMR Airports | 41,000 | 7,950 | 16.8x | 5.4 |
Adani Airports* | NA (Unlisted) | NA | NA | NA |
IRB Infra | 26,500 | 8,600 | 12.3x | 7.8 |
Airport Authority (AAI) | Government | Public body | NA | NA |
*Adani Group’s airport vertical is not separately listed yet.
Key takeaway: The stock remains the only major listed pure-play airport operator in India.
What Are the Growth Drivers for GMR?
1. India’s Aviation Boom
- India expected to be 3rd largest aviation market by 2030
- Rising middle class, regional connectivity (UDAN)
2. Capex Expansion
- DIAL Phase 3A: Terminal expansion to 100 Mn pax
- HIAL: New terminal operational in FY24
3. Non-Aero Monetization
- Aerocity retail, hotels, and commercial space (15 Mn sq. ft.)
- Mopa Airport land development model
4. International Footprint
- Philippines profitable and expanding
- Greece airport adds European exposure
5. Debt Reduction Strategy
- It sold 49% in DIAL to Groupe ADP (France)
- Looking to raise ₹3,000+ Cr via asset monetization and InvIT
What Are the Risks for GMR?
1. High Debt
- Still over ₹24,000 Cr in net debt (airports alone)
- Interest cost eats into profitability
2. Regulatory Risks
- Tariff setting by AERA (Airports Economic Regulatory Authority)
- Government control on UDF and landing fees

3. Traffic Risk
- Air travel is sensitive to economic cycles, pandemics, geopolitical shocks
4. Execution Risk
- Infrastructure projects often delayed or overrun budget
5. Foreign Exposure
- Currency fluctuations (Euro, PHP) impact overseas margins
What’s the Latest Buzz Around GMR?
- Jan 2025: DIAL surpasses 70 million passengers, highest ever
- Feb 2025: Mopa (Goa) Phase 1 completed, Phase 2 planning underway
- Mar 2025: Revenue up 17% YoY, EBITDA margin hits 36.7%
- April 2025: Management targets debt reduction of ₹5,000 Cr over 2 years
(Source: Moneycontrol, Business Standard, IR)
Valuation Metrics (As of April 2025)
Metric | Value |
---|---|
Share Price | ₹65 |
Market Cap | ₹41,000 Cr |
P/B Ratio | 2.1x |
EV/EBITDA | 16.8x |
Net Debt/Equity | 1.8x |
PEG Ratio | 0.9 (est.) |
Interpretation: While not cheap on traditional metrics, the valuation reflects long-term cash flow potential from core assets.
Is GMR a Safe Bet or a Risky Ascent?
Reasons to Consider:
- India’s only listed airport pure play
- Long runway for aviation growth
- Non-aero monetization could boost margins
- Global partnerships (Groupe ADP)
Reasons to Be Cautious:
- Still loss-making at net level
- High leverage
- Policy dependency
Ideal Investor Profile:
- Long-term horizon (5+ years)
- Comfortable with infrastructure risk
- Seeking infra exposure aligned with India growth story
Conclusion: Should You Invest in GMR?
This Airports Infrastructure company represents an aspirational India story—rising air travel, smart cities, airport-driven urbanization. But it comes with a price: capital intensity, debt, and regulatory overhang.
If GMR delivers on its traffic projections, expands non-aero revenue, and deleverages meaningfully, it can transition from a value trap to a strong compounder.
It’s not a stock for the faint-hearted. But for those who believe in India’s aviation-led infrastructure growth, GMR’s runway may just be long enough to clear the clouds.

Sources:
- GMR Airports Investor Relations
- Screener
- BSE India
- Business Standard, ET Now, Moneycontrol
- Company Earnings Call Transcripts and Press Releases (Q3 FY25)
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only. Investors should conduct their own research or consult a financial advisor before making any investment decisions.
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