Zee Entertainment Q4FY26: Elara Sell, MOFSL Neutral
Zee Entertainment Enterprises Ltd
ZEEL
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What changed after Zee’s Q4FY26 results
Brokerages turned more cautious on Zee Entertainment Enterprises after its Q4FY26 performance, pointing to weak advertising demand, deteriorating profitability, and intensifying competition. The calls also reflect a broader shift in ad budgets from linear television to digital platforms. Analysts flagged that the advertising environment remains soft, particularly for FMCG categories on linear TV. At the same time, rising competitive intensity in broadcasting and streaming is adding pressure on both growth and margins. Against this backdrop, Elara Capital downgraded the stock to ‘Sell’. Motilal Oswal Financial Services (MOFSL) retained a ‘Neutral’ rating, arguing that valuation support is the key offset to near-term operating headwinds.
Elara Capital’s ‘Sell’ downgrade and the core rationale
Elara Capital analysts led by Karan Taurani said the downgrade was driven primarily by a sharp deterioration in profitability. They highlighted Zee’s first-ever EBITDA loss since FY07, which they treated as a key negative inflection point. Elara also pointed to weakening visibility on management’s earlier mid-teen margin guidance. In its assessment, the combination of structurally weak ad demand and rising competitive intensity is limiting the pace of earnings recovery. The brokerage also cited continued structural challenges across the TV broadcasting ecosystem. It added that industry consolidation, especially following the Reliance and Disney merger, is exacerbating competitive intensity. Elara also noted macro concerns, including geopolitical tensions in West Asia, as another factor constraining visibility on recovery.
MOFSL stays Neutral: valuation is the main support
MOFSL retained its ‘Neutral’ rating on Zee Entertainment with a target price of ₹80, premised on 12x FY28E P/E. Analysts Aditya Bansal, Avinash Karumanchi, Siddhesh Chaudhar and Niraj Harwande said inexpensive valuations are the only reason for the neutral stance. MOFSL noted that the stock trades at below 5x FY28E EV/EBITDA. The brokerage also highlighted Zee’s cash balance of ₹2,700 crore as a cushion. Even so, it said that a sustainable recovery in advertising revenue remains key to any potential re-rating in multiples. MOFSL’s view reflects a “valuation floor” argument rather than a fundamental turnaround call.
Advertising remains the pain point, led by FMCG slowdown
MOFSL said the slowdown in FMCG advertising spends on linear platforms continues to weigh on Zee’s domestic advertising revenue. It estimated that domestic ad revenue has declined around 37% over FY19-26. In a separate operating snapshot cited in the material, Zee’s weak domestic ad revenues were indicated at -27% YoY for a period where total revenue was largely flat. The broader theme across broker notes is that ad softness has persisted for several years and has not yet shown a durable recovery. MOFSL also cautioned that structural shifts in ad spending toward digital mediums add downside risks to ad recovery assumptions. While festive-season demand can offer temporary support, broker commentary suggests it has not been sustained.
Estimate cuts: what MOFSL changed in its model
MOFSL cut its FY27-28E EBITDA estimates by 11-13% due to persistent weakness in ad revenue and higher expenses. It also adjusted profit after tax (PAT) estimates by 5-6%. Despite the long-running decline in ad revenue, the brokerage built in 3.5% CAGR in ad revenue over FY26-28E, while warning of downside risks from the ongoing shift of ad budgets to digital. These estimate changes underline that valuations alone may not drive a re-rating if earnings remain under pressure. The focus, as stated by the brokerage, remains on a sustained ad recovery. Higher spending and competitive intensity were also cited as factors shaping profitability.
Operating snapshot: revenue mix, movies and Zee5 losses
One brokerage snapshot noted Zee’s revenue was largely flat at ₹2,200 crore, up 10% QoQ and a 5% beat, as weak domestic ad revenues (-27% YoY) were offset by a 3.2x YoY jump in other sales and services linked to movie releases. It also noted EBITDA was broadly in line, down 10% QoQ, with the comment that margins are typically lower in the movie business. Zee5 losses were reported to have declined to ₹75 crore from ₹140 crore QoQ, led by higher syndication revenue. With costs stated as largely optimized in that note, the operational focus was framed around driving 8-10% revenue growth through re-entry into Free-to-Air (FTA), a push into new genres and regional languages, and achieving guided EBITDA margins of 18-20% in FY26E. Separately, another note referenced a 10% YoY contraction in domestic advertising and a 25% YoY decline in EBITDA, with profitability impacted by increased investments and advertising softness.
Key data points from the broker commentary
Other brokerage targets cited across reports
The material also referenced multiple targets and stances from different points in time and across brokerages. One MOFSL update reiterated ‘Neutral’ while adjusting the price target to ₹90 from ₹95, citing mixed quarterly performance and valuation support. Other MOFSL targets mentioned included ₹125 (from ₹115 earlier), ₹130 (12x FY27E P/E), ₹145, and ₹155 in different reports, each keeping the ‘Neutral’ view while linking upside to advertising recovery and, in at least one case, the outcome of litigation related to ICC rights with Star. Separately, Citi Research was cited as maintaining ‘Sell’ with a target price of ₹175, while Emkay Global Research retained a ‘Sell’ rating with a reduced target price of ₹165. Another mention referenced a ‘neutral’ stance with a target price of ₹200, described as implying a 6% upside from a referenced close.
Market impact: why the ad cycle and competition matter
The broker commentary points to a market where linear TV advertising remains under pressure and competition is rising. For Zee, this combination affects both revenue momentum and the ability to rebuild margins. The cited industry consolidation after the Reliance and Disney merger was flagged as a factor that can elevate competitive intensity further. In such an environment, even improved cost control may not be enough if the core advertising engine fails to recover. Zee5 loss reduction, as referenced in one note, is a positive operational datapoint, but it sits alongside continued uncertainty in domestic ad spending. On valuations, multiple notes emphasized low multiples and cash balances as support, but also made it clear that a re-rating needs ad recovery rather than just cheapness.
Analysis: what investors are likely to track next
Two signposts stand out across the reports: the trajectory of domestic advertising recovery and the sustainability of profitability improvement. The Elara downgrade reflects a sharper concern on the earnings base after the EBITDA loss marker, while MOFSL’s Neutral view reflects a balance between low valuation and weak fundamentals. Management’s stated aspiration to reach 18-20% EBITDA margins by FY26 is an important benchmark, but broker notes indicate limited visibility on how quickly this can be achieved. Competitive intensity, especially as peers consolidate and bid aggressively for content and audiences, can keep costs elevated. Investors are also likely to watch how Zee’s revenue mix evolves, since movies and other services can support top line but may carry lower margins. Any re-rating case in the notes consistently comes back to sustained ad recovery.
Conclusion
Brokerages have turned more cautious on Zee after Q4FY26, with Elara downgrading to ‘Sell’ on profitability deterioration and MOFSL staying ‘Neutral’ mainly on valuation support. Across notes, domestic advertising weakness remains the central risk variable, while margin recovery and Zee5 loss reduction are key operational watch points. Several targets and ratings referenced in the reports underline a market-wide focus on earnings visibility rather than near-term narratives. The next set of updates from the company and broker model revisions are likely to hinge on whether domestic ad spending stabilises and whether margin guidance becomes more credible through execution.
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