City
Epaper

India’s healthcare sector grew strongly in Q2 FY25, revenue up by 17.6pc: Report

By IANS | Updated: November 26, 2024 11:40 IST

New Delhi, Nov 26 The Healthcare sector in India grew strongly in Q2 of FY25, with revenue increasing ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 26 The Healthcare sector in India grew strongly in Q2 of FY25, with revenue increasing by 17.6 per cent year on year (YoY), according to a report.

The report by Axis Securities showed that the healthcare sector also grew strongly by 10.4 per cent in quarter on quarter (QoQ).

Hospital occupancy rates, which rose by 340 basis points (bps) YoY and 470 bps QoQ were a key driver behind the growth.

Further, insurance payers contributed 33 per cent of total revenues in the hospital segment -- marking a 23 per cent YoY and 12 per cent QoQ growth.

However, the insurance penetration continues to remain low, the report said. It also offers room for expansion as awareness and purchasing power increase.

The report noted that cancer and cardiac care continue to drive double-digit growth. This, in addition to rising occupancy rates and Average Revenue Per Occupied Bed (ARPOB), is expected to sustain future growth in the healthcare sector, it added.

The report also recorded strong growth in the Indian pharma sector in Q2 FY25.

Major pharmaceutical companies in India reported a 10 per cent YoY growth in Q2 of FY25. This has been driven by impressive performance in North America and the domestic market.

The Indian Pharmaceutical Market (IPM) grew by 8 per cent YoY, with chronic therapies seeing a 9 per cent increase. However, acute therapies experienced a modest 4 per cent growth due to a weaker season.

The report highlighted that the pharmaceutical sector under coverage recorded a 10.2 per cent YoY and 1.7 per cent QoQ growth, led by a 10.8 per cent YoY increase in North America and a 9.8 per cent YoY rise in the Indian business.

The outlook for the pharmaceutical sector remains positive over the next three years, with a promising pipeline in biosimilars, GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1), and peptides, all of which are important in treating diabetes and other conditions.

Companies with a significant share of chronic therapy portfolios continue to outperform the broader market.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentKriti Sanon on ‘Tere Ishk Mein’: “Mukti Is One of the Most Layered Characters I’ve Played”

BusinessStar Housing Finance Limited Declares Q2 & H1 FY2025-26 Results Reports Business And Finance Performance For The Period Ending September 30, 2025

InternationalExercise Garuda: IAF and French fighter jets begin coordinated missions, enhance interoperability

TechnologyAir India to start non-stop flights between Delhi and Shanghai from Feb 2026

Other SportsIf Smith was to retire, Handscomb could be stable No. 4 in Tests: Chris Rogers

Health Realted Stories

HealthResearchers use AI to create first 100-billion-star Milky Way simulation

HealthIndian researchers develop smart portable device to detect toxic pesticides in water, food

HealthPreventable cervical cancer kills a woman every two minutes: UN

HealthOver 70 Australian schools closed due to possible asbestos contamination

HealthDelhi-NCR's AQI remains in 'very poor' range, six stations cross 400 mark