Stocks with the sharpest EPS downgrades included IndusInd Bank, Adani Enterprises, Eicher Motors, ONGC, and Tata Motors, according to JM Financial
Puravankara plunged nearly 10 per cent after its loss in the fourth quarter to ₹88 crore, along with a decline in revenue
LIC's stock rose as much as 8.81 per cent after its net profit for Q4FY25 grew 38 per cent
MTAR Tech's stock rose as much as 4.83 per cent after it reported a multifold increase in its Q4 net profit
Borosil's stock rose as much as 7.06 per cent after its profit rose 119.29 per cent to ₹11.14 crore in the quarter ended March 2025
RailTel's standalone net profit rose 46.33 per cent to ₹113.4 crore in Q4 FY25, compared to ₹73.53 crore in Q4 FY24
Nine of the 13 brokerages that reviewed TCS's Q4 results downgraded their target price for the stock
Fixed income and commodity strategies, such as those involving gold and silver, can further help balance portfolios and provide stability in uncertain times
Meanwhile, according to a note by JM Financial, 66 per cent companies under their coverage saw earnings per share (EPS) cuts for FY25
Other income or non-interest income went up to Rs 2,684.19 crore from Rs 2,314.53 crore. Fees and services for Q2FY25 increased to Rs 2,312 crore, up 14 per cent
The developments come at a time when the markets are already grappling with geopolitical developments in West Asia and the uncertainty surrounding the outcome of the US presidential polls
The Nifty 200 index is valued at about 24 times its 12-month forward earnings estimates, versus last decade's mean of about 19 times
Emkay Global has raised the Nifty50 target to 26,000 for September 2025 on the back of rate cuts, revival in rural consumption, and earnings growth
The equity market appreciates high dividend paying companies and these companies share prices appreciate at a steady rate providing capital appreciation to their investors well
The Nifty-50 is expected to deliver 12% earnings growth in FY25 over a high base of FY24 (+26 per cent Y-o-Y), said Khemka.
B30 AUM SURGE MIRRORS SMALL TOWN GRIT: Lower base, higher equity driving growth
The Japan story is still in its early days. But the lesson it holds is that companies, regulators, and the broader market micro-system all need to continuously evolve
Salasar Techno Engineering Ltd (STEL) on Saturday reported a 56 per cent rise in its consolidated net profit to Rs 16.76 crore for the December quarter. It had posted a net profit of Rs 10.69 crore during the October-December quarter in 2022-23, the company said in an exchange filing. The company's total income rose to Rs 304.35 crore from Rs 240.93 crore in the year ago period. Its expenses were at Rs 281.22 crore as against Rs 226.54 crore in the third quarter last fiscal. New Delhi-based STEL is a steel structural manufacturer and EPC infrastructure company, providing services across telecom, energy and railways.
In contrast, flows into Chinese shares dropped the most among 14 emerging markets that are covered by Japan's data on international investment positions
Consolidated net profit rose 48% to 582.4 million rupees ($7 million) in the quarter ended Dec. 31 from a year earlier. Analysts, on average, had expected a profit of 555.1 million rupees