Muthoot Finance Q4 Results: Pcrofit jumps 22% YoY to Rs 1,444 crore; AUM grows 37% on gold demand
India's largest gold loan company Muthoot Finance reported a 22% year-on-year rise in fourth quarter consolidated net profit at Rs 1444 crore as compared with Rs 1182 crore in the year ago period, backed by robust business expansion.
ADVERTISEMENT The Karala-headquartered group grew its consolidated assets under management 37% year-on-year to Rs 1.22 lakh crore.
The annual net profit for the group rose 20% at Rs 5352 crore against Rs 4468 crore in the year ago period.
On a standalone basis, Muthoot's net profit stood at Rs 1479 crore for the quarter under review, up 41% over Rs 1050 crore in the year ago period. Standalone AUM grew 41% year-on-year to Rs 1.06 lakh crore. All the subsidiaries taken together booked a Rs 35 crore net loss.
'The rising gold prices have attracted customers to monetise their gold, which has resulted in rising AUM for us. Customers have seen that getting personal loans has become difficult, so they have monetised their household gold," managing director George Alexander Muthoot told ET. "For customers, it has been less gold and more money. We have achieved the highest ever gold loan advance to new customers of Rs 21,888 crore in FY25," he said.
ADVERTISEMENT The company declared its highest ever dividend of 260% on equity share of face value of Rs10 each, which translates into Rs 26 per equity share.Its micro loan subsidiary, Belstar MIcrofinance, has seen a 20% squeeze in AUM to Rs 7980 crore at the end of March from Rs 10023 crore a year back, mirroring the industry trend of slower disbursement as the sector is going through a rough patch facing high asset quality stress. This led to a fall in annual net profit at Rs 46 crore from Rs 340 crore earlier.
ADVERTISEMENT
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
25 minutes ago
- Time of India
Maharashtra IT department emerges as primary cloud service provider for govt departments
Pune: Maharashtra's Information Technology Corporation Ltd (MahaIT) has become the main cloud service provider for govt departments. Senior state IT officials confirmed that several departments have already began migrating their data to MahaIT's cloud platform, marking a strategic shift in the state's data management approach. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now "It is a win-win situation — departments gain peace of mind regarding data safety and security, while we strengthen our capabilities in cloud services," said an official. The move has come in the aftermath of a major controversy earlier this year when MahaIT filed a criminal complaint against a private cloud vendor and its directors over alleged extortion and threats to delete sensitive govt data. The FIR accused the firm of breaching contract terms and blocking access to services for eight departments after invoicing for undelivered services. The matter escalated to Bombay High Court, which directed affected departments to transfer their data to MahaIT's cloud. Launched under Maharashtra's 2018 public cloud policy — the first of its kind in India — the state mandated all govt departments to store data on cloud platforms, opening a Rs 200 crore opportunity for cloud service providers. However, concerns over security and vendor reliability have since prompted a greater push for in-house cloud solutions. Currently, MahaIT is in discussion with multiple departments to broaden cloud adoption on its platform, aiming to consolidate govt data under a single, secure service provider. Many departments, such as the state registration department, the agriculture department, and many others, have shifted to cloud. "There are several departments that are already using cloud services. We will reach out to all departments and put across our services,'' an IT official added.


Economic Times
30 minutes ago
- Economic Times
PM Modi to chair 5th Chief Secretaries' Conference, focus on 'human capital for Viksit Bharat'
New Delhi: The 5th National Conference of chief secretaries, chaired by Prime Minister Modi, will focus on building and leveraging 'human capital' to achieve national goals. To be held in November 2025 on the theme 'Human Capital for Viksit Bharat', the conference will look at a series of action plans across sectors from education to skilling to R&D in cutting-edge areas, ET has learnt. It is being held in the wake of a fast-paced technology scale-up and R&D across several countries and the imperative to ensure India's manpower is trained and equipped to steer the country into the 'Viksit Bharat' mode. The meet follows from the 2024 one that focused on 'Promoting Entrepreneurship, Employment and Skilling: Leveraging the Demographic dividend'. A key pillar for the fifth edition is 'Schooling: Building Blocks' and focus will be on basic education to outcome-based education; quality upgrades and key areas of improvement. The conference will see all states take stock of the scenario of education in their respective regions, the challenges faced, solution pathways and time-bound action plans to ensure qualitative improvement across all geographies.


Economic Times
30 minutes ago
- Economic Times
RBI's next interest rate cut action likely in December
Reserve Bank of India may keep interest rates steady in August. However, further reduction is expected later this year. This follows a larger-than-expected cut aimed at boosting economic growth. Most institutions anticipate a rate cut in either October or December. The central bank will also lower the cash reserve ratio to inject liquidity. These measures surprised the markets. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is expected to hold interest rates in August but possibly make yet another reduction later this year, following its greater-than-expected cut on Friday aimed at bolstering growth.A poll by ET showed that eight out of 10 institutions expect a rate cut either in October or December while two do not expect any reduction until December. All participants expect a pause in August. Nomura is the only participant anticipating a25 bps rate cut in the October and December policy reviews. The next meeting of the RBI Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is scheduled for August 4-6. A basis point is 0.01 percentage RBI announced a 50 bps reduction in the key repo rate to 5.50% — against expectations of a 25 bps cut — and shifted its stance to 'neutral' from 'accommodative'.Since then, economists and market participants have been debating the extent of further rate cuts that the central bank may take and by when, given governor Sanjay Malhotra's statement that monetary policy was left with limited space to support growth after having reduced the repo rate by 100 bps since February. He added that the future course of action by the MPC will be data other factors could come into play later in the year. 'The combination of a 50 bps repo rate cut and a shift in stance to neutral is a signal that the space for policy easing has been largely exhausted,' Nomura said. 'However, the policy outlook depends on the macro outlook. Beyond an August pause, we expect the easing cycle to continue and still see 5.00% as the terminal rate.'Possible uncertainties include the June-September monsoon, US tariffs and their impact on growth and the potential for inflation to come in below projections. Despite challenges, there's room for further reduction in the RBI's repo rate, most participants said. The monsoon made landfall earlier than scheduled and while the weather office has said it will be above normal, there's been a lull in rain in some parts of the country since then. Other areas have been hit by severe RBI will also lower the cash reserve ratio by 50 bps to 3% in phases, starting September, to infuse Rs 2.5 lakh crore liquidity in the system. Both measures — the extent of the rate cut and the CRR reduction — caught the markets off guard. 'Everything that had been forecast for this calendar year happened in one policy,' a bond trader said, reflecting the market's mood after the June 6 monetary policy the governor's statement on the limited space to support growth, some economists said the RBI is not just responding to short-term data, but is also aiming to help the Indian economy grow at its full potential. Malhotra has said that the aspiration is to grow at 8%, more than 6.5% projected by the central bank for FY26.