
IRCTC Q4 Results: Cons PAT jumps 26% YoY to Rs 358 crore, revenue up 10%
Live Events
Catering: The Q4FY25 revenue stood at Rs 529 crore versus Rs 555 crore reported in Q3FY25 and Rs 531 crore reported in Q4FY24.
Rail Neer: The Q4FY25 revenue stood at Rs 96 crore versus Rs 96 crore reported in Q3FY25 and Rs 83 crore reported in Q4FY24.
Internet Ticketing: The Q4FY25 revenue stood at Rs 372 crore versus Rs 354 crore reported in Q3FY25 and Rs 342 crore reported in Q4FY24.
The Q4FY25 revenue stood at Rs 274 crore versus Rs 224 crore reported in Q3FY25 and Rs 199 crore reported in Q4FY24.
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our ETMarkets WhatsApp channel
Indian Railway Catering And Tourism Corporation ( IRCTC ) reported a 26% year-on-year growth in its Q4FY25 consolidated net profit at Rs 358 crore versus Rs 284 crore in the year ago period. The company's revenue from operations in the said quarter stood at Rs 1,269 crore, gaining by 10% over Rs 1,152 crore reported in the corresponding quarter of the last financial year.The ticketing company also announced a final dividend of Re 1 for the financial year 2024-25.The company's profit after tax (PAT) for the quarter under review was up 5% versus Rs 341 crore reported in Q3FY25 while the topline was up 4% on a sequential basis versus Rs 1,225 crore in the October-December quarter of FY25.For the full financial year, the net profit stood at Rs 1,315 crore versus 1,111 crore reported in FY25. The FY25 revenue stood at Rs 4,675 versus Rs 4,26O crore in the previous financial year.The state-run company reported expenses of Rs 903 crore versus Rs 824 crore in Q3FY25 and Rs 810 crore in the year ago period.The company derives its revenues from four businesses viz. catering, Rail Neer, internet ticketing and tourism.The earnings were announced after market hours and IRCTC shares today ended at Rs 775.95 on the NSE, falling by Rs 17.20 or 2.17% over the Tuesday closing price.

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


India Today
21 minutes ago
- India Today
Currency devaluation is quietly eating into your wealth, expert warns
Many people may not realise it, but their savings could already be losing value. Finance educator Akshat Shrivastava has raised a warning that currency devaluation and continuous money printing are slowly reducing the real value of people's wealth. And this is happening without most people noticing a post on social media platform X, Shrivastava explained this through a simple example. 'Imagine that your 2BHK flat is worth Rs 1 crore. The next year, its value falls to Rs 90 lakh. How would you feel?' he asked. 'What if I tell you: this is actually happening—without you even taking note of it.'Shrivastava's concern is not about direct price drops. Instead, he points to the slow and steady fall in the purchasing power of money. He says that this type of devaluation is not just visible when comparing currencies across countries, but also when comparing money to assets like gold, real estate, Bitcoin, or land.'Governments right now can print as much money as they wish. And, guess what? They are doing it,' he wrote. According to him, the rise in the supply of money is one of the key reasons for this quiet loss of gave an example from the United States, where the Federal Reserve reportedly printed 20% of the total US money supply in just one year after the COVID-19 outbreak. While this helped in boosting short-term spending and supported the economy, Shrivastava says the long-term impact is more serious.'If the rate of money printing is 10%, and your post-tax deposit rate is 6%, your money is losing 4% of its value each year,' he said. In simple terms, if you keep your money in a bank savings account or fixed deposit and inflation or money printing rises faster than your interest earnings, you are becoming poorer over also pointed out how many people don't seem worried about it. 'People don't protest. Because most of them don't bother with economics. Cricket and politics keep them busy,' he added, hinting that financial awareness is still low among the general deal with the risk of devaluation, Shrivastava suggests investing in assets that tend to hold or increase value over time. 'Stocks, (good quality) real estate, gold, and Bitcoin are all hedges,' he said. However, he warned that these are not always safe either if one buys them at the wrong an example, he said, 'If you would have bought BTC on its 2021 high, you would have made 0% returns for 3 years—even though its 10-year CAGR is 88%.' This means even strong long-term assets can give flat returns if purchased without proper timing or believes that the real problem is not just picking the right assets but knowing how to invest wisely. 'Most people don't know how to execute these points: what assets to buy when, how to analyse value, how much to buy, how much cash to keep, and how to book profits,' Shrivastava final advice was not to blindly stick to one asset class or investment idea while ignoring the bigger risk. 'Every year, their wealth keeps going down—in real terms,' he warned. advertisement


Time of India
21 minutes ago
- Time of India
engineers india: I-Sec downgrades Engineers India to Add, raises target price to Rs 250
Cancel › › › › Text Size: A A A I-Sec downgrades Engineers India to Add, raises target price to Rs 250 Sign In Sign Up Success This article has been saved


Economic Times
24 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Stock market update: Nifty Realty index falls 0.42% in an upbeat market
(What's moving Sensex and Nifty Track latest market news, stock tips, Budget 2025, Share Market on Budget 2025 and expert advice, on ETMarkets. Also, is now on Telegram. For fastest news alerts on financial markets, investment strategies and stocks alerts, subscribe to our Telegram feeds .) Subscribe to ET Prime and read the Economic Times ePaper Sensex Today. Top Trending Stocks: SBI Share Price, Axis Bank Share Price, HDFC Bank Share Price, Infosys Share Price, Wipro Share Price, NTPC Share Price