logo
Ambani's Reliance tops profit estimates on asset sale gains

Ambani's Reliance tops profit estimates on asset sale gains

Reutersa day ago
July 18 (Reuters) - Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani's Reliance Industries (RELI.NS), opens new tab reported a better-than-expected 78% surge in first-quarter profit on Friday, driven by strong growth across key businesses and gains from the sale of its stake in Asian Paints (ASPN.NS), opens new tab.
The profit jump was underpinned by a recovery in Reliance's core oil-to-chemicals segment, which benefited from improved refining margins and petrochemical demand. Strong performances from its retail and digital services arms also bolstered earnings.
Additionally, a sharp rise in other income, led by the sale of its stake in Asian Paints, boosted profit. The conglomerate's other income nearly quadrupled to 151.19 billion rupees in the June quarter, with 89.24 billion rupees stemming from the investment sale.
Reliance, India's biggest company by market value, in June sold a stake in Asian Paints , worth about $1.12 billion.
Reliance Retail and Jio, which together account for roughly 45% of the company's revenue, had been the engine powering the conglomerate's earnings in the six months to March, while offsetting a slowdown in the oil-to-chemicals segment, its largest revenue contributor.
Reliance's consolidated profit jumped to 269.94 billion rupees ($3.14 billion) in the June quarter, up from 151.38 billion rupees a year earlier, smashing analysts' estimate of 198.59 billion rupees, according to LSEG data.
Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) for the oil-to-chemicals business rose 10.8% to 145.11 billion rupees.
EBITDA from its Jio Platforms rose 23.9% year-on-year, the strongest growth among its segments, while retail EBITDA increased 12.7%.
Jio Infocomm, its telecom unit, logged a 23.3% rise in net profit, while revenue rose 16.6%.
The company said it was on track to set up its planned "giga factories" in the next four-to-six quarters and that, once operational, the business would be self-sustaining, without requiring further investment from Reliance.
Reliance, which operates the world's largest refining complex in Jamnagar, Gujarat, announced a $10 billion investment in 2021 to build its green energy portfolio and achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2035.
($1 = 86.0620 Indian rupees)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Supermarket bosses attack Reeves's plan for fresh tax raid
Supermarket bosses attack Reeves's plan for fresh tax raid

Telegraph

time2 hours ago

  • Telegraph

Supermarket bosses attack Reeves's plan for fresh tax raid

Tesco and Sainsbury's have warned Rachel Reeves that plans for a £1.7bn tax raid on big shops would accelerate the decline of the high street. The intervention by the country's two largest supermarkets marks a significant escalation in the backlash against the Chancellor's plans for a shake-up of the business rates system. Retail chiefs fear will Ms Reeves will deal another devastating blow to Britain's struggling town centres. Ken Murphy, boss of Tesco, told The Telegraph that the move threatened 'investments in customers, colleagues and communities'. His comments are likely to fuel fears of fresh price rises, redundancies and another cull of shops as retailers look to offset swinging cost rises introduced by a cash-strapped Labour Government at the last Budget. The reforms will increase business rates for department stores, supermarkets and those with larger premises. Mr Murphy said: 'Increasing the burden on large shops would hinder rather than help our town centres. Many of these shops are anchor stores in their local communities.' Simon Roberts, the Sainsbury's boss, predicted that retail's big beasts would 'pull away from our high streets' as they sought to weather a jump in National Insurance contributions and minimum wage increases. The sector is also concerned about the potential costs of of Angela Rayner's Employment Rights Bill. Mr Roberts said: 'The changes being proposed will further increase the negative impact of business rates and won't stimulate the growth or investment into our high streets and jobs that we all want to see. The Government promised fundamental reform to level the playing field but the changes we are hearing about will not deliver this – they will not stimulate growth or investment.' Opposition is also mounting beyond the big grocers. Alex Baldock, the boss of electricals giant Currys, accused Ms Reeves of 'rushing' changes to the business rates system that will have widespread implications for retailers already grappling with a tsunami of additional government-imposed costs. Jobs at risk Over-burdened retailers are already grappling with 'a perfect storm' of 'extra costs and red tape', which is 'bad for jobs, investment and growth,' he said. 'The mooted hikes in business rates will just make things worse.' Mr Baldock warned that the overhaul would 'shutter more stores' and 'leave more gaps on the high street', as well as harming employment opportunities for young people. Thierry Garnier, the chief executive of B&Q's parent company Kingfisher, warned that the Treasury's latest tax grab would harm 'communities across the UK'. The Chancellor is expected to use her next Budget to ramp up business rates in a desperate attempt to plug a £5bn hole in the public finances created by abrupt about-turns on benefits and winter fuel cuts. As part of efforts to level the playing field, businesses with bigger premises will be charged more in order to reduce the rates paid by smaller stores. The effective discount is intended to target online retailers and save independent firms, ministers contend. Last month, the British Chambers of Commerce warned that tax rises are 'paralysing' British businesses. One in three companies were cutting jobs to weather the £25bn National Insurance raid, it said. 'Larger physical stores, which support more jobs, should not be penalised through a higher multiplier,' Mr Garnier said. Pub bosses protest The hospitality industry is also braced for further pain with pub bosses queueing up to express their disquiet last week. Simon Emeny, the chief executive of Fuller's, said pubs were already labouring under 'a ridiculously disproportionate' £25bn business rates burden. Sir Tim Martin, the boss of JD Wetherspoon, complained that pubs were already having to contend with a 'ferocious tax disadvantage '. The sector maintains it is unfair that pubs pay VAT on food sales while supermarkets do not have to, enabling them to sell alcohol at a discount to pubs. Meanwhile, the Government's own analysis shows that the impact of the planned reforms will be felt far and wide from hotels, restaurants and theatres to cinemas, theme parks and even zoos. At the same time, only a fifth of those are warehouses used by internet retailers. In a speech to prominent City figures attending the Mansion House dinner in London on Tuesday evening, Ms Reeves claimed 'Britain is better off under Labour'. A Treasury spokesman said: 'We are a pro-business Government that is creating a fairer business rates system to protect the high street, support investment and level the playing field. 'To deliver our manifesto pledge and provide certainty and support to the high street we intend to introduce permanently lower tax rates for retail, hospitality and leisure properties from next year.'

Japan heads to polls in key test for PM Ishiba
Japan heads to polls in key test for PM Ishiba

Reuters

time4 hours ago

  • Reuters

Japan heads to polls in key test for PM Ishiba

TOKYO, July 20 (Reuters) - Japanese voters could unleash political turmoil as they head to the polls on Sunday in a tightly contested upper house election, with rising prices and immigration concerns threatening to weaken Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's grip on power. Opinion polls suggest Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party and coalition partner Komeito may fall short of the 50 seats needed to retain control of the 248-seat upper house of parliament in an election where half the seats are up for grabs. The polls show smaller opposition parties pushing for tax cuts and increased public spending are set to gain, among them the right-wing Sanseito, which vows to curb immigration, oppose foreign capital inflows and reverse gender equality moves. A poor showing by the coalition could shake investor confidence in the world's fourth-largest economy and disrupt critical trade talks with the United States, analysts said. Ishiba may have to choose between making way for a new LDP leader or scrambling to secure the backing of some opposition parties with policy compromises, said Rintaro Nishimura, an associate at the Asia Group in Japan. "Each scenario requires the LDP and Komeito to make certain concessions, and will be challenging, as any potential partner has leverage in the negotiations." After the election Japan faces a deadline of August 1 to strike a trade deal with the United States or face punishing tariffs in its largest export market. Such import levies could squeeze the economy and further pressure the government to give financial relief to households already reeling from inflation, such as a doubling of rice prices since last year. With an eye on a jittery government bond market, the LDP has called for fiscal restraint, rejecting opposition calls for major tax cuts and welfare spending to soften the blow. Ishiba's administration lost its majority in the more powerful lower house in October. As the LDP's worst showing in 15 years, the outcome roiled financial markets and left the prime minister vulnerable to no-confidence motions that could topple his administration and trigger a fresh general election. Ruled by the LDP for most of the post-war period, Japan has so far largely avoided the social division and fracturing of politics seen in other industrialised democracies. Voting ends at 8 p.m. (1100 GMT), when media are expected to project results based on exit polls.

China plans crackdown on zero-mileage used car sales
China plans crackdown on zero-mileage used car sales

Reuters

time5 hours ago

  • Reuters

China plans crackdown on zero-mileage used car sales

SHANGHAI, July 19 (Reuters) - China's industry ministry is planning to ban the resale of cars within six months of their initial registration as part of efforts to combat sales of so-called zero-mileage used cars, an industry association publication reported on Saturday. Zero-mileage used cars have emerged in China as a result of the uniquely cutthroat competition for sales in the world's largest auto market, which is reeling from a brutal, years-long price war caused by chronic overcapacity. The practice involves insuring a new vehicle before it is sold, allowing automakers and their dealers to meet sales targets. But it can create hassles for customers. Auto Review, a publication run by the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, reported the plan in an editorial published on its WeChat account. It said that the China Automobile Dealers Association, another industry group, had separately proposed a code system for exports of used cars. The editorial added that Chery and BYD ( opens new tab, were among companies planning to hold dealers accountable for violations, including licensing cars before they are sold. The measures, if enforced, would mark the first policy action taken by the Chinese government to stop the practice, which became a nationwide issue after Great Wall Motor ( opens new tab CEO Wei Jianjun called it out in May. Since then, there have been several signs China's central government was preparing a crackdown, from a Communist Party newspaper condemning zero-mileage used cars last month to the country's cabinet pledging on Friday that it would control "irrational" competition in the domestic auto industry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store