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Afcons Infrastructure shares rise 4% after posting Q1 results; Details
At 10:36 AM, Afcons Infrastructure share price was up 3.98 per cent at ₹423 per share on BSE. In comparison, the Sensex was 0.34 per cent higher at 80,131.41.
Afcons Infra Q1 results
In Q1, Afcons Infrastructure reported a consolidated profit after tax (PAT) of ₹137 crore, as compared to ₹92 crore year-on-year (Y-o-Y), up 50 per cent. The company's consolidated revenue from operations in the first quarter stood at ₹3,370 crore, as against ₹3,154 crore in the year-ago period, up 6.8 per cent.
The Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation (Ebitda) stood at ₹445 crore, as compared to ₹372 crore, up 19.6 per cent. Ebitda margin stood at 13 per cent, as against 11.6 per cent a year ago.
In Q1 FY26, the company received orders worth ₹1,093 crore. In July 2025, it emerged as L1 in three road and rail projects in Croatia worth ₹11,321 crore. With this, the total L1 stands at ₹21,556 crore. Check List of Q1 results today
Our sustained efforts to make an entry in European markets bore fruits with us becoming L1 in multiple large orders in Croatia. This is in line with our strategy of focusing on large orders and expanding our presence in overseas markets,' said Subramanian Krishnamurthy, executive vice chairman (Whole-time Director), Afcons Infrastructure.
He added: We are excited by the growth opportunities available both domestically and internationally. We believe that our consistent financial performance, including a sturdy margin profile, positions us well to deliver value to our shareholders. We will continue to remain disciplined in our bidding and financing decisions while focusing on growth.
Nuvama Institutional Equities has maintained 'Buy' on the stock with a revised target of ₹523 per share from ₹535.
'While Afcons remains a sterling Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) player (refer to In a league of its own), execution growth is contingent on payment trajectory. We are cutting FY26E/27E EPS by 2 per cent/5 per cent due to stretched working capital cycle,' the brokerage noted.
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