
MAH MBA CET results 2025: Check how to download scorecard from cetcell.mahacet.org, expected cut offs and admission process
Visit cetcell.mahacet.org
Go to the 'MAH MBA/MMS CET 2025' section
Click on 'View Score Card'
Enter application number and date of birth
Download and print the scorecard
MAH MBA CET 2025 result Grace marks
MAH MBA CET 2025 result CAP rounds for MBA
Live Events
Online Registration : Fill details, upload documents, and pay the counselling fee
: Fill details, upload documents, and pay the counselling fee Document Verification : Submit documents at assigned centres
: Submit documents at assigned centres Choice Filling : Select up to 300 preferred colleges and courses
: Select up to 300 preferred colleges and courses Seat Allotment : Seats will be allotted based on merit and preferences
: Seats will be allotted based on merit and preferences Admission Confirmation: Pay the seat acceptance fee and report to the allotted institute
MAH MBA CET 2025 result: Expected Cut off
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
The Maharashtra State Common Entrance Test (CET) Cell will soon declare the MAH MBA CET 2025 results on its official website, cetcell.mahacet.org. The entrance exam was conducted on April 1, 2, and 3, 2025, for candidates seeking admission into MBA and MMS programs across Maharashtra. Following objections to the provisional answer key released on April 28, the CET Cell awarded grace marks for 28 disputed questions. The final answer key was released on May 19.Once results are out, candidates can check their scorecards by following these steps:The scorecard will show section-wise scores, total marks, and percentile rankings.Candidates had time until April 30 to raise objections to the provisional answer key. After reviewing the submissions, the CET Cell found issues with 28 questions. 'Grace marks have been awarded to all candidates for these questions, ensuring fairness and transparency in the evaluation process,' said the official notification.Candidates who qualify the exam must take part in the Centralised Admission Process (CAP), which is likely to start in June or early July 2025. The CAP will run through September 2025.Steps in the CAP include:Top B-schools such as JBIMS, SIMSREE, Welingkar, and PUMBA usually have high cut-offs, often above the 99th percentile.
Hashtags

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


Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
Barometers pare losses; Nifty trades above 24,850
The headline equity benchmarks pared all early losses and traded with minor gains in the morning trade. The Nifty traded above the 24,850 mark. Realty shares witnessed selling pressure for the fifth consecutive trading session. At 10:30 IST, the barometer index, the S&P BSE Sensex rose 57.70 points or 0.08% to 81,517.51. The Nifty 50 index added 31.40 points or 0.12% to 24,864.85. In the broader market, the S&P BSE Mid-Cap index rallied 0.60% and the S&P BSE Small-Cap index rose 0.24%. The market breadth was positive. On the BSE 2,028 shares rose and 1,664 shares fell. A total of 209 shares were unchanged. Economy: India's forex reserves dipped by $1.18 billion to $695.49 billion for the week ending July 18, data by the Reserve Bank of India showed on Friday. For the week ended July 18, foreign currency assets, a major component of the reserves, slipped by $1.201 billion to $587.609 billion, the data released on Friday showed. However, the gold reserves increased by $150 million to $84.499 billion during the week, the RBI said. The Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) were down by $119 million to $18.683 billion, the apex bank said. India's reserve position with the IMF declined by $13 million to $4.698 billion in the reporting week, the apex bank data showed. Result today: Adani Green Energy (up 2.12%), Apollo Micro Systems (down 2.15%), Indusind Bank (down 0.45%), Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders (down 0.75%), JK Paper (down 1.62%), KEC International (up 0.83%), Laxmi Organic Industries (up 0.12%), Mold-Tek Packaging (up 0.95%), Motherson Sumi Wiring India (down 1.01%), NTPC Green Energy (up 2.17%), Paradeep Phosphates (up 5.35%), Piramal Pharma (up 1.06%), Quess Corp (down 0.84%), RailTel Corporation of India (down 1.64%), Sanghi Industries (up 0.39%), Transport Corporation of India (down 1.37%), Thangamayil Jewellery (up 0.46%), Torrent Pharmaceuticals (down 0.09%), TTK Prestige (up 0.08%), UPL (up 0.18%) and Vijaya Diagnostic Centre (up 0.92%) will announce their quarterly results later today. Buzzing Index: The Nifty Realty index dropped 2.90% to 923.05. The index slumped 8.26% in five consecutive trading sessions. Lodha Developers (down 4.37%), DLF (down 2.8%), Prestige Estates Projects (down 2.24%), Brigade Enterprises (down 1.77%), Phoenix Mills (down 1.64%), Oberoi Realty (down 1.55%), Raymond (down 1.25%), Godrej Properties (down 1.24%) and Sobha (down 0.88%) declined. Stocks in Spotlight: ACME Solar Holdings surged 9.16% after the companys consolidated net profit stood at Rs 130.83 crore in Q1 FY26, steeply higher than Rs 1.39 crore in Q1 FY25. Revenue from operations jumped 65% YoY to Rs 510.98 crore in Q1 June 2025. Reliance Infrastructure advanced 2.32% after the company reported a consolidated net profit of Rs 59.84 crore in Q1 FY26, compared to a net loss of Rs 233.74 crore posted in Q1 FY25. Revenue from operations fell 17.86% to Rs 5,907.82 crore in the quarter ended 30 June 2025.


Time of India
2 hours ago
- Time of India
America is slipping behind India's clean power boom
Bloomberg Live Events Bloomberg Bloomberg (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Once upon a time, the US was the sole clean energy superpower . Until 2011, it led the world in connecting wind and solar generators to the grid. Then China took over, to a point where its lead now looks unassailable: The People's Republic added eight times more renewables than the US last year. This year, India is likely to overtake country connected 22 gigawatts of wind and solar in the first half — a dramatic recovery from a troubling slowdown in 2022 and 2023, and enough at full output to power nearly one-tenth of the grid. Assuming this is maintained through December, that should put India ahead of the 40 GW that the US government expects this also setting the world's most populous nation on course to hit a target of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's that once seemed implausible: to reach 500 GW of non-fossil generation by 2030. Such a shift will herald the dawn of a new clean energy superpower, and give the world some of its best hopes of averting disastrous climate a remarkable turnaround for a country whose renewable industry looked like a lost cause barely more than a year ago. What happened?One factor is financing. Easing inflation has allowed the Reserve Bank of India to cut its policy rate by a percentage point since December to the lowest in three years. This reduces the price of renewables, which are particularly exposed to debt costs. Regulatory deadlines have also played a role: A waiver on transmission charges for wind and solar expired at the end of last month, causing developers to rush to complete their builds in time to get the financial end of that waiver may cause a wobble for the sector over the next year or so, but the changes will be introduced slowly. Over the balance of the decade there's now good reason to think the recent pace can be sustained. The rash of projects breaking ground this past year means about 414 GW of clean power is already either operating or under construction, including nuclear and hydroelectric plants. That's not far off the 500 GW target, and we've still got more than five years to are counting on it. Solar panel manufacturing has been ramping up to the point where it now runs far in excess of domestic demand, at 91 GW. With lower tariffs into the US than their rivals in China and Southeast Asia, this excess of supply might make local panel makers rare beneficiaries of President Donald Trump's war on clean energy. That certainly seems to be the assumption of a group of US competitors, who last week sought anti-dumping measures to keep Indian products out of their many years, India had a skeptical take on the energy transition, arguing since the 1970s that poverty was a more pressing problem than protecting the environment. The difference now is that zero-carbon power is decisively cheaper than the competition. Rising incomes, meanwhile, mean the government needs to also think about the needs of roughly half a billion middle-class citizens, who worry more about where to find a good job in a clean, livable city than the basics of subsistence is still building coal-fired power plants to make sure those newly-minted urbanites don't suffer power cuts in the middle of punishing heatwaves, but they're not necessarily being used. Thanks to milder weather than in recent years and the rising volumes of renewables pushing it off the grid, fossil-fired power generation fell 4% in the first half relative to 2024. That's the first time it has dropped since the Covid-19 pandemic hit in 2020, and occurred even as electricity generation rose 0.8%. Retirements of old plants mean that fossil-generation capacity has actually declined slightly so far this still possible that emissions from India's power sector won't peak until well into the 2030s. Even so, the faster rollout of renewables, combined with declining pollution from China and the rich world, means the global picture is improving faster than you'd realize if you were focused only on the steampunk posturing in power isn't just cleaner — it's cheaper, and more suited to the aspirations of the billions in the Global South who want a better, healthier nations like the US can afford the indulgence of a campaign against modern energy, at least until their citizens realize how badly they're being shortchanged. It's a fatal myopia, though. For all Trump likes to boast of energy dominance, America is falling behind on the most important energy technologies of the 21st century.


Time of India
3 hours ago
- Time of India
Only 20-25% of India's 850 mn internet users shop online, shows untapped potential: McKinsey Report
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel India's e-commerce sector is set for significant growth in the coming years, according to a report by McKinsey & report noted that only 20-25 per cent of India's 850 million internet users shop online. This is much lower as compared with mature markets like the United States and China, where over 85 per cent of internet users make purchases report said, "Out of the country's 850 million internet users, only about 20 to 25 per cent shop online".The report also highlighted that India has seen a strong rise in e-commerce activity over the past few country is not just catching up as a fast adopter of online shopping but is also emerging as an innovator in the field. This is especially visible in the rapid growth of quick commerce platforms that deliver goods in a very short e-commerce still accounts for only 7 to 9 per cent of India's total retail sales as of fiscal year 2023. This share is expected to more than double to between 15 and 17 per cent by 2030, showing the huge potential for business models are changing the shape of the e-commerce industry in India. Quick commerce and social commerce together make up more than 15 per cent of the e-commerce market today. Their share is expected to exceed 25 per cent by 2030.E-commerce companies are also finding new ways to serve consumers. They are expanding into new categories such as instant bookings for domestic services, professional help, and even medical next wave of growth in Indian e-commerce is likely to come from two main factors. One is the increasing entry into new segments like B2B (business-to-business) commerce and building materials. The other is the rising demand from tier-two and tier-three cities are seeing faster income growth than metro and tier-one cities. Monthly incomes in tier-two cities grew by 18 per cent between 2023 and 2024, which is higher than the growth seen in bigger report suggested that e-commerce in India will go beyond simply disrupting traditional retail. It is expected to reshape the entire retail system, including areas like last-mile delivery and logistics.