Adani Enterprises Q1 Results: Net Profit Declines 50% YoY To Rs 734 Crore, Revenue Falls 14% | Business News
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Adani Enterprises Q1 Results: Its revenue in April-June 2025 falls 14 per cent to Rs 22,437 crore, compared with Rs 26,067 crore in the year-ago period.
Adani Enterprises Q1 Results.
Adani Enterprises Ltd (AEL) on Thursday reported a 50 per cent YoY decline in its consolidated net profit to Rs 734 crore for the first quarter ended June 30, 2025. Its revenue in April-June 2025 fell 14 per cent to Rs 22,437 crore, compared with Rs 26,067 crore in the year-ago period.
AEL’s profit before tax dropped 34 per cent to Rs 1,466 crore, while EBITDA declined 12 per cent to Rs 3,786 crore.
The lacklustre financial performance dragged AEL shares down nearly 4%, with the stock trading at Rs 2,435 on the NSE by mid-afternoon.
However, the company pointed to the resilience of its incubating businesses — airports, roads, and green hydrogen — which accounted for 74% of the company’s EBITDA during the quarter. These segments together delivered a 5% growth in EBITDA to Rs 2,800 crore, helping cushion the blow from weak earnings elsewhere.
The airport vertical led the gains, with EBITDA rising 61% to Rs 1,094 crore, supported by a pickup in air passenger traffic and robust non-aero revenue. Meanwhile, Adani New Industries (ANIL) faced a 26% decline in EBITDA to Rs 1,212 crore amid softer prices and volumes.
Chairman Gautam Adani said the performance validated the group’s model of building future-ready infrastructure assets. “With landmark assets like the Navi Mumbai International Airport, the Copper Plant, and the Ganga Expressway set to become operational, we are accelerating our mission to build next-generation infrastructure platforms,” he said.
Operationally, Adani Airports handled 23.4 million passengers, up from 22.8 million last year, while mining services dispatches surged 30% to 12.1 million tonnes.
In post-quarter developments, AEL offloaded part of its stake in Adani Wilmar through a Rs 3,700 crore block deal and struck an agreement to divest the remaining 20% stake to the Wilmar Group. It also mopped up Rs 1,000 crore via non-convertible debentures, which saw full subscription within three hours of launch.
The ports-to-power conglomerate’s coal trading business is its biggest segment, contributing to 36% of its overall revenue. It saw continued weakness in the reporting quarter as India registered lower coal-fired electricity demand.
India’s overall power output also declined amid a milder summer, earlier-than-expected monsoon and slowing economic activity, leading to a decline in coal demand.
The conglomerate has been expanding its new energy business, which includes solar manufacturing and wind turbines. However, the segment registered an 11% dip in revenue, during the quarter.
Haris is Deputy News Editor (Business) at news18.com. He writes on various issues related to personal finance, markets, economy and companies. Having over a decade of experience in financial journalism, Haris h…Read More
Haris is Deputy News Editor (Business) at news18.com. He writes on various issues related to personal finance, markets, economy and companies. Having over a decade of experience in financial journalism, Haris h… Read More
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