City
Epaper

GAIL Q3 profit flares up to Rs 2,842.62 crore, interim dividend declared

By IANS | Updated: January 29, 2024 19:35 IST

Chennai, Jan 29 GAIL (India) Ltd on Monday said it closed the third quarter of FY24 with a ...

Open in App

Chennai, Jan 29 GAIL (India) Ltd on Monday said it closed the third quarter of FY24 with a higher net profit of Rs 2,842.62 crore on a lower revenue.

In a regulatory filing, GAIL said for the quarter ended December 31, 2023, it had earned an operational revenue of Rs 34,253.52 crore (against Q3FY23's Rs 35,380.38 crore) and a net profit of Rs 2,842.62 crore (Rs 245.73 crore).

The Board of Directors, in their meeting held on Monday, declared an interim dividend of Rs 5.50 per equity share (face value of Rs 10 each) amounting to Rs 3,616.30 crore.

The company’s scrip closed at Rs 171.70 after the previous closing price of Rs 165.40.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Will remember this support": Jamaica and Cuba praise India for support after Hurricane Melissa

International150 years of Vande Mataram: Indian Embassy in Nepal honours song's timeless message

EntertainmentAnupam Kher directorial 'Tanvi The Great' to be screened at International Film Festival of India 2025

CricketSiliguri Municipal Corporation felicitates Richa Ghosh after India's CWC win

Other SportsSindhu writes a heartfelt note for retiring Tai Tzu-ying, remembers battles fought with old rival

Business Realted Stories

BusinessState PSUs should partner with IREL for rare-earth mining and processing: NITI Aayog official

BusinessIndia leads global tax policy shift amid expanding digital economy: CBDT Joint Commissioner

BusinessTIDCO working to meet aerospace and defence industry needs, says TIDCO's VP

BusinessIndia working on multilateral tax certainty framework, says principal commissioner Income Tax

BusinessIndia must partner with friendly nations for success in rare-earth materials, says former defence official