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July 21, 2025

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Shares of Reliance Industries Ltd (RIL) dropped over 2.5% in Monday’s trading session, as investors appeared unimpressed by the conglomerate’s highest-ever quarterly profit and EBITDA performance, amid underwhelming results in its key retail and oil-to-chemicals (O2C) segments.

The stock opened at ₹1,465 per share, below the previous close of ₹1,476, and declined further to ₹1,439 by noon, down 2.5%.

This came despite the Mukesh Ambani-led firm posting a 76% year-on-year jump in consolidated net profit for the April-June quarter of FY26.

Strong top-line and profitability gains in Q1

Reliance reported consolidated profit after tax (PAT) of ₹30,681 crore for the first quarter of FY26, significantly ahead of analysts’ estimates and up from ₹17,448 crore in the same quarter a year ago.

Consolidated EBITDA rose 35.7% to ₹58,024 crore, marking the group’s best quarterly performance to date.

Revenue grew 6% year-on-year to ₹2,73,252 crore.

Chairman Mukesh Ambani said, “Reliance has begun FY26 with a robust, all-round operational and financial performance. Consolidated EBITDA improved strongly from the year-ago period, despite significant volatility in global macros.”

The EBITDA margin improved by 460 basis points to 21.2% from 16.6% last year, reflecting improved cost efficiencies and growth in high-margin segments.

Retail and oil-to-chemicals fail to meet analyst expectations

Despite the strong headline numbers, earnings in the O2C and retail segments came in lower than expected, tempering the market’s response.

The company cited planned maintenance shutdowns at its Jamnagar refinery and seasonal weakness in consumer electronics as key factors affecting performance.

Nomura flagged a weaker-than-anticipated show in retail and O2C, attributing it to maintenance activities and elevated feedstock and freight costs.

CLSA noted that a 3% miss in O2C EBITDA and a 5% miss in retail EBITDA overshadowed strong showings from the upstream and telecom unit Jio.

Brokerages raise price targets despite market reaction

While the market reacted negatively in the short term, the results prompted at least 10 analysts to raise their target prices on the stock.

Analysts believe the moderation in stock prices may be short-lived.

A rebound in gross refining margins, coupled with Jio’s expansion and recovery in discretionary retail, could drive stronger performance in upcoming quarters.

The median target price has climbed to ₹1,640 from ₹1,565 a month ago.

“Retail and Jio are likely to accelerate, and the new energy ecosystem is expected to fully operationalise in four to six quarters, with partnerships and a self-funded model in a few years,” Emkay analysts said in a note.

Domestic brokerage Motilal Oswal Financial Services cut FY26–27 earnings estimates by 1–4%, but raised its price target slightly to ₹1,700 per share.

“While 1Q was soft, we remain sanguine on RIL’s growth prospects across segments and build in a CAGR of ~11% in EBITDA/PAT over FY25-28E,” the brokerage said.

Jefferies maintained a “buy” rating with a revised target of ₹1,726, acknowledging short-term weakness but expressing optimism about the O2C outlook.

Reliance shares are still up about 19% year-to-date, outperforming the broader Nifty 50 index, which has gained 5.9% in the same period.

As the company navigates operational hurdles and global headwinds, the street appears to be betting on a longer-term story built around telecom, retail expansion, and clean energy transformation.

The post Reliance shares fall despite record profit jump: should you buy? appeared first on Invezz

President Donald Trump celebrated six months since he was sworn into his second term on Sunday, saying that the United States has been ‘totally revived’ after being ‘DEAD’ under former President Joe Biden. 

‘Wow, time flies! Today is that Sixth Month Anniversary of my Second Term. Importantly, it’s being hailed as one of the most consequential periods of any President,’ Trump wrote on social media. 

‘In other words, we got a lot of good and great things done, including ending numerous wars of Countries not related to us other than through Trade and/or, in certain cases, friendship,’ he added on TRUTH Social. ‘Six months is not a long time to have totally revived a major Country.’ 

Trump continued: ‘One year ago our Country was DEAD, with almost no hope of revival. Today the USA is the ‘hottest’ and most respected Country anywhere in the World. Happy Anniversary!!!’ 

Trump’s first six months have been marked by a number of significant moments, particularly on the international stage.

After Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen ramped up attacks on shipping vessels in the Red Sea in late 2024, the Trump administration designated the group a foreign terrorist organization, reinstating a move that had been reversed under Biden.

U.S. and U.K. forces earlier this year pounded Houthi missile and radar sites as part of an operation to ensure freedom of navigation, and the Trump administration secured a ceasefire deal with the terror group in May.  

Trump intervened in the Israel-Iran war in June, ordering U.S. military strikes against Iranian nuclear facilities and infrastructure that pummeled Tehran’s capabilities and forced the regime into quick submission. 

Though Trump had promised on the campaign trail to end the Ukraine-Russia war within 24 hours, a peace agreement between the two sides has so far failed to materialize. 

Earlier in his second term, Trump had slammed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy for a perceived lack of gratitude for billions of dollars in U.S. support to his war effort under Biden’s presidency. Trump more recently has sharpened his criticism of Russian leader Vladimir Putin, slamming Moscow for the massive loss of life on both sides during the more than three-year-long conflict. 

Trump issued a new deadline in mid-July that Russia had 50 days to agree to a ceasefire or face ‘maximum tariffs.’ He also recently approved the sale of additional U.S. Patriot missiles to Ukraine. 

In its first six months, the Trump administration had also brokered a ceasefire between the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda in late June. 

Beyond ‘ending numerous wars,’ Trump has celebrated other accomplishments during his first six months back in office, including securing the passage of his ‘big, beautiful bill,’ which made the 2017 Trump tax cuts permanent. The legislative package also earmarked funding for the president’s other initiatives, including for his mass deportation campaign and border security. 

On overseas trips and at home, Trump has repeatedly said the U.S. is the ‘hottest’ country, claiming to have restored America’s reputation both domestically and on the world stage with his ‘America First’ foreign policy. 

Delivering on his 2024 pledge to make the U.S. the ‘crypto capital of the planet,’ Trump on Friday signed landmark legislation that creates a regulatory regime for dollar-pegged cryptocurrencies known as stablecoins. 

Trump on Sunday also appeared to dismiss concerns that his administration’s handling of the Jeffrey Epstein files could cost Republicans control of Congress in the 2026 midterm elections and beyond. 

‘My Poll Numbers within the Republican Party, and MAGA, have gone up, significantly, since the Jeffrey Epstein Hoax was exposed by the Radical Left Democrats and, just plain ‘troublemakers’,’ Trump wrote in another post Sunday morning. ‘They have hit 90%, 92%, 93%, and 95%, in various polls, and are all Republican Party records. The General Election numbers are my highest, EVER! People like Strong Borders, and all of the many other things I have done. GOD BLESS AMERICA. MAGA!’ 

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