Business
Jyothy Labs shares tumble 15% in two days after Henkel ends Pril, Fa licence agreements
On Saturday, Jyothy Labs said the decision marks the end of a nearly 15-year partnership between the two companies.
The company added that it is preparing for an “orderly transition” and plans to sharpen its focus on its owned brands, especially Exo in the dishwash category. While Pril has historically been Jyothy Labs’ flagship dishwash liquid brand, Exo has remained a strong player in the dishwash bars segment.
Jyothy Labs had acquired Henkel’s India consumer business in 2011 through a transaction involving brands, assets, and operations. Under the agreement, Pril and Fa were operated under fixed-term licence arrangements, whereas brands such as Mr White and Henko continued under perpetual licence agreements.
The company fully owns brands including Margo, Neem toothpaste, Tuhina, and Chek. Jyothy Labs also stated that discussions with Henkel regarding a possible renewal had been underway for several months, including the evaluation of “commercial and business continuity alternatives”.
Share Price and Technical Indicators
Jyothy Labs currently commands a market capitalisation of Rs 8,300.88 crore. The stock touched a 52-week high of Rs 378.20.
On the valuation front, the company is trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 26.14, while its price-to-sales (P/S) ratio stands at 2.46. The price-to-book (P/B) ratio is 5.48.
Technically, the stock’s 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) is at 43.6. Typically, an RSI below 30 indicates oversold conditions, while a level above 70 suggests the stock may be overbought. Jyothy Labs is currently trading below all eight of its key simple moving averages (SMAs), signalling a bearish trend.
Institutional sentiment remained subdued during the March 2026 quarter. Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) trimmed their stake from 12.77% to 12.35%, while Mutual Fund holdings declined from 13.73% to 13.15%.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
Earnings call transcript: Suncor Energy Q1 2026 beats forecasts but shares dip

Earnings call transcript: Suncor Energy Q1 2026 beats forecasts but shares dip
Business
Aussie shares wobble ahead of budget, oil surges again
Australia’s share market has wobbled ahead of the federal budget, as investors brace for tax reforms expected to impact returns on housing and stocks.
Business
Vodafone Idea board to weigh fundraise through equity after AGR relief
The proposed fundraising comes at a time when investor sentiment around the company has improved sharply following a series of developments that eased concerns around its long-standing balance sheet stress and capital raising ability.
Vodafone Idea stock has surged nearly 30% over the past month and gained more than 50% in the last four months, aided by regulatory relief on adjusted gross revenue (AGR) liabilities, management changes and renewed expectations around network expansion funding.
A major trigger came earlier this month after the Department of Telecommunications recalculated the company’s AGR dues, lowering the outstanding amount to around Rs 64,046 crore as of December-end. The move was seen by analysts as a significant reduction in financial overhang for the debt-laden telecom operator.
The company also saw renewed investor attention after Kumar Mangalam Birla returned as non-executive chairman, nearly five years after stepping down during a period marked by mounting financial pressure and uncertainty over the telecom operator’s future.
The sharpest rally in the stock, however, came earlier this week after a Bloomberg report said UK-based Vodafone Group was exploring a potential transfer of a portion of its stake in Vodafone Idea back to the company for treasury holding purposes. Vodafone Plc currently owns about 19% in the Indian telecom operator.
Brokerages have turned more constructive on the stock after the AGR clarity. Citigroup maintained its “Buy-High Risk” rating on Vodafone Idea with a target price of Rs 14, implying further upside from current levels.According to Citi, uncertainty surrounding AGR liabilities had for years weakened lender confidence and delayed the company’s fundraising plans. The brokerage said the government’s conversion of dues into equity, resulting in a 36% stake in Vodafone Idea, has materially improved the company’s prospects of securing fresh capital for network investments.
Also read: Gold, housing play under pressure as PM’s pitch rattles consumer-facing stocks
Citi also noted that the improved regulatory clarity reduces execution risk around Vodafone Idea’s previously announced fundraising roadmap. The brokerage now expects the telecom operator to have better visibility in completing its targeted debt raise, which is crucial for accelerating 4G and 5G rollout plans and competing more effectively with rivals Reliance Jio and Bharti Airtel.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
Business
These Stocks Are Today’s Movers: Qualcomm, Intel, Micron, Zebra, Nvidia, Quantum Computing, GameStop, and More
These Stocks Are Today’s Movers: Qualcomm, Intel, Micron, Zebra, Nvidia, Quantum Computing, GameStop, and More
Business
Dixon Technologies Q4 Results: Cons PAT falls 36% YoY as topline grows 2%; Rs 10/share dividend announced
Meanwhile, Dixon Technologies’ total income grew 3% year-on-year to Rs 10,595 crore versus Rs 10,304 crore in Q4FY25. It included other income of Rs 84 crore compared to Rs 11 crore in the year-ago period.
The company’s board recommended a final dividend of Rs 10 per equity share for the financial year 2025-26. The dividend, if approved by the company members at its 33rd Annual General Meeting (AGM), will be credited within 30 days from the AGM date, the company filing said.
The company’s Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortisation (EBITDA) stood at Rs 493 crore in the quarter under review, up 9% YoY.
Dixon Tech’s expenses in the reported quarter stood at Rs 10,231 crore versus Rs 10,399 crore in Q3FY26 and Rs 9,982 crore in the year-ago period. The expenses were for the cost of material consumed, employee benefits and finance cost, among other things.
The profit before tax (PBT) was Rs 370 crore in Q4FY26 versus Rs 412 crore in Q3FY26 and Rs 576 crore in Q4FY25.
For the full financial year, PAT stood at Rs 1,644 crore, gaining 33% YoY, while total income stood at Rs 49,586 crore, up 28%. EBITDA for FY26 increased 69% to Rs 2,580 crore over the previous financial year. The earnings were announced after market hours, and Dixon Tech shares ended today at Rs 10,120, down by Rs 652 or 6.05%.
(Disclaimer: The recommendations, suggestions, views, and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times.)
Business
eBay rejects $55.5bn offer from GameStop
The online auction giant said it doubted how the video game retailer would finance its offer.
Business
Gilt Yields Hit 28-Year High as Starmer Defies Resignation Calls
Britain’s bond market delivered its sharpest rebuke yet to Sir Keir Starmer’s premiership on Tuesday, with 30-year gilt yields climbing to their highest level this century as the prime minister stared down a growing chorus of Labour MPs demanding he step aside.
The sell-off, which dragged sterling and equities lower in lockstep, wiped out the relief rally that followed Starmer’s defiant intervention last week. Tuesday’s cabinet meeting, at which the prime minister once again refused to countenance resignation, did little to settle nerves. Investors are now openly pricing in the prospect of a leftward lurch in Labour policy, with the attendant risks of looser fiscal rules, higher gilt issuance and a further squeeze on the cost of capital for British business.
For the country’s 5.5 million small and medium-sized enterprises, the implications are far from academic. Higher long-dated gilt yields feed directly into the swap rates that underpin commercial lending, business mortgages and asset finance, raising the prospect of yet another leg up in the borrowing costs faced by Britain’s corporate backbone at a time when many are still nursing the legacy of post-pandemic debt.
The 30-year gilt yield rose 13 basis points to 5.81 per cent, the highest since May 1998. The benchmark 10-year yield gained 10 basis points to 5.1 per cent, within a whisker of breaching the post-2008 peak it set earlier this month. Bond prices move inversely to yields.
“A new Labour leader may face pressure to ease the fiscal rules and raise gilt issuance,” warned Jim Reid, analyst at Deutsche Bank, capturing the City’s central concern that any successor would lean towards higher spending and heavier taxation of the very businesses the Treasury is counting on to drive growth.
Sterling’s slide alongside government bonds will draw uncomfortable parallels with the dark days of Liz Truss’s mini-budget. When a currency weakens in concert with rising borrowing costs, it is the trading pattern of an emerging market that has lost the confidence of foreign capital, not that of a G7 economy. The pound fell 0.64 per cent against the dollar to a two-week low of $1.352, and shed 0.21 per cent against the euro to €1.152, its weakest since mid-April.
Some of the pressure is undeniably imported. Bunds, OATs and BTPs all sold off as President Trump declared the Iran ceasefire was “on life support”, sending Brent crude up 2.8 per cent to $107.17 a barrel and reigniting inflation fears across advanced economies. The Strait of Hormuz, through which a fifth of global oil and gas once flowed, remains largely shut. Germany’s Dax bore the brunt of the European sell-off, falling more than 1 per cent. But gilts underperformed by a substantial margin, marking out Westminster’s political turmoil as a uniquely British risk premium.
Mohit Kumar, chief European economist at Jefferies, urged clients to short sterling, arguing any change in the composition of government “would likely be left-leaning”. Anthony Willis, senior economist at Columbia Threadneedle Investments, cautioned that the bond market was unlikely to settle “until greater clarity emerges”.
Equities followed suit. The FTSE 100 surrendered 0.3 per cent having opened the week with a 0.4 per cent gain, while the more domestically focused FTSE 250 dropped 211 points, or 0.9 per cent, extending its losing streak to a second day. Mid-cap stocks, dominated by UK-facing businesses, are the clearest read on how the City judges Britain’s economic prospects.
The grim verdict from Andrew Goodwin, chief UK economist at Oxford Economics, is that there is little prospect of meaningful relief. He expects 10-year borrowing costs to remain stuck above 5 per cent for the remainder of the year, regardless of who occupies Number 10. “Markets clearly perceive the UK has a bigger inflation problem and that tighter monetary policy will be needed to limit second-round effects from the energy shock, while political uncertainty has added to pressures at the long end,” he said.
Even were Starmer to dig in, Goodwin argued, the bond market would have little to celebrate, with the prime minister’s “attempts to regain popularity, or, more likely, from a successor implementing more costly left-wing economic policies” weighing on sentiment. “If Starmer sets out a timetable to stand down, the uncertainty premium will persist.”
For owner-managers already navigating a punishing cost base, a softening consumer and the fallout from this spring’s National Insurance changes, the message from the bond vigilantes is unambiguous: brace for borrowing to stay dear, and for political risk to remain firmly on the balance sheet.
Business
CPGs need a new playbook

Sector underperformance calls for retooled growth model.
Business
Litis to buy $4m Yallingup shack
The property identity is set to purchase the unique coastal home following more than two decades in the same hands.
Business
Prudential to admit 5.7 million new shares to London Stock Exchange

Prudential to admit 5.7 million new shares to London Stock Exchange
-
Crypto World4 days agoHarrisX Poll Found 52% of Registered Voters Support the CLARITY Act
-
Fashion4 days agoWeekend Open Thread: Marianne Dress
-
Crypto World5 days agoUpbit adds B3 Korean won pair as Base token gains Korea access
-
NewsBeat5 days agoNCP car park operator enters administration putting 340 UK sites at risk of closure
-
Fashion24 hours agoCoffee Break: Travel Steam Iron
-
Fashion2 days agoWhat to Know Before Buying a Curling Wand or Curling Iron
-
Tech2 days agoAuto Enthusiast Carves Functional Two-Stroke Engine from Solid Metal
-
Politics19 hours agoWhat to expect when you’re expecting a budget
-
Politics3 days agoPolitics Home Article | Starmer Enters The Danger Zone
-
Business3 days agoIgnore market noise, India’s long-term story intact, say D-Street bulls Ramesh Damani and Sunil Singhania
-
Tech1 day agoGM Agrees To Pay $12.75 Million To Settle California Lawsuit Over Misuse Of Customers’ Driving Data
-
Crypto World6 days agoBlackRock CEO Larry Fink Discusses a New Asset Class
-
Entertainment6 days agoSarah Paulson Called Out For Met Gala ‘Hypocrisy’
-
Entertainment5 days agoGeneral Hospital: Ric & Ava Bombshell – Ric’s Massive Secret Exposed!
-
Sports6 days ago
NBA playoff winners and losers: Austin Reaves is not loving Lakers vs. Thunder matchup, but Chet Holmgren is
-
Entertainment6 days agoBold and Beautiful Early Spoilers May 11-15: Steffy Revolted & Liam Overjoyed!
-
Politics5 days agoSimon Cowell Says He Was ‘Horrible’ To Susan Boyle During BGT Audition
-
Crypto World6 days agoRobinhood says Wall Street is building onchain
-
Sports5 days agoUEFA Champions League final schedule, teams, venue, live time and streaming | Football News
-
Tech7 days agoApple and Samsung are dominating smartphone sales so thoroughly that only one other company makes the top 10

You must be logged in to post a comment Login