Home Business

Sun TV Q1 net up 17% at Rs 120 cr

Media Group Sun TV Network today reported a 16.83 per cent growth rate in net profit to Rs 119.80 crore in the first quarter ended June 30, 2009, as compared to Rs 102.54 crore in the corresponding period a year ago. - Tulip Telecom Q1 net up 63% at Rs 75 cr - Sesa Goa Q1 net profit at Rs 422 cr - RNRL Q1 net up 7% at Rs 17 cr - Zenith Birla Q1 net up 41% at Rs 3.9 cr - Sterlite Industries posts 42% fall in Q1 net - Hero Honda achieves highest quarterly sales, surpasses a million mark Total income increased to Rs 301.88 crore in the same quarter of 2009 from Rs 239.95 crore in the corresponding year-ago period, Sun TV said in a filing to the Bombay Stock Exchange. "The channels have been able to continue to maintain its advertising growth resulting out of a well-diversified mix of clients (national, regional and local) across multiple product categories," the filing added. Sun TV"s revenue rose by 28.66 per cent to Rs 287.65 crore in the June quarter of this year. During the quarter, the company earning per share stood at Rs 3.04, a 16.83 per cent rise over the year ago-period. Shares of Sun TV closed at Rs 262.65, up 3.47 per cent on the BSE.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
No bauxite mining at Niyamgiri yet
The Orissa government has made it clear that mining of bauxite in the Niyamgiri hills in Kalahandi district will not be allowed till all the statutory clearances are obtained.
Popular Articles

Arunachal projects kept out of ADB lending
Seeks 40% lower funding from Asian Development Bank.

All is Greenberg
Enough has been written about last year’s collapse of insurance giant AIG after it had to make good all the insurance it sold against corporate bond defaults and the fact that the US government bailout happened to help Goldman Sachs, the firm that US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson once ran. Much less, however, is known about the company’s origins (it was the first reverse MNC, with its headquarters in China), of how it had such tremendous clout it could even threaten governments with US sanctions, or of how in the second World War it allowed US intelligence agency officials to masquerade as journalists of one of the newspapers it owned and collect information against the Japanese.