Gayatri Highways Limited

NSEI:GAYAHWS Stock Report

Market Cap: ₹424.2m

Gayatri Highways Past Earnings Performance

Past criteria checks 0/6

Gayatri Highways has been growing earnings at an average annual rate of 36.1%, while the Infrastructure industry saw earnings growing at 39.3% annually. Revenues have been declining at an average rate of 41.6% per year.

Key information

36.1%

Earnings growth rate

35.7%

EPS growth rate

Infrastructure Industry Growth22.1%
Revenue growth rate-41.6%
Return on equityn/a
Net Margin-2,529.2%
Last Earnings Update30 Sep 2024

Recent past performance updates

Recent updates

Revenue & Expenses Breakdown

How Gayatri Highways makes and spends money. Based on latest reported earnings, on an LTM basis.


Earnings and Revenue History

NSEI:GAYAHWS Revenue, expenses and earnings (INR Millions)
DateRevenueEarningsG+A ExpensesR&D Expenses
30 Sep 2437-933270
30 Jun 2432-1,306180
31 Mar 2417-1,372150
31 Dec 23201,643280
30 Sep 23371,644210
30 Jun 23641,672550
31 Mar 23761,489740
31 Dec 22939-6901760
30 Sep 221,047-6071540
30 Jun 22997-6641510
31 Mar 2263-161290
31 Dec 21918-7401350
30 Sep 21908-7111330
30 Jun 21875-7741360
31 Mar 21814-8161330
31 Dec 20748-9151620
30 Sep 20698-9781700
30 Jun 20375-6061660
31 Mar 20695-9141610
31 Dec 191,773-2,5432010
30 Sep 191,531-2,6741820
30 Jun 191,409-2,6081810
31 Mar 19747-8002200
31 Mar 182,791-1,846800
31 Mar 176,762000

Quality Earnings: GAYAHWS is currently unprofitable.

Growing Profit Margin: GAYAHWS is currently unprofitable.


Free Cash Flow vs Earnings Analysis


Past Earnings Growth Analysis

Earnings Trend: GAYAHWS is unprofitable, but has reduced losses over the past 5 years at a rate of 36.1% per year.

Accelerating Growth: Unable to compare GAYAHWS's earnings growth over the past year to its 5-year average as it is currently unprofitable

Earnings vs Industry: GAYAHWS is unprofitable, making it difficult to compare its past year earnings growth to the Infrastructure industry (7.4%).


Return on Equity

High ROE: GAYAHWS's liabilities exceed its assets, so it is difficult to calculate its Return on Equity.


Return on Assets


Return on Capital Employed


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