Tag: GTPL HATHWAY

  • Orange Alert as Media Chiefs Call Time on Sour Regulation

    Orange Alert as Media Chiefs Call Time on Sour Regulation

    MUMBAI: When your brightest industry minds start comparing creativity to citrus fruit, you know the discussion’s got some zest. At FICCI FRAMES 2025, the session titled “Regulating the Orange Economy: Past, Present, and Future” turned into a spirited masterclass on what’s holding back India’s most vibrant export creativity itself.

    Moderated by Koan Advisory’s Vivan Sharan, the panel brought together some of the sharpest voices in Indian broadcasting Avinash Pandey (CEO, Indian Broadcasting and Digital Foundation), Krishnan Kutty, head of cluster, Entertainment (South) – JioStar, Anil Malhotra (COO, Zee Media), and Yatin Gupta (COO, GTPL Hathway). Together, they dissected the bitter-sweet evolution of India’s media and entertainment (M&E) industry from its liberalisation glory days to today’s tangled web of red tape and regulation.

    Avinash Pandey kicked things off with a nostalgic rewind. “We were declared an industry in 1996, and for a brief while, we were actually treated like one,” he said dryly, drawing laughter from the crowd. He recounted how the early 2000s saw broadcasting boom as a sunrise sector driven by investment, private innovation, and minimal interference.

    “Then came a time when the government helped us grow,” he continued. “But today, every little aspect from pricing to packaging is regulated. We are living under a 2005 framework in a 2025 economy.”

    Pandey’s lament set the tone. The orange economy shorthand for industries fuelled by creativity and culture has turned ripe, but over-regulation, panelists warned, risks turning it sour.

    Krishnan Kutty of JioStar took the baton, calling for “a lighter hand and a smarter head” in policymaking. He drew a sharp comparison between legacy broadcasters and digital-first platforms. “Television is capped, controlled, and scrutinised. OTT platforms, meanwhile, stream what they want with almost no oversight,” he said.

    Kutty argued that the answer isn’t to regulate the new, but to liberate the old. “Over-prescription kills innovation. Consumers don’t need protection from choice they need access to more of it.” His words echoed across an audience that included broadcasters, policymakers, and streaming executives all trying to decode the new power balance between screens.

    Anil Malhotra from Zee Media added historical perspective and a dose of irony. “Cable TV arrived in India in 1985. It was regulated only in 1995. Broadcasting began in 2005, got regulated much later,” he said. “Regulation always comes late to the party and then overstays its welcome.”

    Malhotra argued that in a digital-first world, it makes no sense to hold traditional media hostage to older rulebooks. “If the government doesn’t regulate new tech like OTT and AI, it must deregulate the old. Otherwise, you’re penalising the legacy systems that built India’s media strength in the first place.”

    He also called for a “policy audit,” a comprehensive review of old broadcasting rules to identify those that have outlived their relevance. “We need regulation that enables, not restricts,” he stressed.

    GTPL Hathway’s Yatin Gupta brought the discussion closer to ground reality and homes still running on coaxial cables. “We’re the most regulated part of the media chain,” he said bluntly. “Every rate, every fee, every package is dictated. Yet, we’re expected to compete with digital platforms that face no such limits.”

    Gupta pointed out that India’s cable homes have dropped from 150 million a few years ago to around 100 million today, a staggering 30 per cent loss in a market still hungry for affordable entertainment. “We can’t evolve if we’re boxed in,” he added. “If the aim is to take India fully digital, we must support the legacy infrastructure that connects Bharat to the world.”

    He called for skill development, broadband integration, and hybrid models that let cable operators transform into full-fledged digital service providers. “If we don’t, we’ll end up with an uneven playing field and an excluded audience.”

    By the time Avinash Pandey took the mic again, his tone had sharpened. “Regulators talk about ‘orderly growth’,” he said with a knowing smile. “That’s a Soviet-era phrase. You can’t dictate how creativity grows, it defeats the very nature of innovation.”

    He urged policymakers to think of the media sector as a living organism, one that thrives on unpredictability. “Creativity doesn’t follow command-and-control models. It needs chaos, experimentation, and freedom to fail.”

    The audience broke into applause when he declared, “If you want free markets, let the market breathe.”

    Despite the fiery debate, the panel didn’t write television off. Far from it. “TV still delivers high-quality entertainment at the lowest cost per viewer,” Pandey noted. “There are over 100 million Indians yet to own a television. Growth is far from over but it will stall if innovation is strangled.”

    The panellists agreed that the future of India’s media sector lies in convergence television and digital not competing, but coexisting. With global streamers investing heavily in Indian stories and regional content booming across states, the creative economy stands at a crossroads.

    As the discussion wound down, what emerged was less of a gripe and more of a roadmap: deregulate the old, modernise the law, empower talent, and let creativity not bureaucracy set the tone.

    In a nation bursting with storytellers, artists, and innovators, the message was clear: the Orange Economy shouldn’t be juiced dry by rules made for an analogue age.

    If India truly wants to be a global creative powerhouse exporting not just IT services but imagination, it must give its creators the same freedom its coders enjoy. Or as one delegate quipped while leaving the hall, “You can’t make lemonade with red tape.”

     

  • GTPL Hathway navigates challenging quarter, eyes future growth

    GTPL Hathway navigates challenging quarter, eyes future growth

    MUMBAI: GTPL Hathway has unveiled its unaudited financial results for the first quarter ended 30 June 2025, revealing a mixed bag for the entertainment and broadband major. While the company saw an uptick in its top line, profitability faced a squeeze during the period.

    The consolidated revenue from operations for Q1 FY26 stood at Rs 5,946.79 million, a healthy increase from Rs 5,359.94 million reported in the same quarter last year. Total income also reflected this growth, climbing to Rs 5,990.20 million from Rs 5,432.95 million year-on-year. On a consolidated basis, total income for the quarter reached Rs 9,091 million, marking a 7 per cent rise year-on-year and a 1 per cent increase quarter-on-quarter.

    However, the spotlight falls on the company’s profitability. Net profit after tax (Pat) saw a significant decline, coming in at Rs 56.25 million for Q1 FY26, a stark contrast to Rs 150.23 million in Q1 FY25. Consolidated PAT was Rs 105 million, consistent with the previous quarter but down from Rs 143 million in Q1 FY25. Consolidated earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (EBITDA) was recorded at Rs 1,123 million, with an EBITDA margin of 12.4 per cent. This is a decrease from Rs 1,205 million and a 14.2 per cent margin in the corresponding quarter of the prior fiscal year.

    Operationally, GTPL Hathway continues to expand its reach. The cable television business maintained a strong subscriber base, with 9.60 million active set-top boxes and 8.90 million paying subscribers as of Q1 FY26. The broadband segment also showed progress, reaching 1.05 million active subscribers and a home-pass count of 5.95 million. Average data consumption per customer soared to 410 GB per month, a 17 per cent increase year-on-year, while average revenue per user (ARPU) held steady at Rs 465..

    In a strategic move, the board of directors approved the re-appointment of Anirudhsinh Jadeja as managing director for a further three-year term, effective from 8 December 2025.

    The company also highlighted a contingent liability related to a demand from the Department of Telecommunications (DOT) for licence fees totalling Rs 9,754.15 million. GTPL Hathway remains confident in its legal position and has not recognised any provision for this matter.

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  • GTPL Hathway announces fiscal year 2025 results; recommends dividend

    GTPL Hathway announces fiscal year 2025 results; recommends dividend

    MUMBAI: Cable TV MSO and broadband major GTPL Hathway Ltd  has released its audited financial results for the fourth quarter and the entire financial year, ended 31 March 2025. The board of directors, at its recent meeting, approved these results and recommended a dividend of Rs. 2.00 per equity share of Rs. 10 each, subject to shareholder approval.

    Here’s a snapshot of the company’s standalone financial performance, with comparisons to the previous year:

    finanials
    For the quarter ended 31 March 2025, GTPL Hathway reported revenue from operations of Rs. 5,621.91 million, a 10.44 per cent increase compared to the same period last year, and a net profit after tax of Rs. 81.50 million, a decrease of 18.10 per cent.

    For the year ended 31 March 2025, revenue from operations reached Rs. 21,933.81 million, an 8.13 per cent increase year-over-year, and net profit after tax was Rs. 478.03 million, a 37.30 per cent decrease compared to the previous year.

    The company’s board has proposed a dividend of Rs. 2.00 per share.

    segment results

    The old stager, cable TV, remains a significant contributor to GTPL Hathway’s coffers, raking in Rs 28,620.85 million for the year. However, the segment’s profitability has taken a hit, dropping to  Rs 268.48 million, compared to a far healthier Rs 859.68 million in the previous year. The fourth quarter, in particular, saw a loss of Rs 6.68 million. The internet service segment continues its race, pulling in Rs 5,485.09 million for the year, and a profit of Rs 218.31 million.

    Meanwhile GTPL Hathway  has paid a one-time application fee of Rs 100 million and has obtained approval from the ministry of information & broadcasting to establish, maintain, and operate a headend-in-the- sky (HITS) broadcasting services platform for a 10-year period, in compliance with the HITS guidelines. As at 31 March 2025, the company  is in the process of setting up the associated network and also obtaining other necessary licences.

    A media release issued by the company had the following to say: 

    Q4 FY25 Total revenue stood at Rs 8,989 million a growth of 10 per cent  Y-o-Y
    * FY25 revenue stood at Rs  35,072 million a growth of 8 per cent  annually and broadband revenue grew by four per cent  annually
    * EBITDA for Q4 FY25 stood at Rs   1,144 million  with an EBITDA Margin of 12.7 per cent  and an operating EBITDA margin of 22 per cent. For the full year, EBITDA stands at Rs   4,625 million with EBITDA Margin of 13.2 per cent  with an operating margin of 22 per cent 
    * Q4 FY25 Profit After Tax stood at Rs   105 million  and the same for FY25 is Rs   479 million

    Digital Cable TV
    • Active subscribers were 9.60  million as of March 31, 2025, achieving an increase by 100K Y-o-Y
    • Paying subscribers stood at 8.90 million, increasing by 100K Y-o-Y
    • Subscription revenue from cable TV stood at Rs   2,982 million for Q4FY25 & Rs  12,327 million for FY25
    • Company signed grant of permission agreement (GOPA) with ministry of information and broadcasting for
    providing headend-in-the-sky (HITS) services for a period of 10 years

    Broadband
    • Increase in broadband subscribers by 25K Y-o-Y thus standing at 1045K
    • Broadband revenue increased by 4% to Rs   1,358 million  for Q4 Y-o-Y &Rs   5,456 million  for FY25
    • Homepass as on 31 March  2025, stood at Rs 5.95 million – an addition of 150K Y-o-Y. Of the 5.95Mn, 75 per cent available for FTTX conversion
    • Broadband average revenue per user (ARPU) stood at Rs  465 per month per sub, increased Rs 5 Y-o-Y.
    • Average data consumption per user per month was 396 GB, an increase of 11 per cent  Y-o-Y.

    GTPL Hathway Ltd  managing director Anirudhsinh Jadeja said:  “It pleases me to report that the company has sustained its subscriber base across both business divisions reflecting the resilience within operations in an overall challenging industry environment. We continue to remain optimistic about our long-term strategies and our initiatives to capitalize on the evolving consumer trends.The upcoming financial year will be pivotal as we look to enhance our capabilities for distribution of TV services with material benefits expected to accrue over the medium term. We are constantly enhancing the ambit of our offerings, upgrading and implementing technological innovations and focusing on providing consumer centric services. We will continue to evaluate opportunities for growth across our businesses.”

  • Naval Pandya plugs In at You Broadband, eyes national network expansion

    Naval Pandya plugs In at You Broadband, eyes national network expansion

    MUMBAI: Naval Pandya, a seasoned telecom executive, has joined You Broadband India  as vice president of network alliance, tasked with turbocharging the company’s national broadband expansion. After a 13-year stint at GTPL Hathway, Pandya is set to leverage his extensive experience to forge strategic partnerships and broaden You Broadband’s footprint.

    Pandya, who officially plugged into his new role in April 2025, brings over two decades of industry expertise to the table. His LinkedIn post expressed enthusiasm for “building on that journey by strengthening our last-mile access and creating broadband-ready homes across the country.”

    You Broadband, in a statement, highlighted Pandya’s “more than 22 years of industry experience,” and expressed confidence that his “leadership and drive will contribute significantly to our goals on expanding the operator business.”

    Prior to You Broadband, Pandya served as vice president of broadband sales & operations at GTPL Hathway, where he oversaw customer lifecycle management, P&L management, and growth strategies. His resume also includes roles at Den Networks, Hathway Cable & Datacom, Bharti Airtel, Tata Communications, and You Telecom India.

    Pandya’s track record spans cable TV operations, broadband sales, and institutional sales, positioning him to drive You Broadband’s ambitions in a rapidly evolving market. He arrives at You Broadband with a wealth of experience in the Indian broadband and cable sectors.

  • Media stocks hold the mic as markets crash in Trump tariff meltdown

    Media stocks hold the mic as markets crash in Trump tariff meltdown

    MUMBAI: Even as the Bombay stock exchange tanked five plus per cent  in the morning on Trump tariff meltdown Monday, Indian media and entertainment stocks shed just one to three per cent of their values at the time of trading at 3:30 pm. Sun TV was trading at Rs 638  a gain 0.83 per cent over  its previous weekend closing of Rs 632.75. TV Today network was up 1.65 per cent toto trade at Rs 160.40. On the flip side, a few media players were caught in the downward spiral. Entertainment Network India – the operator of Radio Mirchi – cut 2.06 per cent to stand at Rs 132.80. GTPL Hathway declined 3.69 per cent to Rs 105.75 even as Hathway dropped 3.16 per cent to Rs 12.58. Dish TV fell by 2.61 per cent to Rs 5.60.

    The advertising sector, however, bore the brunt of the market tremors. Advertising agency RK Swamy lopped off 10 per cent to trade at Rs 199.15 from its previous days closing of 223.50. Bright Outdoor clipped 4.36 per cent at Rs 449.50 as against Signpost which went negative to the tune of 7.36 per cent to trade at Rs 235.40. Innokaiz India dropped to Rs 13.56 with a 4.98 per cent fall. Maxposure saw a 5.76 per cent decline settling at Rs 57.30. Meanwhile, DAPS Advertising India saw a dip of 2.86 per cent to Rs 17.00. (At around 4 pm, may vary according to the market)

    Despite the broader bloodbath on Dalal Street, the relatively cushioned fall of media and entertainment stocks could indicate investor confidence in the sector’s long-term fundamentals, or perhaps just temporary insulation from global trade frictions. Either way, for now, the M&E sector is holding its script, even as the markets slip into drama mode.  

  • GTPL Hathway signs grant of permission agreement with MIB for HITS

    GTPL Hathway signs grant of permission agreement with MIB for HITS

    MUMBAI: In a bold move, GTPL Hathway is preparing to colonise India’s broadcast wilderness. The Reliance Industries-owned cable TV and broadband maverick secured ministry of information & broadcasting (MIB)  approval in July 2024 to launch its Headend-In-The-Sky (HITS) project, with Rs 100 crore earmarked to execute it, subject to it being able to fulfill the laid-down guidelines.

    Having met them successfully, the company inked a grant of permission agreement (GOPA) with the ministry  on 27 March, securing a decade-long broadcast channel distribution mandate. The nerve centre? Ahmedabad for what could be a nationwide entertainment revolution. The company informed the Bombay stock exchange about the development through a regulatory filing. 

    Piyush Pankaj, the company’s chief strategy officer, had revealed during an analysts’ call in January 2025 that the project was 80 per cent complete. The idea was  to target satellite-dark regions, particularly the infrastructure-starved northern territories through the HITS service..

    The strategic thrust: by marrying cable TV and DTH technologies, GTPL aims to beam entertainment into the digital hinterlands where traditional infrastructure fears to lay its cables. It is believed that GTPL has leased twelve Telkomsat C-band transponders to broadcast the company’s digital dreams.

  • GTPL Hathway aims high with headend-in-the-sky launch in FY26

    GTPL Hathway aims high with headend-in-the-sky launch in FY26

    MUMBAI: Two companies have tried to deliver TV signals via this mode. One of them- Jain headend in the sky (Hits)  was too early – and had to be put to rest. The second -Nxt Digital from the Hinduja group – has only been able to take it a certain distance.  Now a third player is getting into the Hits game: the  Anirudhsinh Jadeja-headed  cable TV and broadband MSO GTPL Hathway.

    Speaking at the investor call after the declaration of its third quarter FY25  financials last week, GTPL Hathway business head B2B &  chief strategy officer Piyush Pankaj  admitted this while responding to a question from an analyst.

    Said he: “..we  are going to change the delivery technology which we are going on. I will talk about that in Q4, much in the Q4 as we are changing it from the fiber to satellite which we are doing right now going on to the Hits, but I will talk about the Hits in the next quarter and how it is going to give us the company the access to all over India, what are going to be main targets on that, how we are going to increase our subscriber base, how it is going to affect our costing and what the positive impact is going to happen on that. That is what we are going to give you in Q4. We are trying to launch that in FY26 this Hits and it is going to be very positive for the company.”

    Pankaj added that government clearances from some of its departments are pending  and the company was in the process of fulfilling  some of the licence obligations from the ministry of information and broadcasting.

    The company has already taken loans for the Hits project  and it is almost 80 per cent complete on the capex side, Pankaj  revealed. “We are just looking forward that by next quarter the whole project will be completed and we will be ready to launch,” he said. 

    Going by the fact that it has emerged as the largest active subscriber cable TV company  in the country, it is in the realms of possibility that its Hits project could well go on to be a major hit with customers. 

  • GTPL: Investing in Q3 FY 2025 for growth

    GTPL: Investing in Q3 FY 2025 for growth

    MUMBAI: It has been a challenging year for the cable TV industry, with increasing pressure on their broadband operations from wireless operators like Jio, Airtel, and Vi. Cord-cutting continues to grow, alongside the rise of cord-nevers. This trend is likely to be reflected in the financial results of listed MSOs and DTH operators.
    Some of these challenges are evident in the results of one of India’s top MSOs, GTPL Hathway, although the company is investing for growth.

    The Anirudhsinh Jadeja-led group reported a 7.64 per cent growth in revenue for the third quarter ended 31 December 2024, reaching Rs 565.16 crore, compared to Rs 521.69 crore in the corresponding period of the previous year. The company spent Rs 14.93 crore on the purchase of project material (nil in Q3 ended 31 December 2023). Operating expenses rose significantly to Rs 441.70 crore (Rs 364.22 crore), while finance costs increased to Rs 6.6 crore (Rs 4.4 crore). These higher costs impacted the profit before exceptional items and tax (PBEIT), which declined to Rs 14.24 crore (Rs 25.91 crore).

    Despite a lower tax outgo of Rs 3.58 crore (Rs 13.83 crore), net profit fell to Rs 10.66 crore (Rs 19.13 crore). Total comprehensive income also decreased to Rs 10.69 crore (Rs 19.21 crore).

    The company declared in its investor presentation that its active cable TV subscribers and paying subscribers were at 9.6 million and 8.9 million in Q3 FY25 as against 9.4 million  and 8.7 million in Q3FY24 respectively. Its subscription income from CATV fell six per cent in Q3FY25 to Rs 211.2 crore (Rs 225.1 crore in Q3FY24), while its placement income rose 21 per cent to Rs 308 crore (Rs 254.2 crore in Q3FY24).

    Its content costs climbed 14 per cent  to Rs 382.4 crore in Q3FY25 from Rs 335.1 crore. GTPL Hathway’s EBITDA fell 14 per cent to Rs 65.4 crore in Q3FY25 from Rs Rs 75.7 crore in Q3FY24. 

    On the broadband front, its active subscriber base at 1,042,000  in Q3 FY25 showed an increase of 37,000 over the previous year’s corresponding quarters. Average revenue per user too rose by Rs 5 to Rs 465 in the same period. Its home passes were higher by 350,000 touching 5.95 million by 31 December 2024. 

    On a nine-month basis ending 31 December 2024, GTPL Hathway reported total income of Rs 1653.37 crore, up from Rs 1545.56 crore in the same period the previous year. However, expenditure on project material rose to Rs 21.70 crore (Rs 0 in the previous year’s comparative period). Higher operating expenses at Rs 1196.57 crore (Rs 1087.1 crore) and increased finance costs (Rs 15.61 crore vs Rs 11.55 crore) led to a lower PBEIT of Rs 53.48 crore (Rs 90.07 crore). Net profit after tax fell to Rs 39.65 crore, compared to Rs 66.29 crore.

    During the current quarter, GTPL sold its entire 61 per cent  equity stake (12,200 shares) in its subsidiary GTPL Bansidhar Telelink for Rs 0.12 million. Additionally, it entered into a share transfer agreement to acquire the remaining 49 per cent stake (1,00,000 equity shares of Rs 10 each) in its subsidiary GTPL Vision Services from existing shareholders for Rs 1131 per share, totaling Rs 113.10 million.

    The company clarified that revenue from operations includes projects executed by the group, amounting to Rs 7.6 crore for the quarter and nine months ended 31 December 2024, compared to Rs 41.64 crore for the same periods in the previous year and the year ended 31 March 2024.

  • Assamese channel Prag News engages Kunal Deshamukhya as COO

    Assamese channel Prag News engages Kunal Deshamukhya as COO

    MUMBAI: Prag News – Assam’s oldest news channel – has got a new operational boss. Veteran Kunal Deshamukhya has joined AM Television Pvt Ltd – the company which runs the news channel – as chief operating officer.

    Kunal has been in the television and distribution trade and has in the past worked with Star India, Star Den, BBC Worldwide, GTPL Hathway, Digi Jadoo Broadband and Afghani channel Ariana Radio and TV network. He has had stints with Joyco, Mother Dairy and has also tried his hand at turning entrepreneur.

    Prag News which is beaming off a GSat 30 transponder is owned by chairman & managing director Sanjive Narain.

    A free to air service, it is available on various DPOs including top ones like: Tata Play, Airtel DTH, and Dish TV.

     

  • GTPL Hathway: net profit plummets, revenue rises nine per cent in Q2 FY 2025

    GTPL Hathway: net profit plummets, revenue rises nine per cent in Q2 FY 2025

    MUMBAI: Ahmedabad-hqed GTPL Hathway Ltd’s results for Q2 FY 2025 ended on 30 September 2024 are a bit of a mixed bag, according to the company’s filings with the Bombay stock exchange.

    Total consolidated income rose nine per cent to Rs 8,620 million as against Rs 7,900 million in the corresponding quarter of the previous year. Net profit however plunged 62 per cent at Rs 129 million as against Rs 344 million (Q2 FY2024). EBITDA for Q2 FY25 stood at Rs 1,138 million (Rs 1,351 million); EDITDA margin was at 13.2 per cent (17.1 per cent), operating EBITDA margin was at 22 per cent (25.2 per cent).

    GTPL Hathway’s active digital cable TV subscribers rose by 100,000 over the previous year’s corresponding quarter to touch 9.50 million, even as paying subscribers rose by a similar number reaching  8.80 million.

    Its broadband subs also jumped by 50,000 to get to 1.04 million with home passes standing at 5.95 million, a pole vault of 400,000 year on year.  Of the 5.95 million, 75 per cent are FTTX conversion ready, the MSO says. Average revenue per user for broadband stood at a chunky Rs 460 while data consumption per user was 350 GB per month, an increment of 13 per cent year on year.

    According to GTP Hathway managing director Anirudhsinh Jadeja what helped the cable TV MSO retain its no 1 position as the largest operator in the country in Q2 2025 is its sharp focus on innovation and enhancing customer experience. 

    Anubhai (as he is called in the trade) added: “Broadband business is witnessing healthy subscriber growth, propelled by both direct customer additions and with strategic use of our extensive partner network to expand. In the cable business, our efforts are focused on growing our subscriber base through a mix of organic growth and industry consolidation via acquisitions of existing operators and MSOs. This dual strategy strengthens our market position and builds on our success.”

    He explained that the company added the customer app GTPL Buzz, relaunched its website (gtpl.net), introduced TV everywhere, Blacknut cloud gaming, Distro TV, while integrating its AI-enabled app Giva for sales as well as support during the quarter.

    “These customer touchpoints have been designed for a consistent user experience and to deliver seamless interaction across platforms and devices,” said Anubhai.

    GTPL’s shares rose Rs 2.65 to end the day at Rs165.65.