📊 Key Highlights (Airtel Tower Edition)
| Metric | FY25 | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue | ₹30,123 Cr | 📈 +5.3% |
| Net Profit | ₹9,932 Cr | 🚀 +64.5% |
| EBITDA | ₹20,845 Cr | 🪜 +41.9% |
| Towers Held | 2.49 Lakh | 🏗️ More than Indian marriages |
| Sharing Factor | 1.63 | 👯 Slightly less than your Netflix account |
🏗️ “We Build Towers. Please Use Them.”
Indus Towers is that guy who builds infrastructure but gets friend-zoned by telecom operators. In FY25, they posted nearly ₹10,000 crore in profit — which is impressive considering nobody outside the telecom world knows they exist.
Even the net profit grew like your parents’ hopes when you finally got a haircut — a whopping 64.5% YoY.
😬 Q4 FY25 — A Little Static in the Signal
| Metric | Q4 FY25 | Q4 FY24 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | ₹7,727 Cr | ₹7,196 Cr | 📈 +7.4% |
| Net Profit | ₹1,779 Cr | ₹1,854 Cr | 📉 -4% |
| Excuses Made | Countless | ✔️ Normal |
And why did profit fall?
Because they set aside ₹226 crore in provisions.
For what? “Doubtful receivables.” Aka: “We called, they didn’t pick up.”
📞 Still India’s Largest Missed Call Enabler
Indus owns 2,49,305 towers. Yes, the kind you ignore every day while scrolling memes. But they’re critical infrastructure — and they’re now renting them out with better efficiency.
Imagine owning land, then charging people rent to stand on it. Now imagine doing that 2.5 lakh times.
That’s Indus Towers.
Except, when one tenant doesn’t pay (like cough Vodafone Idea cough), they quietly take a ₹200+ crore

