Ravindra Energy Limited, a small-cap renewable energy firm, saw its stock hit the 20% upper circuit after a stellar March quarter. The company reported a 495% quarter-on-quarter rise in net profit, pushing shares to ₹143.50 from the previous close of ₹119.60.
The solar power player posted a Q4 FY25 consolidated revenue of ₹158.99 crore, up 428% year-on-year and 199% quarter-on-quarter. Net profit turned positive, rising from a loss of ₹63.40 crore in Q4 FY24 to a profit of ₹12.90 crore this quarter.
Most of the revenue—96.75%—came from solar energy sales, with the rest from trading activities. Earnings per share jumped to ₹0.74 from ₹0.14 in Q3 FY25, marking a 428.57% surge.
Full-Year Performance
FY25 was a turnaround year. Revenue rose 91% to ₹250.42 crore from ₹130.96 crore in FY24. Net profit improved from a loss of ₹50.89 crore to a gain of ₹21.81 crore.
Project Pipeline & Expansion
Headquartered in Mumbai, Ravindra Energy is scaling up its solar presence. It is working on a 130 MWp solar project under the KUSUM C scheme with MSEDCL. Of this, 40 MWp is scheduled for completion by March 2025, and the rest by August 2025.
The firm also secured a 44 MW award under the same scheme, with a July 2026 commissioning timeline. In Karnataka, it has completed over 30 MW of utility-scale solar projects, signaling growing operational strength.
As clean energy demand rises, Ravindra Energy’s performance reflects strong execution and renewed investor interest in India’s solar power space.
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Investors: Knowing What Not to Do
Matters More Than Knowing What to Do
In investing, returns often improve naturally when common mistakes are avoided. Over time, by observing and interacting with many investors, certain behavioral patterns clearly stand out. These traits usually indicate investors who struggle to succeed in the stock market.
Investors who panic easily and sell as soon as markets fall slightly.
Those who lack patience and expect fast results.
People who treat the stock market like a gambling platform instead of investing in real businesses.
Investors who borrow money to invest, especially during bull markets.
Individuals who book profits too early without letting investments grow.
Overactive traders who frequently buy and sell but believe they are long-term investors.
Emotional investors whose decisions are driven by market noise or personal life situations.
People who focus more on lifestyle display and status rather than disciplined wealth building.
Investors with irregular income who fail to invest consistently, limiting the power of compounding over time.
Those who stop learning after making some money and lose the drive to grow further.
Investors who blindly follow tips from social media, influencers, or news without doing their own research.
People who don’t review their mistakes and keep repeating the same errors.
Those who ignore risk management and invest without understanding downside possibilities.
Investors who constantly compare their returns with others and make impulsive changes.
People who have no long-term plan and keep changing strategies every few months.
Often, it’s the blind spots we are unaware of that lead to disappointing outcomes. If you recognize any of these traits in yourself, working on them can make a big difference. Stock market investing is a journey of learning first and earning later. Unfortunately, many investors try to earn first and learn later.