 NIIT Ltd posts consolidated PAT of Rs. 1.37 crore in Q2FY26
NIIT Ltd posts consolidated PAT of Rs. 1.37 crore in Q2FY26 Martin Burn Ltd Q2 FY2025-26 PAT at Rs. 58.84 lakhs
Martin Burn Ltd Q2 FY2025-26 PAT at Rs. 58.84 lakhs Aditya Birla Real Estate Ltd Q2 FY2026 consolidated loss at Rs. 15.74 crores
Aditya Birla Real Estate Ltd Q2 FY2026 consolidated loss at Rs. 15.74 crores TTK Prestige Ltd consolidated Q2FY26 PAT climbs to Rs. 64.24 crores
TTK Prestige Ltd consolidated Q2FY26 PAT climbs to Rs. 64.24 crores Dynamic Cables Ltd Q2FY26 net profit at Rs. 19.63 crores
Dynamic Cables Ltd Q2FY26 net profit at Rs. 19.63 crores 
              India's total external debt stock at US$ 242.8 billion as at end-September 2009 recorded an increase of US$ 18.2 billion or 8.1% over end-March 2009 estimates. The long-term debt increased by US$ 19.2 billion (10.6%) to US$ 200.4 billion, while short-term debt was lower by US$ 985 million (-2.3%) to US$ 42.4 billion. Over the previous quarter, the increase in external debt as at end-September 2009 was US$ 13.0 billion or 5.7%.
Of the total increase of US$ 18.2 billion in India's external debt at end-September 2009, the valuation effect on account of depreciation of US dollar against major international currencies accounted for US$ 8.3 billion or 45.6%. The increase in total external debt also reflected the impact of inclusion of cumulative SDR allocations to India by International Monetary Fund as a long-term debt liability in external debt statistics.
Short-term external debt by original maturity stood at US$ 42.4 billion at end-September 2009, while total short-term debt by residual maturity was US$ 93.2 billion, accounting for 38.4% of total external debt outstanding and 33.1% of foreign exchange reserves at end-September 2009.
Government (Sovereign) external debt was US$ 65.7 billion as at end-September 2009 as against US$ 55.9 billion as at end-March 2009. At this level, its share in total external debt was also higher at 27.1% at end-September 2009 (24.9% at end-March 2009). The ratio of Government external debt to GDP has remained around 5.0% in the last three years.
US dollar denominated debt accounted for 51.4% of total external debt at end-September 2009, followed by Indian rupee (16.6%), Japanese Yen (13.6%), SDR (12.0%) and Euro (3.9%).
The debt-service ratio i.e., the ratio of total debt service payments to current receipts worked out to 4.9% during April-September 2009 as against 3.7% for April-September 2008. The ratio of short-term external debt to foreign exchange reserves, which had increased from 14.8% at end-March 2008 to 17.2% at end-March 2009, was also lower at 15.1% at end-September 2009.