In its most recent quarterly results, Bharti Airtel Ltd. delivered a performance that not only caught the attention of investors but also prompted a wave of optimism across the brokerage community. The company’s second-quarter earnings revealed solid growth in revenue, an increasingly favourable average revenue per user (ARPU), and a forward-looking outlook that has analysts revising their target price upwards. This combination of strong operational metrics and positive sentiment has driven the company’s shares upward, reinforcing Airtel’s position as a telecom heavyweight with momentum on its side.
Robust financial results underpin rising investor confidence
Airtel’s Q2 numbers showed a commendable increase in topline revenue, indicating that demand in its core telecommunications business remains healthy. The company reported consolidated revenue of approximately ₹52,145 crore for the quarter, up from around ₹49,463 crore in the preceding period, marking a rise of about five per cent. Its earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) also grew, reaching roughly ₹29,561 crore, compared to ₹27,839 crore previously — an increase of around six per cent. The operating margin held steady at about 56.7 %, nearly matching the prior quarter’s 56.3 %. Meanwhile, net profit rose significantly, climbing to around ₹6,792 crore from ₹5,948 crore — a 14 % year-on-year uptick.
Beyond the raw numbers, a key driver of the improved results was the uptick in ARPU, which increased from approximately ₹250 to around ₹256, reflecting about a 2.4 % gain. This metric is viewed as critical in the telecom sector, because rising ARPU often signals that the operator is succeeding in persuading users to migrate to higher-value plans, use more services, or stay engaged longer. In Airtel’s case, the improvement in ARPU suggests that its strategy of focusing on premium or higher-usage segments may be paying dividends. The strong operational performance earned Airtel a boost in the market; its shares surged more than 2.5 % on the trading day following the results announcement, reaching intraday highs near ₹2,130 compared to a closing price of around ₹2,074 the previous day. Some brokerage houses also reported that Airtel’s one-year return had exceeded 32 % before the earnings release.
Analysts at Jefferies International Ltd. responded promptly, issuing a bullish note on Airtel which raised the 12-month target price from about ₹2,500 to around ₹2,635. The uptick in target price reflects their confidence in Airtel’s improving fundamentals and growth potential in both domestic and African markets. Furthermore, data from Bloomberg indicated that among the 32 analysts tracking the stock, 25 had assigned a “buy” rating, while only two had a “hold” and three had a “sell.” The consensus target price stood near ₹2,116 — which implied only flat returns from the previous price — yet the recent update clearly pushed sentiment higher.
Strategic growth drivers and medium-term outlook
While the latest quarter’s results were strong, Airtel’s forward outlook and strategic initiatives have arguably captured greater attention from investors. One key area is the company’s emphasis on increasing ARPU through premium services and value-added features. Rather than relying strictly on subscriber volume growth, Airtel appears to be focusing on enhancing the quality of its subscriber base — encouraging upgrades to higher tier plans, bundling services like 5G, home broadband, streaming and other digital offerings. This shift positions the company to benefit from a tariff environment in which sustainable margin growth depends less on cost arbitrage and more on value creation.
Another important growth vector is Airtel’s operations in Africa. The company’s presence across multiple African countries gives it exposure to a faster-growing telecom market, with potentially higher margins and less intense competition than the domestic Indian market. As global telecom investors increasingly seek diversification beyond traditional mature markets, Airtel’s Africa business becomes a differentiator and driver of incremental value. The fact that Jefferies explicitly cited outperforming Africa operations as part of the rationale for its target-price upgrade underscores the significance of this geography to Airtel’s growth story.
Additionally, Airtel continues to invest in network expansion and upgrade — particularly 5G deployment, fibre broadband rollout, and strengthening its digital services ecosystem. These investments are aimed at boosting capacity, reducing per-unit costs, and positioning Airtel to capture future growth in high-speed connectivity, enterprise services and digital solutions. The company’s ability to invest and monetise these assets effectively will likely be a key determinant of its success over the coming years.
From a strategic standpoint, rising ARPU, expanding into higher-value digital and broadband services, and growth in emerging markets position Airtel to benefit from longer-term structural trends — including data consumption growth, shift to fibre, and rising demand for bundled services. While the domestic telecom market in India remains intensely competitive, Airtel’s performance suggests a shift from volume competition toward differentiated value propositions and margin enhancement. The robust second-quarter showing, combined with revised analyst expectations, lends credence to the view that Airtel is entering a new phase of scalable profitability rather than mere subscriber accumulation.
The post Bharti Airtel’s Q2 earnings spark stock surge as bullish analyst outlook lifts market confidence | cliQ Latest appeared first on CliQ INDIA.
You may also like

Belgium drones LIVE: Airspace closed as flights cancelled at Brussels and Liège airports

CBDT successfully achieves targets of Special Campaign 5.0

Reckless driver killed dad-of-four after crashing £105k Audi at 102mph

Arne Slot makes feelings crystal clear on Liverpool crowd booing Trent Alexander-Arnold

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle issued dire warning after Andrew banishment




