Stock Name | LTP | Change (%) | Volume | Market Cap | P/E Ratio | 52 Weeks High | 52 Weeks Low | 1M Return | 3M Return | 1Yr Return | 5Yr Return |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jsw Steel Limited | ₹1,141.30 | +0.08 | 22,08,479 | ₹2,78,965.16 | 37.45 | ₹1,284.70 | ₹905.20 | -5.91 | -3.76 | +9.31 | +120.54 |
| Jindal Steel Power Ltd | ₹1,137.90 | +0.04 | 14,85,498 | ₹1,16,147.23 | 58.56 | ₹1,272.10 | ₹770.00 | -2.61 | +5.21 | +25.71 | +197.22 |
| Jsw Energy Limited | ₹491.10 | +1.44 | 30,45,689 | ₹85,993.10 | 37.79 | ₹557.40 | ₹427.75 | +4.92 | -4.99 | -6.84 | +467.42 |
| Jindal Stainless Limited | ₹717.80 | +1.84 | 8,41,249 | ₹59,172.72 | 20.12 | ₹884.00 | ₹496.60 | -4.92 | -17.08 | +20.72 | +923.97 |
| Jsw Infrastructure Ltd | ₹241.25 | -2.70 | 21,77,316 | ₹50,715.04 | 31.41 | ₹349.00 | ₹237.76 | -2.21 | -14.36 | -25.19 | - |
| JSW Cement Ltd | ₹115.94 | +1.05 | 9,77,234 | ₹15,821.85 | 155.25 | ₹162.15 | ₹106.65 | -2.85 | -4.39 | -20.63 | - |
| Jsw Holdings Limited | ₹11,916.00 | +1.31 | 3,685 | ₹13,239.47 | 92.69 | ₹27,740.00 | ₹11,250.00 | -26.10 | -39.16 | -53.76 | +204.81 |
| Jindal Saw Limited | ₹191.79 | +0.24 | 28,21,149 | ₹12,268.97 | 10.90 | ₹277.95 | ₹153.00 | +13.39 | +11.06 | -30.60 | +413.49 |
| Maharashtra Seamless Ltd | ₹588.40 | +1.36 | 2,20,028 | ₹7,887.20 | 9.38 | ₹773.80 | ₹500.70 | +6.84 | +5.49 | -19.06 | +324.38 |
| Jindal Poly Films Limited | ₹772.35 | +5.00 | 1,22,156 | ₹3,382.06 | 21.63 | ₹1,026.45 | ₹365.00 | +16.20 | +61.97 | +8.91 | +4.34 |
Jindal Group has built its business across steel, power, and infrastructure over the years. These three areas are not separate from each other. They share supply chains, resources, and business relationships. That connection is what gives the group much of its operational strength. Here is a look at what each area covers.
Steel is where Jindal Group made its name. The companies in this space produce pipes, plates, strips, hollow sections, and structural steel that go into construction, oil and gas, defence, and manufacturing. This is a large-scale, long-running business and the group has developed considerable production capacity over time. Investors tracking metals and materials tend to keep steel stocks India from the Jindal Group on their watchlist, simply because the scale and diversity of products makes these companies worth following.
Jindal Group has a presence in power generation through both thermal plants and renewable energy projects. The electricity these companies produce goes to industrial consumers, utility buyers, and the national grid. India is actively building out its energy capacity right now, and Jindal Group has a role in that ongoing expansion.This has brought energy infrastructure stocks from Jindal into focus for investors looking at the power sector as a long term opportunity rather than a short term trade.
On the infrastructure side, the group works on ports, industrial corridors, and road projects. This fits naturally with what the rest of the group does. When a company already has steel production and power generation in house, taking on infrastructure projects becomes more practical and cost efficient. You can see how these pieces fit together when you look at the full list of Jindal companies listed across NSE and BSE.
Jindal Group companies are in businesses where outside conditions genuinely matter. Steel prices, infrastructure spending, and global trade can all affect how a company performs in a given quarter. So if you are following Jindal group stocks, these are the things worth paying attention to beyond just the price chart.
Steel prices move regularly and the reasons are not always obvious. Global demand, production volumes in major steel making countries, and raw material supply all influence where prices land. When steel prices are strong, Jindal’s steel companies tend to report better margins. When prices fall, the effect on earnings is usually quick. The added complexity here is that coal and iron ore costs do not always move the same way as steel prices. So even in periods where steel realizations seem reasonable, high input costs can still drag margins down. People tracking steel stocks India from the Jindal Group really need to look at both the revenue and cost side together rather than just the headline steel price.
India’s infrastructure build out has kept demand fairly consistent for many Jindal businesses. Highways, ports, railways, and urban construction all need structural steel, pipes, and related materials. The group supplies into this demand chain, which means government capex has a direct link to order books and revenues for Jindal companies listed on NSE and BSE. When public sp
Jindal group stocks are shares of companies that belong to the Jindal Group through ownership, promoter holding, or subsidiary links. These are listed on NSE (National Stock Exchange) and BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange) and cover steel, power, and infrastructure businesses.
Yes, mostly. Steel and infrastructure tend to follow economic conditions closely. Strong growth periods bring better demand and margins, while slowdowns hit order books and earnings. That cycle is a regular part of how Jindal group stocks behave.
Jindal companies are mainly in steel, power, and infrastructure. A few also touch mining and industrial supply. These segments connect and support each other, which gives the group a reasonable level of operational strength across its listed companies.