Searched for
ANOOP BECTOR
Mrs Bectors Food Specialities Q3 results: PAT grows 86% to Rs 21 croreFor the nine month period ended December 2020, the net profit was up by 180 per cent to Rs 60 crore from Rs 21 crore in the corresponding p...
Post Burger King and Mrs Bectors stellar response, should investors bet big on QSRs?Shares of Westlife Development, which operates McDonald’s in the West and South through its subsidiary Hardcastle Restaurants, Speciality R...
Mrs Bectors IPO: Key takeaways from analyst meetMrs Bectors plans to use the IPO proceeds for financing its Rajpura expansion project by establishing a new production line for biscuits an...
Mrs Bectors Food Specialities files for Rs 800 crore IPOThe IPO will see sale of shares to the tune of Rs 800 crore by existing shareholders and promoters.
CX-led investors to buy $100 million stake in CremicaCX Partners is leading a consortium of investors to buy a 48% stake in Cremica, a homegrown maker of biscuits and bakery products, for $100...
Kedaara Capital, TA Associates eye 49% in CremicaCremica Group, founded by Rajni Bector, till recently was controlled by three siblings - Anoop, Akshay and Ajay Bector - with equal shareho...
We hope to be in metros & big cities by year-end: Akshay BectorThat’s not entirely true. We work closely with restaurants and coffee chains in the condiments space — through that channel we have been na...
- Cremica set for stake sale post family rejig
Cremica, founded by Rajni Bector 35 years ago, is now controlled by three siblings Anoop, Akshay and Ajay Bector with equal shareholding.
- Goldman may pull out of Bector’s
Goldman Sachs has revived its plans to sell 10% stake in Mrs Bector’s Food Specialities, makers of Cremica biscuits and ketchup, as the inv...
- Rising star: Cremica Group venturing into different snack segments
Ludhiana-based Cremica Group is the third largest ketchup maker in the country, one of the largest manufacturers of vegetarian mayonnaise a...
- No copyright music without licence this year
Bombay High Court order that barred hotels and other commercial establishments in the city from playing copyright music without licence.