‘Dhurandhar,’ IPL Power India’s Reliance Industries’ Media Business to $3.7 Billion Revenue
Reliance Industries’ media and entertainment operations generated revenue of INR34,917 crore ($3.7 billion) in FY26, chair Mukesh Ambani disclosed at the company’s annual general meeting in Mumbai on
Reliance Industries’ media and entertainment operations generated revenue of INR34,917 crore ($3.7 billion) in FY26, chair Mukesh Ambani disclosed at
Read Full Story at Variety →The revelation that Reliance Industries’ media and entertainment arm, now rebranded as ‘Dhurandhar,’ has crossed the $3.7 billion revenue threshold in FY26 underscores a pivotal moment in India’s rapidly evolving digital and content landscape. While the headline figures grab attention, the underlying story is one of strategic transformation—how a conglomerate once synonymous with petrochemicals and telecom has pivoted toward a future where storytelling, streaming, and sports converge into a high-stakes entertainment ecosystem. For global investors, this signals India’s media market is no longer a secondary growth play but a primary battleground where scale, technology, and consumer behavior collide. A less-discussed layer to this development is the structural evolution of Reliance’s media assets. The rebranding to ‘Dhurandhar’—named after a legendary 19th-century musician—isn’t merely cosmetic; it reflects a deliberate attempt to reposition the business beyond traditional broadcasting. By integrating Viacom18, Network18, and JioCinema under a unified identity, Reliance is leveraging synergies between content creation, distribution via Jio’s telecom infrastructure, and monetization through subscriptions and advertising. This vertical integration mirrors global trends seen in companies like Disney and Warner Bros., but with an Indian twist: unparalleled access to a young, digital-native population hungry for both local and global content. Looking ahead, the key question is whether this revenue growth translates into sustained profitability, especially as competition intensifies. With JioCinema aggressively undercutting global platforms on pricing and Reliance’s deep pockets funding sports rights (IPL, Olympics) at premiums, margins remain vulnerable to content inflation and subscriber fatigue. Moreover, regulatory scrutiny over market dominance—already a sore point in telecom—could spill into media if JioCinema’s rapid rise is seen as an abuse of its telecom-OTT bundle. Ultimately, ‘Dhurandhar’ represents more than a corporate milestone; it’s a bellwether for India’s ambition to become a soft power through cultural exports. If Reliance can balance scale with profitability, it won’t just redefine media in South Asia—it could set a new template for how conglomerates worldwide monetize the intersection of technology and entertainment.
