MAM
Jindal Steel chief quits days before board sits down to crunch the numbers
Gautam Malhotra cites personal commitments as he steps down, with results meeting and successor search both looming
NEW DELHI: Gautam Malhotra has walked out of the corner office at Jindal Steel, and he has picked his moment. The chief executive’s resignation, effective from the close of business on 15 July, lands just over a week before the board gathers to pore over the company’s unaudited numbers for the first quarter of the 2027 financial year. Awkward timing, to put it mildly.
Malhotra had held the top job since 28 October last year, barely nine months in the chair before calling it quits. His exit letter, filed with the exchanges, is a model of corporate brevity: he asked to be relieved of his duties “due to personal commitments,” and thanked the board, his colleagues and the wider Jindal Steel team for their support. No fireworks, no airing of grievances, just a clean, quiet departure.
The company has offered nothing beyond that. No reason has been fleshed out, no successor named, and no timeline given for who takes the wheel next. The board meeting on 24 July, called to approve the quarter’s financial results, will now double as the first real test of how the company plans to fill the gap.
Jindal Steel remains one of the country’s leading steelmakers, and leadership voids at that scale rarely stay unfilled for long. But for now, the story is the vacancy itself: a chief executive gone, a results day bearing down, and a boardroom that has some fast talking to do.




