BEML dividend 2026: ₹2.30 record date details
BEML Ltd
BEML
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Announcement snapshot
BEML has declared a dividend of ₹2.30 per share, with the record date and ex-dividend date both stated as 05-Jun-2026. The update is positioned as part of the company’s regular dividend distributions aimed at shareholder value. The disclosure also notes that investors should track the ex-dividend date to confirm eligibility for the payout. Alongside the ₹2.30 declaration, the source material also mentions, separately, that the “latest dividend declared by BEML is of 0.46 per share for the financial year as announced on 05-Jun-2026.”
Key dates investors need to note
For the ₹2.30 per share dividend, the record date is listed as 05-Jun-2026. The ex-dividend date is also listed as 05-Jun-2026. This alignment matters because shares need to be held in time for the ex-dividend cut-off to be eligible for the dividend. Investors who purchase shares on or after the ex-dividend date are typically not eligible for that declared dividend, based on how ex-dates work in equities.
What BEML has declared: ₹2.30 per share
The dividend value is listed as ₹2.30 per share and described as a “Second Interim Dividend” with “46%” shown in the description. The announcement date for this entry is given as 29-May-26, and the record and ex-dividend dates are both given as 05-Jun-26. This provides a clear window for investors monitoring eligibility.
Latest declared dividends table
The following table consolidates the dividend items and dates provided in the source.
FY2026 dividend trail mentioned in the data
Beyond the June 2026 ₹2.30 per share entry, the dataset lists an interim dividend declared on 06-Feb-2026. For that interim dividend, the record date is stated as 13-Feb-2026 and the dividend per share is ₹2.50. The “BEML Latest Dividend” block also provides a dividend yield of 0.14% for that interim payout. It also lists an LTP value of ₹1740.05 for the same entry.
Dividend history points and older payouts
The dividend history table excerpt includes older entries such as a final dividend of ₹15.50 declared on 12-May-2024 with record date shown as 14-Sep-2024, and an interim dividend of ₹5.00 declared on 08-Feb-2024 with record date 16-Feb-2024. It also lists dividends of ₹5.00 for several earlier instances, including 26-May-2023 (final), 10-Feb-2023 (interim), 27-May-2022 (final), and 22-Mar-2022 (interim). The dataset further lists a final dividend of ₹1.20 on 11-Jun-2021 and an interim dividend of ₹4.80 on 10-Feb-2021.
What the dataset says about dividend yield and frequency
A separate block states: “BEML Ltd dividend yield is 0.56.” It also says BEML has declared 6 dividends since 2024. Another line states that, in the past 12 months, BEML Ltd has given a dividend of ₹19.00 per share. These are useful summary indicators, but they should be read alongside the detailed date-wise tables to understand what period each summary refers to.
Conflicting totals: what to verify before acting
The source includes multiple statements about annual or recent dividend totals that do not align with each other. It states, “Last year, BEML Ltd gave ₹6.00 for the full year,” and separately says “Annual dividend payment: ₹6.00.” Another line says, “BEML Ltd has declared dividend worth ₹4.80 in the last year.” Elsewhere, it states “BEML has paid a total dividend of ₹41.70 in 2023-2025,” and also includes a separate statement: “BEML Limited has an annual dividend of 35.50 INR per share, with a yield of 0.92%,” along with an ex-dividend date of May 15, 2025 and a cash amount of 15.000 INR. Given these inconsistencies, investors typically cross-check dividend totals using company filings and exchange disclosures, and rely on the specific announcement, record date, and ex-date for eligibility.
How eligibility works using the ex-dividend date
Eligibility is tied to whether the shares are held in time for the ex-dividend date. For the ₹2.30 per share dividend, the ex-dividend date is stated as 05-Jun-2026. The record date is also 05-Jun-2026, which is the date used by the company to determine the list of shareholders eligible for the payout. In practice, investors focus on the ex-dividend date because it reflects the market cut-off.
What to track next
The dataset provides clear date markers for the ₹2.30 second interim dividend and the ₹2.50 interim dividend earlier in February 2026. For the 30-May-26 entry showing ₹0.55 as a final dividend, the record date and ex-dividend date fields are not provided in the table excerpt. Investors monitoring the next step generally look for the missing dates and the eventual payment details in the official dividend communication and exchange updates.
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