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Indian Company Investor Calls

NHPC to Commission Four Units by March 2027

May 25, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

NHPC Limited — Q4 FY’26 Earnings Conference Call (Quarter & Year ended Mar 31, 2026) | May 18, 2026

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights strong operational momentum and commissioning progress, e.g., “very pleased and proud” and “commissioned four units… remaining four units… till March’27.”
  • Financial performance is framed positively: “PAT… 25% higher” and revenue “about 12% higher.”
  • Even when discussing headwinds (PAF down, insurance/DTL reversals), responses emphasize recoverability and regulatory pass-through.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Generation growth driven by commissioning
  • FY’26 generation +16% to 29,619 MUs, attributed to Parbati-II, Parbati-III, Karnisar Solar, Subansiri Lower (part), Uri-I, and NHDC.
  • PAF softness explained by planned outages/repairs
  • FY’26 PAF 74.75% vs 78.87%, mainly due to shutdowns for MIV repair works and gate/restoration activities.
  • Large hydro project execution with phased COD
  • Subansiri Lower: 4/8 units commissioned; remaining expected one-by-one till Mar’27.
  • Dibang: major contracts awarded; “Nal la diversion” achieved; completion Feb’32.
  • Teesta-V restoration: expected to resume generation June’26.
  • Renewables expansion continues
  • CPSU solar: 300 MW commissioned; remaining tranches expected by Jun’26 / Dec’26.
  • Additional solar projects expected by Oct’26 / Mar’27 (small scale) and grid-connected projects by Jun’26 / Dec’26.
  • PSP pipeline remains in DPR/PFR stage
  • Currently, we have 18 GW PSPs… at DPR/PFR stage” and expectation to start Indira Sagar–Omkareshwar (640 MW) in FY’26.
  • Regulatory accounting as a key driver of reported profitability
  • Multiple Q&A points revolve around tariff petitions, interim tariff, and conservative revenue booking (80% AFC).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Adjusted vs Reported PAT; one-off tax/regulatory accounting

  • Core questions
  • How to compute Adjusted PAT for the quarter; what is the adjustment magnitude?
  • Management response
  • Adjusted PAT differs due to DTL reversal from opting for lower tax regime (Sec. 115BAA): impact “around Rs. 1,156 Crore… net impact… around Rs. 900 Crore.”
  • If you reduce Rs. 900 Crore from the Reported PAT, you will arrive at Adjusted PAT.
  • Notable signals
  • Clear quantification; no evasion. Also confirmed as applicable standalone and consolidated.

Theme B: Project-level profitability (Parbati-II, Subansiri Lower) and reasons for quarter vs full-year swings

  • Core questions
  • Why Parbati-II shows profit in Q4 but loss for FY; what drives improvement?
  • Status of petitions; billing % and under-recovery.
  • Management response
  • Parbati-II Q4 profit attributed to booking shortfall recovery: “shortfall of energy… Rs. 200 Crore… booked under revenue.”
  • Billing: Parbati-II already billing 75% based on interim tariff; Subansiri Lower awaiting interim tariff.
  • Under-recovery quantified:
    • Parbati-II: booked revenue at 80% of AFC; gross-up implies ~Rs. 300 Crore under-recovery.
    • Subansiri Lower: ~Rs. 150 Crore under-recovery.
    • Total: ~Rs. 450 Crore not booked vs tariff petition filed.
  • Evasive/partial elements
  • Some answers are accounting-centric; less discussion on operational drivers beyond tariff/energy shortfall.
  • Strong/transparent elements
  • Quantification of under-recovery and explicit billing policy (“80% AFC booked conservatively”).

Theme C: Teesta-V restart and impact on top-line

  • Core questions
  • When Teesta-V will restart; impact on FY’26 and under-recovery.
  • Management response
  • June onwards… power station will start generation.”
  • there is no revenue, only expenditure” in Teesta-V; under-recovery framed via AFC: “total AFC… around Rs. 500 Crore… ~Rs. 400 Crore excluding tax.”
  • Notable signals
  • Confident restart timing (“June onwards”) but still conditional on restoration completion.

Theme D: Tariff timeline for revenue recognition at 100%

  • Core questions
  • CERC tariff hearing/order timelines for Parbati-II and Subansiri; when 100% revenue recognition can occur.
  • Management response
  • Parbati-II: hearing “25th of this month”; expecting order by “30th of June”; if order comes within a quarter, differential revenue + interest could be recognized in that quarter.
  • Subansiri Lower: interim tariff expected first; then final order “within… not more than six months” (qualitative expectation).
  • Credibility note
  • They provide a specific Parbati-II hearing date and a June order expectation—more concrete than prior quarters’ generalities.

Theme E: PSP/renewables pipeline; monsoon/El Niño generation risk

  • Core questions
  • When PSP construction starts; any slowdown in RE tendering/PPA signing; El Niño impact on generation; normative PAF.
  • Management response
  • PSP: “not started any construction… very early”; only expectation to start Omkareshwar PSP construction in current fiscal.
  • REIA/PPA: no recent tendering; previously awarded ~23 GW; hoping ~13 GW for PPA/PSA with ~7 GW signed; expects more clarity “in months to come.”
  • El Niño/monsoon: “No” slowdown expected; snow-fed stations reduce monsoon dependence.
  • Normative PAF: consolidated 82%, standalone 80%; actual lower due to Teesta-V inclusion (75% with Teesta-V; ~80% excluding it).
  • Notable signals
  • RE narrative is more cautious than earlier optimism: emphasizes PPA bottlenecks (connectivity timing, discom preference for storage/RTC).

Theme F: Cost escalation pass-through in regulated regime

  • Core questions
  • Will construction cost increases be passed through or hit margins?
  • Management response
  • cost plus… everything is allowed by CERC”; beyond-control increases are passed on; examples include geological surprises/design changes.
  • Strong signal
  • Direct regulatory assurance reduces perceived margin risk from cost overruns (at least for allowed costs).

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative / time-bound)

  • Subansiri Lower commissioning
  • four units… commissioned… remaining four units… till March’27.”
  • Teesta-V restoration
  • start generation in June’26.”
  • Solar (CPSU Tranche-II)
  • 100 MW Andhra Pradesh: expected by June’26
  • 600 MW Gujarat: expected by December’26
  • Solar other projects
  • 40 MW Ganjam, Odisha: expected by October’26
  • 50 MW Floating Solar, Kerala: expected by March’27
  • Grid-connected PV in Gujarat (RE Park Khavda): expected by June’26 and December’26 (stage-wise)
  • PSP
  • Expect to start construction of Indira Sagar–Omkareshwar (640 MW)in the current financial year.”
  • Parbati-II tariff
  • Hearing: 25 May
  • Expect order: “by 30th of June
  • Dibang / Teesta-V / other hydro schedules (from opening remarks)
  • Dibang completion: Feb’32
  • Teesta-VI commissioning: Sep’29
  • Rangit-IV commissioning: Nov’26
  • Ratle commissioning: Nov’28
  • Pakal Dul commissioning: 4Q FY’27
  • Kiru commissioning: 4Q FY’27
  • Kwar commissioning: Mar’28

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Revenue recognition remains constrained by tariff approvals
  • Continued conservative booking: “booking… at 80% of the AFC” until interim/final tariff orders.
  • Operational risk exists but is framed as manageable
  • Cost escalation “inherent” in hydro, but “allowed by CERC.”
  • RE growth may be bottlenecked by PPA/PSA signing mechanics
  • Connectivity availability (2029–30) and discom preference for storage/RTC are cited as friction points.

5. Standout Statements (direct / highly revealing)

  • Subansiri execution confidence
  • commissioned four units… remaining four units are expected to be commissioned one-by-one till March’27.”
  • Tariff-driven accounting policy
  • we are booking… at the rate of 80% of the tariff filed… conservative approach.”
  • Quantified under-recovery
  • Parbati-II and Subansiri Lower… Rs. 450 Crore of revenue has not been booked…”
  • Teesta-V restart
  • June onwards… we are very much sure… operation to get resumed.”
  • Regulatory pass-through assurance
  • cost plus… everything is allowed by CERC… there is no such concern.”
  • RE PPA bottleneck explanation
  • Discoms hesitant due to “connectivity… coming in 2029-30” and desire for “solar with the battery… 24-hour… RTC.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Red flags
Profitability is heavily shaped by regulatory/timing adjustments
– Multiple Q&A admissions: under-recovery due to conservative revenue booking; DTL reversal impacts Adjusted PAT.
Teesta-V remains a swing factor
– “no revenue, only expenditure” in FY’26; restart timing is crucial for future earnings.
RE growth depends on PPA/PSA signing and grid readiness
– Connectivity timing mismatch could delay revenue realization.

Positive signals
Commissioning momentum
– Multiple units commissioned/near-COD across hydro and solar.
Clear, quantified tariff/accounting mechanics
– Under-recovery and billing percentages are explicitly stated.
Regulatory confidence on cost pass-through
– Strong stance that CERC allows beyond-control cost increases.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY’26): More Optimistic
  • Strong commissioning language and “very pleased and proud.”
  • More concrete tariff timeline (Parbati-II hearing date; June order expectation).
  • Prior (Q3 FY’26, Feb 6 2026): More cautious/operationally focused
  • Emphasis on recovery of PAF and project progress; tariff recognition discussed but less “closure” tone.
  • Shift drivers
  • By Q4 FY’26, more assets are already commissioned (Subansiri units, solar), reducing execution uncertainty.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Subansiri Lower commissioning (from Q3 FY’26)
  • Past: “commissioned and declared COD of two units… third… within this week… fourth… by end of March’26.”
  • Current: “commissioned four units… remaining four… till March’27.”
  • ✅ Delivered (at least for 4 units by Mar’26; remaining extended to Mar’27).
  • Teesta-V restoration / generation restart
  • Past (Q3 FY’26): Teesta-V described as progressing; geological issue in HRT; targeted commissioning 2029 (project-level schedule).
  • Current: “start generation in June’26” (near-term restart).
  • ⏳ Partially Delivered / Narrative shift (from long-term commissioning framing to near-term generation resumption; suggests earlier restoration progress but still not “full” contribution).
  • REIA/PPA signing optimism (from Q3 FY’26)
  • Past: REIA discussion acknowledged demand drying down but still hopeful for PPA signing in “next 2–3 months” (Feb 2026 call).
  • Current: still cautious—no recent tendering; only ~7 GW signed out of ~13 GW hoped; “clarity in months.”
  • ⏳ Delayed / Not fully resolved (less optimistic than earlier hope).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “project pipeline” to “tariff/accounting mechanics”
  • Earlier calls focused heavily on construction milestones and CAPEX.
  • Current call Q&A spends significant time on under-recovery, billing %, interim tariff timing, and DTL/DTAs.
  • Teesta-V narrative tightened
  • Earlier: restoration/project progress.
  • Now: explicit earnings impact (“no revenue, only expenditure”) and restart month.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium credibility
  • Strength: consistent explanation of conservative revenue booking (80% AFC) and regulatory pass-through.
  • Weakness: reliance on timing of CERC orders and interim tariff hearings; outcomes depend on regulator schedules (Parbati-II order “by 30th June” is a near-term bet).
  • No major contradictions, but recurring “timing difference” framing can mask earnings volatility.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/Generation
  • Stable: snow-fed assets reduce monsoon risk; Teesta-V remains the exception.
  • Margins/Profitability
  • Volatility explained via regulatory/tax adjustments and under-recovery rather than operational cost control.
  • Expansion
  • Improving execution: more commissioning achieved vs earlier pipeline emphasis.
  • Regulatory/tariff
  • Increasing prominence: more questions on when 100% revenue recognition happens.

f. Additional Insights (cross-period intelligence)

  • Earnings quality is improving operationally but not “cleanly”
  • Reported PAT is up, but a meaningful portion is tied to DTL reversal and timing of tariff/energy shortfall bookings.
  • RE growth is structurally constrained
  • The connectivity year mismatch (2029–30) and discom preference for storage/RTC suggests NHPC’s RE monetization may lag capacity additions unless grid/storage requirements align.