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Indian Company Investor Calls

JSW Energy Targets 3GW Delivery, Cites ₹11,041cr EBITDA

May 18, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

JSW Energy Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Conference Call (held 11 May 2026; FY ended 31 Mar 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management highlights “highest-ever annual EBITDA of ₹11,041 crore”, “accelerating earnings delivery” in FY27, and “strong visibility into future EBITDA” from a “fully contracted under-construction book”.
  • They repeatedly emphasize confidence on execution (“we are confident at this time that definitely 3 GW… will happen without any challenge”) and demand tailwinds (“demand growth rebounding to 2.2% in Q4”, FY27 YTD “4.6%”).

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Scale + integration driving earnings
  • FY26: installed capacity up 2.6 GW to 13.45 GW; generation up 58% YoY; “highest-ever annual EBITDA”.
  • Inorganic integration: O2 Power integration progressing; KSK Mahanadi ramp-up with cost efficiencies and healthy PLF.
  • Demand environment: muted H1, recovery in Q4; structural growth intact
  • FY26 national demand growth 0.9% (monsoon softness), but “from Q4 FY26 onwards… recovery” and FY27 YTD 4.6%.
  • Peak demand trajectory: ~270 GW expected summer 2026 vs 250 GW record May 2024.
  • Merchant market: still soft, but company protects realizations
  • Merchant exchange prices averaged ~₹3.86/unit; JSW Energy maintains “~20% plus premium” via back-to-back short-term contracts.
  • tariffs firm up in FY2027 as summer cooling demand builds.”
  • Execution visibility via contracted under-construction pipeline
  • Under construction: 14 GW, “all… fully tied up under long-term PPAs”.
  • Locked-in capacity: 32.1 GW, “on track to deliver the 30 GW target by 2030”.
  • Thermal optionality + de-risking
  • Thermal regained prominence as baseload; Salboni expansion (PPA secured) and supply-chain de-risking (Toshiba-JSW JV strengthening; GE boiler business acquisition expected within two quarters).
  • KSK: PPA back-downs monetized via short-term market sales; normalized with summer demand.
  • Grid/evacuation constraints acknowledged but framed as manageable
  • Curtailment due to evacuation constraints: 160 million units curtailed; “significant portion… under permanent recovery” (tariff received), with limited revenue loss (~₹16 cr quarter; ~₹50 cr FY), expected to be “over by July’26” with new evacuation line.
  • Energy storage build-out + vertical integration
  • Locked-in storage: 29.6 GWh (incl. 3.2 GWh BESS and 26.4 GWh pumped hydro).
  • Pune 5 GWh battery assembly facility commissioned in Q4 FY26; “commercial sales… commenced”.
  • Blade manufacturing at Halol scheduled H1 FY27 to reduce capex/logistics/FX exposure.

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: Renewables commissioning plan (FY27/FY28)

  • Core questions
  • FY27 RE commissioning guidance: total GW and wind vs solar split; any FY28 number.
  • Timing of commissioning across quarters (Q1–Q4).
  • Management response
  • FY27: “approximately close to about 3 GW” additions; split: “35%-40% wind, rest… solar”.
  • Commissioning phasing: “uniformly divided between H1 and H2” (exact numbers “difficult”).
  • FY28: no explicit quantitative guidance given.
  • Assessment
  • Clear FY27 direction; FY28 remains unspecified (partial/deflective on longer horizon).

Theme B: Capex funding, CWIP, and project economics

  • Core questions
  • How capex (~₹20,000 cr) is funded (equity vs debt; preference shares/warrants already planned).
  • CWIP levels for RE and thermal by end FY26; expected CWIP mix by project type.
  • Management response
  • Funding: cashflows + existing leverage guardrails; “within those ratios, we will be able to easily manage ₹20,000 crores”; also “additional ₹1,800 crores of warrants”.
  • CWIP: “total of about ₹17,300 crores of CWIP₹11,200 is for RE”.
  • Capex allocation rough split: “₹4,000-₹5,000 crores for thermal and pump storage… rest… wind and solar space, and battery energy.”
  • Assessment
  • Reasonably specific CWIP and rough capex allocation; no detailed funding mix (debt vs equity) beyond qualitative “within ratios”.

Theme C: KSK Mahanadi minority acquisition, PPA/merchant strategy, and EBITDA drivers

  • Core questions
  • Minority acquisition consideration: whether crystallized and amount.
  • PPA strategy for remaining units: remain merchant or convert to long-term PPA.
  • Merchant contribution to KSK EBITDA (quantification).
  • Tariff reduction impact trajectory (UPPCL) and FY27/FY28 EBITDA outlook.
  • Management response
  • Minority acquisition: “not yet crystallized”; expects “by end of Q2”.
  • PPA: discussions ongoing; “in a longer term, we prefer… long term PPA”; merchant optionality supported by low fuel cost.
  • Merchant EBITDA in quarter: disclosed as “EBITDA from the merchant sale was 203 crores” (for the quarter).
  • Tariff reduction: acknowledged impact but offset by efficiency/cost actions; management also reiterated base case framing:
    • steady state EBITDA of 2,700” (base case) and confidence to deliver better.
  • Assessment
  • Strong on merchant EBITDA disclosure; minority acquisition amount remains withheld (timing only).

Theme D: Grid curtailment, DSM, and regulatory impacts

  • Core questions
  • Quantify curtailment impact on EBITDA (₹ terms).
  • DSM regulation impact and whether “X factor” could rise by 2030.
  • Curtailment assumptions in bidding; DSM “fact X=0” vs grouping at substation.
  • Management response
  • Curtailment: “loss of around 15 crores during the quarter and full year approximately 50 crores”; expected to end after July’26 evacuation line.
  • DSM: impact budgeted “between 1.5% – 2%” of revenues; clarified it is “without grouping” and with grouping it reduces; “not as 2% to 2.5%” and “some… already there”.
  • Curtailment: emphasized group captive (~1 GW) insulated; long-term PPA economics protected; DSM worst-case framed as conservative.
  • Assessment
  • More transparent on curtailment ₹ impact; DSM answer includes methodology clarifications (grouping vs no grouping).

Theme E: Supply chain / West Asia conflict / cost protection

  • Core questions
  • Whether West Asia conflict increases supply chain disruption costs and impacts IRRs.
  • BESS pack prices and execution impact.
  • Management response
  • Wind: fixed-price, fixed-currency contract for 2.4 GW signed in Mar-Apr 2024; “insulated… next at least 1.5 years”.
  • Solar: next 2–2.5 years executed before ALMM timing; “benchmark return IRRs… remains protected”.
  • BESS pack prices: refused to give a number (“varying… Tier 1/2/3… difficult”); cited cost optimization via in-house assembly.
  • Assessment
  • Strong cost-insulation narrative; BESS price transparency limited.

Theme F: BESS business model and margins

  • Core questions
  • Margin profile, revenue contribution, order book status for BESS cell-to-pack assembly.
  • Whether to set up merchant BESS or preponed battery for merchant arbitrage.
  • Management response
  • BESS ramp-up: captive first; outside market after testing/approvals; “Maybe next time… share revenue and financial numbers.”
  • Merchant BESS: evaluating, but not immediate; argued curtailment makes “temporary” merchant arbitrage less attractive vs 12-year battery life and benchmark returns.
  • Assessment
  • Clear strategic stance; financial/margin disclosure deferred.

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • FY27 capacity additions (RE):approximately close to about 3 GW
  • Wind/solar mix: “35%-40% wind, rest… solar
  • FY27 capex:capex spent of around Rs 20,000 Crores for the year
  • FY27 demand tailwind: FY27 YTD demand growth “4.6% YoY” (qualitative metric but stated as a number)
  • FY27 earnings direction:expected to be a year of accelerating earnings delivery” (directional, not numeric)
  • Under-construction commissioning visibility:14 GW… fully tied up” (visibility statement)
  • FY27 RE commissioning phasing:uniformly divided between H1 and H2” (qualitative split)

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Execution confidence despite grid constraints
  • 3 GW… without any challenge
  • Curtailment expected to be “over by July’26
  • Merchant market improvement
  • tariffs firm up in FY2027 as summer cooling demand builds
  • Base case EBITDA framing
  • For KSK: “steady state EBITDA of 2,700” and confidence to deliver better.

5. Standout Statements (direct / high-signal)

  • FY2026… highest-ever annual EBITDA of ₹11,041 crore.”
  • FY2027 is expected to be a year of accelerating earnings delivery.
  • This high-quality, fully contracted under-construction book gives us strong visibility into future EBITDA.
  • Curtailment monetization: “a significant portion of this 160 MUs is under permanent recovery… thus not impacting our revenue.
  • Execution confidence: “we are confident at this time that definitely 3 GW of capacity addition will happen without any challenge.
  • KSK merchant disclosure: “EBITDA from the merchant sale was 203 crores” (quarter).
  • DSM methodology: “it is not 0… it is 1.5% to 2%… without grouping is what I have said.
  • Cost insulation: “fixed price contract… fixed in terms of the currency also… insulated… next at least 1.5 years” (wind).
  • Funding flexibility: “we have an additional ₹1,800 crores of warrants” (if timing changes).

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Strong operational metrics: PLF strength (KSK Q4 PLF 93%, thermal portfolio 78% Q4, 73% FY).
– Clear curtailment quantification and timeline (“~₹50 cr FY impact… expected to be over by July’26”).
– Contracting/visibility emphasis: “fully tied up under long-term PPAs” for under-construction book.
– Cost protection narrative (fixed-price wind contract; solar execution before ALMM timing).

Red flags
Limited transparency on some key numbers:
– Minority acquisition consideration amount not disclosed (“not yet crystallized”).
– BESS pack pricing refused; BESS margin/revenue contribution deferred (“next time”).
Guidance is mostly directional:
– FY27 capex is given, but no explicit EBITDA/margin guidance.
Regulatory/market uncertainty acknowledged:
– DSM impact framed as worst-case; DSM “grouping” assumptions matter.
– Merchant market still described as “soft” through most of FY26.


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

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY26): More Optimistic
  • Moves from earlier “weather-led softness” framing (Q3 FY26) to “accelerating earnings delivery” and “highest-ever annual EBITDA”.
  • What changed
  • More confidence on execution (“3 GW… without any challenge”) and clearer monetization of curtailment.
  • More emphasis on earnings conversion from capacity additions (“capacity additions… visibly converting into higher generation volumes and stronger cash flows”).

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • O2 integration / scaling
  • Prior: O2 expected to scale to 4.7 GW by June 2027 (earlier calls).
  • Current: O2 operating capacity “grown to approximately 2 GW at close of FY2026” with remaining construction underway.
  • Assessment: ✅ On track (no slippage indicated).
  • Connectivity/curtailment risk
  • Prior calls discussed TGNA vs GNA and curtailment risk as temporary.
  • Current: curtailment quantified and tied to evacuation line expected by July’26.
  • Assessment: ✅ Progress (risk acknowledged but now quantified with a timeline).
  • KSK efficiency improvement
  • Prior: “efficiency enhancement initiatives” with upside; no one-off.
  • Current: KSK EBITDA strong (“EBITDA of over Rs. 3,300 Crore in FY26”) and cost efficiencies via coal sourcing/logistics.
  • Assessment: ✅ Delivered (stronger-than-previous-year narrative).

c. Narrative Shifts

  • From “demand softness” to “demand recovery + peak readiness”
  • Q3 FY26: muted demand due to monsoon; focus on resilience.
  • Q4 FY26: explicit recovery from Q4 and peak forecast ~270 GW.
  • From “merchant de-risking” to “merchant premium + firming tariffs”
  • Earlier: merchant soft; premium via contracting.
  • Now: still soft but management expects tariffs firm up in FY2027.
  • BESS narrative evolves
  • Earlier: BESS assembly plant planned/commissioning.
  • Now: “commercial sales… commenced” but financial contribution still deferred.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Medium-to-High credibility
  • Consistent themes: contracted pipeline visibility, leverage guardrails, cost insulation, and execution discipline.
  • Credibility improved by quantifying curtailment losses and disclosing merchant EBITDA (203 cr).
  • However, some recurring “we can’t comment / next time” deferrals remain (minority acquisition amount, BESS margins).

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand
  • Improving/stabilizing: FY26 muted → Q4 recovery → FY27 YTD healthy.
  • Margins
  • Improving narrative: FY26 EBITDA record; KSK efficiency and curtailment monetization.
  • Expansion
  • Still execution-led; under-construction book emphasized as fully contracted.
  • Regulatory
  • DSM now quantified (1.5–2% revenue hit) with methodology (grouping vs no grouping).

f. Additional Insights (cross-period)

  • Evacuation constraints are becoming more “operationally managed” rather than “strategically uncertain”
  • Earlier calls treated curtailment as a watch item; now it’s quantified and tied to a specific commissioning window (July’26).
  • Management is increasingly using “base case EBITDA” framing
  • KSK: “steady state EBITDA of 2,700” appears as a more structured downside anchor vs earlier broader efficiency optimism.

Note: The transcript provided is largely management Q&A; no separate analyst presentation slides were included, so guidance is extracted only from spoken statements in the call.