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Indian Company Investor Calls

Adani Power Confident on FY27 Growth, 13.3GW Expansion PPA

May 6, 2026 8 mins read Firehose Gupta

Adani Power Limited — Q4 FY26 Earnings Call (held Apr 30, 2026)

1. Overall Tone of Management: Optimistic

  • Management repeatedly emphasizes “operational resilience,” “financial discipline,” “earnings visibility has improved materially,” and “we are sure” about meeting expansion timelines.
  • Forward-looking language is confident: “FY27 will see a strong growth”, “significant earnings growth,” and “conservatively by FY2031” for EBITDA targets.

2. Key Themes from Management Commentary

  • Weather-driven demand volatility, but improving trend: FY26 demand growth was tepid (0.8%); management attributes weakness to early/extended monsoon and cold weather, then highlights revival from March and expects stronger FY27 demand/peak demand.
  • EBITDA resilience despite softer merchant/market conditions: Q4 EBITDA up 27% YoY to INR 6,498 cr; FY26 EBITDA described as robust even with subdued merchant prices.
  • Contracted portfolio as the risk mitigant:
  • 95% of operating capacity tied under long/medium-term PPAs (availability-based fixed charges).
  • Expansion PPAs tied: 13.3 GW total tie-up for the 23.7 GW thermal expansion program.
  • Capacity expansion execution focus: Progress updates for Mahan/Raipur/Raigarh/Korba; management frames commissioning as the driver of future cash flows/EBITDA.
  • Capital allocation + funding stance: “Careful approach” to capital allocation; bridge financing acknowledged; emphasis on liquidity/credit access and internal accruals.
  • Strategic pivot beyond India + new energy themes: SPVs in Bhutan (570 MW hydro) and preparation for nuclear opportunities (awaiting government rules).

3. Q&A Analysis

Theme A: PPA details (tariffs, structure, timeline, assignment of capacity)

  • Core questions
  • Tariffs and contours of the 2.5 GW MSEDCL RTC contract (including how residual capacity is served).
  • Timeline for 1,600 MW Maharashtra PPA commissioning.
  • Which project/location the Maharashtra PPA capacity will be assigned to.
  • Management response
  • Maharashtra PPA served via a “trading platform” using residual coal capacity plus renewables/wind/solar/PSP/batteries; management expects ~1%–1.5% residual capacity left out after tie-ups.
  • Tariff disclosed: INR 5.30/unit (capacity INR 4.11, energy INR 1.19).
  • Timeline: LOA received; PPA expected to be signed in ~3 months, then 48 months for commissioning (~4–5 years).
  • Assignment: location not fixed; probabilities mentioned: Raigarh / Raipur / at most Korba.
  • Notable / evasive elements
  • Tariff transparency was provided, but project assignment remained probabilistic (“yet not assigned”).
  • For Maharashtra PPA, management avoided giving a definitive commissioning schedule until PPA signing.

Theme B: Merchant vs contracted exposure (definition, share, outlook)

  • Core questions
  • Definition of “merchant” and reconciliation with reported merchant share (analysts noted earlier merchant % vs current).
  • Whether merchant capacity converts into medium/long-term PPAs.
  • Expected PLF/merchant price impact and whether PPA EBITDA trajectory is better than merchant.
  • Management response
  • Merchant defined as capacity not tied under long/medium-term PPA; also includes market purchases when PPA-based units are out of service.
  • Merchant share: management stated merchant capacity is only ~5% now (down from ~16% earlier in the year).
  • Conversion: management stated no new group-level long-term PPA signed in FY26 (merchant decline is from tie-ups, not group re-contracting).
  • PPA vs merchant: management refused to forecast which is “better,” stating merchant can be upside but also can drop with weather; PPA provides surety.
  • Structural view: renewables increasing expected to suppress merchant prices; hence risk mitigation via more PPAs.
  • Notable / unusually strong answers
  • Strong directional claim: “renewables are going to get added every year… and that is going to suppress the merchant prices.”
  • Management also gave a clear operational framing: under new PPAs, EBITDA is largely capacity-charge driven (fuel pass-through).

Theme C: Project commissioning schedule, delays, and capex

  • Core questions
  • Exact commissioning quarters for Korba and Mahan.
  • EBITDA contribution expectations from Korba/Mahan in FY27–FY28.
  • Capex per megawatt and reasons for Mahan delay (from earlier target).
  • Management response
  • Korba commissioning: June–September; first unit Q2, second unit before year-end.
  • Mahan commissioning: first unit likely last quarter of current year, but “at the most” Q1 next year; second unit ~6 months thereafter.
  • EBITDA contribution: Korba estimated ~INR 1,000 cr (FY27 partial year); FY27–FY28 expected higher; Mahan expected “good EBITDA.”
  • Mahan delay explanation: geopolitical situation impacting labour availability and LPG availability; management took a “conservative approach.”
  • Capex guidance: FY26-27 capex ~INR 25,000 cr, FY27-28 ~INR 33,000 cr.
  • Weighted cost of borrowing: market rate ~8%.
  • Notable / partial answers
  • Capex per MW for specific units was not cleanly provided; management explained acquisition cost bundling makes per-MW for units 3/4 hard to isolate.

Theme D: Balance sheet items & one-off accounting (minority interest)

  • Core questions
  • Sharp Q-o-Q jump in non-controlling interest (minority interest) in P&L.
  • Management response
  • Explained as accounting impact from new PPA and acquisition timing: Coastal Energen/Moxie operations accounted fully in FY26 vs partial in FY25; Q4 impact tied to medium-term PPA started in prior quarter.
  • Credibility signal
  • Explanation was specific enough to be plausible (timing + PPA impact), but still not quantified in detail.

Theme E: Working capital / receivables risk (Bangladesh)

  • Core questions
  • Update on Bangladesh receivable collection and dispute/reconciliation status.
  • Management response
  • Outstanding reduced; regular payments.
  • Dispute: expert appointed; if accepted by both parties, implemented; otherwise arbitration route (Singapore International Arbitration Council).

4. Guidance / Outlook

Explicit guidance (quantitative)

  • Demand outlook
  • FY27 expected to see strong growth in overall power demand and peak demand (no numeric demand growth % given).
  • Peak demand recently reached 256 GW (directional expectation to rise).
  • EBITDA / profitability
  • No formal FY27 EBITDA guidance; management reiterates earnings growth and provides a longer-term target (see Standout Statements).
  • Capacity expansion / commissioning
  • Korba Phase-II: commissioning June–September (first unit Q2; second unit before year-end).
  • Mahan Phase-II: first unit last quarter of current year / at most Q1 next year; second unit ~6 months later.
  • Capex
  • FY26-27 capex: ~INR 25,000 cr
  • FY27-28 capex: ~INR 33,000 cr
  • Debt / borrowing
  • Weighted market borrowing rate: ~8% (DCM/domestic banks).

Implicit signals (qualitative)

  • Merchant risk mitigation: merchant share reduced to ~5%; management expects renewables to further pressure merchant prices.
  • Execution conservatism: Mahan moved by up to ~6 months due to labour/LPG constraints; management frames this as temporary and “conservative,” not structural.
  • Funding confidence: emphasis on liquidity/credit access and internal accruals; bridge financing for interim capex.

5. Standout Statements (most revealing)

  • Merchant share compression:today, the merchant capacity is only 5%… in the beginning of the year, we were at 16% merchant capacity.”
  • PPA visibility:95% of our operating capacity… is now tied up under long-term and medium-term PPAs.”
  • Renewables → merchant suppression thesis:renewables are going to get added every year… and that is going to suppress the merchant prices.”
  • Mahan delay rationale (explicit): delay due to “availability of labour and the availability of LPG… we are taking a conservative approach.”
  • Capex trajectory:FY26-27… ~INR25,000 croresFY27-28… ~INR33,000 crores.”
  • Long-term EBITDA target: “We should be in a position to achieve INR50,000 crore conservatively by FY2031… even in 2030… at most 2031.”
  • Debt paydown narrative: “by FY31-32, we can pay our entire debt… thereafter… huge cash surplus.”

6. Red Flags / Positive Signals

Positive signals
– Strong contracted visibility (95% operating capacity tied).
– Clear operational metrics: Q4 PLF 74%, Q4 EBITDA up 27% YoY.
– Bangladesh receivables: “outstanding has gone down” and “regular payments.”

Red flags
Geopolitical constraints are now explicitly affecting execution (labour/LPG), and management has already deferred Mahan by ~6 months—suggesting schedule risk may persist.
Project assignment uncertainty for Maharashtra PPA (“yet not assigned… probabilities”).
– Merchant vs PPA economics: management avoids committing to relative profitability (“not be fair to say in advance”), which can be read as limited visibility on merchant upside/downside.


7. Historical Comparison & Consistency Analysis (vs prior 3 calls)

a. Change in Tone Over Time

  • Current (Q4 FY26): Optimistic with more emphasis on earnings visibility and confidence in meeting expansion goals, despite acknowledging execution conservatism.
  • Prior calls (Q1 FY26, Q2 FY26, Q3 FY26): also optimistic, but more focused on weather softness and improving demand; less explicit about labour/LPG constraints.
  • Shift classification: More Optimistic / No Change overall, but with a new execution-risk admission (Mahan delay) that wasn’t as explicit earlier.

b. Tracking Past Commitments vs Outcomes

  • Merchant reduction plan
  • Prior (Q3 FY26): merchant described as reducing (e.g., “open capacity already at 10%” and strategy to reduce further).
  • Current: merchant now ~5%.
  • ✅ Delivered (directionally consistent with stated strategy).
  • Mahan commissioning timing
  • Prior (Q3 FY26 call): Mahan Phase-II “about 80% complete” and projects scheduled to commission in phases from FY27 onwards; less explicit about quarter-level delay.
  • Current: Mahan first unit now “last quarter of this year / at most Q1 next year,” with delay attributed to geopolitical labour/LPG constraints.
  • ⏳ Delayed (at least relative to earlier “this year” expectation; management now frames as conservative).
  • Capacity trajectory / 42 GW by FY32
  • Prior (Q2 FY26): strong confidence on 42 GW by 2032; commissioning schedule laid out more aggressively.
  • Current: acknowledges deferrals but states “on track” and that deferrals average ~6 months; commissioning cadence still targets 4 GW+ per year from FY29–FY32.
  • ✅/⏳ Mixed: “on track” claim is maintained, but the need for deferrals suggests execution risk has increased.

c. Narrative Shifts

  • Merchant economics narrative softened: earlier calls discussed merchant upside; current call emphasizes risk mitigation and refuses to forecast merchant vs PPA relative returns.
  • New explicit operational constraint: geopolitical impacts on labour and LPG now appear as a concrete execution driver.
  • Expansion funding narrative remains consistent: internal accruals + interim bridge financing; current call reiterates conservative capital allocation.

d. Consistency & Credibility Signals

  • Credibility: Medium
  • Strength: management provides specific numbers (PPA tariff, capex, commissioning windows, debt rate).
  • Weakness: repeated reliance on “conservative approach” and probabilistic assignment (Maharashtra PPA location), plus execution deferrals (Mahan) indicate that timelines can move.

e. Evolution of Key Themes

  • Demand/macro: consistently weather-driven volatility; now management highlights revival from March and expects FY27 strength.
  • Margins: consistent theme that PPA capacity charges stabilize EBITDA; merchant remains volatile.
  • Execution: early calls emphasized de-risking (advance ordering, land availability). Current call adds geopolitical resource constraints as a new execution variable.
  • Contracting: consistent emphasis on increasing PPA tie-ups; current call shows progress (95% tied).

f. Additional Insights (Cross-Period Intelligence)

  • The company’s confidence in commissioning remains high, but the reason for delay has shifted from “weather” (demand) to “geopolitics affecting inputs” (execution)—a potentially more persistent risk than demand volatility.
  • Management’s refusal to quantify merchant vs PPA profitability suggests that merchant upside may be less reliable than earlier implied, reinforcing the strategic shift toward contracted capacity.