"The Company maintained stable performance despite lower profits from Solar EPC businesses mainly on account of lower financing cost and stable performance across all clusters. All other subsidiaries & Joint Ventures continued to perform well," the company said in a statement. That apart the company won new renewables bids totaling 220 MW during the quarter under review.
"Net debt declined to Rs 44,400 crore on account of asset monetization and WC management despite the current Covid-19 environment. While certain clarity is pending with regard to upcoming new regulations for Indonesian coal mines (concerning tax and royalty), at current levels, we view the risk-reward as favorable. Divestment-related measures (International Shipping business, Arutmin, and Tata SED) and approval for the infusion of Rs 2,600 crore from promoters would continue to aid debt reduction. Debt reduction should lead to lower interest costs, and with normalization in its EPC businesses and some WC, we expect EPS to increase at a 9–10% CAGR over FY20–23. The approval of a tariff hike at Mundra, merger of CGPL & Tata Power Solar with TPWR, and favorable InvIT valuations provide upsides," said analysts at Motilal Oswal Financial Services. They have upgraded the stock to 'Buy' with target price of Rs 66.