Construction workers have been installing solar panels at a rate that doesn’t stop for market sentiment somewhere in Rajasthan’s flat, sun-baked terrain. A 150 MW solar project in the state was put into commercial operation by NTPC Green Energy on April 16. An additional 87.5 MW came three days later. The company’s total operational capacity is currently 10,363.90 megawatts; this month, it quietly and without much fanfare surpassed five digits while the stock fluctuated around ₹113. That combination has an almost stubborn quality. The capacity continues to increase. The market continues to wait for certainty.
In November 2024, NTPC Green Energy went public on Indian exchanges and raised ₹108 per share through an IPO. Anyone who bought in on opening day was put to the test during the first year. The stock dropped to ₹84 at its 52-week low before rising to ₹117.64 at its peak, a range of more than 40 percent that illustrates the challenge the market has had pricing a company at this specific stage—large enough to matter, growing quickly enough to draw attention, but not yet profitable enough in conventional terms to justify the valuation it commands. There is no inherent comfort in a P/E ratio of roughly 171 on trailing earnings. This figure necessitates a very particular kind of conviction about the company’s future state in five to seven years.
Since both the bullish and bearish scenarios are real, it is worthwhile to examine the financial picture objectively. Positively, revenue reached ₹2,568 crore, up 23% over the previous twelve months. On a TTM basis, net profit was ₹557 crore. Infrastructure companies with long-term power purchase agreements, where revenues are predictable once a project is operational, have operating profit margins that are consistently higher than 85%. Over a two-year period, debtor days significantly decreased from 700 to 85.3, indicating a real improvement in cash collection discipline. The MoU signed with PTC India in March to investigate bilateral power sales indicates that management is considering expanding revenue streams beyond fixed PPAs. The company has been increasing capacity through both organic project development and acquisitions.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | NTPC Green Energy Limited (NGEL) |
| Stock Symbol | NSE: NTPCGREEN / BSE: 544289 |
| Founded | April 7, 2022 |
| IPO Date | November 27, 2024 |
| Headquarters | Noida, India |
| CEO | Sarit Maheshwari |
| Parent Organization | NTPC Limited (89.01% promoter holding) |
| Employees | ~3,200 (FY) |
| Sector | Utilities — Alternative Power Generation |
| Current Share Price | ₹113.59 (April 22, 2026) |
| 52-Week Range | ₹84.00 – ₹117.64 |
| Market Capitalization | ~₹95,000–95,450 Crore |
| P/E Ratio (TTM) | ~170–173 |
| Book Value | ₹22.2 per share |
| Dividend Yield | 0% (no dividend declared) |
| ROCE | 4.89% |
| ROE (3-Year avg) | ~4% |
| Basic EPS (TTM) | ₹0.66 |
| Revenue (FY2025) | ₹2,210 Crore |
| Net Profit (FY2025) | ₹474 Crore |
| Total Borrowings (Sep 2025) | ₹21,826 Crore |
| Free Cash Flow (FY2025) | -₹9,986 Crore |
| Total Operational Capacity | ~10,363.90 MW (as of April 19, 2026) |
| Key Projects | Solar and wind projects across Rajasthan and other states |
| Notable ETF Holdings | iShares Global Clean Energy ETF (ICLN), Goldman Sachs India ETF |
| YTD Return | +19.58% |
| 1-Year Return | +5.30% |
| Next Earnings Date | ~May 27, 2026 |

However, the issues are not aesthetic. As of September 2025, the total amount borrowed was ₹21,826 crore. For FY2025, free cash flow was negative ₹9,986 crore, which is indicative of the massive amount of money being invested in projects that won’t pay off for years. Because of the low interest coverage ratio, a sizable amount of operating profit is used to pay off debt rather than increase equity value. The company has not paid a dividend since listing, and its ROE is currently at about 4%. For an early-stage infrastructure builder, these figures are not out of the ordinary. Adani Green’s own early years appeared somewhat similar, but patient investors in that business eventually saw a different picture. However, NGEL is still a very young company with only 229 to 3,200 employees, depending on how the corporate structure is counted, and the comparison only holds if the execution proceeds without significant setbacks.
It’s educational to look at the YTD chart. Since January, the stock has increased by almost 20%, significantly outperforming the overall market. In the last month alone, it has increased by 13%. A particular kind of investor is drawn to that kind of short-term momentum: one who is purchasing the narrative and the chart instead of the present earnings yield. The ₹110–114 range has been identified as a breakout zone by a number of retail traders on community platforms, who have noted volume increases and momentum indicators. The obvious next test from a technical standpoint is the resistance at ₹117 from the 52-week high. The Q4 results, which are expected to be released around May 27, will determine whether it holds or breaks. Revenue is projected to be ₹8.89 billion, which, if realized, would indicate significant sequential growth.
One of the most well-known brands in India’s power industry is still NTPC Limited, the parent company that owns 89% of NTPC Green Energy. That support is not insignificant. It gives access to regulatory connections, balance sheet support, and a reputation that solely private renewable developers don’t always have. Due to the stock’s inclusion in several international clean energy exchange-traded funds (ETFs), including iShares, Goldman Sachs, and Franklin, foreign passive capital is already coming in regardless of any active conviction. For structural rather than quarterly reasons, the market seems to want to trust NTPC Green Energy. Every new buyer must determine for themselves whether the current price allows for that belief to pay off.
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