SUZLON — Deck
Suzlon is India's largest wind turbine manufacturer with 21 GW installed across 17 countries, earning revenue from turbine sales and project execution alongside a 15 GW aftermarket service annuity under long-term maintenance contracts.
Reported 24x P/E masks a 70x cash flow multiple — the market is using the wrong denominator.
- Headline P/E is fiction. FY25 net profit of ₹2,072 Cr includes ₹638 Cr from deferred-tax-asset recognition; FY23's ₹2,887 Cr profit was 95% a non-cash debt-restructuring gain. Strip DTA and adjusted P/E is 49–72x. The ₹1,100 Cr of remaining DTA shields ~₹4,400 Cr of future profits, extending this distortion 2–3 years.
- Cash never follows profit. Three-year CFO-to-net-income: 0.30x — only 30 paisa of every reported rupee arrived as operating cash. FY24 was the worst: ₹80 Cr CFO on ₹660 Cr PAT (12% conversion). Even FY25's best year converted only 53%.
- Receivables outrun revenue. Standalone trade receivables surged 574% over FY23–FY25 (₹546 Cr to ₹3,683 Cr) while revenue grew 82%. Debtor days expanded 72 to 130. The gap ties to India's grid evacuation and land-readiness constraints — outside Suzlon's control and unlikely to resolve in one monsoon cycle.
From ₹17,000 Cr of debt and eight loss-making years to net cash and 33% ROCE.
The wreck. Founder Tulsi Tanti spent ₹7,000+ Cr acquiring Hansen Transmissions and REpower Systems to build a top-5 global wind OEM. The 2008 crisis froze credit, revenue collapsed 85% peak-to-trough (₹20,403 Cr to ₹2,973 Cr), and cumulative losses from FY14 to FY22 exceeded ₹19,000 Cr. Six restructurings in a decade — CDR, SDR, S4A, ICA, bond default, formal resolution plan.
The reset. The July 2020 debt restructuring cut interest costs 70%+. A ₹1,200 Cr rights issue in October 2022 — nine days after Tulsi Tanti's death at age 64 — and a ₹2,000 Cr QIP in 2023 eliminated negative reserves and made the company net debt-free. Borrowings fell from ₹17,059 Cr to ₹323 Cr.
Today. FY25 revenue crossed ₹10,000 Cr for the first time since FY16. The S144 turbine drives 92% of the 6.4 GW order book. New Group CEO Ajay Kapur (ex-Ambuja Cements, hired February 2026) and a 5 MW turbine unveiled for Europe in April 2026 signal a second attempt at global markets — funded by cash this time, not leverage.
Peak-cycle operating leverage on a rebuilt balance sheet — but cash quality lags the P&L.
Breakeven rebuilt from 1,300 MW to 650 MW; Q3 FY26 deliveries of 617 MW put the company at 2.4x breakeven, and every incremental MW drops disproportionately to EBITDA. The balance sheet survived its resurrection — borrowings down 98%, reserves positive for the first time in a decade. But the cash flow statement tells a different story: receivables consumed almost all of FY24's profit, and the ₹5,745 Cr receivable balance at FY25 is 145+ days of sales outstanding.
Q4 FY26 results in late May 2026 are the single event that resolves the debate.
- 60% growth test. Management needs roughly ₹6,200 Cr in Q4 revenue and 855 MW in deliveries to meet FY26 guidance — when the best-ever quarter was 617 MW (Q3 FY26). A miss resets the sell-side narrative; a beat validates the April 2026 rally.
- DTA exhaustion watch. ₹1,355 Cr of cumulative DTA recognized over two periods. As DTA fades, the advertised 24x P/E reprices toward 49–72x adjusted. Consensus anchored to ₹2,072 Cr FY25 PAT may cut to ₹1,100–1,400 Cr normalized.
- Receivables reckoning. Standalone trade receivables at ₹5,745 Cr against ₹15,029 Cr TTM revenue is 145+ days DSO. If Q4 receivables grow faster than revenue for a fourth consecutive year, the structural cash-quality thesis is confirmed.
Lean watchlist — the business transformation is real, but 49–72x adjusted earnings demand proof of cash conversion.
- For. Balance sheet is the cleanest in Suzlon's listed history — ₹1,556 Cr net cash versus ₹17,059 Cr debt a decade ago, CRISIL double-upgraded to A/Positive, zero promoter pledge. Survival risk eliminated.
- For. OMS annuity (23% of revenue, 25% margin) grows mechanically with the installed base. The Renom acquisition triples addressable fleet from 15.5 GW to 47.5 GW for under 1% of market cap — and no analyst runs a sum-of-parts.
- Against. Three-year cash conversion of 0.30x: 70% of reported profit never arrived as cash. Receivables surged 574% in two years versus 82% revenue growth. The market prices the P&L; the cash flow statement tells a different story.
- Against. Promoters sold ₹1,309 Cr in a June 2025 block deal at cycle peak; holding at 11.73% — lowest in listed history. Zero dividends despite ₹2,072 Cr FY25 profit. Insiders monetize via share sales while minorities get nothing.
Watchlist to re-rate: Q4 FY26 standalone receivables and DSO (late May 2026); book-to-bill ratio — below 1.0x for two quarters signals cycle turn; promoter activity post December 2025 lock-in expiry.