Tata
Power: High voltage
Business
Standard March 29, 2008
The Tata Power stock rose 3.6
per cent on Friday to Rs 1211, even as the management
outlined its plans for the future in a presentation
on Thursday. Indias biggest integrated private
sector utility has chalked out a strategy which entails
a presence across generation, transmission, distribution
and power trading.
On the generation front, the Rs 4,715 crore company
proposes to be an independent power producer, set up
ultra mega power plants (UMPPs )and hold generation
assets that will be used both for captive purposes and
for distribution.
The gameplan is to increase the generation capacity
six-fold by 2013 from the current levels of 2,365 mw
to about 12860 mw, with most of the addition coming
up post 2010. The capacity that can be used for merchant
sales would account for a reasonable 12 per cent of
the total capacity.
To ensure adequate supplies of coal, a critical input,
Tata Power has picked up a 30 per cent stake in a couple
of mines of Bumi Resources of Indonesia. It was also
recently allotted two coal mines in Jharkhand and Orissa
which should support about 800-1000 mw of merchant capacity.
Over the next four years, the company will need to
spend Rs 24,000 crore on projects for which Tata Power
is already readying the funds. Of this, the larger chunk
of Rs 18,000 crore will be mobilised through borrowings.
Internal accruals should fetch the company approximately
Rs 3,000 crore and an issue of preferential shares or
warrants to promoters another Rs 2,000 crore or so.
The balance is expected to be met through the sales
of investments and perhaps an issue of shares. In fact,
the company has sold some investments including a small
stake in Tata Teleservices.
Tata Power is expected to close FY08 with revenues of
Rs 5,200 crore and a net profit of about Rs 600 crore.
Revenues for FY09 are estimated at Rs 5,500 crore while
net profits could be in the region of Rs 710 crore.
While the companys equity will get diluted by
about 15 per cent as the company mobilises resources
by issuing new shares, the earnings could nonetheless
grow at around 14-15 per cent over the next few years,
say analysts. If coal prices stay firm or rise, the
earnings stand to get a boost because of the companys
stakes in coal mines.
At Rs 1211, the stock trades at just under 40 times
FY09 estimated earnings which may appear rather expensive.
However, the companys investments in group firms
such as TCS, Tata Communications, Tata Teleservices
and so on should be taken into account as also the value
of the stake in the Bumi coal mines and the value of
the distribution business in New Delhi. Together all
these have been valued by analysts at around Rs 900-1000
per share.
That leaves an implied price of about Rs 211-311 per
share for the core power generation business, which
is getting a discounting of around 7-10 times. Given
the shortage of power, power stocks should get good
valuations over the next few years.

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