Popular Articles

Don't forget the home ground
News reports in business dailies, including this one, tell us almost every day that India and Asia continue to grow at a robust rate. While developed nations are still suffering from the effects of the recession, India and most of Asia are clocking impressive growth rates.

Govt to encourage pvt investments in shipping
The Shipping Minister said today that the ministry is taking all possible measures to encourage private sector investment in the shipping sector as major ports alone require over Rs 36,000 crore private investment by March 2012.

News of the day

United Spirits: Little to cheer about
Poor performance from Whyte and Mackay and adverse foreign exchange movements pulled down United Spirits’ consolidated numbers for 2008-09. The liquor firm reported a loss of Rs 410 crore.
Small Business

Tata Power: All charged up

With Tata Power now in a position to sell 100 MW of power from its Trombay unit as merchant sales, the company’s earnings for the current year should get a slight boost. In the current year, the higher generation—estimated to be higher by 10-15 per cent — is what will push up revenues rather than any significant increase in power realisations. - Tata Power slips 2% despite good results - Tata Power net rises 58% - Tata Power to sensitise 1 mn people about energy conservation - Banks give Tata Power a collateral shocker - Tata Power moves SC on Sasan coal - Govt seeks details on $437 mn raised by Tata Power From Rs 7,071.5 crore last year, stand-alone revenues are expected to increase by about 10 per cent this year. Consolidated revenues showed much higher growth of 60 per cent last year mainly because the company’s coal mines fared better with coal prices ruling high. Tata Power may have added just 420 MW of capacity last year but it plans to increase capacity five-fold from 2785 MW currently to 13,000 MW by 2014. The first phase of the Mundra UMPP of 800 MW will be commissioned in September 2011 with about a fourth of the work having been completed. Apart from a gap of around Rs 3,000 crore, which is the equity contribution to be made over three years, the company has tied up loans amounting to Rs 12,000 crore. Meanwhile, with coal prices bottoming out, concerns over realisations from the Bumi coal mines, in which Tata Power holds a 30 per cent stake, should ease. The mines are currently profitable with coal prices at around $60 per tonne and an average selling price of $50 per tonne over the longer term should be good enough to ensure that Tata Power repays the loans that it took to acquire the mines. The Street has been concerned about the repayment of the loans amounting to around $750 million. However, these concerns seem exaggerated because a fairly large portion is due only in 2014-15, by which time the Mundra plant should be generating cash flows. Tata Power is a great play on India’s chronic power shortage though at the current price of Rs 1,140, the stock trades close to it sum-of the- parts-valuation price of Rs 1,200.


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