IPO Analysis · Power Infrastructure · April 2026
Om Power Transmission IPO Review 2026: Riding India’s Grid Supercycle — But Is It Priced Right?
A Gujarat-based HV/EHV EPC player raises ₹150 crore from primary markets. We break down the numbers, the narrative, and the honest truth behind the listing.
Investor’s Note · IPO Spotlight
Om Power Transmission Ltd IPO
Executive Summary
1. Who Is Om Power Transmission Limited?
Om Power Transmission Limited (OPTL) is an Ahmedabad-based Engineering, Procurement, and Construction (EPC) company that has spent over 14 years building the infrastructure that keeps India’s lights on. Incorporated in June 2011, the company specialises in high-voltage (HV) and extra-high voltage (EHV) power transmission projects — moving electricity across hundreds of kilometres from generation plants to consumption hubs.
Their core services span the full project lifecycle: design, procurement, construction, installation, testing, commissioning, and ongoing O&M. Revenue breaks across four verticals:
- Transmission Line EPC — overhead HV/EHV lines (45% of 9MFY26 revenue)
- Underground Cabling — urban and industrial cable projects (26%)
- Substation EPC — 66 kV to 400 kV (21%, up from 12% in FY23)
- O&M Services — 124 substations under maintenance as of December 2025 (8%)
The company holds triple ISO certification (9001:2015, 45001:2018, 14001:2015) and has delivered 500+ circuit kilometres of transmission lines and cabling. Promoters Kalpesh Patel, Kanubhai Patel, and Vasantkumar Patel bring deep domain experience in Gujarat’s power ecosystem.
2. IPO Structure — What’s the Money For?
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| IPO Open / Close Dates | April 9 – April 13, 2026 |
| Listing Date | April 17, 2026 (BSE & NSE) |
| Price Band | ₹166 – ₹175 per share |
| Face Value | ₹10 per share |
| Lot Size | 85 shares |
| Minimum Investment (Retail) | ₹14,875 |
| Total Issue Size | ₹150.06 crore |
| Fresh Issue | ₹132.56 crore (75.75 lakh shares) |
| Offer for Sale (OFS) | ₹17.50 crore (10 lakh shares) |
| Anchor Allocation | ₹45.01 crore (April 8, 2026) |
| Lead Manager | Beeline Capital Advisors Pvt. Ltd. |
| Registrar | MUFG Intime India Pvt. Ltd. |
The IPO is predominantly a fresh issue — 88% of the total raise flows directly into the company’s balance sheet. Proceeds are allocated as: ₹55 crore for long-term working capital, ₹25 crore for debt repayment, ₹11.2 crore for capital expenditure on machinery, and the balance for general corporate purposes.
| Investor Category | Allocation | Subscription |
|---|---|---|
| QIB (Qualified Institutional Buyers) | 50% | 3.65× |
| NII / HNI | 15% | 7.06× |
| Retail Individual Investors | 35% | 1.54× |
| Overall | — | 3.33× |
Source: NSE data, April 13, 2026
3. The Industry Tailwind — Why This Sector, Why Now?
If there’s one infrastructure theme where India is throwing serious capital, it’s power transmission. The story is simple: India is building 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030. That power needs to travel from windswept coasts and solar parks to urban consumption centres — through transmission lines, substations, and underground cables. That’s exactly what OPTL builds.
The India power T&D EPC market was valued at approximately USD 14.68 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow to USD 35.20 billion by 2035 at a CAGR of 9.34%. India’s National Electricity Plan targets expansion to 6.48 lakh circuit kilometres by 2032. In 2025 alone, the Ministry of Power added 6,511 ckm of new lines and boosted transformation capacity by 1,00,368 MVA.
Total sector investment envisaged hits ₹9.15 lakh crore by 2032. Green Energy Corridor Phase-II targets 10,750 ckm of lines and 27,500 MVA of substation capacity. Western India — OPTL’s home turf — contributed 31.61% of market revenue in 2025, driven by Gujarat’s 30 GW Khavda Renewable Park.
The tailwinds are undeniable. The real question is whether OPTL — a Gujarat-concentrated EPC player with ₹280 crore in annual revenue — can capture meaningful share against Kalpataru Projects, KEC International, Sterlite Power, and Adani Energy Solutions.
4. Financial Analysis — Growth Is Real, But Ask Harder Questions
| Metric | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 | 9MFY26 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue from Operations | ~₹120 Cr | ₹184.39 Cr | ₹281.65 Cr | ~₹274 Cr |
| Profit After Tax (PAT) | ~₹6 Cr | ₹7.41 Cr | ₹22.08 Cr | — |
| Revenue CAGR (FY23–FY25) | 52.45% | |||
| PAT CAGR (FY23–FY25) | 88.17% | |||
| ROE (9MFY26) | ~24% | |||
| ROCE (9MFY26) | ~26% | |||
| Order Book (Dec 2025) | ₹744.60 Cr (58 projects) | |||
| Total Debt (Dec 2025) | ₹215.78 Cr | |||
| Trade Receivables (Dec 2025) | ₹144.07 Cr | |||
| Working Capital % of Total Assets | 62.42% | |||
Revenue nearly doubled from FY24 to FY25. The ₹744.60 crore order book provides ~2.6× revenue visibility. ROE of ~24% and ROCE of ~26% are healthy for this scale. But there are structural concerns that every investor must stress-test before committing capital.
The Working Capital Trap
Working capital as a percentage of total assets was 62.42% as of December 2025, up from 53.65% in FY23. The company is growing fast and tying up increasing proportions of its asset base in receivables and project cash requirements — a classic EPC pressure point that compounds quickly at scale.
Trade Receivables: Watch This Number
Trade receivables stood at ₹144.07 crore as of December 2025 — up from ₹57.82 crore in FY23, a 2.5× jump in two years. 7.82% of receivables are outstanding for more than six months. If government client payments slow, cash flows compress fast.
Debt vs. IPO Size Mismatch
Debt of ₹215.78 crore against annual revenues of ~₹280 crore is a high leverage ratio. Even after using ₹25 crore from IPO proceeds for repayment, the balance sheet remains stretched — a key risk overhang for near-term investors.
5. Valuation — Fully Priced, No Margin of Safety
| Parameter | Om Power Transmission | Listed Peers (Indicative) |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue Scale | ~₹280 Cr (FY25) | ₹2,000–20,000 Cr |
| P/E at Issue Price | ~28–32× | 25–38× |
| ROE | ~24% | 15–25% |
| Geographic Reach | Gujarat ~79% of OB | Pan-India / Global |
| Listing Segment | T-to-T (initially) | Normal trading |
6. GMP & Listing Performance
The grey market was notably subdued before listing. Unlisted shares were trading at ~₹176.75 ahead of April 17 — a GMP of just ₹1.75 or 1% over issue price. HNI caution on valuation drove the muted sentiment.
The actual listing comfortably outpaced GMP expectations. Shares opened at ₹186 on NSE — a premium of ₹11 or 6.3% — and touched an intraday high of ₹193. On BSE, shares opened at ₹181.10, up 3.5%. Listing outperforming a near-flat GMP signals genuine secondary market demand, not speculative positioning.
7. Key Risks
1. Geographic Concentration
100% of completed projects in FY23–9MFY26 were in Gujarat. The state still contributes 79% of the current order book. Any policy shift, budget squeeze, or disruption in Gujarat directly hits revenues. Geographic expansion into Rajasthan and Punjab has begun, but remains early stage.
2. Customer Concentration
Top 10 customers contribute 97%+ of revenue. PSUs account for ~83.74% of the order book. Double concentration — few clients, all government — creates simultaneous payment timing risk and policy dependency.
3. Declining Bid Conversion
Bid wins declined from 35 (FY23) to just 15 (9MFY26). The pipeline is shrinking and conversion has deteriorated — a signal of increasing competition and potential margin pressure ahead.
4. Negative Cash Flow History
The company has disclosed periods of negative net cash flows from operations. Growth is partly debt-funded — which needs monitoring quarter by quarter post-listing, especially as the working capital base expands.
8. SWOT Analysis
Strengths
- ›14+ years proven HV/EHV track record
- ›500+ CKM delivered; 124 substations under O&M
- ›Triple ISO certified
- ›ROE ~24%, ROCE ~26%
- ›Revenue CAGR 52.45%; PAT CAGR 88.17%
- ›₹744.60 Cr order book — ~2.6× revenue visibility
Weaknesses
- ›100% Gujarat revenue (historically)
- ›Top 10 customers = 97%+ of revenues
- ›High debt (₹215.78 Cr) vs. scale
- ›Declining bid conversion rate
- ›Negative operating cash flows (prior periods)
- ›Small scale vs. listed EPC peers
Opportunities
- ›T&D EPC market → USD 35.2 Bn by 2035
- ›500 GW RE target → massive infra demand
- ›GEC Phase-II — 10,750 CKM pipeline
- ›Geographic expansion — Rajasthan, Punjab
- ›O&M recurring revenue expansion potential
Threats
- ›Competition from L&T, KEC, Kalpataru, Adani
- ›PSU capex cuts or policy reversals
- ›Right-of-way acquisition delays
- ›Input cost inflation (copper, steel, cores)
- ›Tender delays by state utilities
9. Investment Verdict
✓ Who Should Consider Investing
- ✓Investors with a 2–3 year minimum holding horizon
- ✓Those bullish on India’s power infrastructure capex cycle
- ✓Investors who missed larger EPC names and want small-cap proxy exposure
- ✓Portfolio allocators seeking thematic power sector allocation
- ✓Those patient enough to accumulate near ₹155–165 for better risk-reward
✕ Who Should Avoid or Wait
- ✕Listing gain seekers — 6.3% is modest; T-to-T segment limits quick exits
- ✕Investors expecting near-term catalysts — next earnings visibility is 6+ months out
- ✕Risk-averse investors uncomfortable with single-state PSU dependency
- ✕Those who cannot stomach small-cap liquidity risk
- ✕Anyone expecting blue-chip governance — promoter-controlled, concentrated shareholding
Tags
References & Further Reading
- ↗Om Power Transmission Ltd — Official Website
- ↗SEBI — Securities and Exchange Board of India
- ↗NSE India — Live Market Data
- ↗BSE India — IPO & Listing Data
- ↗Business Standard — Om Power Transmission Listing Coverage
- ↗Ministry of Power, Government of India
- ↗Central Electricity Authority — National Electricity Plan
- ↗Astute Analytica — India T&D EPC Market Outlook 2035
