Suzlon Energy has done the unthinkable: from bankruptcy candidate to renewable rockstar. The stock’s 5-year CAGR of 75% makes Bitcoin blush, but with promoter holding slipping to 11.7%, the party may have some uninvited guests. With a ₹92,000 Cr market cap, P/E of 44x, and no dividends (because cash is for survival, not romance), Suzlon’s story is equal parts thriller and horror. Orders are pouring in like monsoon rains, margins have hit 17–18%, and profits have exploded 187% YoY. But can this wind giant stay airborne, or will the market clip its wings?
Introduction
Ah, Suzlon. The company that was once synonymous with debt traps, legal drama, and “hope-based” investments is suddenly the darling of green energy. Investors who held on through the storm now look like clairvoyants; the rest are still licking their wounds. In FY25, Suzlon pulled off a staggering turnaround with ₹10,890 Cr revenue and ₹2,072 Cr net profit – a far cry from its loss-making days.
However, with a P/E north of 40, public holding at 55% (aka retail frenzy), and FIIs circling, one question looms: is this a genuine comeback or just another bubble inflated by renewable hype? Buckle up.
Business Model (WTF Do They Even Do?)
Suzlon builds, sells, and maintains wind turbines. Sounds simple? Well, they’re a vertically integrated beast:
Manufacturing: Rotor blades, towers, generators, nacelles – you name it, they make it.
Project Execution: From wind assessment to commissioning entire farms.
O&M: Long-term service contracts keep cash flowing long after turbines start spinning.
Global Reach: 20+ GW installations across 17 countries, with India as the primary playground.
Clients range from NTPC to private renewable players. It’s not just selling turbines; it’s selling a lifetime of maintenance revenue.