Agni Green Power Ltd: Rooftop Dreams, Penny-Stock Reality
1. At a Glance
Agni Green Power Ltd is a 1995-born solar EPC and O&M contractor that makes a living out of small rooftop and off-grid solar projects. With a market cap of barely ₹43 Cr and stock price at ₹22 (down 53% in one year), it’s more like a solar lantern flickering in a storm than a blazing sun. Despite winning orders from IOCL Paradip Refinery, Mizoram health centres, and WBREDA, the company struggles with wafer-thin profits (PAT FY25 = ₹0.63 Cr) and a P/E that’s hotter than a Chennai rooftop at noon: 69x.
2. Introduction
Agni’s pitch is seductive: “We do turnkey solar projects, from design to maintenance, and we even give you fancy hybrid inverters.” Reality? They’re basically a Tier-3 EPC vendor chasing state tenders and small industrial orders while giants like L&T, Tata Power Solar, and Adani Energy lap up the multi-MW contracts.
In FY25, revenue touched ₹41 Cr (up 17%), but net profit was just ₹0.63 Cr—an OPM of 6.6%. That’s like selling samosas at ₹10 while pocketing only 15 paise. Debt at ₹9.8 Cr isn’t huge, but with interest coverage at 1.4x, every EMI feels like a knife to the gut.
The tragedy: promoters still hold 70.6%, but the public who bought at ₹54 (high of the year) are now sitting at ₹22—probably wondering if solar energy can recharge their patience too.
Question for you: Do you think small EPC solar players can survive against the big boys? Or will they forever remain subcontractors begging for crumbs?
3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?
Agni Green Power is basically a solar service shop. Here’s their menu:
Solar EPC: Design, procurement, installation—your standard “we’ll set up panels on your roof and disappear after inauguration photo.”
O&M Services: They promise to keep your panels clean and working (though monsoon pigeons might have other plans).
Consultancy: Helping clients “evaluate feasibility”—read: sending a PDF report with copy-pasted solar irradiation data.
On-grid / Off-grid / Hybrid Systems: Rooftop panels that either push power into the grid, run standalone for villages, or come with batteries for that “UPS on steroids” experience.
Products: Solar pumps, inverters, MPPT chargers, remote monitoring—essentially assembling components sourced from bigger OEMs.
Core customer base? State agencies like JREDA, WBREDA, and small industrial clients. Translation: government paperwork, delayed payments, and working capital cycles longer than Game of Thrones.
4. Financials Overview
Source table
Metric
Mar ’25 (Latest Half)
Mar ’24
Sep ’24
YoY %
QoQ %
Revenue
₹24.9 Cr
₹21.0 Cr
₹16.2 Cr
+18.7%
+54.2%
EBITDA
₹1.71 Cr
₹1.14 Cr
₹1.02 Cr
+50.0%
+67.6%
PAT
₹0.47 Cr
₹0.27 Cr
₹0.15 Cr
+74.1%
+213.3%
EPS (₹)
0.24
0.14
0.08
+71.4%
+200%
Commentary: Growth looks good on paper, but remember—EPS annualised = ₹0.48. At ₹22 CMP, that’s P/E ~46x even on optimistic basis. Compare that to sector median P/E ~22x. Investors are clearly paying “renewable premium” for what’s essentially a solar kirana shop.