Analyst Corner| NTPC: Maintain ‘buy’ with DCF-based TP of Rs 141
The Ministry of Power (MoP) has issued a notification on Late Payment Surcharge (LPS). As per the new rules, LPS would be based on one-year SBI MCLR v/s a fixed rate of 18% p.a. specified in the tariff regulations issued by CERC. In the current scenario, this would imply a LPS of 12-15% p.a. We note that, despite the 18% p.a. CERC specified rate, NTPC is currently charging 12% p.a. on overdue, which are settled under the Atmanirbhar scheme, and NTPC’s WC borrowing cost has also declined ~300bp over the past one year, thereby softening the impact of lower LPS rate. The impact on P&L is therefore not significant. We had already baked in lower LPS income (based on 12% p.a.) for FY22E/FY23E and hence leave unchanged our estimates. The overdue and LPS situation is a key monitorable, particularly with the Ministry now stepping in to supersede the regulations set by CERC. The new rules lay emphasis on reducing overdue as well, the addressing of which is of prime importance.
The MoP’s notification has linked the LPS rate to SBI’s MCLR. As per the new rules, the rate of LPS would be equal to the one-year SBI MCLR + 500bp. This rate would increase 50bp for every month of delay, with a cap of 300bp. The LPS will be in the range of one-year MCLR + 500bp to 800bp. Currently, SBI’s one-year MCLR stands at 7%, thereby implying a LPS rate of 12-15% p.a. This is lower than the fixed rate of 18% p.a. specified under CERC’s tariff regulations.








