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Sterling & Wilson Solar IPO: Here’s All You Need To Know

The company plans to raise close to Rs 3,125 crore by selling four crore equity shares at Rs 775-780 apiece through the IPO.

A worker cleans the surface of solar panels during production at a manufacturing facility. (Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)
A worker cleans the surface of solar panels during production at a manufacturing facility. (Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

Sterling & Wilson Solar Ltd. will launch its three-day initial public offering on Tuesday as the chairman and promoter plan to pare their holdings in the Shapoorji Pallonji Group’s solar engineering, procurement and construction company.

The Sterling & Wilson Solar plans to raise close to Rs 3,125 crore by selling four crore equity shares at Rs 775-780 apiece via IPO, according to the solar firms’s red herring prospectus. The issue is a pure offer-for-sale by the promoter—Shapoorji Pallonji & Co. Pvt. Ltd—and Chairman Khurshed Daruvala.

At the upper end of the price band, the company is valued at nearly Rs 12,500 crore, according to BloombergQuint’s calculations. After listing, the promoter shareholding will fall to 75 percent from 100 percent.

Business

Sterling & Wilson Solar, a pure-play end-to-end EPC company, provides services for utility-scale solar power projects with a focus on project design and engineering. It also manages all aspects of project execution from conceptualising to commissioning, and provides operations and maintenance services—which contributes only 1 percent to its total revenue.

The renewable energy EPC firm, which is present in 26 countries, commissioned and contracted 205 solar projects with a total capacity of 6,870.12 megawatt as of March 2019, according to its red herring prospectus.

In 2017, Sterling & Wilson Solar won a contract to build a 1,177-MW solar photovoltaic plant in Abu Dhabi—the largest such project at a single location.

Order Book

In 2015-16, Sterling & Wilson Solar generated 100 percent of its orders from India. Now it has diversified its order book.

Sterling & Wilson's order book stood at Rs 3,831 crore as of March this year, and it had received letter of intent for orders worth Rs 3,908 crore, the red herring prospectus showed.

Financials

The company’s net worth stood at Rs 841 crore as of March this year, translating into a book value of Rs 52.4 apiece.

Sterling & Wilson Solar’s revenue has grown at an annualised rate of 44.4 percent over financial years 2016-2019. Its net profit rose at a compound annual growth rate of 72.1 percent during the period. Growth in revenue was primarily led by a significant increase in EPC revenue from South East Asia, Africa, the U.S. and Latin America.

The company’s earnings before interest, tax and depreciation and amortisation grew at an annualised rate of 50.4 percent through fiscals 2016-2019, while its Ebitda margin rose from 6.9 percent to 7.8 percent during the period. The margin improved due to operating leverage and higher efficiency.

Debt Structure

The company’s total debt rose to Rs 2,228 crore in the financial year ended March 31, 2019 over the year-ago period. That was because of the company’s inter-corporate loan to a promoter group entity. To be sure, the promoter group company will repay the debt within 90 days of listing.

  • Total debt-to-equity ratio as of March: 2.6 times
  • Total debt-to-Ebitda: 3.5 times

Business Model

Sterling & Wilson Solar has an asset-light business model. Its customers are responsible for sourcing and acquiring real estate, while it leases the equipment. Thus, the company has lower capital expenditure and fixed costs. Its return ratios are also higher, owing to the business model.

Peers And Valuations

Sterling & Wilson Solar has no direct listed peer in India.

Its earnings per share will be close to Rs 40 for 2018-19. At the upper end of the price band, the company’s price-to-earnings ratio stands at 19.6 times, according to BloombergQuint’s calculations.