State electricity boards (SEBs), independent power producers, power plant developers and captive power producers have been asked to offer projects based on domestic coal, imported coal or a mix of both. EoIs will have to submitted by April 7. Analysts said time was ripe for NTPC to make acquisitions as valuations were low. Besides, the company is among a handful of Indian firms with the balance sheet strength to pull off such deals. It had a cash reserve of Rs 16,867 crore as on March 31, 2013.
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"This is appropriate time for acquisitions. A number of developers have realised that the high returns originally envisaged are not possible; they are willing to exit," said Salil Garg, director (corporate affairs), India Ratings and Research. Garg said no major acquisitions had occurred in the sector over the past year. He, however, cautioned that most projects likely to be sold had issues like regulatory hurdles.
Apart from the EoI, a sub-committee of NTPC board was also looking at a few proposals for acquisition, chairman & managing director, Arup Roy Choudhury, had said earlier this month. NTPC, which owns and operates 22 power plants, has a generation capacity of 42,400 Mw. around a fifth of India's total installed capacity. It had earlier evaluated at least six projects, including Larsen & Toubro's (L&T's) Rajpura project in Punjab and all thermal power projects of the debt-laden Jaypee group, beside Shapoorji Pallonji’s imported coal-based plant in Gujarat and state government’s projects in Bihar & UP.