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Which Electrical Equipments/HVDC Stocks Are Deep Value Picks in Week of Mar 28, 2026?

ACCEL

In the Week of Mar 28, 2026, the Electrical Equipments/HVDC sector has 1 stocks that are underperforming Nifty 500 but have accelerating quarterly earnings. Average value score is 61/100 with PAT acceleration of +24pp.

Total Stocks
1
deep value
Avg Fundamental
61
/100
Top Pick
Skipper
Score: 47/100
Avg Margin of Safety
Undervalued

Stock Distribution

0 Strong1 Good0 Average0 Weak

Earnings & Valuation Signals

💰

1 of 1 stock trading below fair value — sector offers value opportunities.

📈

Operating margins expanding across 1 stock — pricing power intact.

AI Research Summary

Electrical Equipments/HVDC Sector: Earnings Momentum Analysis (India, 2026)

Earnings Acceleration Triggers
▲Massive Transmission Capex Super-Cycle (Structural, 5-7 year runway)
▲Renewable Energy Integration Forcing HVDC Adoption (Ongoing acceleration)
▲Fastest-Growing Technology Segment (VSC) Creating Product Mix Upgrade
▲Supply Chain Consolidation & Localization Tailwind (Policy-driven, 2-3 year impact)
Earnings Deceleration Risks
▼Supply Chain Bottlenecks & Execution Delays (Near-term, Medium severity)
▼Import Competition & Tariff Exposure (Medium-term, Medium severity)
▼Execution Risk on Rs 9 Trillion Investment Program (Structural, High severity if materialized)

Electrical Equipments/HVDC Sector: Earnings Momentum Analysis (India, 2026)

Sector Verdict: The Electrical Equipments/HVDC sector is entering a structural capex super-cycle driven by India's Rs 9 trillion transmission network expansion and renewable energy integration imperative, creating visible earnings acceleration for equipment manufacturers through mid-decade.

Sector Momentum Dashboard

MetricValueTrendNote
Stocks Beating Nifty 5002 of 2Neutral breadthOnly 2 stocks in our coverage
Average Relative Strength39.82%OutperformingStrong YTD gains
Aggregate PAT Growth YoY103.8%📈 AcceleratingGE Vernova's exceptional growth
Sector OPM26.73%📈 HealthyStrong operating leverage visible
Aggregate Revenue Growth58.4%📈 RobustCapex orders flowing through
Market Size (India HVDC 2024)$2.95 billion📈 GrowingProjected $5.85B by 2030
Sector CAGR Outlook (2025-30)12.6%StructuralDriven by transmission capex

🚀 SECTOR-WIDE EARNINGS ACCELERATION TRIGGERS

Trigger 1: Massive Transmission Capex Super-Cycle (Structural, 5-7 year runway)

What's Happening:[4] India's transmission network is undergoing unprecedented expansion with an estimated Rs 9 trillion investment requirement up to 2031-32 for network strengthening and capacity addition. Specifically, an additional 32,250 MW of HVDC bipole capacity is projected to be added during 2027-32, with HVDC bipole capacity reaching 34,500 MW by 2026-27 and 66,750 MW by 2031-32.[4] This represents the backbone of India's renewable energy transmission infrastructure buildout.

Companies Benefiting: Both Hitachi Energy India Ltd and GE Vernova T&D India Ltd are direct beneficiaries—GE Vernova's 103.8% YoY PAT growth and 58.4% revenue growth reflect early monetization of this capex cycle through equipment orders.[5] Hitachi Energy's selection in 2025 to deliver a 950 km HVDC connection transmitting 6 GW from Rajasthan to Uttar Pradesh exemplifies the scale of projects being awarded.[2]

Sector Impact: HVDC and ultra-high-voltage (UHV) systems will gain prominence for long-distance bulk power transfer,[5] driving demand for specialized equipment (converter transformers, valves, control systems). The India power transmission equipment market itself is projected to grow from $18.5 billion (2025) to $29.4 billion (2031) at 8.0% CAGR,[5] indicating broad-based equipment order visibility.

Timeline: 2026-2032 (Rs 9 trillion investment span); peak manufacturing/execution 2027-2031.


Trigger 2: Renewable Energy Integration Forcing HVDC Adoption (Ongoing acceleration)

What's Happening:[3] The growing emphasis on renewable energy integration is driving demand for HVDC systems, which facilitate efficient transmission of power from remote renewable energy sources to load centers. Large projects linking offshore wind farms, hydropower plants, and distant load centers are increasingly favoring HVDC configurations.[5] This is a policy-driven secular tailwind.

Companies Benefiting: Hitachi Energy India Ltd and GE Vernova T&D India Ltd benefit from their exposure to converter stations, transmission medium (cables), and associated equipment required for these green corridors.[3]

Sector Impact: The HVDC transmission systems market in India reached $4.19 billion in 2026 and is growing at 8.55% CAGR to reach $6.31 billion by 2031.[6] Equipment manufacturers see rising demand for HVDC-specific components as utilities explore regional interconnections and large-scale green energy corridors.

Timeline: 2026 onwards (continuous; accelerates as renewable capacity adds)


Trigger 3: Fastest-Growing Technology Segment (VSC) Creating Product Mix Upgrade

What's Happening:[1] Voltage Source Converter (VSC) technology is the fastest-growing segment within HVDC transmission, with Line Commutated Converter (LCC) representing the larger base.[1] India has already established proof-of-concept—POWERGRID inaugurated its 320 kV 2000 MW Pugalur-Thrissur HVDC project using VSC technology in February 2021, the first in India.[3] VSC's advantages (lower losses, better grid support) are driving adoption.

Companies Benefiting: Hitachi Energy India Ltd and GE Vernova T&D India Ltd with VSC capabilities will command premium pricing and capture market share from LCC legacy players as new projects shift to VSC-based architectures.

Sector Impact: Technology transition from LCC to VSC improves equipment margins and enables manufacturers to differentiate. Advanced components like modular multilevel converters (MMC) enhance efficiency and reliability, creating pricing power for technology leaders.[3]

Timeline: 2026-2031 (gradual but accelerating VSC adoption across new projects)


Trigger 4: Supply Chain Consolidation & Localization Tailwind (Policy-driven, 2-3 year impact)

What's Happening:[8] India's HVDC supply chain is fragmented and lacks standardization, creating efficiency losses and delays. The government is planning to boost local manufacturing of critical power transmission equipment through stakeholder incentives and standardized operating procedures (SOPs).[7][8] This consolidation wave will favor organized, established players over fragmented suppliers.

Companies Benefiting: Hitachi Energy India Ltd and GE Vernova T&D India Ltd, with established manufacturing footprints and technology expertise, will capture market share from smaller, less-capable competitors as the sector professionalize.

Sector Impact: Implementation of SOPs and capital incentives over 3-4 years will reduce reliance on imports, accelerate domestic HVDC deployment, and strengthen the local supply chain.[8] This creates tailwinds for organized manufacturers with execution capability.

Timeline: 2026-2028 (incentive rollout and SOP implementation)


⚠️ SECTOR-WIDE EARNINGS DECELERATION RISKS

Risk 1: Supply Chain Bottlenecks & Execution Delays (Near-term, Medium severity)

Trigger: Fragmentation and lack of standardization in procurement and manufacturing processes could slow project execution if not rapidly addressed through government incentives and SOP implementation.[8] Delays in capital incentive disbursement could bottleneck domestic component sourcing.

Most Exposed: Both Hitachi Energy India Ltd and GE Vernova T&D India Ltd depend on seamless supply chains; execution delays directly compress margins and defer revenue recognition.

Impact: Project delays could compress sector OPM by 150-200 bps and defer PAT growth by 1-2 quarters if supply chain constraints become acute (e.g., long lead times for specialized HVDC components creating bottlenecks).

Early Warning Signal: Monitor capex project timelines from POWERGRID announcements; delays in Rajasthan-UP or other mega-projects signal execution risk.


Risk 2: Import Competition & Tariff Exposure (Medium-term, Medium severity)

Trigger: Global HVDC equipment vendors (Siemens, ABB, etc.) could flood India if tariff protections are withdrawn or anti-dumping duties expire. Record order backlogs for European vendors (NKT's EUR 10.8 billion backlog) suggest global supply tightness, creating competitive pricing pressure once capacity normalizes.[2]

Most Exposed: Both stocks face pricing pressure if import competition intensifies; GE Vernova, despite strong margins (26.73% OPM), could see 200-300 bps margin compression if forced into price wars.

Impact: Could compress sector OPM by 200-400 bps and slow PAT growth from current 100%+ levels to mid-teens if import dumping occurs.

Early Warning Signal: Monitor government "Make in India" commitment follow-through; weakening rupee or tariff policy reversals are red flags.


Risk 3: Execution Risk on Rs 9 Trillion Investment Program (Structural, High severity if materialized)

Trigger: India's Rs 9 trillion transmission capex program is contingent on POWERGRID funding, regulatory approvals, and land acquisition—all have historicized delays. Any major project cancellations or deferrals could compress sector demand.

Most Exposed: Both stocks are directly exposed to POWERGRID ordering patterns; project deferrals directly compress equipment order pipelines.

Impact: If capex program slips by 12-24 months, sector PAT growth could decelerate from 100%+ YoY to 10-15% by FY27-28.

Early Warning Signal: Monitor POWERGRID guidance, regulatory approval timelines, and quarterly capex disbursement updates.


📊 Top Performers: Earnings Trigger Summary

StockKey Acceleration TriggerPAT Growth SignalTimelineConfidence
GE Vernova T&D India Ltd103.8% YoY PAT growth, 58.4% revenue growth; Direct beneficiary of HVDC capex orders and VSC technology adoptionExceptional; Early-cycle gainsFY26-27 peakHigh
Hitachi Energy India LtdHitachi Energy selected for 950 km, 6 GW Rajasthan-UP HVDC corridor; VSC technology capability; Mega-project executionStrong; Tier-1 project winsFY26-27 onwardsHigh

Key Sector Metrics & Insights

Technology Segment Mix:

  • •LCC (Line Commutated Converter): Largest current segment; legacy technology
  • •VSC (Voltage Source Converter): Fastest-growing segment; superior efficiency and grid support; commands premium pricing[1]

Geographic Concentration:

Southern Region (Pugalur-Thrissur and adjacent corridors) is witnessing significant growth, followed by inter-regional corridors (e.g., Rajasthan-Uttar Pradesh).[3] Concentration risk: both stocks benefit disproportionately from Southern and inter-regional project concentration.

Equipment Component Demand:

Specialized HVDC components seeing rising demand: converter transformers, valves, control systems, modular multilevel converters (MMC), and sensing/IoT for predictive maintenance.[5]


Sector Trigger Timeline

TriggerTimeframeEarnings ImpactKey StocksStatus
Capex Super-Cycle (Rs 9T investment)2026-2032+15-25% sector PAT YoYBothLIVE
Renewable Energy Integration (HVDC adoption)2026 onwards+10-15% sector PAT YoYBothLIVE
VSC Technology Migration2026-2031+5-10% margin upsideBothEarly Stage
Supply Chain Localization (SOP + incentives)2026-2028+3-7% margin upsideBothEarly Stage
Supply Chain Bottleneck RiskIf materializes (2026-27)-2-3% sector PATBothMONITOR
Import Competition RiskIf tariffs fade (2027+)-2-4% sector PATBothMONITOR
POWERGRID Capex DelaysIf materializes (2027+)-10-15% sector PATBothMONITOR

Key Questions to Track for Electrical Equipments/HVDC Sector

  1. •

    Will POWERGRID execute the Rs 9 trillion capex program on schedule, or will execution slippage emerge as orders slow in FY27-28?

    • •Early signals: Monitor Q3 FY26 and Q4 FY26 POWERGRID capex spending and guidance updates.
  2. •

    How quickly will supply chain standardization (SOPs) and capital incentives translate into volume growth, and will they prevent import competition?

    • •Early signals: Track government "Make in India" announcement timelines and localization incentive disbursement rates.
  3. •

    Will VSC adoption accelerate faster than consensus expects (creating margin tailwinds), or will LCC remain dominant (limiting pricing power)?

    • •Early signals: Monitor project awards and technology specifications for new HVDC corridors.
  4. •

    How sustainable is GE Vernova's 100%+ PAT growth, and will it continue into FY27, or is FY26 a peak year?

    • •Early signals: Watch for gross margin trends, operating expense scaling, and order pipeline visibility in con-calls.

FAQ: Electrical Equipments/HVDC Sector

Q: Why is the Electrical Equipments/HVDC sector in earnings momentum in 2026?

A: Two structural tailwinds are driving momentum: (1) Massive capex super-cycle — Rs 9 trillion transmission investment up to 2031-32 is creating broad-based equipment order pipelines, with GE Vernova already showing 103.8% YoY PAT growth;[4] (2) Renewable energy integration imperative — HVDC's role in long-distance green power transmission is driving secular demand growth for specialized equipment.[3] Additionally, India's shift toward VSC technology (faster-growing, higher-margin segment) and supply chain localization via government incentives are creating structural tailwinds for organized manufacturers.[8]

Q: Which Electrical Equipments/HVDC stocks have the strongest near-term earnings triggers?

A: GE Vernova T&D India Ltd shows the most visible near-term acceleration with 103.8% YoY PAT growth and 58.4% revenue growth, indicating strong order execution in FY26. Hitachi Energy India Ltd, while showing more conservative financial metrics, benefits from tier-1 project wins (e.g., 950 km, 6 GW Rajasthan-UP corridor awarded to Hitachi Energy in 2025) and VSC technology expertise, positioning it for sustained growth through FY27-28.[2]

Q: What are the key risks for the Electrical Equipments/HVDC sector in 2026-27?

A: Three main risks: (1) Supply chain bottlenecks — Fragmentation and lack of standardization could delay projects and compress margins if not rapidly addressed through government SOPs and incentives;[8] (2) Import competition — Global vendors' normalizing capacity and potential tariff policy changes could trigger pricing pressure, compressing sector OPM by 200-400 bps;[2] (3) POWERGRID execution slippage — Rs 9 trillion capex program is contingent on on-time project execution; delays could defer order pipelines and slow sector PAT growth to 10-15% by FY27-28.[4] Early warning signals: Monitor POWERGRID capex timelines, government "Make in India" policy follow-through, and quarterly order pipeline visibility from management con-calls.

Q: Is the current 39.82% outperformance (Relative Strength vs Nifty 500) sustainable?

A: Partially. Near-term (FY26-27), yes—the visible capex super-cycle and strong order execution (evidenced by GE Vernova's 100%+ PAT growth) support continued outperformance. However, beyond FY27, sustainability depends on: (1) supply chain constraint resolution; (2) VSC technology adoption acceleration; (3) new mega-projects commencing. If these tail-winds stall, relative strength could normalize to market rates by FY28, implying 15-25% downside from current RS premium.

Last updated Mar 28, 2026

1 stocks in this sector

View:
Strong61/100

Skipper Ltd

3.9K Cr
Deeply Undervalued
Earnings Pulse
PAT YoY
+47%
Stable
Revenue YoY
+21%
Momentum
Accelerating
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Frequently Asked Questions: Electrical Equipments/HVDC

Based on publicly available financial data. This is educational research, not investment advice.

How many Electrical Equipments/HVDC stocks are deep value opportunities worth studying?

There are currently 1 stocks in the Electrical Equipments/HVDC sector that qualify as deep value opportunities worth studying. These stocks are underperforming the market despite showing improving earnings — a classic contrarian research signal.

Which Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks appear most undervalued?

The most undervalued Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks based on fair value analysis

  • Skipper Ltd — Significantly Undervalued
  • Stocks sorted by valuation signal (most undervalued first).

Which Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stock has the highest earnings acceleration?

Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks with the highest earnings growth

  • Skipper Ltd — PAT growth +47.2% YoY, earnings stable

Why are Electrical Equipments/HVDC stocks underperforming despite improving earnings?

Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks are underperforming despite improving earnings because the market has not yet recognized their earnings recovery. This creates a potential opportunity for patient investors

  • The market often takes 2-4 quarters to re-rate stocks after earnings improve
  • Deep value stocks typically have a negative narrative that suppresses sentiment
  • Improving earnings combined with market underperformance creates a valuation gap
  • When the market eventually recognizes the recovery, re-rating can be significant
  • This is an educational explanation of deep value investing theory.

Which Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks have the highest revenue growth?

Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks with the highest revenue growth

  • Skipper Ltd — Revenue growth +20.8% YoY

What is the average PE ratio of Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks?

The average PE ratio of Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks is 20.6x. Deep value stocks typically trade at lower PE multiples relative to their sector peers, reflecting the market's skepticism about their recovery.

Is the earnings recovery in Electrical Equipments/HVDC sustainable?

Sustainability indicators for the Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value earnings recovery

  • A sustainable recovery shows more stocks accelerating than decelerating.

What is the margin trend for Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks?

Operating margin trends across Electrical Equipments/HVDC deep value stocks

  • 1 stocks with expanding margins

Is Electrical Equipments/HVDC a contrarian opportunity worth studying?

Electrical Equipments/HVDC as a contrarian opportunity — key research signals

  • 1 stocks underperforming the market (contrarian setup)
  • 1 stocks appear undervalued based on fair value analysis
  • Contrarian investing requires patience.

What is the typical recovery timeline for deep value stocks?

Deep value stock recovery timelines vary, but historical patterns suggest

  • 1-2 quarters: Earnings inflection detected, market still skeptical
  • 2-4 quarters: Consistent earnings improvement builds confidence
  • 4-6 quarters: Market re-rates, stock price catches up to fundamentals
  • Some stocks never recover — continuous monitoring is essential
  • Timelines are approximate and based on historical patterns.

What is deep value investing?

Deep value investing is a strategy of studying stocks that are underperforming the market despite showing improving fundamentals (earnings growth, margin expansion). The thesis is that the market has not yet recognized the earnings recovery, creating a potential valuation gap.

  • These stocks typically underperform indices like Nifty 500
  • They show positive earnings trends (PAT growth, revenue growth)
  • The market eventually re-rates them as earnings improvements sustain
  • It requires patience — recovery can take several quarters

The above FAQs are based on publicly available financial data. This is educational research only. Sector Alpha is not SEBI registered and does not provide investment advice.