GE Vernova T&D India Limited (NSE: GVT&D, BSE: 522275) grabbed the spotlight on December 22, 2025 after the stock jumped sharply in early trade, fueled by a fresh multi-year HVDC (High Voltage Direct Current) contract win. Reuters noted the counter climbed around 8% after the order announcement, while market trackers and media reports showed the move extending into double-digit territory intraday, reflecting just how “growth-sensitive” India’s power transmission theme has become. [1]
At the center of the rally: a contract from AESL Projects Limited for a 2,500 MW, ±500 kV HVDC Voltage Source Converter (VSC) terminal station—a big-ticket grid project designed to evacuate renewable power from KPS 3 (Khavda) to South Olpad over a multi-year execution period. [2]
The headline trigger: 2,500 MW HVDC win linked to Khavda renewables
In its exchange disclosure dated December 20, 2025, GE Vernova T&D India said it had been awarded the contract by AESL Projects Limited. The scope: design and establishment of a 2,500 MW, ±500 kV HVDC VSC terminal station, split into two 1,250 MW units, to support renewable evacuation from KPS 3 (Khavda) to South Olpad, with execution “over a period of multiple years.” The company also stated the order is domestic and indicated no related-party involvement. [3]
If HVAC is the familiar “national highway” of power transfer, HVDC—especially VSC-based HVDC—is closer to a controlled-access expressway built for long distances, heavy loads, and tricky grid conditions. That’s why this matters: India’s renewable build-out is increasingly running into the bottleneck of “generation is ready, but evacuation isn’t.”
How big is this order in rupee terms?
While the company’s filing describes the scope and timing, broker commentary quickly moved the conversation to estimated order value and earnings visibility.
The Financial Express reported that Nuvama Wealth Management reiterated a Buy view with a 12-month target price of ₹3,680, arguing the order improves medium-term earnings visibility even as the stock trades near recent highs. Nuvama estimated the order value at ~₹8,000–₹10,000 crore, with execution likely spread across three to four years, which implies revenue recognition will be gradual rather than immediate. [4]
That “3–4 year” timeline is not a footnote—it’s the entire story for long-cycle capital goods companies. Big orders can boost confidence instantly (hello, share-price spike), but financial statements absorb the benefit over time through execution milestones, billing, and working capital discipline.
Order book context: visibility improves, but the market wants to see conversion
Nuvama’s note (as summarized by Financial Express) framed the win as meaningful against GE Vernova T&D India’s already-strong order book (reported around ₹13,100 crore in that coverage) and against expected FY26 revenue levels cited in the same discussion. [5]
This aligns with why HVDC wins often attract premium sentiment: they’re not just “more of the same” switchgear/transformer orders—they signal capability in complex system integration, where vendor qualification and track record matter.
It’s not the only recent HVDC-related development
Just days earlier, the company disclosed another HVDC-linked development: a Letter of Award from Power Grid Corporation of India (PGCIL) for refurbishment of the 2×500 MW HVDC Chandrapur back-to-back link connecting India’s northern and southern regions. Business Standard reported the scope included upgrading HVDC thyristor valves and controls & protection, again positioned as a multi-year domestic contract. [6]
Put the two together and you get a clear narrative the market can latch onto: GE Vernova T&D India is stacking wins across both “new-build renewable evacuation” (Khavda) and “strategic upgrade/refurbishment” (Chandrapur). Those are different flavors of grid capex—both valuable.
The stock move on Dec 22: what the tape said
Multiple outlets captured the speed of the move:
- Business Standard reported the shares surged as much as ~11% intraday to about ₹3,250 on the BSE, with the rally linked to the AESL/Adani Energy Solutions-related HVDC contract. [7]
- Economic Times reported the stock rose about 10% to around ₹3,225 during the session after the HVDC order disclosure, while also flagging the “priced-in optimism” debate. [8]
- Trendlyne data later in the day showed the stock around ₹3,094.20 on the NSE at 1:02 PM IST, still up strongly on the day—suggesting early euphoria cooled into a more measured gain. [9]
One important nuance for readers: sharp intraday spikes on order news are common in Indian capital goods—but the sustainability of the move usually depends on whether follow-on orders and margin execution keep pace.
Financial performance: the latest reported quarter in focus
The most recent company-released financial snapshot (as of Dec 22) comes from its Q2 FY2025–26 release (quarter ended September 30, 2025). In that press release, GE Vernova T&D India reported:
- Revenue of ₹15.4 billion, up 39% YoY
- EBITDA of ₹3,965 million with an EBITDA margin of 25.8%
- Profit After Tax of ₹2,995 million
- Order bookings of ₹16.1 billion, down 66% YoY (a reminder that order inflow can be lumpy) [10]
Alongside results, the company announced board-approved plans to invest ₹806 crore to expand capacity across transformers/reactors and GIS/AIS products, including new manufacturing lines (air core reactors and bushings). [11]
That capex matters because HVDC and high-voltage grid projects are often constrained not by demand, but by delivery capacity and lead times. Investors tend to reward companies that expand capacity before the order wave crests—assuming they don’t overbuild into a downturn.
Brokerage forecasts and targets: where the Street is clustering
Here’s the key thing about “targets”: they’re not prophecies. They’re conditional narratives—assumptions about order inflows, margins, execution, and valuation multiples. Still, they shape flows, and Dec 22 was full of target-talk.
Nuvama: Buy, ₹3,680, and the “earnings visibility” angle
As reported by Financial Express, Nuvama maintained a Buy stance with a 12-month target of ₹3,680, and pegged the HVDC order value at ₹8,000–₹10,000 crore, executed over 3–4 years. The same coverage noted Nuvama’s view that the win strengthens visibility and could lift medium-term earnings, while also acknowledging that valuations are elevated. [12]
A separate Nuvama institutional equities “result update” (dated Nov 3, 2025) also reiterated a BUY call and referenced a revised target price of ₹3,680, linking optimism to margin strength, capacity expansion, and export/HVDC optionality. [13]
Antique: Buy, ₹3,596, “good long-term buy”
Business Standard reported that Antique maintained a Buy rating with a target of ₹3,596, highlighting factors such as order backlog strength, balance sheet quality, and earnings/return profile as support for a long-term view. [14]
YES Securities: Initiate “Add”, ₹3,200, grid capex “supercycle”
A YES Securities initiating coverage note dated December 10, 2025 initiated at “Add” with a target price of ₹3,200, framing the opportunity as a grid capex “supercycle.” The note argued for strong multi-year growth drivers, including a large domestic electrification capex pipeline and robust order book visibility, with projections such as >30% CAGR revenue growth (FY25–FY28) and EBITDA margin expansion assumptions (as presented in that report). [15]
Consensus snapshot: Trendlyne’s average target
Trendlyne’s consensus page (as visible on Dec 22) showed an average share price target of ₹3,265.50, described as implying a mid-single-digit upside from the then “last price” shown on the platform. [16]
Valuation and technical picture: the “already priced in?” question
Economic Times, while covering the HVDC order-driven spike, explicitly flagged valuation richness, citing metrics such as a P/E around 81 and P/B above 40 at the time of publication, and noting the stock was trading near its 52-week high—often a setup for higher volatility if expectations wobble. [17]
In other words: the market is treating GE Vernova T&D India less like a sleepy equipment supplier and more like a premium compounder in a multi-year grid build-out. That can be great—until the narrative meets a bad quarter of execution or slower order conversion.
Regulatory and headline risks: recent GST demands/penalties
Beyond orders and targets, investors also saw regulatory updates in recent filings.
- A disclosure dated December 20, 2025 referenced a GST-related matter in West Bengal, citing a tax demand tied to an Input Tax Credit mismatch (FY2021–22), with tax amount ₹1,92,67,583 and penalty ₹19,45,444 (interest not quantified). The company stated it would file an appeal and indicated no material operational impact in the disclosure. [18]
- A separate disclosure dated December 19, 2025 referenced a GST demand in Uttar Pradesh tied to reconciliation issues (FY2018–19), listing tax ₹15,99,531, penalty ₹15,99,531, and interest ₹20,87,980, with the company similarly indicating it would appeal. [19]
These aren’t unusual for large industrial firms, but they can affect sentiment at the margin—especially when a stock is priced for near-flawless execution.
What could move GE Vernova T&D India stock next?
As of Dec 22, the stock’s near-term drivers look less like “mystical chart astrology” and more like a practical checklist:
Order wins are great. Investors will watch whether HVDC wins translate into steady quarterly execution—revenue conversion, margin durability, and working capital control.
The HVDC pipeline is competitive. Nuvama’s commentary (as reported) noted upcoming HVDC projects where competition is largely between GE Vernova T&D India and Hitachi Energy India, which underscores that “winner-takes-most” is not guaranteed. [20]
Capacity expansion must land on time. The company’s planned ₹806 crore investment is a growth enabler, but it also introduces execution complexity—ramp-ups, qualification, supply chain, and productivity. [21]
Valuation leaves little room for boredom. With valuation multiples highlighted as elevated by market coverage, any disappointment—slower order inflow, margin compression, delayed project execution—can have an outsized price effect. [22]
Bottom line
On December 22, 2025, GE Vernova T&D India’s stock surge was fundamentally anchored to something tangible: a 2,500 MW HVDC VSC renewable evacuation project awarded by AESL Projects with multi-year execution visibility. [23]
Brokerage commentary the same day leaned constructive—some calling it a long-term buy on backlog strength and grid capex tailwinds—while simultaneously acknowledging the obvious: the stock is not cheap, and the market is already paying up for a “grid build-out winner.” [24]
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 3. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 4. www.financialexpress.com, 5. www.financialexpress.com, 6. www.business-standard.com, 7. www.business-standard.com, 8. m.economictimes.com, 9. trendlyne.com, 10. www.gevernova.com, 11. www.gevernova.com, 12. www.financialexpress.com, 13. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 14. www.business-standard.com, 15. images.assettype.com, 16. trendlyne.com, 17. m.economictimes.com, 18. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 19. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 20. www.financialexpress.com, 21. www.gevernova.com, 22. m.economictimes.com, 23. bsmedia.business-standard.com, 24. www.business-standard.com


