Adani Power: From ₹101 to Record Highs — The Remarkable Rally of 2026
India’s largest private thermal power producer has staged one of the most dramatic stock recoveries of the year, surging 86% in twelve months on the back of soaring summer demand expectations, a landmark Maharashtra contract win, and bold moves into nuclear energy.
At the start of 2026, Adani Power’s stock was in the doldrums — languishing near ₹101 in January as concerns about falling power prices and weakening quarterly profits weighed on investor sentiment. Four months later, the script has been completely rewritten. As of late April 2026, shares trade near an all-time high of ₹217.25, making it one of the most talked-about turnaround stories on Dalal Street.
What changed? A potent combination of record summer heat forecasts, a massive 2,500 MW contract from Maharashtra, forward-loading of demand expectations, and the company’s surprise entry into nuclear energy have collectively ignited a buying frenzy that has pushed the stock up 35% in April alone.
The January Low and What Sparked the Turnaround
The stock’s journey from ₹101 in January to record highs is a story of multiple catalysts converging. During the January lows, the market was reacting to a double-digit drop in merchant power clearing prices and a sharp 18.89% year-on-year fall in net profit for Q3 FY26, which came in at ₹2,479 crore. Revenue too had slipped — declining over three consecutive quarters, from ₹14,570 crore to roughly ₹12,990 crore.
But the management at Adani Power was clear on one thing during its Q3 earnings call: the weakness was temporary, driven by a high base effect from exceptional one-time income in the prior year. And as temperatures started climbing across India in March and April, the thesis of a robust FY27 demand cycle began to look far more credible.
“The Adani Power share price is seeing new record highs as markets price in expectations of increased power demand this summer.”— InvestingCube, April 16–17, 2026
The Maharashtra MSEDCL Deal: A Game-Changer
Perhaps the single most significant catalyst for the April rally was the announcement on April 1, 2026, that Adani Power had received a Letter of Award from Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Co. Limited (MSEDCL) for the supply of 2,500 MW of renewable round-the-clock (RE RTC) power for a period of 25 years. This contract — one of the largest of its kind — not only adds long-term revenue visibility but also signals the company’s growing pivot toward blended, green-compliant power solutions.
For a company that already counts 84% of its revenue from long-term Power Purchase Agreements with government utilities, this deal extends and deepens that defensive revenue moat. The remaining 16% comes from short-term contracts and merchant sales, where price volatility is higher but upside potential is also greater during peak demand periods.
Adani Power’s operating capacity of 18,150 MW across 13 assets in 8 states accounts for approximately 3.82% of India’s total installed capacity. Its flagship Mundra Thermal Power Plant alone contributes 4,620 MW — making it historically the largest single private thermal site in the country.
Nuclear Ambitions: The Next Big Bet
In a move that has surprised even veteran observers of the Adani Group, April 2026 brought two significant disclosures related to nuclear energy. On April 13, Adani Power’s subsidiary AAEL incorporated CMAEL, a new entity for nuclear energy business. Just a week later, on April 20, the company incorporated a further step-down subsidiary — RRAEL — again earmarked for nuclear activities.
While commercial nuclear power in private hands remains a heavily regulated frontier in India, the incorporation of these entities signals long-term strategic intent. As India looks to dramatically scale its low-carbon baseload capacity over the next two decades, Adani Power appears to be positioning itself as a first mover in a space where the barriers to entry are extraordinarily high.
A Timeline of Key Events in 2026
Stock hits a trough near ₹101 amid weak Q3 results and merchant price pressure.
Adani Power receives a Letter of Award from MSEDCL for 2,500 MW RE RTC power over 25 years — a landmark contract win.
Stock trades at ₹175.81, with day-high of ₹178.10 — momentum building.
Subsidiary AAEL incorporates CMAEL for nuclear energy business — first major signal of nuclear ambitions.
Stock hits a then-record high of ₹207.40. A new step-down nuclear subsidiary RRAEL is also incorporated.
Shares surge 5% in a single session, reaching ₹212.70 on BSE with massive volumes. Market cap crosses ₹4 lakh crore.
52-week high of ₹217.25 recorded. Six-month return stands at 25.4%; one-year return at 86.1%.
Financials: Strength Beneath the Noise
Despite the noise around falling quarterly profits, the full-year picture for FY2025-26 is considerably healthier. Revenue for the full year reached ₹58,905 crore, with profit touching ₹12,749 crore. The company’s market cap now stands at approximately ₹4.16 lakh crore — a figure that reflects the market’s confidence in its long-term earnings power.
The valuation, however, is not cheap. Adani Power trades at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 40.5x and a price-to-book (P/B) of 8.67x as of late April. These multiples price in significant future growth and leave limited margin for error if demand expectations disappoint or pricing softens further.
Bull Case vs. Bear Case
▲ Bull Case
- Record summer heat driving peak power demand surge
- 25-year MSEDCL contract provides long-term revenue security
- Nuclear entry positions company as future low-carbon leader
- Management confident on strong FY27 as base effect normalizes
- India’s overall capacity additions lag demand growth
▼ Bear Case
- Merchant power prices soft; double-digit decline in clearing prices
- Revenue declined for three consecutive quarters through Q3 FY26
- High P/E of 40.5x leaves little room for negative surprises
- Coal supply chain risks despite national stockpile sufficiency
- Regulatory uncertainty around private nuclear energy in India
What Analysts Are Watching Next
The near-term focus will be squarely on two variables: actual summer power demand prints and merchant spot prices. If temperatures remain elevated and grid load reaches record peaks, Adani Power’s remaining merchant capacity will command premium pricing, potentially turning Q1 FY27 into a very strong earnings quarter.
The second variable is coal logistics. While India has flagged national-level coal stockpiles as sufficient, the critical question is whether the supply chain can deliver that coal efficiently to end-users during a demand spike. Any logistics bottleneck that curbs generation would be a headwind both for earnings and for the stock narrative.
Longer term, eyes will be on the pace of the nuclear subsidiary ramp-up, progress on the MSEDCL contract execution, and whether Adani Power can sustain the momentum of its inorganic growth strategy — having already added 7,270 MW through acquisitions to supplement its 10,840 MW of organically developed capacity.



