Mumbai, June 15, 2026, 20:35 IST
- Suzlon Energy ended at ₹55.57 on Monday, up 0.89%. The shares touched a high of ₹56.78 earlier in the session.
- Broker commentary has put the company’s FY31 roadmap in focus again, with recent notes setting price targets at ₹65.
- Investors are watching execution. That includes order conversion, working capital, new turbine launches, plus Suzlon’s push into solar and battery storage.
Suzlon Energy closed 0.89% higher at ₹55.57 on the NSE Monday. Shares traded in a ₹55.21-₹56.78 range. Volume crossed 6.5 crore shares, The Economic Times reported. The stock was in focus as brokerages commented on its “Suzlon 2.0” plan and renewable ambitions. The rise was modest compared to Suzlon’s recent moves. The Economic Times
Fresh buying picked up after multiple reports called out a ₹65 target price. Zee Business said Motilal Oswal is bullish on Suzlon, pointing to its FY31 roadmap—revenue and market share goals, order book, solar, plus battery energy storage systems (BESS). Zee Business InvestmentGuruIndia, also quoting Motilal Oswal, wrote Suzlon expects more than 25% revenue CAGR, wants to push wind market share in India to over 40%, raise yearly renewables sales to 10 GW, and hit a 15 GW order book by FY31. Investment Guru India Whalesbook mentioned the ₹65 target from ICICI Securities, attributed to faith in Suzlon 2.0. Whalesbook
Suzlon said Monday it has rolled out the S175, a 5 MW wind turbine the company is calling the tallest and most powerful in India, after finishing commissioning at Vijayanagar in Karnataka. The new machine uses a 175-meter rotor and a 160-meter hybrid lattice tower, with a blade tip height of 247.5 meters, according to Suzlon. The company says it’s targeting higher energy output in low-to-medium wind zones. Union Renewable Energy Minister Pralhad Joshi said in Suzlon’s statement the launch “will go a long way in ensuring that we meet our wind energy ambitions — both domestically and globally.” Suzlon
Brokers are staying positive on Suzlon, and the latest numbers are a big part of that. A DSIJ story on June 15 said Suzlon shipped 830 MW in Q4 FY26, its highest ever for a quarter. Quarterly revenue hit ₹5,468 crore, with EBITDA at ₹964 crore. EBITDA cuts out interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation to show operating profit. DSIJ also reported just under 9 GW of orders on the S144 platform, and an FY26 closing order book at 5.9 GW. Dalal Street Investment Journal In its own May results, Suzlon said FY26 was its “highest-ever India annual deliveries,” quoting CEO Ajay Kapur, and said the order book supports “strong revenue visibility” ahead. Suzlon
Suzlon shares are trading as the market looks at whether the firm is just a wind turbine recovery play or if it can scale up into a full renewable energy platform that brings steady asset-management fees. Business Today reported Suzlon’s 2.0 plan stands on four main points: dispatchable renewables, faster projects, local manufacturing, and exports. The publication listed Suzlon’s aims for 10 GW in annual renewable sales, a 15 GW order book, and 70 GW managed by FY31. Business Today
Execution remains in focus for Suzlon. The company must convert its 5.5–5.9 GW pipeline to installed projects, which means lining up land, permits, grid links, funding, and timely delivery. Whalesbook mentioned risks here, noting renewables get delayed and run over budget when land, approvals, or connections don’t arrive on time. Whalesbook That’s pushing attention back to Suzlon shares. For now, the question isn’t if broker calls set targets at ₹65 or more, but whether Suzlon can deliver and avoid stretching its balance sheet as it executes these orders.