Tata Steel Share Price Valuation Analysis April 2026
Tata Steel Limited, founded in 1907 and headquartered in Mumbai, is India’s largest integrated steel producer and one of the world’s top-10 steel companies. The group operates across three continents — India, Europe (Netherlands + UK), and Southeast Asia (Thailand) — with an aggregate steelmaking capacity exceeding 35 MTPA.
The India business anchors profitability, spanning Jamshedpur (10 MTPA), Kalinganagar (8 MTPA, expanding to 16 MTPA), and the recently acquired NINL plant (1 MTPA, scaling to 4.5 MTPA). India delivered a best-ever FY26 crude steel output of 23.48 MT and deliveries of 22.53 MT — underscoring consistent operational execution. Management targets 40 MTPA domestic capacity over the medium term.
The European operations are the fulcrum of the deep-value thesis. Tata Steel Netherlands has already returned to EBITDA profitability. The UK operations — historically a significant cash drain (FY24 net loss: ~£1.12 billion) — are undergoing a structural transformation: blast furnaces have been shut down and a £1.25 billion Electric Arc Furnace (EAF) project is underway, with GBP 500 million co-funded by the UK government. At a targeted 3 MTPA capacity by FY27, the UK EAF project should structurally reduce fixed costs and environmental liabilities.
Revenue mix is broadly split ~55% India, ~35% Europe, ~10% Thailand. The India business earns EBITDA/tonne of ₹13,000–15,000; Europe has historically diluted group margins but is on a recovery trajectory. The company operates across Automotive Steels, Construction, Consumer Goods, Engineering, and Energy verticals.
The Tata Group parentage — with Tata Sons holding 33.2% — provides brand equity, institutional support, and strong governance. The management team led by CEO T V Narendran and CFO Koushik Chatterjee has consistently guided on capital allocation discipline, with free cash flow in India directed toward debt reduction.
| Metric (₹ Cr) | FY22 | FY23 | FY24 | FY25 | FY26E | FY27E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | 2,43,959 | 2,43,038 | 2,29,142 | 2,25,088 | 2,38,000 | 2,60,000 |
| EBITDA | 42,200 | 24,600 | 26,800 | 31,343 | 34,500 | 41,000 |
| EBITDA Margin | 17.3% | 10.1% | 11.7% | 13.9% | 14.5% | 15.8% |
| PAT (Consol.) | 41,749 | 8,075 | -4,685 | 9,122 | 11,800 | 18,500 |
| EPS (₹) | 33.9 | 6.5 | -3.8 | 2.74 | 8.5 | 14.2 |
| Net Debt (₹ Cr) | 72,000 | 80,000 | 89,000 | 85,000 | 81,800 | 72,000 |
| Capex (₹ Cr) | 12,500 | 14,200 | 17,000 | 15,671 | 15,500 | 14,000 |
| India EBITDA/tonne (₹) | — | 12,500 | 12,800 | 13,200 | 13,700 | 15,000+ |
FY26E and FY27E are analyst estimates. Source: Company filings, broker research, industry aggregators.
A 10-year Free Cash Flow model anchors our intrinsic value estimate. Given Tata Steel’s cyclical nature and ongoing capex programme, we adopt a conservative FCF ramp — assuming India FCF grows steadily while European drag diminishes post-FY27. Terminal value uses a Gordon Growth approach.
Sum-of-the-Parts (SoTP) check: India standalone business at 6–7x FY27E EBITDA of ~₹28,000 Cr yields enterprise value of ~₹1,75,000–1,96,000 Cr. Subtract net debt of ~₹72,000 Cr = India equity value of ₹1,03,000–1,24,000 Cr or ~₹82–99/share. Europe at conservative 4–5x EV/EBITDA adds ~₹40–60/share. This suggests the current price of ₹148 embeds near-zero value for Europe’s recovery — a classic deep-value asymmetry.
At ₹148, Tata Steel sits firmly in the Accumulate zone. The stock has corrected ~32% from its all-time high of ₹216 (Feb 2026) on macro headwinds — US tariff uncertainty, FII outflows, and delayed UK breakeven. These are temporary factors layered on a structurally improving business. The deep-value case rests on (a) best-ever India volumes, (b) European margins turning positive, and (c) declining net debt trajectory from India FCF.
Base case upside of 25–42% from CMP of ₹148 over 12–18 months is supported by multiple analyst targets (Anand Rathi: ₹240, Jefferies: ₹240, Nuvama: ₹165, JM Financial: ₹240). The risk/reward at current prices is asymmetric — downside to bear case ~₹105 is 29%; upside to base case ~₹200 is 35%; upside to bull case ~₹250 is 69%.
India Capacity Expansion: Kalinganagar Phase 2 will take domestic capacity to ~16 MTPA. NINL expansion from 1 MTPA to 4.5 MTPA expected to be announced in H2 FY27. Total India capacity is on track to 35–40 MTPA over 5–7 years, making Tata Steel the dominant domestic player. India’s infrastructure push (roads, railways, housing, defence) provides secular demand tailwinds.
UK EAF Project: The £1.25 billion EAF transition (GBP 500 million UK government grant) targets 3 MTPA capacity by FY27. UK breakeven — widely expected in Q4 FY27 — eliminates the single biggest EBITDA drag. India Ratings forecasts positive UK cash accruals from FY26 onward as fixed cost overheads fall sharply.
Margin Expansion Drivers: Q4 FY26 HRC prices rebounded 14.8% QoQ; rebar rose 20.7% QoQ. India standalone EBITDA/tonne is expected to cross ₹15,000 in Q4 FY26, signalling a strong exit rate into FY27. EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM, from Jan 2026) and UK safeguard tariffs (from Jul 2026) provide structural protection for European pricing.
EPS trajectory: Normalised earnings power at a mid-cycle steel price (India HRC ~₹52,000–54,000/t) and UK at breakeven yields consolidated EPS of ₹14–18 by FY27–28. Against the current CMP of ₹148, that implies a forward P/E of only 8–10x — compelling for a business with India’s secular growth runway.
| Forward Estimates | FY26E | FY27E | FY28E |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consol. Revenue (₹ Cr) | 2,38,000 | 2,60,000 | 2,80,000 |
| Consol. EBITDA (₹ Cr) | 34,500 | 41,000 | 48,000 |
| Consol. PAT (₹ Cr) | 11,800 | 18,500 | 27,000 |
| EPS (₹) | 8.5 | 14.2 | 21.0 |
| P/E at CMP ₹148 | 17.4x | 10.4x | 7.0x |
| EV/EBITDA | 7.9x | 7.0x | 5.9x |
| Company | Mkt Cap (₹ Cr) | Revenue (₹ Cr) | EBITDA Margin | EV/EBITDA | P/B | D/E | Capacity (MTPA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tata Steel | 1,84,000 | 2,25,088 | 13.9% | 7.0x | 2.7x | 1.0x | 35 MTPA |
| JSW Steel | 2,10,000 | 1,81,400 | 17.2% | 8.5x | 3.4x | 0.85x | 38 MTPA |
| SAIL | 40,000 | 1,09,000 | 10.3% | 5.8x | 0.7x | 0.65x | 21 MTPA |
| Hindalco (Novelis) | 1,35,000 | 2,43,000 | 13.6% | 6.8x | 2.1x | 0.7x | Aluminium |
| Jindal Steel (JSPL) | 80,000 | 58,500 | 22.4% | 7.2x | 2.2x | 0.3x | 11 MTPA |
| ArcelorMittal (Global) | USD 21 Bn | USD 62.7 Bn | 8.4% | 5.2x | 0.8x | 0.35x | 88 MTPA |
Tata Steel trades at a modest premium to SAIL and discount to JSW Steel on EV/EBITDA, which is fair given its global scale but higher leverage. The key differentiator vs. peers is the UK optionality — currently valued at near-zero by the market. If UK operations achieve even ₹3,000 Cr annual EBITDA by FY28, the implied 5x multiple adds ~₹8–10/share to the stock. JSPL’s lower leverage and higher margins make it a cleaner India play; Tata Steel is the deep-value/turnaround trade.