
Vikram Solar's ₹2,079-cr IPO to open on Aug 19; fixes price at ₹315-332
The Kolkata-based firm's maiden public issue would open for subscription on August 19 and conclude on August 21, it announced.
The IPO will include fresh issues of equities worth up to ₹1,500 crore and an offer for sale (OFS) of over 1.74 crore shares valued at around ₹579.37 crore at the upper end of the price band, by its promoters. This aggregates the issue size to ₹2,079.37 crore.
Of the fresh issuance, the company plans to use the proceeds for funding capital expenditure for investment in its wholly owned subsidiary, VSL Green Power Private Ltd, for both Phase I and Phase II of the project.
Vikram Solar commenced its manufacturing operations in 2009 with an installed solar PV module manufacturing capacity of 12 MW, grown to 4.50 GW installed capacity as of the date.
According to a CRISIL report, the company holds one of the largest capacities among non-captive manufacturers on the Ministry of New & Renewable Energy's approved list of module manufacturers, with 2.85 GW listed as of June 2025.
Vikram Solar has two solar PV module manufacturing facilities located in West Bengal and Tamil Nadu, and a solar cell manufacturing facility with two units, in Gangaikondan, Tamil Nadu. It has established a pan-India presence, serving 19 states and two union territories.
The company's key domestic customers include prominent government entities, such as NTPC, Neyveli Lignite Corporation, and Gujarat Industries Power Company and large private independent power producers (IPPs), like ACME Cleantech Solutions Adani Green Energy, Azure Power India, JSW Energy and Rays Power Infra, among others.
In terms of financials, Vikram Solar's revenue from operations increased by 36 per cent to ₹3,423 crore in fiscal 2025 from ₹2,511 crore in the preceding fiscal, similarly, profit after tax rose 75 per cent to ₹140 crore in fiscal 2025 from ₹80 crore in fiscal 2024.
JM Financial, Nuvama Wealth Management, UBS Securities, Equirus Capital and PhillipCapital are book-running lead managers, while Link Intime India is the registrar for the IPO. PTI>

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Economic Times
9 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Apple plots expansion into AI robots, home security and smart display
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Moreover, the new initiatives will help rebut the idea that the company is no longer innovating like it used News first reported last year that Apple was moving forward with a tabletop robotics project, code-named J595, and developing a new smart-home strategy. But now a clearer picture is forming of its push into that market — and what it means for its AI ambitions. Robots The tabletop robot resembles an iPad mounted on a movable limb that can swivel and reposition itself to follow users in a room. Like a human head, it can turn toward a person who is speaking or summoning it, and even seek to draw the attention of someone not facing it. The hope is to bring AI to life in ways that other hardware makers have yet to do. Apple imagines customers placing it on a desk or kitchen counter and using it to get work done, consume media and manage their day. FaceTime calls will also be a key function of the device. 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Apple has multiple teams across its AI, hardware, software and interface design groups tackling the project. The work is being led in part by Kevin Lynch, who previously oversaw a push into smart watch software and technology giant is developing several other robots. It has teams exploring a mobile bot with wheels — something akin to Inc.'s Astro — and has loosely discussed humanoid models. Apple has a group actively developing a large mechanical arm for use in manufacturing facilities or handling tasks in the back of retail stores, a move that could potentially replace some staff. Such a robot, code-named T1333, remains several years away. Charismatic The smart-home push includes a standalone display poised to launch by the middle of next year. That device, code-named J490, is a stripped-down variant of the robot, lacking the arm and conversational Siri — at least to start. It will still have home control, music playback, note taking, web browsing and videoconferencing. It may also include the new Siri visual the smart display and tabletop robot will run a new operating system dubbed Charismatic, which is designed to be used by multiple people. The interface largely centres on clock faces and widgets — small software features that are typically dedicated to specific tasks. Charismatic, which was previously known as Pebble and Rock earlier in development, blends the approach of the Apple TV and Apple Watch operating systems. It offers features like multiuser modes and clock-face themes, such as one based on Snoopy, the beagle from the Peanuts comic strip. The devices are meant to be easily shared: They include a front-facing camera that can scan users' faces as they walk toward it and then automatically change the layout, features and content to the preferences of that person. Some versions of the software use circular app icons and feature a hexagonal grid of apps. Apple is planning to include many of its core apps, including the calendar, camera, music, reminders and notes software. But the interface will be heavily reliant on voice interaction and widgets, rather than jumping in and out of the device will have a touch screen, the primary input method will be Siri and an upcoming upgrade to a feature dubbed App Intents. That software lets users precisely control the interface and applications via hardware itself looks similar to a Google Nest Hub but is shaped like a square, with thin black or white bezels and rounded corners. The non-robotic 7-inch display sits on a half-dome-shaped base, which includes some of the electronics and is perforated around the bottom edges for speakers and microphones. It can also be mounted on a wall. The launch will mark the first time Apple is making a serious push into the smart home and comes nearly a decade after Amazon and Alphabet Inc.'s Google started shipping smart speakers with screens. The home is a critical space for Apple to target, especially as more users consume content from the living room and automate household has long had a strong foothold in mobile devices and quickly became a player in the automotive industry via CarPlay — but that success hasn't followed into the smart home. Though the company launched HomeKit for controlling third-party devices in 2014, it has had limited success with its own HomePod speakers. Linwood and Glenwood Core to the new home devices — and current products like iPhones and iPads — is an overhaul to the underpinnings of are working on a version code-named Linwood with an entirely new brain built around large language models — the foundation of generative AI. The goal is to tap into personal data to fullfill queries, an ability that was delayed due to hiccups with the current new software, known internally as LLM Siri, is planned for release as early as next spring, Bloomberg News has reported. But work is going even further: Apple is preparing a visually redesigned assistant for iPhones and iPads that will also debut as early as next year. Craig Federighi, senior vice president of software engineering, hinted at a bigger-than-anticipated overhaul in an internal meeting with employees this month. 'The work we've done on this end-to-end revamp of Siri has given us the results we needed,' he said, adding that 'this has put us in a position to not just deliver what we announced, but to deliver a much bigger upgrade than we envisioned.' He said that 'there is no project people are taking more seriously.'Linwood is based on technology developed by the Apple Foundation Models team, but the company has a competing project dubbed Glenwood as well that would power Siri with outside technology.A final decision hasn't been made on which models will be used, but Apple has been testing Anthropic PBC's Claude for this purpose. 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Business Standard
11 minutes ago
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WPI inflation dips for 2nd month, hits 25-month low of -0.58% in July
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India.com
11 minutes ago
- India.com
India's WPI Inflation Falls To 2-Year Low In July As Food Prices Fall
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