Catalysts
Catalysts - What Can Move the Stock
The next six months are unusually event-rich. The single most important catalyst is the EAAA India Alternatives IPO — SEBI's observation letter was received on 23 April 2026, opening a 12-month launch window for a ₹1,500 Cr pure offer-for-sale. Before that, the Q4 FY26 results call on 30 April 2026 is the first public test of underlying earnings since management cleared the regulatory backlog. Alongside, the Carlyle ₹2,100 Cr / 45% Nido Home Finance deal is targeted to close by 31 July 2026, subject to RBI / NHB / CCI approval. Three confirmed near-term events, all directly resolving the bull-bear debate. The calendar is not thin — it is the busiest in three years.
Hard-dated events (6m)
High-impact catalysts
Days to next hard date
Signal quality (1-5)
Tomorrow's Q4 FY26 earnings call (30-Apr-2026, 3:30 pm IST) is the first public read since EAAA's SEBI clearance, the Carlyle/Nido deal announcement, and CRISIL's "A+/Watch Negative" placement. Consensus expects roughly +11% revenue, +12% PAT YoY at the consolidated level. The stock sits at ₹124 — only 5% below its 52-week high, with most of the 9MFY26 PAT lift already in the tape via WestBridge gains. Variance against expectation will be read on whether the lift is durable.
Ranked Catalyst Timeline
The ten items below are ordered by decision value to a PM, not chronology. "Confirmed" means the date is verified from a primary release; "Window" means management has stated a fiscal target but no calendar date has been published.
Impact Matrix
The matrix below filters the timeline down to the items that actually resolve the investment debate, rather than just adding new information. Each row maps to a specific bull/bear tension already articulated upstream.
Next 90 Days
The window from 30 April to 28 July 2026 contains every confirmed near-term hard date plus the regulatory clock for Carlyle. A PM looking at this name today should view the next 90 days as the highest-density catalyst stretch in three years.
What Would Change the View
Three observable signals would force the bull-bear debate to update over the next six months. First, EAAA IPO pricing is the cleanest information — a price at or above DRHP-implied platform value (~₹4,000-5,000 Cr) confirms the bull SOTP and likely closes the holding-company discount; a 25%+ cut or withdrawal is the most efficient bear trigger and the principal disconfirming signal Bull listed. Second, the Q4 FY26 underlying-PAT print decides whether the 9MFY26 +22% YoY trajectory is durable or a disposal-gain artefact; the bear's strongest evidence is that FY25's ₹536 Cr PAT leans on the ₹3,250 Cr Nuvama gain, and Q4 is when that claim either holds or breaks. Third, regulatory enforcement on any subsidiary — RBI, SEBI, MCA — is the variant-perception swing factor: eight clean quarters is part of the bear's stated cover signal, while a single fresh action before the EAAA IPO would likely break the listing. Other items on the calendar (CRISIL, Carlyle close, insurance break-even) refine the call; these three resolve it.