Corporate Finance · Corporate Financial Advisory
Detailed Project Reports (DPR) & Financial Modelling
A Detailed Project Report is the document that stands between your project and the funding it needs — from a bank term loan committee, an NBFC credit desk, a SIDBI or CGTMSE scheme, or an internal board approving capital allocation.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
A Detailed Project Report is the document that stands between your project and the funding it needs — from a bank term loan committee, an NBFC credit desk, a SIDBI or CGTMSE scheme, or an internal board approving capital allocation. At PNPC Global, our Chartered Accountants have built DPRs and integrated financial models for manufacturing units, infrastructure projects, hospitality ventures, agro-processing plants, healthcare facilities, and expansion projects across India and the UAE since 1986. A DPR prepared by an accountant who understands how credit appraisal actually works — cash flow coverage, DSCR thresholds, sensitivity to input-cost shocks, security margins — reads differently to a bank than a document assembled from a generic template. We build reports that survive the questions a credit committee actually asks.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
A Detailed Project Report (DPR) is a comprehensive document that establishes the technical, commercial, financial, and managerial viability of a proposed project — a new manufacturing unit, an expansion, a diversification, an infrastructure asset, or any capital-intensive undertaking that requires external financing or formal internal approval. It typically covers the promoter and management background, the product or service and market assessment, the technical process and plant/machinery specification, the implementation schedule, the cost of the project and means of finance, and a detailed financial projection built on explicit, auditable assumptions. The DPR is the primary document a bank, NBFC, or financial institution relies upon when appraising a term loan or project finance proposal, and it is also required for government scheme applications — CGTMSE guarantee cover, SIDBI schemes, PMEGP, state industrial promotion subsidies, and various sector-specific capital subsidy schemes administered by ministries such as MSME, Food Processing, and Textiles.
The financial model that sits within (and beneath) the DPR is an integrated, formula-driven workbook — typically built in Excel — that links the Profit & Loss Account, Balance Sheet, and Cash Flow Statement across the project's operating life, usually 5 to 10 years depending on asset life and loan tenor. It is built up from unit-level operating assumptions — capacity utilisation ramp-up, realisation per unit, input costs, manpower costs, overheads — flowing through to computed outputs: EBITDA margins, Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) year-on-year and average, Internal Rate of Return (IRR) on project and equity, Net Present Value (NPV), payback period, and break-even capacity. Banks specifically scrutinise the DSCR — most credit policies require a minimum average DSCR (commonly in the 1.20–1.50 range depending on the lender's internal policy and sector risk) with no individual year materially below the floor — and the promoter's contribution ratio against the Means of Finance schedule, since Reserve Bank of India lending norms and individual bank credit policies expect a specified minimum promoter equity contribution relative to project cost.
A DPR is distinct from — but closely related to — a business plan. A business plan is often narrative-led and investor-facing, built for equity fundraising and strategic articulation. A DPR is appraisal-led and lender-facing (or scheme-facing), built specifically to satisfy the technical and financial scrutiny of a credit appraisal process, a Techno-Economic Viability (TEV) study requirement, or a government subsidy sanctioning authority. Many projects need both — a business plan for equity investors and a DPR for the debt component of the same capital structure — and the two must be internally consistent, since a lender's credit team will often cross-check DPR projections against any business plan or investor deck already in circulation.
From a regulatory and process standpoint, project finance in India above a certain size threshold is frequently structured as a consortium or multiple-banking arrangement, in which case the DPR (or an independent Techno-Economic Viability study commissioned by the lead bank) forms the basis on which all participating lenders sanction their respective exposure. For projects seeking capital subsidy under MSME technology-upgradation support (the erstwhile Credit Linked Capital Subsidy Scheme, whose availability and successor arrangements should always be confirmed with the current scheme guidelines in force, since central capital-subsidy schemes for MSME technology upgradation have been revised over time), PMEGP for new micro-enterprises, or state-specific industrial investment promotion policies, the DPR format and the specific financial ratios demanded often follow a scheme-prescribed template that differs from a standard bank-facing DPR — getting this wrong is one of the most common reasons scheme applications are returned for revision.
When a formal DPR and financial model is needed
Applying for a term loan or project finance facility from a bank or NBFC for a new unit, expansion, modernisation, or diversification project
Seeking CGTMSE guarantee cover, a SIDBI scheme facility, PMEGP subsidy, or a state industrial promotion capital subsidy that mandates a prescribed-format project report
Presenting a capital allocation decision to your own board or promoter group — an internal DPR brings financial discipline to a go/no-go decision on a large capex outlay
Structuring a consortium or multiple-banking arrangement where several lenders will independently appraise the same project and require a consistent, defensible DPR and TEV study
Applying for infrastructure or project-specific incentives — SEZ, EOU, PLI (Production Linked Incentive) scheme, or state single-window clearance — that require a DPR as a supporting document
Restructuring or refinancing an existing loan, where the lender requires a revised project viability assessment reflecting actual versus projected performance
Raising debt alongside equity for a growth-stage or infrastructure project, where lenders and equity investors will both scrutinise the same underlying financial model from different angles
When a lighter document may suffice
Very early-stage idea validation with no imminent bank application or scheme deadline — a lighter feasibility note or business plan may be the more appropriate first step; see our Financial Feasibility & Valuation Studies service
Working capital-only requirements with no fixed-asset capex component — banks typically assess these through financial statement analysis and a working-capital assessment note rather than a full project DPR
Pure equity fundraising with no debt component and no government scheme application — an investor-facing business plan and pitch deck is usually the more relevant document; a DPR's bank-appraisal format is not what equity investors expect to see
A project so small in scale that the bank's own internal proposal format is sufficient without a standalone DPR — many banks have simplified norms for very small ticket-size loans
Routine annual budgeting or internal MIS forecasting with no external financing trigger — a management financial model without full DPR narrative sections is more efficient for this purpose
DPR & project financial model vs related documents — choosing the right deliverable for the purpose
| Document | Primary Audience | Core Focus | Typical Length | When It Is Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Detailed Project Report (DPR) | Banks, NBFCs, scheme-sanctioning authorities, internal board | Technical + commercial + financial viability with lender-grade ratio analysis | 40–120+ pages depending on project scale | Term loan / project finance application, CGTMSE/SIDBI/PMEGP schemes, board capex approval |
| Techno-Economic Viability (TEV) Study | Lead bank / consortium lenders, large-ticket project appraisal | Independent third-party validation of technical feasibility and financial projections | Comparable to or more detailed than a DPR | Large project finance, consortium lending, restructuring under RBI resolution frameworks |
| Business Plan | Angel investors, VCs, PE funds, grant committees | Narrative-led market opportunity, strategy, and equity-investor financial story | 20–50 pages | Equity fundraising, accelerator/incubator applications, Startup India Seed Fund |
| Financial Feasibility Study | Promoters, early investors, internal decision-makers | High-level viability screen before committing to full DPR effort | 10–25 pages | Early-stage go/no-go decision, pre-DPR sanity check on a project concept |
| Standalone Financial Model | Internal management, CFO, board | Integrated 3-statement model without full narrative sections | Excel workbook, no bound report | Internal budgeting, scenario planning, periodic re-forecasting of an existing DPR |
| Pitch Deck | Investors in a live fundraising conversation | Visual, condensed narrative distilled from the business plan | 12–20 slides | Investor meetings, demo days, follow-on fundraising rounds |
| Project Appraisal Note (Bank-internal) | Bank's own credit committee | Bank's internal risk-rated summary, often built partly from the borrower's DPR | Varies by bank format | Prepared by the bank itself, using the DPR and financial model as key inputs |
Most substantial financing exercises need more than one of these documents working together — for example, a DPR for the debt tranche and a business plan for a simultaneous equity raise, both drawing on the same underlying, internally consistent financial model. Which combination you need depends on your capital structure, project scale, and the specific lender or scheme requirement — this is confirmed at the engagement-scoping stage.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | CA Advice Portals Never Give | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Engagement Scoping — Purpose, lender, and scheme requirement clarified before drafting begins | We establish which lender or scheme the DPR is being prepared for, and whether that lender or scheme mandates a specific prescribed format — CGTMSE, SIDBI, PMEGP, and several state subsidy schemes each have their own required structure and ratio disclosures. Preparing a generic DPR and then discovering it does not match the scheme's mandated format is one of the most common causes of application delay. | Day 1–2 |
| 2 | Promoter, Project & Management Background — Establishing the credibility layer | Lenders assess promoter track record, past project execution experience, and financial standing before they assess project numbers in detail. We structure this section to address what credit officers actually weigh — prior business experience, net worth statement, existing banking relationships and repayment track record, and management team capability for the specific project scale. | Day 2–4 |
| 3 | Market & Demand Assessment — Product/service, target market, and realistic demand sizing | A DPR that simply asserts 'growing market' without a defensible demand estimation methodology is a red flag to any experienced credit appraiser. We build demand assessment from bottom-up, addressable-market logic backed by identifiable data sources — industry association data, government statistics, comparable project benchmarks — not aspirational top-down percentages. | Day 4–8 |
| 4 | Technical Feasibility & Implementation Schedule — Plant, machinery, process, location, and timeline | We coordinate with your technical consultants, architects, or machinery vendors to translate technical specifications into a bankable narrative: production process flow, machinery list with vendor quotations, land and building requirement, utilities (power, water, effluent treatment where applicable), statutory clearances required (environmental, pollution control, factory licence), and a realistic, phased implementation schedule with a critical path. | Day 8–15 |
| 5 | Project Cost & Means of Finance — Capital structure that satisfies the lender's promoter-contribution norm | Project cost is built up systematically: land, building, plant and machinery, preliminary and pre-operative expenses, margin money for working capital, and contingency provision. The Means of Finance schedule then shows how this is funded — promoter's contribution, term loan, and any subsidy or grant component — structured to meet the lender's minimum promoter-equity expectation, since an inadequately capitalised Means of Finance schedule is a common ground for a term-sheet-stage query or rejection. | Day 10–15 — runs parallel to Stage 4 |
| 6 | Financial Model Construction — Integrated P&L, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow across the loan tenor | This is where the report earns or loses credibility. We build the model from unit-economics assumptions upward — realistic capacity utilisation ramp-up (rarely 100% from Year 1), input cost escalation, manpower cost build-up including statutory dues, depreciation computed per the useful lives prescribed under Schedule II of the Companies Act 2013 for accounting purposes and the applicable Income-tax Act rates for tax purposes, working capital cycle assumptions, and interest computation on a scheduled drawdown and repayment basis — not simplified shortcuts that produce numbers a credit analyst will immediately question. | Day 15–22 |
| 7 | Ratio Analysis & Sensitivity Testing — DSCR, IRR, NPV, break-even, and stress scenarios | We compute Debt Service Coverage Ratio year-by-year and on average across the loan tenor, project and equity IRR, NPV at an appropriate discount rate, payback period, and break-even capacity utilisation. We then stress-test the model against realistic downside scenarios — lower capacity utilisation, input cost escalation, delayed ramp-up, interest rate movement — because credit committees routinely ask 'what if revenue is 20% lower' and a DPR without a documented sensitivity analysis cannot answer that question convincingly. | Day 20–25 |
| 8 | Security & Collateral Documentation Support — Aligning the DPR with the security package | We work alongside the security/collateral documentation your lender requires — coordinating what asset cover and collateral margin the lender's policy expects relative to the loan amount, so the DPR's Means of Finance and asset schedule are consistent with what will actually be offered as security. | Day 22–26 |
| 9 | Draft Review & Promoter Walkthrough — Before submission, not after a query | We walk the promoter through the complete draft — not just to obtain sign-off, but to ensure every promoter can confidently answer questions on their own project numbers when the bank's credit team calls for a discussion or site visit. A DPR the promoter cannot defend in a five-minute conversation with a bank manager undermines the document's credibility regardless of how well it is written. | Day 25–28 |
| 10 | Finalisation & Statutory Annexures — CMA data, projected financials, and prescribed formats | Where the lender requires Credit Monitoring Arrangement (CMA) data in the RBI-prescribed or bank-prescribed format, we prepare this alongside the DPR — many banks will not process a term loan application without CMA data in their specific format. We also prepare the projected financial statements in the format the bank's credit appraisal system expects. | Day 26–30 |
| 11 | Submission Support & Query Handling — Present through the credit appraisal process, not absent after delivery | Bank and NBFC credit teams routinely raise queries during appraisal — clarification on an assumption, a request for a revised sensitivity scenario, or additional back-up for a cost estimate. We remain available to respond to these queries as they arise through the sanction process, rather than considering the engagement closed on the day the report is delivered. | As queries arise through sanction process |
| 12 | Scheme-Specific Compliance — CGTMSE, SIDBI, PMEGP, or state subsidy documentation | For projects also seeking guarantee cover or capital subsidy, we prepare the scheme-specific application forms and supporting schedules alongside the DPR, ensuring the figures in the scheme application are fully consistent with the DPR and financial model — inconsistency between a DPR and a subsidy application is a common cause of scheme rejection. | Runs parallel to submission, as applicable |
| 13 | Post-Sanction & Disbursement Support — CMA updates, cost overrun documentation, and periodic re-forecasting | After sanction, projects often experience implementation delays, cost overruns, or phased disbursement conditions that require updated CMA data or a revised project cost statement to the bank. PNPC continues to support these updates through implementation and into the early years of commercial operation, rather than ending the engagement at sanction. | Through implementation and early operations |
Realistic end-to-end timeline for a complete DPR and integrated financial model: 3–5 weeks from engagement scoping to a submission-ready document, depending on project complexity, availability of technical inputs (machinery quotations, land documents, technical consultant inputs), and promoter responsiveness to information requests. Bank sanction timelines beyond DPR submission depend entirely on the lender's own internal credit appraisal process and are outside PNPC's control, though a well-prepared DPR materially reduces query cycles and sanction delays.
PAN and Aadhaar of all promoters/directors/partners — identity verification for the credit appraisal
Net worth statement of each promoter, ideally certified by a Chartered Accountant, along with existing asset and liability details
Bio-data / profile of promoters and key management personnel, including relevant industry or project execution experience
Existing banking relationships — current account details, existing loan facilities, and repayment track record (bank statements for the last 6–12 months are typically requested by the lender)
Details of any group companies, associate concerns, or related entities of the promoters, including their financial standing
Credit Information Report (CIBIL or equivalent) of promoters, where already available, or consent to allow the lender to pull one
Land documents — ownership deed, lease agreement, or allotment letter from an industrial development authority, along with land-use conversion status if applicable
Machinery quotations from vendors, including specifications, capacity, and delivery/installation timelines
Building construction estimate — architect's plan and cost estimate, or a contractor's quotation, for the proposed factory/office structure
Utility requirement details — power load sanction status, water source, effluent treatment requirement if applicable to the industry
Statutory and regulatory clearances applicable — environmental clearance, pollution control board consent, factory licence, fire safety NOC — status of each as obtained, applied for, or pending
Technology/process details — in-house process note or technical consultant's report describing the manufacturing or service delivery process
Product/service specification and target customer segment description
Any existing purchase orders, off-take agreements, letters of intent, or MoUs that provide demand visibility for the project
Competitor landscape information — key competitors, their approximate capacity/market share, and the project's competitive positioning
Pricing basis and realisation assumptions — historical selling price data for existing businesses, or comparable market pricing for new entrants
Raw material sourcing details — key suppliers, input cost trends, and supply security arrangements
Audited financial statements for the last 3 years — Balance Sheet, Profit & Loss Account, and cash flow statement
Existing loan sanction letters and repayment schedules, if the project involves refinancing or is an expansion alongside existing facilities
GST returns and income tax returns for the last 2–3 years, reconciled with the audited financials
Current year provisional financial statements or management accounts, if the audited figures are more than a few months old
Statutory registers and shareholding pattern of the entity undertaking the project
Detailed project cost break-up as available with the promoter — land, building, plant and machinery, pre-operative expenses, and contingency, to the extent already estimated
Proposed means of finance — promoter's contribution amount and source, term loan amount sought, and any subsidy or grant being simultaneously applied for
Details of any government scheme the promoter intends to apply under — CGTMSE, SIDBI, PMEGP, MSME technology-upgradation capital subsidy, or state industrial policy — including current scheme guidelines if available (central and state capital-subsidy schemes are revised periodically, so eligibility should be reconfirmed at the time of application)
Working capital requirement estimate, if the DPR is also being used to support a working capital facility alongside the term loan
The specific application format, if the lender or scheme has a prescribed DPR or project report template — many public sector banks, SIDBI, and state industrial corporations issue their own formats
CMA (Credit Monitoring Arrangement) data format, if required by the lender — typically the RBI-prescribed or bank-specific format for projected financials
Details of the consortium or multiple-banking arrangement, if more than one lender is participating, including the lead bank's specific documentation requirements
Any TEV (Techno-Economic Viability) study terms of reference, if the lender has separately commissioned or requires a TEV study alongside the DPR
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-DPR Feasibility Screen | Early project concept, before committing to full DPR effort | A lighter feasibility review to sanity-check demand assumptions, indicative project cost, and broad viability before investing in a full DPR and financial model — avoiding wasted effort on a project that does not clear a basic viability threshold. | Full DPR effort spent on a project with a fundamental viability flaw that a lighter screen would have surfaced early, at far lower cost. |
| DPR Preparation | Decision to seek term loan, project finance, or scheme support | Full DPR and integrated financial model built to the specific lender or scheme's requirements, with defensible assumptions, ratio analysis, and sensitivity testing that will withstand credit committee scrutiny. | Generic or template-based DPR is queried repeatedly by the credit team, delaying sanction, or is rejected outright for not matching the scheme's prescribed format. |
| Submission & Credit Appraisal | DPR submitted to lender or scheme authority | Ongoing availability to respond to lender queries, provide additional data, or revise sensitivity scenarios as the credit appraisal process unfolds — including support for any site visit or promoter interview the bank conducts. | Unanswered or slowly answered queries stall the sanction process; promoters unable to defend their own numbers in a bank discussion undermine confidence in the entire application. |
| Sanction & Documentation | Term loan sanctioned, sanction letter issued | Review of sanction letter terms against the DPR's Means of Finance assumptions — confirming the sanctioned amount, interest rate, tenor, and DSCR-linked covenants (if any) are consistent with what the financial model assumed, and flagging any material deviation. | Sanction terms materially different from DPR assumptions (lower loan amount, shorter tenor, higher promoter contribution) are accepted without revisiting project viability, creating an unworkable capital structure from Day 1. |
| Implementation Phase | Construction, machinery installation, project execution begins | Periodic project cost and implementation-progress tracking against the DPR's cost schedule and timeline — supporting revised CMA data submissions to the bank if cost overruns or delays occur, which most sanction terms require the borrower to report. | Cost overruns or delays not reported to the lender in the required format can trigger classification issues or affect further disbursement tranches under the sanction terms. |
| Commercial Operations — Early Years | Plant commissioned, commercial production/operations begin | Actual performance tracked against DPR projections — capacity utilisation ramp-up, realisation, and cost assumptions compared to actuals — with variance analysis prepared for management and, where required, for the lender's periodic monitoring. | Material underperformance against DPR projections not proactively flagged to the lender can affect the account's asset classification and the borrower's future credit standing with that lender. |
| Refinancing / Restructuring | Interest rate change, cash flow stress, or expansion opportunity | Revised financial model and updated project viability assessment to support a refinancing application, a restructuring proposal under applicable RBI frameworks, or a fresh term loan for a subsequent expansion phase — built on the actual track record established since the original DPR. | Approaching a lender for restructuring or refinancing without a properly revised, defensible financial model weakens the borrower's negotiating position and credibility with the credit team. |
What exactly is a Detailed Project Report (DPR) and who typically asks for one?
A DPR is a comprehensive document establishing the technical, commercial, financial, and managerial viability of a proposed project — a new unit, expansion, or diversification. Banks and NBFCs require it to appraise term loan and project finance applications. Government schemes such as CGTMSE, SIDBI facilities, PMEGP, and various state industrial subsidy programmes require it in a prescribed format as part of the application. Internally, boards and promoter groups use a DPR to bring financial discipline to a large capital allocation decision before committing funds.
What is the difference between a DPR and a business plan?
A business plan is typically narrative-led and built for equity investors — it tells a growth story with market opportunity and strategy at the centre. A DPR is appraisal-led and built specifically for lender or scheme scrutiny — it foregrounds technical feasibility, project cost, means of finance, and lender-specific ratios like DSCR. Many capital raises need both, built on the same underlying, internally consistent financial model, because a bank's credit team will often cross-check DPR numbers against any investor deck already in circulation for the same project.
What is DSCR and why does it matter so much to a bank evaluating my DPR?
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) measures a project's ability to service its debt obligations — broadly, cash available for debt servicing divided by the debt obligation (principal plus interest) for that period. Banks compute both a year-by-year DSCR and an average DSCR across the loan tenor. Most bank credit policies require a minimum average DSCR, commonly in a 1.20–1.50 range depending on the lender's internal policy and the sector's risk profile, with individual years not materially below the floor. A DPR with a marginal or volatile DSCR profile invites either rejection or onerous additional security conditions.
How long does it take PNPC to prepare a complete DPR and financial model?
A realistic end-to-end timeline is 3 to 5 weeks from engagement scoping to a submission-ready document, depending on project complexity and how quickly the promoter can provide technical inputs — machinery quotations, land documents, and consultant reports. Larger or more technically complex projects, or projects requiring coordination with external technical consultants, can take longer. Bank sanction timelines after submission depend entirely on the lender's own internal process and are outside our control, though a well-prepared DPR materially reduces query cycles.
Does PNPC guarantee that my loan will be sanctioned if we prepare the DPR?
No, and any firm that promises loan sanction as an outcome should be treated with caution — sanction is entirely the lender's credit decision, based on factors including the borrower's overall credit profile, existing exposures, security offered, and the bank's own risk appetite at that time, several of which are outside any DPR preparer's control. What PNPC does control is the quality, defensibility, and format-compliance of the DPR itself — a well-prepared report materially improves the odds of a smooth appraisal and reduces query cycles, but it cannot override a lender's independent credit assessment.
What is CMA data and do we need it separately from the DPR?
CMA (Credit Monitoring Arrangement) data is a specific set of projected and historical financial statements, in an RBI-influenced or bank-prescribed format, that many banks require as part of their internal credit appraisal system alongside — or as an extension of — the DPR's financial projections. Not every lender requires CMA data in exactly the same format; some public sector banks are particularly specific about this. We prepare CMA data alongside the DPR when the lender's process requires it, using figures fully consistent with the DPR's financial model.
What is the minimum promoter contribution a bank expects for project finance?
There is no single statutory percentage that applies universally — the required promoter contribution (equity/margin) varies by lender policy, sector, project scale, and the specific scheme (if any) under which financing is sought. It is common for banks to expect promoters to fund a meaningful minimum share of total project cost through their own contribution, with the balance financed through term debt, though the exact ratio should always be confirmed with the specific lender rather than assumed from a general rule of thumb.
Can a DPR be used to apply for a CGTMSE guarantee?
Yes. CGTMSE (Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises) provides collateral-free credit guarantee cover for eligible micro and small enterprise loans, and the underlying loan application — including the DPR — follows the lending bank's normal appraisal process, with the guarantee cover applied for by the bank based on the borrower's eligibility under the scheme. The DPR itself does not change format for CGTMSE purposes in most cases, but the borrower's eligibility (loan quantum, enterprise category, sector) must be confirmed against current CGTMSE scheme guidelines, which are periodically revised.
What is PMEGP and how does a DPR fit into a PMEGP application?
The Prime Minister's Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP) is a credit-linked subsidy scheme administered by the Khadi and Village Industries Commission (KVIC) for new micro-enterprises, offering a capital subsidy on the project cost for eligible new units set up by eligible beneficiaries. PMEGP applications require a project report in a format broadly aligned with KVIC's guidelines, covering project cost, means of finance, and viability — smaller in scale than a large bank-facing DPR, but the same rigour in demand assessment and financial projection is expected by the appraising bank and the scheme's monitoring committee.
What financial statements does the integrated financial model actually produce?
A properly built model produces three linked statements across the projection period (typically 5–10 years): the Profit & Loss Account (revenue, costs, EBITDA, depreciation, interest, tax, net profit), the Balance Sheet (assets, liabilities, and net worth movement consistent with the P&L and cash flows), and the Cash Flow Statement (operating, investing, and financing cash flows, and the resulting cash/bank balance). From these, key ratios are computed — DSCR, IRR (project and equity), NPV, payback period, and break-even capacity utilisation — which are the numbers a credit committee actually reviews.
How is capacity utilisation ramp-up assumed in a realistic DPR?
Almost no project achieves full rated capacity utilisation from its first year of commercial operation. A credible DPR builds a phased ramp-up — commonly starting well below full capacity in Year 1 and scaling up over subsequent years based on realistic market absorption, operational stabilisation, and, where relevant, comparable project benchmarks in the same industry. A DPR that assumes near-full capacity utilisation from Year 1 without justification is one of the fastest ways to lose credibility with an experienced credit appraiser.
What discount rate should be used for IRR and NPV calculations in the project model?
The discount rate — typically the project's Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) — should reflect the actual blended cost of the debt and equity financing the project, adjusted for the specific risk profile of the project and sector. There is no single fixed rate that applies to every project; it is built up from the cost of the term loan (interest rate), the cost of equity (which reflects promoter/investor return expectations for the risk taken), and the debt-equity mix in the Means of Finance schedule. Using an arbitrarily chosen discount rate without a documented build-up is a common weakness that undermines the credibility of the resulting IRR and NPV figures.
Is a Techno-Economic Viability (TEV) study the same as a DPR?
Not exactly. A TEV study is often commissioned independently by the lead bank (particularly for larger, consortium-financed projects) as a third-party validation of the project's technical feasibility and financial projections — sometimes prepared by an engineering consultant or a specialised TEV agency rather than the borrower's own advisor. The borrower's DPR is typically the starting point and primary input for a TEV study, but for large projects the bank's TEV consultant will independently verify or revise the assumptions rather than simply accepting the DPR as submitted.
Can PNPC prepare a DPR for a project that is a diversification or expansion of an existing business, not a new unit?
Yes — expansion and diversification DPRs are a significant part of our project finance advisory work. These require, in addition to the standard DPR elements, an analysis of the existing business's financial track record, existing loan exposures and repayment history, and how the new project's cash flows interact with the existing business's cash flows (particularly if there is any cross-collateralisation or if the existing business's cash flows are expected to support the new project during ramp-up).
What happens if actual project performance falls short of the DPR's projections after the loan is sanctioned?
This is common — few projects perform exactly to plan — and most sanction terms require the borrower to keep the lender informed of material deviations from the DPR's projected performance, particularly if it affects DSCR compliance or triggers any financial covenant in the sanction letter. Consistent, proactive communication with the lender, supported by a properly updated financial model and variance analysis, is materially better received than the lender discovering a shortfall independently through delayed repayments or a stressed account review.
Does PNPC prepare DPRs for projects in the UAE as well as India?
Yes. PNPC's Dubai office supports project financing documentation for UAE-based businesses seeking bank or financial institution financing in the UAE, structured to the documentation and appraisal norms of UAE banks and financial institutions, which differ from Indian bank norms in format and regulatory framework. For India-UAE cross-border projects — where financing may be sought in one jurisdiction for operations connected to the other — our India and Dubai teams coordinate under a single engagement.
How much does a DPR and financial model engagement with PNPC cost?
PNPC agrees a fixed, written fee for each DPR engagement, scoped to the project's complexity, scale, and the specific lender or scheme format required. The fee is confirmed in writing before work begins. Fees for a straightforward MSME-scale DPR are naturally lower than for a large, technically complex, multi-crore project requiring extensive coordination with external technical consultants and a full sensitivity-testing exercise.
Will PNPC visit our project site before preparing the DPR?
For projects where a site visit materially improves the quality of the technical and market assessment sections — particularly manufacturing, hospitality, and infrastructure projects — we conduct structured site visits and management interviews as part of the engagement. For smaller or more straightforward projects, or where geographic distance makes a site visit impractical, we work from detailed documentation and structured calls with the promoter and technical team, while remaining clear about which approach is being used for a given engagement.
What is the difference between project IRR and equity IRR, and why do both appear in the DPR?
Project IRR measures the return generated by the total project investment (debt plus equity combined), independent of how it is financed — it answers whether the underlying project itself is economically viable. Equity IRR measures the return specifically to the promoter's equity investment, after accounting for debt servicing — it reflects the return the promoter actually earns given the specific financing structure. A project can show an attractive project IRR while equity IRR is compressed by high leverage, or vice versa, so both figures serve different audiences: the lender cares more about project viability and debt service capacity, while the promoter cares more about equity IRR.
Does the DPR need to address environmental clearances and other regulatory approvals for the project?
Yes, where applicable to the project's sector and scale. Certain categories of industrial projects require Environmental Clearance under the Environment Impact Assessment (EIA) Notification, and most manufacturing units require Consent to Establish and Consent to Operate from the relevant State Pollution Control Board. The DPR should clearly state the status of each applicable clearance — obtained, applied for, or pending — because a lender will factor regulatory approval risk into the implementation timeline and, in some cases, into the sanction's disbursement conditions.
Can the same DPR be submitted to multiple banks in a consortium or multiple-banking arrangement?
Generally yes, with care — in a formal consortium arrangement, one DPR (or an independent TEV study built from it) typically forms the common basis on which all participating lenders sanction their respective share of the facility, coordinated through the lead bank. In a multiple-banking arrangement (where separate banks lend independently, without formal consortium coordination), each bank conducts its own appraisal, and while the same core DPR can generally be submitted to each, individual banks may still request bank-specific formats, additional data, or their own CMA data submission.
What is a break-even capacity utilisation figure and why does a bank ask for it?
Break-even capacity utilisation is the level of production or service delivery, expressed as a percentage of installed/rated capacity, at which the project's revenue exactly covers its total costs (fixed and variable) — below this level, the project operates at a loss. Banks use this figure to assess the margin of safety in the project's projections: a project whose base-case ramp-up assumption sits only marginally above its break-even point has very little cushion against underperformance, which is a meaningfully riskier lending proposition than one with a wider margin.
How does depreciation get treated in the project financial model, and does it matter for the loan appraisal?
Depreciation is computed on plant, machinery, buildings, and other fixed assets, typically based on the useful lives prescribed under Schedule II of the Companies Act 2013 for accounting purposes (from which the applicable straight-line or written-down-value depreciation rate is derived), and separately under the Income-tax Act rates for computing taxable income (which can differ from accounting depreciation, requiring a separate tax computation line in the model). Depreciation is a non-cash expense, so while it reduces book profit and taxable income, it is added back in the cash flow statement — this addback is a key contributor to the cash available for debt servicing that feeds directly into the DSCR calculation.
What is 'margin money' in the context of a project DPR and Means of Finance schedule?
Margin money in a project finance context most commonly refers to the promoter's own contribution towards the working capital requirement of the project (as distinct from the promoter's contribution to the fixed capital cost) — banks typically finance only a portion of the assessed working capital requirement, with the balance expected to come from the promoter as margin. It can also refer, in a subsidy-scheme context, to the promoter's required own contribution as a condition of receiving scheme support. The exact margin percentage and how it is computed depends on the lender's working capital assessment methodology and any applicable scheme guideline.
Should the DPR include a Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) or sustainability section?
For companies that will be subject to Section 135 CSR obligations once they cross the applicable net worth, turnover, or net profit thresholds under the Companies Act 2013, or for projects seeking incentives that have an ESG or sustainability disclosure component, a brief forward-looking note on the promoter's CSR approach can strengthen the DPR's overall governance narrative, though it is not a mandatory DPR component for most bank term loan appraisals. We include this where relevant to the project's scale and sector rather than as a standard boilerplate section.
Can PNPC help if our DPR was prepared elsewhere and the bank has raised queries we cannot resolve?
Yes. We regularly review DPRs prepared by other consultants or in-house, where a bank's credit team has raised queries the promoter is struggling to address — commonly around DSCR assumptions, capacity ramp-up credibility, or Means of Finance inconsistencies. We assess the existing document, identify the specific gaps a credit analyst is likely reacting to, and either revise the model or prepare a supplementary response note that directly addresses the bank's concerns.
How does GST treatment factor into the financial model's revenue and cost projections?
Revenue and cost projections in the financial model are typically built on a GST-exclusive basis (i.e., net of GST), since GST is a pass-through tax collected on behalf of the government and does not form part of the project's own revenue or cost economics, except to the extent input tax credit is not fully available (which does affect landed cost in specific scenarios, such as blocked credits under Section 17(5) of the CGST Act). Working capital assumptions in the model do need to account for the GST payment and refund cycle, since this affects the cash conversion cycle even though it does not affect the P&L directly.
What sensitivity scenarios does PNPC typically build into the financial model?
Common sensitivity scenarios include: a lower capacity utilisation ramp-up than the base case, an input-cost escalation beyond the base assumption, a delayed project implementation timeline (pushing back the revenue-generation start date while interest during construction continues to accrue), and an interest rate increase on the term loan. We compute the resulting DSCR, IRR, and break-even impact under each scenario, so the promoter and the lender can both see how resilient the project is to realistic adverse conditions, not just how it performs under an optimistic base case.
Does PNPC prepare DPRs for infrastructure and real estate projects, or only manufacturing?
We prepare DPRs across a range of sectors — manufacturing, hospitality, healthcare facilities, agro-processing, warehousing and logistics, and select infrastructure and real estate development projects. Real estate and infrastructure projects have some distinct financial modelling considerations — such as project-stage-wise cash flow and revenue recognition (often tied to construction milestones or RERA-linked project completion), and specific RERA compliance disclosures for real estate developers — which we build into the model where relevant to the project.
How often should the financial model be updated after the DPR is first submitted?
At minimum, whenever a lender's sanction terms require periodic CMA data updates (commonly annual, sometimes more frequent for larger facilities), or whenever there is a material change in project cost, timeline, or actual performance versus the original projections. Even without a specific lender requirement, we recommend promoters revisit the model at least annually during the implementation and early operational years, since a model that is never revisited loses its usefulness as a management and monitoring tool.
What is the role of a Chartered Accountant specifically in preparing a DPR, versus an engineer or technical consultant?
A DPR draws on both technical and financial expertise. Technical consultants, architects, or machinery vendors typically provide the process design, plant layout, machinery specification, and construction cost estimates. The Chartered Accountant's role is to translate these technical inputs into a financially rigorous, internally consistent project cost, Means of Finance schedule, and integrated financial model — applying appropriate accounting treatment, tax computation, working capital assessment, and the specific ratio analysis (DSCR, IRR, NPV) that a lender's credit team evaluates. For most DPRs, both technical and financial expertise are needed, and we coordinate directly with the promoter's technical consultants rather than treating the technical inputs as a black box.
Is a DPR required if we are only seeking a working capital loan, with no new fixed-asset investment?
Generally not in the full DPR sense. Working capital facilities are typically assessed by banks through financial statement analysis, a working capital assessment note (based on methods such as the Turnover Method for smaller facilities or the MPBF/Cash Budget method for larger ones), and CMA data — rather than a full project DPR, which is oriented around fixed-asset project viability and DSCR. If a working capital enhancement is being sought alongside a new project's term loan, the working capital assessment is usually built into the same overall financial model as a distinct component.
Can a DPR help us apply for a state government industrial subsidy or single-window clearance in addition to bank financing?
Yes. Most state industrial promotion policies and single-window clearance systems require a project report broadly similar to a bank DPR as part of the application for incentives — capital subsidy, interest subvention, stamp duty exemption, or SGST reimbursement schemes, depending on the specific state policy in force. The exact documentation format and eligibility criteria vary by state and are periodically revised, so we confirm the current state policy requirements at the time of application rather than assuming a standard format applies.
Why should we engage PNPC rather than a generic DPR-writing service or freelance consultant?
A generic DPR-writing service typically produces a document that reads well but has not been built with an understanding of how a bank's credit committee actually interrogates a project — the DSCR sensitivity a credit analyst will ask about, the Means of Finance structure a bank's policy actually expects, the format a specific scheme mandates. PNPC has been a practising Chartered Accountancy firm since 1986, working directly with banks, NBFCs, and government scheme authorities across India and the UAE. We build DPRs that anticipate the questions a credit committee will actually ask, and we remain available through the sanction process and into implementation — not just for the day the report is delivered.
PNPC Global DPR & Financial Modelling Engagement vs typical template-based or freelance DPR services
| Dimension | PNPC Global | Template / Freelance DPR Service |
|---|---|---|
| Preparer background | Practising Chartered Accountancy firm since 1986, with direct bank and credit-appraisal experience | Often a freelance writer or generic consultancy with limited exposure to how banks actually appraise credit |
| Format compliance | DPR structured to the specific lender's or scheme's prescribed format, confirmed before drafting begins | Frequently a single generic template applied regardless of the lender or scheme's actual requirement |
| Financial model rigour | Fully integrated, formula-driven P&L, Balance Sheet, and Cash Flow with documented assumptions | Often a simplified spreadsheet with unlinked statements or unstated assumptions that do not withstand scrutiny |
| Sensitivity analysis | Downside scenarios (lower utilisation, cost escalation, delay, rate increase) built and quantified as standard | Base-case-only projections with no stress-testing, a common cause of credit committee queries |
| DSCR and ratio discipline | DSCR, IRR, NPV, payback, and break-even computed transparently with documented methodology | Ratios sometimes presented without a visible, checkable calculation basis |
| Post-submission support | Available to respond to lender queries and revise scenarios through the sanction process | Engagement often ends at document delivery, leaving the promoter to field bank queries alone |
| Cross-border capability | Direct India and UAE presence for cross-border project financing documentation | Typically single-jurisdiction, with no coordinated cross-border capability |
| Ongoing relationship | Continued CA support through implementation, CMA updates, and future refinancing needs | One-off engagement with no structured post-sanction relationship |
This comparison reflects PNPC's own service approach against commonly observed market practice — always verify the specific track record and approach of any firm you are evaluating.
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Engagement scoping consultation — lender or scheme, format requirement, and timeline confirmed in writing before drafting begins
- 02
Promoter and management background section, structured to address what credit appraisers actually assess
- 03
Bottom-up market and demand assessment with defensible sourcing, not generic top-down assertions
- 04
Technical feasibility section coordinated with your architects, machinery vendors, and technical consultants
- 05
Fully integrated 3-statement financial model — P&L, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow — with documented, auditable assumptions
- 06
DSCR, IRR, NPV, payback period, and break-even capacity utilisation, computed transparently year by year
- 07
Downside sensitivity analysis — capacity, cost, timeline, and interest-rate stress scenarios
- 08
CMA data preparation in the lender's required format, where applicable
- 09
Scheme-specific documentation support — CGTMSE, SIDBI, PMEGP, or state industrial subsidy formats
- 10
Senior CA review of every DPR before it reaches the client for sign-off
- 11
Ongoing query support through the bank's or scheme authority's credit appraisal process
- 12
Post-sanction support — revised CMA data, variance analysis, and updated projections as implementation proceeds
Speak directly with a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your next term loan, project finance, or scheme application. Not a template. Not a generic DPR mill. A practising CA firm that has prepared bankable project reports for promoters across India and the UAE since 1986 — and that stays engaged through sanction, implementation, and beyond.