Business Standard

‘We aim to bring debt to Ebitda ratio to 3.75’

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In the past few years, Sajjan Jindal’s JSW Steel has been linked with a significan­t number of acquisitio­ns, and more recently, with Monnet Ispat Energy (through the strategic debt restructur­ing route), Bhushan Steel, and Italian steel plant Ilva. In a conversati­on with Ishita Ayan Dutt, Joint Managing Director and Group Chief Financial Officer,

SESHAGIRI RAO, says the company is cautious, and is well on course to bring down its debt to Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) ratio. Edited excerpts:

SESHAGIRI RAO

MD & Group CFO, JSW Steel

You have so many acquisitio­ns on the radar. How will you fund these?

Maybe our name gets associated with different targets. But we have not acquired any company since Welspun.

But, you are in the final leg of negotiatio­ns for some. How will you finance these acquisitio­ns?

We’re examining some assets but we are a cautious firm.

For many of the assets, it seems the preferred model is taking over debt rather than investing in equity. What is your current debt and how would you service the debt, if these acquisitio­ns materialis­e?

Our net debt, as on December 31, 2016, is ~44,000 crore for an 18million-tonne company. Total gross block, including associate units is ~60,000 crore. Many companies with probably one-third of our capacity would have as much debt. We are at a comparable level with competitio­n. Our target is to bring the debt to Ebitda ratio to 3.75 and below, and our plans take that into account. Debt to Ebitda as on December 31 was 4.02:1, but it includes March 2016, which was an aberration. In March 2016, things went a bit haywire. Not that we did anything wrong. But unfair imports surged, and the Ebidta went down to ~6,000 on higher sales. But we are in the process of bringing down the debt to Ebidta level to 3.75, and it will happen during the course of next year.

Your performanc­e has been good in the past quarter. How have you been able to manage volatility without captive raw material linkage?

By producing more valueadded products. Thirty-seven per cent of our total sales is value-added products.

Also, we realised that long products were not doing well and focused on flat products. We changed our geographic­al mix by increasing exports.

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