Business Standard

Domestic steel companies focus on exports to enhance revenues

Favourable condition in the global market and falling demand at home are key reasons for the move

- ADITI DIVEKAR & MEGHA MANCHANDA

Domestic steel producers will continue to focus on exports on the back of increased competitiv­eness in the global market and fluctuatin­g demand back home, industry representa­tives said.

“Indian steel has become more competitiv­e in the global market and since a favourable export environmen­t has emerged, Indian steel exports are expected to remain strong in coming months,” said Sanak Mishra, secretary general and executive head of Indian Steel Associatio­n.

According to Joint Plant Committee data, steel exports more than doubled to 8.24 million tonnes (mt) in 2016-17 from about 4 mt in the previous financial year. Production, too, was 11 per cent up at 101.27 mt on year-on-year basis.

Tata Steel, Bhushan Steel, JSW Steel, Essar Steel, Jindal Steel & Power, Steel Authority of India (SAIL) and Rashtriya Ispat Nigam are some of the top producers of the alloy in the country.

Delhi-based Bhushan Steel said it garnered over 30 per cent of its total revenues from exports in the March quarter. The company is of the view that domestic demand in the sector would remain between six and seven per cent and is unlikely to breach the double-digit mark in 2017-18. “Local steel demand keeps fluctuatin­g, hence we would continue to focus on exports for some time,” an official with Bhushan Steel told Business Standard.

Debt-laden Bhushan Steel saw its loss widen to ~734.04 crore in the December quarter as against ~693.60 crore in the correspond­ing period of the previous year, even as net sales rose 47.12 per cent on year-on-year basis to ~3611.13 crore in the period under review.

State-owned SAIL also has chalked out a plan to broaden its export basket as it aims to expand overseas sales to 10-15 per cent of its total production.

The company is targeting to tap the export market with twin objectives of enhancing its global standards of competitiv­eness and setting industry benchmarks in technologi­cal advancemen­ts, it said.

Industry officials attribute the surge in steel exports to barriers imposed by other countries against cheap Chinese goods and stability in the price of coking coal, a key raw material used in the making of the commodity.

Though steel companies remain focussed on exports, most see domestic demand also picking up as the government lays thrust on infrastruc­ture developmen­t.

“We expect domestic demand to go up more strongly in the second half of the year as government spending will increase towards announced projects,” said Jayant Acharya, director commercial and marketing at JSW Steel. “As of now, there is a pick-up in demand in auto segment,” he added.

Select domestic steel producers, such as Essar Steel, continue to focus on domestic market sales, while JSW Steel is striking a balance between the two markets.

 ??  ?? Good days lie ahead for the Indian steel industry
Good days lie ahead for the Indian steel industry

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