Business Standard

Falling iron prices play spoilsport for NMDC

Revenues and operating profit remain robust in Q4

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

NMDC continues to witness strong volume growth with improving realisatio­ns driving its quarterly performanc­e. During the March quarter (Q4), the company achieved volumes of 9.8 million tonnes (MT) which were much better than 8.8 MT in the year-ago quarter. Similarly, per tonne realisatio­ns at ~2,841 also improved from ~2,403 in the December quarter and ~1,658 seen in the year-ago quarter.

Thus, the company saw an 88 per cent year-on-year (y-o-y) and 15 per cent sequential rise in sales to ~2,872 crore. This was also ahead of Street expectatio­ns as Bloomberg consensus estimates pegged revenues at ~2,694 crore.

Operating profit at ~1,429 crore also improved over the year-ago quarter and was ahead of the ~1,415-crore estimate pegged by analysts. But, rising employee costs (provisioni­ng for gratuity) led to muted operating profit show on a sequential basis.

The net profit figure was, however, a disappoint­ment as the company reported a number of ~511 crore, lower than ~595 crore in Q3 and just 11.5 per cent growth over the year-ago quarter. This was due to one-off charges as the company has provisione­d for mine-closure charges and service tax on royalty, among others. The concern, however, stems from the fact that the company had made provisions in Q3 as well. Analysts at Motilal Oswal Securities say NMDC had recognised charges of ~390 crore on account of service tax on royalty, track-laying charges to the railways, mine closure and bad debts in Q3, which were one-off in nature. These expenses, however, have continued in Q4 (~450 crore) and till the time there is clarity on them, they have kept rating for NMDC under review.

The bigger concern is decline in internatio­nal iron ore prices, which has kept the Street cautious. Though after four successive hikes in November-March the company has continued to maintain prices for its output in April and May, but with decline in internatio­nal prices, it may have to rethink on its domestic pricing. Analysts at Credit Suisse say all major Odisha miners cut prices by ~150-300 per tonne this month and they believe NMDC may follow suit. Global ore prices have corrected sharply from $95 a tonne in February to $61 a tonne now. This also increases risks on rising imports, which may also have a bearing on NMDC’s exports of low-grade ore.

Thus, the Street’s concerns will remain alleviated in the near-term. The stock prices have already corrected from the highs of ~152.50 at the start of March to ~116levels now.

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