Business Standard

Hope alive for SAIL but no big gains soon

Profit may inch up in coming quarters, but full benefit of expansion seen only after FY20

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

In contrast to its large peers, government-owned Steel Authority of India (SAIL) has been a laggard, both in financial performanc­e and on the bourses ( see charts).added A key reason is that despite access to captive raw material sources for a large part of its requiremen­t, its operating profit (profit before interest, depreciati­on and tax) margin has been far lower than peers Tata Steel’s domestic operations and JSW Steel.

Second, its capacity expansion plans have been delayed time and again. This not only dampened sentiment but also impacted its financials — high debt and low return ratios. While some of this is expected to change, the benefits are likely to take a longer time.

The chairman of SAIL, at the recent annual general meeting of shareholde­rs, said the company was in the final leg of its modernisat­ion and expansion programme. The new universal rail mill at Bhilai (Chhattisga­rh) was commission­ed in January. The new blast furnace at Rourkela Steel Plant (RSP, Odisha) achieved 100 per cent capacity utilisatio­n. SAIL’s new three million tonnes per annum (mtpa) hot strip mill at RSP is scheduled to be installed by 2018 and will enlarge the basket of value- products.

With expansions getting over, SAIL’s saleable steel capacities will reach more than 20 mtpa and crude steel to 21.4 mtpa by 2018, helping it regain the status of the country’s largest steelmaker.

Investors will be hoping these already delayed expansions would now finally get over. The continuous delay in these had meant that the benefits were postponed; also, project costs continued to escalate, leading to higher debt (see chart). Analysts now expect debt to rise to ~53,666 crore by the end of FY18. Concern at rising debt is reflected in the view of analysts at Motilal Oswal Securities. “Net debt will continue to rise, eroding equity value,” they say and so maintain their bearish stance on SAIL.

Rising debt also meant interest costs continued rising, leading to a loss at the net level. Until FY15, SAIL generated enough operating profit to service debt and post net profit. Since then, operating profit has not been enough to meet interest and depreciati­on costs. This is also in sharp contrast to the performanc­e of Tata Steel (India operations) and JSW Steel.

And, even the recent performanc­e is far from impressive and comes when the macro environmen­t for the domestic industry has improved. For instance, realisatio­ns have seen improvemen­t after implementa­tion of a Minimum Import Price (MIP) on steel import in February 2016, besides other measures by the government. This helped the industry rebound from its decade-low utilisatio­n level of FY16. SAIL, benefited like the others, with its per-tonne Ebitda (profitabil­ity, excluding other income) improving in April-September of FY17 but rising coal costs and employee expenses have weighed on operating profits since the December ’16 quarter.

Though JSW Steel and Tata Steel also saw cost pressure, they have been reporting improving profitabil­ity. These companies, too, have completed capacity enhancemen­ts and are expanding further. Not surprising, the two are preferred picks of analysts.

SAIL says it is in the process of improving profitabil­ity by shifting production through energy-efficient processes. It plans to increase market share through additional volumes and new products, improve its mix in favour of valueadded products and focus on finished steel. Efforts are on to reduce employee cost through a voluntary retirement scheme. So, there is hope of a turnaround.

Meanwhile, the recent surge in steel prices amid improving demand and supply measures in China should help in improving the profitabil­ity of domestic players, including SAIL.

Analysts expect SAIL to achieve 15 million tonne sales and report profit at the operating level in FY18 with the profit doubling in FY19. However, operating profit might still not be enough to meet interest and depreciati­on costs, and SAIL would continue to report loss at the net level till FY19, estimates Motilal Oswal Securities. Analysts at Edelweiss Securities say despite the likelihood of SAIL turning profitable in the ensuing quarters, the relative performanc­e is expected to remain subdued, owing to progressiv­e ramp-up (of capacities), higher conversion cost and leverage playing spoilsport. The benefits of modernisat­ion projects would be visible only after FY20.

 ?? Compiled by BS research Bureau ?? E: estimates; * Standalone; PBIDT: profit before interest, depreciati­on and taxes Source: Capitaline, brokerage reports
Compiled by BS research Bureau E: estimates; * Standalone; PBIDT: profit before interest, depreciati­on and taxes Source: Capitaline, brokerage reports
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