Business Standard

Better prospects turn analysts positive on CG Power

Global businesses continue to be a drag on consolidat­ed financials

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

CG Power and Industrial Solutions has seen its market capitalisa­tion erode by almost half from the January highs to the lows of this Wednesday, largely due to concern on its losing internatio­nal operations. While restructur­ing and discontinu­ing of operations in Ireland and Belgium are in progress, delay in sale of the business in Hungary keeps the Street worried.

For one, the latter is incurring a quarterly loss of ~1 billion. Its sale will ease the consolidat­ed numbers, as related debt will also go off the balance sheet. While the Street awaits news on this, after the steep share price fall and given the good performanc­e of its domestic business, the brokerages find value emerging and, hence, have upgraded the stock.

Following these upgrades in the past two days, the stock gained three per cent on Thursday, even as broader markets closed in the red.

Key segments in the domestic business, 80 per cent of consolidat­ed sales, continue to see steady performanc­e as in the March quarter's numbers. Profitabil­ity has improved, pulling up the operating profit margin to 11 per cent from single-digit in earlier quarters. Power systems’ revenue (54 per cent of domestic sales) continues to be driven by healthy switchgear and transforme­r sales, and of industrial systems by railways, motors, drives and automation across regions.

The motors segment (a fourth of sales) is expected to benefit from increased spending in cement, steel, lift irrigation and from a shift to energy-efficient IE2 motors. Switchgear (a fifth of sales) should gain from new products and entry into the Southeast Asia market, say analysts. Growth in the railways business (a tenth of sales) will continue and the move towards electric locomotive­s trebles the scope of value addition, say analysts at Kotak Institutio­nal Equities.

Hence, analysts are maintainin­g a positive stance on the standalone business. Rupesh Sankhe at Reliance Securities says he sees some value at current levels and has upgraded the stock.

However, he feels the major trigger will come from sale of the loss-making power business in Hungary and Belgium, a drag on profit.

After the FY18 results, the management had said procedural delays in sale of the Hungary unit had been due to elections there and should be completed in a few months.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India