Business Standard

UPL’S TURNAROUND SCRIPT FOR FY19

It forecast a robust show on improvemen­t in global prices, better margins and strong India show

- RAM PRASAD SAHU

It has not been the best of starts for UPL. The company (earlier known as United Phosphorus and in the businesses of agrochemic­als, industrial chemicals and chemical intermedia­tes) failed to hit its annual revenue growth expectatio­n of eight to 10 per cent for 2017-18. This is the first time it happened in the last five years.

This, with concerns on high raw material costs, falling prices in the key markets of Brazil and North America, and currency fluctuatio­ns, beside continuous capital expenditur­e, has led to muted sentiment for the stock. It has shed about eight per cent in a week and is down almost 23 per cent since its high earlier this calendar year.

The bad news ends there. Brokerages believe the situation is changing and the steps the company is taking on raw materials would bear fruit.

The key trigger for the stock is the outlook for its major markets of Brazil and India, together a little over 70 per cent of consolidat­ed revenue. Analysts at SBICAP Research

say the pick-up in soybean and forecast is normal and so maize prices in Brazil, coupled the demand for agrochemic­als with a depreciati­ng Brazilian seems positive in the Aprilcurre­ncy, puts more money in June quarter, they add. farmers’ hands, boding well for What should keep demand agri-input companies such as elevated, believes Sharekhan, this. In addition, India’s monsoon are the lower stock to consumptio­n ratio for soybean, maize, wheat, cotton and rice, unlike in the past, when higher inventorie­s had kept their prices muted. The other price trigger could be a US- China tariff war, which could keep crop prices elevated — China is a major importer of soybean and maize, while the US and Brazil are major exporters.

The other worry for the Street has been higher raw material costs and the company’s decision to invest in building new capacities. UPL is planning to invest ~2.5 billion in an intermedia­te plant to reduce its dependence on Chinese raw materials, which have turned costlier. Raw material costs as a percentage of sales increased by 600 basis points sequential­ly to 51 per cent in the March quarter, due to supply issues and higher costs. The increase in costs is partly due to China; 25-30 per cent of UPL’s cost of goods is from there. The new plant is expected to mitigate sourcing risk.

Though UPL outperform­ed with seven per cent year-onyear growth in FY18, against an industry growth average of only 0.2 per cent, this was a bit short of its own eight to 10 per cent growth forecast. Analysts, however, note the contrast with the rest of the sector. UPS is confident of good growth for FY19, saying it expects 10-12 per cent more. The management confidence comes when the overall agrochemic­al industry is expected to grow by only two to five per cent this calendar year, after three years of flat or falling growth.

Operating profit is also expected to increase, by 12-15 per cent, which should improve its margins by 50 basis points in FY19, from 20.2 per cent in FY18, via higher-margin products and a larger proportion of branded sales.

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