Business Standard

L&T’S GLOBAL BUSINESS KEEPS ORDER MOMENTUM STRONG

With domestic slowdown, global order wins are helping it stay on track

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

Since the start of the week, Larsen & Toubro has been adding to its order book in both the domestic and internatio­nal business.

While its orders at home in power, water treatment and hospitals are incrementa­l, the announceme­nt of a $1 billion (over ~7,000 crore) order for a gas field developmen­t in Algeria is considered the most significan­t. According to CLSA analysts, this order means L&T will beat its 2018-19 order book growth forecast, at a time when domestic order flow is declining.

The first half of FY19 (AprilSepte­mber) had seen strong flow in domestic orders, largely driven by those from government. The pace became slower in the December quarter and is likely to taper further, given the coming elections. Notably, domestic private sector capital expenditur­e (capex) remains sluggish. Hence, the flow of internatio­nal orders is now compensati­ng and it is on this that analysts are betting on to achieve the earlier order inflow forecast.

In the near term, order finalisati­on in the Indian market (particular­ly large orders) is expected to stay muted, say analysts at Edelweiss. In

this scenario, L&T seems to have shifted its focus to bagging internatio­nal orders (it needs ~40,000 crore, ex-services, to meet the lower end of the forecast).

Notably, of the four it got in the latest quarter, two are from abroad (versus 83 per cent and 76 per cent domestic proportion in the March ’18 quarter and yearto-date FY19, respective­ly), note analysts.

L&T’s diverse product mix and presence in West Asai/North Africa will help it tide over a potentiall­y volatile domestic market in the first six months of 2019, say analysts at CLSA. They add that L&T is a good proxy for domestic capex and has a credible strategy to improve both growth and return on equity. In the December quarter, L&T had seen orders decline by 12 per cent yearon-year to ~42,200 crore.

However, inflow in the first nine months (till end-December) of FY19 stood at ~120,200 crore, up 16-17 per cent over a year. Given strong growth in these nine months, led by government capex and some pick-up in private capex, analysts estimate L&T needs only two to three per cent growth in the March quarter order inflow to achieve its 10-12 per cent growth here which it had forecast for FY19.

Thus, while internatio­nal orders are making up for decline in domestic ones, analysts also feel this latest big order reinforces confidence in L&T’s capability to execute large and complex projects in a highly competitiv­e environmen­t. The company won this turnkey order in competitiv­e bidding.

The other positive is the strong execution which is driving its earnings growth. In the December quarter, this helped it to grow its revenue by 24 per cent year-onyear and operating profit by 27 per cent. While its 12-15 per cent sales growth forecast means the March quarter might see flat growth, some analysts feel the management is being conservati­ve. However, most brokerages are cautious, given the impact of slowing government spending due to the elections. This could lead to some slowdown in execution, as some of this is also dependent on payments being received on time.

Still, after the global order wins, analysts at Edelweiss believe L&T’s improving ability to adapt to changing industry dynamics by constantly re-engineerin­g its core reflects a change in DNA and warrants a re-rating of the stock.

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