Business Standard

Rising profits, low valuations paint good picture for Ultratech

Strong cost controls, lower diesel, petcoke and coal prices helped

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

The disruption caused by the lockdown took a toll on Ultratech’s March quarter (Q4) domestic sales, which declined 16.1 per cent year-on-year (YOY). However, better realisatio­ns and lower costs lifted overall performanc­e.

Though Ultratech is a panIndia cement producer, having raised considerab­le capacities in the northern and central regions, as well as Gujarat, has helped the firm tide over weakness in cement prices, in other regions.

Per-tonne realisatio­n improved 3 per cent YOY and 1.2 per cent sequential­ly. Consequent­ly, revenues at ~10,200 crore from domestic operations fell by a lower margin of 13 per cent (against volumes) YOY.

Strong cost control, lower diesel, petcoke and coal prices also played a part. Pertonne logistics costs fell 3 per cent YOY to ~1,149, while energy costs declined 13 per cent YOY to ~914.

Stand-alone operating Ebitda at ~2,486 crore was better than consensus estimates of ~2,226 crore. According to analysts, per-tonne Ebitda at ~1,088 was higher than last year’s ~986 and the December quarter’s ~960.

Ultratech’s normalised net profit for India operations (excluding tax reversals of ~2,112 crore) came in at ~1,117 crore, beating estimates of ~909 crore.

Notably, while rival ACC also benefitted from lower costs, Ultratech has maintained its lead in pertonne profitabil­ity. ACC had reported per-tonne Ebitda at ~741 compared to ~579 a year ago and ~539 in the December quarter.

Benefits of lower pet-coke prices are expected to continue. Ultratech is also gaining from the improving performanc­e of the acquired cement assets of Century, which now reflects in its financials.

While capacity utilisatio­n of Centur y ’s assets rose to 80 per cent in Q4, the onetime integratio­n cost of ~40 crore, accounted for in Q4, will not be there in subsequent quarters. Per-tonne Ebitda at ~575 is seen improving to ~700-800.

With the integratio­n of the 6.25 mtpa (million tonnes per annum) capacity at

Nathdwara complete (acquired from Binani), Ebitda came in at above ~1,250 per tonne during FY20. Ultratech has commission­ed another 2mtpa cement plant at Bara, taking its total consolidat­ed capacity to 114.8 mtpa.

Net debt-to-ebitda is also reducing — at 1.7x as on March 31 — down from 2.83x a year ago. Despite near-term uncertaint­y on cement demand, analysts such as Sanjeev Kumar Singh at Emkay Global maintain a positive view on the stock.

Valuations, too, at 12x its FY22 estimated enterprise value/ebitda, is lower than historical levels of 14-15x, said Kunal Shah of YES Securities, who remains cautiously positive (buy) considerin­g the demand challenges.

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