Business Standard

THIS IS THE RIGHT TIME TO MAKE INVESTMENT­S: SESHAGIRI RAO

- SESHAGIRI RAO, Ishita Ayan Dutt SESHAGIRI RAO Joint MD & group CFO, JSW Steel

“ON THE DEMAND SIDE, INDIA SAW ONE OF THE FASTEST RECOVERIES. THIS WAS MAINLY DRIVEN BY INFRASTRUC­TURE SPEND. WE FEEL THE DEMAND WILL BE ROBUST AND WE WILL QUICKLY RECOVER”

JSW Steel is drawing up a growth plan that will take its capacity to 38 million tonnes (mt) by 2024 from 23 mt now. In an interview, joint managing director and group chief financial officer of JSW Steel, tells that demand will be robust and India will quickly recover from Covid impact. Edited excerpts:

JSW recorded its best performanc­e in Q4FY21, but steel prices in China appear to be correcting. What is the outlook on demand?

Structural­ly, the demand is quite strong, including in China. The kind of increase that China has seen, particular­ly on the commodity exchanges, is majorly driven by speculativ­e buying. That’s why margin requiremen­ts are being increased, which has led to some correction. But fundamenta­l factors have not changed.

Is there headroom for an increase in the domestic market?

Steel prices are at $1,000-$1,015 a tonne in China, $1,730 in the US, and $1,340 a tonne in northern Europe. The difference between the domestic price and landed cost of imports from China is about 20 per cent. Whether prices will increase is anybody’s guess, but Indian prices have, historical­ly, remained at a discount to the landed cost of imports.

Are lockdowns impacting demand?

It is impacting demand. In April, demand fell to 6.7 mt from more than 9 mt in March. But the comforting factor is the fall in demand is not as severe compared to April 2020 because it is not a nationwide lockdown. But localised lockdown has an impact on the overall demand.

Indian steel companies have been adjusting with exports since last year. This quarter, exports have picked up again because domestic demand is not that strong.

Most steel companies used the current cycle to deleverage, what about JSW Steel?

Relative ratios improved remarkably. As of March 31, 2020, debt-to-ebitda was 4.5x, whereas it was 2.61x in the same period this year. Debt-to-equity was 1.48x and has come down to 1.14x.

In terms of absolute numbers, as of March 31, 2020, the debt was ~53,473 crore, which has come down to ~52,617 as of March 2021. So, there is a reduction of ~858 crore in debt. This appears to be small, but this is after the total cash spent by the company in organic and inorganic growth last year, which was about ~15,000 crore.

What is the status of the 5-mt expansion at Dolvi?

The second wave of Covid has impacted the implementa­tion of the Dolvi unit. When Covid hit again in March, we had 18,000 people working at Dolvi. Now, the strength has come down to 7,000 and among them, skilled workers have left. Also, the European and Japanese suppliers who were at the site left. We could have completed Dolvi by June, but now it will probably be September-end.

You have announced a 5-mt expansion at Vijaynagar. Is that based on the demand outlook?

We have surplus pellets and coke at Vijaynagar. We have a rolling mill also. But we don’t have hot metal and melt shop. That can be set up quickly at a very good cost and increase the capacity by 5 mt.

There are very few players who can create this kind of capacity in the steel sector because of the capital-intensive nature of the industry. This is the right time to make investment­s.

On the demand side, India saw one of the fastest recoveries. This was mainly driven by infrastruc­ture spend. We feel the demand will be robust and we will quickly recover.

What kind of expansion is planned for Bhushan Power & Steel (BPSL)?

The plant is operating at 2.7 mt capacity. In 18 months, it will have a capacity of 3.5 mt, and three years from now, the company will have a capacity of 5 mt.

When will Vijaynagar expansion be completed?

The 5 mt will be commission­ed in March 2024. In the next three years, across Vijaynagar, Dolvi, and Salem units, capacity will be 30.5 mt. If we add Mingo USA, Bhushan Power & Steel, and Monnet, the total capacity will be 38 mt by 2024.

You have submitted an expression of interest for Neelachal Ispat. Would you explore bidding for other companies on the disinvestm­ent list like NMDC’S steel plant or RINL?

As and when these assets are made available, we will evaluate.

What happened to your bid for Gontermann?

Our proposal was not accepted by the committee of creditors and they referred it to the National Company Law Tribunal for liquidatio­n.

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