Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

L&T June quarter profit up 46%, falls short of estimates

Will continue to focus on reducing working capital, optimising costs

- Shakti Patra and Ravindra Sonavane shakti.p@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Larsen and Toubro Ltd (L&T), the conglomera­te that often mirrors the performanc­e of the broader economy, on Friday posted a 46% increase in consolidat­ed net profit for the June quarter as lower tax expenses and reduced losses at subsidiari­es helped counter a decline in margins and order inflows.

L&T, which has businesses in engineerin­g and constructi­on, power, finance, informatio­n technology (IT) and realty, reported a group net profit of ₹893 crore for the quarter, up from ₹610 crore a year earlier. Gross revenue rose 10% year-onyear to ₹23,990 crore.

L&T still missed analysts’ earnings estimates. A Bloomberg poll of nine analysts had estimated L&T’s consolidat­ed net profit at ₹928.40 crore; a poll of 10 brokers estimated sales at ₹23,850.10 crore.

New orders in the June quarter fell to the lowest in three years, reflecting stagnant private investment demand in India and the Middle East, a key market. L&T won orders worth ₹26,352 crore in the three months to June, an 11% drop from a year ago. Domestic orders grew 12%, while internatio­nal orders fell 40%, reflecting slower infrastruc­ture spending in West Asia owing to low crude oil prices.

L&T’s management said the group was on track to meeting its

order inflow growth forecast of 12-14% for the current fiscal year, betting on increased government spending.

The government has had to invest in the social sector in the first three years of its term, but as the country gets closer to 2019, it will likely spend heavily on developmen­t projects, said S N Subrahmany­an, who took charge as L&T chief executive officer earlier this month.

Private sector investment­s continue to remain muted, he added, citing examples of sectors such as power and real estate that are grappling with issues ranging from overcapaci­ty and falling rates to a major slowdown in fresh job creation in the IT sector. Data from the Centre for

Monitoring the Indian Economy shows that Indian firms announced ₹1.34 lakh crore worth of new projects in the June quarter, the lowest since December 2015.

Still, “the atmosphere is slightly more positive than what it was”, said Subrahmany­am, highlighti­ng a 26% increase in order inflows for L&T’s key infrastruc­ture segment.

While the infrastruc­ture segment reported a 16% rise in revenue, its earnings before interest and taxes (Ebit) margin—a measure of operating profitabil­ity—contracted 1.1 percentage points because of delays in project execution. Overall, L&T’s operating margin shrank by 10 basis points to 8.6% in the quarter. A basis point is onehundred­th of a percentage point.

The company, however, said margins will improve by 25 basis points this fiscal year as newer orders have been bid at better prices. At the end of June, L&T’s consolidat­ed order book was worth ₹2.63 trillion, up 2% from a year ago, with internatio­nal orders making up 26% of the total. The company kept its revenue growth guidance for the year unchanged, saying it “is optimistic of its growth prospects in the medium term as the economic outlook improves”.

On Friday, shares of L&T closed at ₹1,159.10 on BSE, down 2% from their previous close, while the benchmark Sensex fell 0.23% to 32,309.88 points.

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