Business Standard

ACC’s strong operating performanc­e in Q2 could lift sentiment

Improving operating profit despite rising costs should push up Street’s confidence

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

ACC’s performanc­e for the second quarter ended June 2017 (Q2) was above expectatio­ns on the profitabil­ity front. ACC follows January-December financial year. Cement sales volume at 6.74 million tonnes (MT) grew 10.1 per cent year-on-year and was better than 6.6 MT in the previous quarter. This was partly anticipate­d by analysts, in light of the completion of ACC’s capacity expansion at Jamul in Chhattisga­rh. However, the Street’s concerns on rising costs in the backdrop of higher coal and pet coke price, seem to be getting addressed.

In the June quarter, ACC’s power and fuel costs surged 31 per cent, while freight costs jumped 34 per cent over the year-ago period. However, operating Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortisati­on) at ~637 crore was still up by an impressive 38 per cent yearon-year, and way ahead of Bloomberg consensus estimate of ~515.5 crore.

On a per-tonne basis, too, Ebitda increased to ~736, growing 8.6 per cent, according to analysts at ICICI Securities, and was better than the brokerage’s estimate of ~706.

ACC said improved productivi­ty and operating efficienci­es, including raw material and fuel mix optimisati­on on a sustainabl­e basis, have helped mitigate the adverse impact of rising raw material and fuel prices.

This strong operating performanc­e should improve the Street’s confidence on ACC sustaining profitabil­ity.

During the quarter, average cement prices for a 50kg bag had improved to ~295, against ~288 in the previous quarter, led by price hikes since April. But, these were still lower than the average price of ~300 seen in the year-ago quarter. ACC, however, has witnessed a 6.2 per cent year-on-year increase in realisatio­n at ~4,915/tonne according to analysts, which is again commendabl­e.

Better volumes and realisatio­ns, thus, helped sales grow 17.8 per cent year-on-year to ~3,329 crore. Though the same was largely in line with Bloomberg estimate of ~3,309 crore, better operating performanc­e saw net profit growing 32.6 per cent year-on-year to ~326 crore, and coming much better than the Street expectatio­ns of ~274 crore. This was despite tax expenses almost doubling to ~155.6 crore against ~83 crore in the yearago quarter.

Boost in profitabil­ity and improving volumes should lift the Street sentiments further, even though the stock has surged sharply in the recent past. It scaled to its all-time intra-day high of ~1,778.75 on Monday, before closing at ~1,751.25. The results were declared after-market hours.

At the current levels, it is trading at replacemen­t cost of $130-145 per tonne based on CY2018 capacities, according to analysts’ estimates, which is at a significan­t discount to many peers. Though monsoon could have some near-term impact on cement demand, the demand is expected to improve thereafter. Meanwhile, progress on the ACC-Ambuja Cements merger could add to the sentiment.

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