Business Standard

Shree Cement: Q2 operationa­lly sound

Per-tonne profitabil­ity better than peers

- UJJVAL JAUHARI

Shree Cement’s performanc­e for the seasonally soft September quarter, which bears the impact of monsoon, was better than expectatio­ns at the operating level, even as costs were elevated. Although net profit missed estimates, it was due to higher tax expenses. The profit miss led to the stock correcting 2 per cent to ~18,629 levels on Wednesday, but any correction offers an opportunit­y for long-term investors to buy this most-profitable cement player.

The company’s sales volumes at 4.88 million tonnes (mt) grew seven per cent yearon-year (y-o-y) but were down 0.7 per cent sequential­ly — largely on expected lines given the monsoon season. However, an increase of 2.6 per cent in the per-tonne cement realisatio­ns year-on-year to ~4,170 was a key positive. Rising freight costs (up 31 per cent yo-y) and power and fuel expenses (up 15 per cent y-o-y) impacted Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax depreciati­on and amortisati­on), which came at ~552.60 crore, down 13.6 per cent y-o-y. But analysts say the control over overall costs was better than expectatio­ns. This coupled with improving realisatio­ns helped the company post an Ebitda, which was much better than estimates, of ~488 crore, as indicated by Bloomberg consensus estimates.

Shree Cement remains an efficient cement producer and, despite cost escalation­s, has been able to report pertonne Ebitda of ~1,133 in the September quarter. This was much better than the same for peers such as UltraTech (~1,028), ACC (~592), and Ambuja Cements (~705), as reported in the September quarter.

Higher realisatio­ns helped net sales increase 6.5 per cent y-o-y to ~2,137 crore in Q2, marginally short of Bloomberg consensus estimates of ~2,154 crore.

Higher taxes of ~185 crore, as against ~26.5 crore in the year-ago quarter, and ~106.5 crore in the June 2017 quarter saw net profit decline 13.3 per cent y-o-y to ~211.5 crore and miss analysts’ estimates of ~ 277 crore.

Shree Cement’s power division’s performanc­e was muted due to subdued demand and tariffs for merchant power. A 45 per cent yo-y decline in volume at 295 million units and a 4 per cent y-o-y decline in tariff at ~3.5 saw the segment’s Ebitda declining sharply from ~62.2 crore in the year-ago quarter to ~7.8 crore, but better than the Ebitda loss of ~1.36 crore in the June quarter.

The prospects of Shree Cement remain firm, looking at expected cement demand revival in the second half led by infrastruc­ture and housing spending. Binod Modi at Reliance Securities says that with the recent improvemen­t in demand outlook in Eastern and Northern regions along with visible price uptick, Shree Cement should continue to get traction. He maintains his positive stance on the stock.

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