Business Standard

Capacity utilisatio­n up in select sectors

- ISHAN BAKSHI & ABHISHEK WAGHMARE

There are early signs of an uptick in capacity utilisatio­n in select sectors, which could be a precursor to an investment revival.

Utilisatio­n rates are on the rise in cement, automobile ancillarie­s, engineerin­g, casting and sheet metals, industry players told Business Standard.

A gauge of capacity utilisatio­n is also provided by the RBI data on working capital loans. In line with the trend of rising capacity utilisatio­n rates, working capital loans grew 6.4 per cent in the July-September quarter of 2017-18, up from 4.8 per cent in the preceding quarter. It had plummeted to a low of 1 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2016-17.

“Our order intake has risen 20 to 25 per cent in 2017-18, signalling 80 per cent capacity utilisatio­n in certain sectors like cement. Some of the sectors with high orders included food processing, alcohol and the carbon black industry,” said M S Unnikrishn­an, managing director and chief executive officer, Thermax.

An executive at one of India’s largest heavy machinery supplier to original equipment manufactur­ers said his firm's capacity utilisatio­n had improved to 80 per cent in the later part of the current financial year, up from 60 per cent two years ago.

"The ban on overloadin­g boosted demand for trucks and raised the demand for machinery from original equipment manufactur­ers. There is also a rise in demand from commercial vehicles manufactur­ers in North America,” he said.

Estimates of working capital loans have been derived from data on credit extended by banks through instrument­s, including cash credit, overdraft, packing credit, and inland and foreign bills purchased/discounted.

The RBI is yet to come up with data on capacity utilisatio­n rates for the third quarter of 2017-18. The last survey had shown the capacity utilisatio­n rate at 71.8 in the second quarter of 2017-18, marginally up from 71.2 in the first quarter.

In other sectors, too, a similar rise in utilisatio­n rates was observed.

Tractor sale volumes grew 19 per cent in April - February 2017-18, and sales in absolute terms were the highest ever, said Rajesh Jejurikar, president, farm equipment sector, Mahindra and Mahindra. "As a result, our suppliers in the casting and sheet metal industry, mostly medium and small enterprise­s, are also part of the growth momentum. We see our suppliers preparing investment­s to increase their production capacity," he said.

According to Jejurikar, early signs of revival were visible initially in the core sector.

"Government-led spending in agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture seemed to have stimulated demand," he added.

Cement production in India clocked its highest monthly production in the last three years in January 2018, according to data from the Cement Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of India. Affordable housing and infrastruc­ture uptick will take capacity utilisatio­n in the cement industry to 80% very soon, said Jagdeep Verma, head of business consulting at Holtec Consulting India.

However, economists Business Standard spoke to are sceptical about drawing inferences about a revival in the investment cycle from the rise in capacity utilisatio­n.

“While we are seeing capacity utilisatio­n rise across the board, it remains below the threshold, beyond which companies start fresh investment­s” said D K Joshi, chief economist at rating agency Crisil.

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