Business Standard

Mahindra reports first quarterly loss in 19 yrs

Pre-tax loss stood at ~1,761 cr in Q4, while net sales fell 26% YOY

- KRISHNA KANT & RAM PRASAD SAHU

Hit by impairment losses mainly in its South Korean subsidiary Ssangyong and other internatio­nal subsidiari­es, and a sharp fall in demand for its tractors and utility vehicles because of the Covid-19 pandemic, Mahindra & Mahindra on Friday reported its first quarterly loss in nearly two decades during the quarter ended March 31, 2020 (Q4FY20).

The company reported a pre-tax loss of ~1,761 crore on a consolidat­ed basis in

Q4FY20, t he first such instance since the July-september quarter in 2001.

In comparison, the Mumbai-based company had reported a profit before tax (PBT) of

~1,705 crore on a consolidat­ed basis in

Q4FY19 and ~868 crore in Q3FY20. The firm began reporting consolidat­ed quarterly result only from the June 2018 quarter.

M&M also reported a sharp decline in net sales during the quarter as volumes declined across segments because of the lockdown. On a consolidat­ed basis, net sales were down 26 per cent year-on-year (YOY) to ~20,182 crore during the quarter. Standalone net sales fell 35 per cent YOY in the quarter — its worst showing since it first reported quarterly results in June 1997.

At ~9,144 crore, its net sales in the quarter on a standalone basis were the l owest since the December quarter in 2013. In comparison, it reported net sales of ~14,035 crore during Q4FY19 and ~12,345 crore in Q3FY20. Losses were largely attributed to asset impairment charges as M&M marked down the fair value of its long-term equity investment in its subsidiari­es and joint ventures because of Covid-19.

This led to an exceptiona­l loss of ~2,780.5 crore on standalone basis and ~1,782.6 crore on consolidat­ed basis during the quarter. Adjusted for exceptiona­l gains and losses, it reported net loss of ~530 crore on consolidat­ed basis and a net loss of ~276 crore on standalone basis.

Nearly 80 per cent of the impairment was on account of M&M’S investment in South Korean firm Ssangyong Motors and its North American electric scooter business, which it plans to shut.

The company’s standalone business includes the farm equipment, or tractor, and automotive segments. On a consolidat­ed basis, M&M is amongst the country’s biggest conglomera­tes with a presence in the IT services, retail lending, insurance brokering, hospitalit­y, defence equipment, real estate, logistics, and auto components sectors, among others. On a consolidat­ed basis, M&M reported losses in three of its six-business segments — automotive, real estate, and others, before exceptiona­l items. In comparison, farm equipment, financial services and hospitalit­y divisions reported profits before interest and taxes (PBIT), excluding exceptiona­l items.

The Street, however, expected worse and equity investors and traders were delighted at the lower losses in the company’s core businesses of tractors and domestic automobile­s. As a result, the stock rallied after the results and M&M was the top gainer among index stocks, ending the day with gains of 7.2 per cent, against 0.7 per cent rise in the benchmark BSE Sensex.

The company reported a 100 basis points increase in its share of the domestic tractor market to 41.2 per cent during FY20, against 40.2 per cent the previous year.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India