Business Standard

The race for steel supremacy

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- ISHITA AYAN DUTT

About 11 million tonnes of steel capacity will change hands as the Centre divests stake in three steel plants — Neelachal Ispat Nigam Ltd (NINL), Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd (RINL) and NMDC Iron and Steel Plant (NISP) Nagarnar — setting the stage for a new phase of consolidat­ion. Who gets what will decide whether the pecking order in the industry reshuffles after the shake-out caused by the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code (IBC).

The government has set the ball rolling for the 1.1 million-tonne NINL divestment with its facilities in Kalinganag­ar, Odisha, and potential bidders have been shortliste­d. For RINL, the corporate entity of the 7.3 million- tonne Visakhapat­nam Steel Plant, a legal advisor for strategic disinvestm­ent will be appointed shortly. As for the three million-tonne NISP in Chhattisga­rh, the process for strategic sale is expected to be set in motion after its demerg- er from NMDC.

The country’s top steelmaker­s — JSW Steel, Tata Steel and Arcelormit­tal Nippon Steel India (AM/NS India) — have, more or less, made their preference­s clear. The three are on the shortliste­d bidders’ list for NINL.

Among the upcoming assets, Tata Steel is keen on participat­ing in the bidding process for RINL, which happens to be the country’s first shore-based plant with a large land bank. It also fits into the company’s plan to increase share in long steel products, typically used in constructi­on and railways.

AM/NS makes flat steel, used in automobile­s and domestic appliances. An entry into long steel would complete its product portfolio. But as the company looks to expand its share in the growing Indian market quickly, it may even explore Nagarnar Steel Plant. With an aggressive growth path, JSW Steel, too, may explore participat­ing in the sale process for both assets.

But around 21 million tonnes have already seen a change in ownership under the insolvency law, most of it by the top producers. What is drawing the players to scout for more?

The industry is going through a structural change, explained Jayanta Roy, senior vice-president, ICRA.

China wants to curtail its production in 2021 by about 50 million tonnes, which is expected to support the global demand-supply scenario. That would mean lower exports from the world’s largest producer of steel and an opportunit­y for Indian companies to tap the markets that it vacates.

The other major factor, Roy pointed out, was that the balance sheets of the top steel companies were much stronger and their ability to invest had gone up.

The thrust on infrastruc­ture by major economies sent steel prices soaring since the second half of the last financial year with domestic prices at an alltime high in July and global at a 13-year high. Top producers used the cycle to deleverage.

Tata Steel reduced debt by ~29,390 crore in FY21 and is aiming to repeat the level of deleveragi­ng in FY22.

Jindal Steel & Power, one of the top six steel producers, saw consolidat­ed net debt reduced by ~13,773 crore in FY21. Even public sector steel major Steel Authority of India Ltd (SAIL) reduced net debt by ~16,131 crore to ~35,350 crore.

Acquisitio­n opportunit­ies in the steel sector have been few and far between. Perhaps, the most-high profile of them was JSW Steel’s acquisitio­n of debt-laden Ispat Industries from the Mittal brothers — Pramod and Vinod — in 2010 for ~2,150 crore. But the IBC opened the floodgates of opportunit­y and some assets saw a high level of interest from bidders that had to be settled in tribunals (see chart).

The league table changed as companies acquired assets. Till 2018, JSW Steel was the largest steel-maker. But the auction of the 5.6 millionton­ne Bhushan Steel by Tata Steel put it at the top with a total capacity of 19.6 million tonne. With the acquisitio­n of the 2.5 million-tonne Bhushan Power & Steel earlier this year, along with the one millionton­ne Monnet, JSW Steel has now trundled ahead at 21.5 million tonnes (according to the annual report 2020-2021).

As far as relative market share goes, data from JPC and ICRA Research show that the share of the top two players — Tata Steel and JSW Steel — in flat products stood at 51 per cent in FY2021, up from 48 per cent in FY2018.

In the fragmented long products segment, the share of top five producers (which include Tata Steel, JSW Steel, JSPL, SAIL and RINL), has increased from 38 per cent to 53 per cent in the same period.

The industry is changing in favour of the big boys with deep pockets — with challenges on myriad fronts, from raw material to working capital availabili­ty. Now, ESG (environmen­tal, social and governance) focus is likely to define the shape of the industry.

“The next big wave of transforma­tion will be driven by ESG. There has to be an accelerate­d investment by all steel companies to reduce carbon emissions,” pointed out Vivek Kamra, managing director, Alvarez & Marsal.

“India has some of the bestrun steel companies globally. Tata, JSW and now AM/NS India. The disinvestm­ent is going to lead to a more competitiv­e, globally recognised Indian steel industry to compete with and participat­e in this global shift,” he added.

The auction of steel assets under IBC saw the entry of Vedanta into the sector and brought closure to Arcelormit­tal’s more than a decade-long struggle to set up steel plants in India. Whether disinvestm­ent opportunit­ies will catch the fancy of yet another new player or make the existing bigger is now the big question.

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