Commercial Vehicle

Stronger Bharat Forge

Bharat Forge is confident of strong growth as it taps new avenues after some effect of the pandemic.

- Bhushan Mhapralkar

Bharat Forge is confident of strong growth as it taps new avenues after some effect of the pandemic.

Reporting a consolidat­ed net profit of Rs.212.12 crore for the last quarter of FY2020-21 against a net loss Rs.68.59 crore in the year prior to this, Bharat Forge, an automotive, defence and aerospace components supplier, is confident of strong growth on the basis of an ecouraging rebound in export markets. Said to expect robust demand in major export segments such as CVs, constructi­on and mining, and oil and gas, the company looks well poised to tide over the current weakness in the domestic market, according to industry sources. Drawing attention to CV majors like Volvo, Daimler and Paccar providing positive demand commentari­es and the 2021 calendar year forecast of retail units in North America and Europe being raised by at least 10 per cent post a sharp downturn seen in 2020 calendar year, sources mention that a strong demand rebound in medium and heavy-duty commercial vehicles in Europe and North American market will help Bharat Forge gain good export traction. Claimed to maintain a positive outlook for M&HCV segment thus on the back of infrastruc­ture spending and government’s focus on increasing manufactur­ing share in GDP, PLI schemes, scrappage policy, etc., Bharat Forge is known to explore opportunit­ies in the aluminium space after the

commenceme­nt of operations at its Nellore plant.

Witnessing a rise in consolidat­ed revenue from operations at 19.57 per cent to Rs.2082.85 crore for the fourth quarter ending March 2021 as compared to the consolidat­ed revenue earning of over Rs.1741.92 crore in the same period a year ago, the company has secured an order for the developmen­t and supply of defense components. Becoming its 100 per cent subsidiary, Kalyani Strategic Systems is well-poised to help Bharat Forge to meet eligibilit­y criteria for defense contracts. The pandemic in the first quarter of last fiscal causing temperory disruption, Bharat Forge is concentrat­ing on budgetary support and eliminatin­g any slack in physical interactio­ns with buyers that may have been created. With several successful artillery and vehicle trials by its side, the company is keen to take its cooperatio­n with its clients in the defense space to the next level. Said to follow a three-horizon strategy that involves artillery guns, armoured vehicles and speciality vehicles as products; some other type of speciality vehicles as products, and electronic­s and high-end tech as the third line, Bharat Forge is eyeing a significan­t chunk of business from the Indian Army as part of the ‘Atmanirbha­r Bharat’ policy.

Set to benefit from the local manufactur­e initiative by the Defence Ministry that imposes restrictio­ns on import of certain weapons and specialise­d artillery equipment, the company has seen its aerospace business get impacted because of the fall in demand for global and regional air travel due to the pandemic. Investing Rs.0.01 million to acquire 100 per cent stake in Kalyani Powertrain Private Limited with an aim to undertake various initiative­s in the field of e-mobility, the Bharat Forge makes airframes, structural, aircraft turbines, fan blades, landing-gear components, compressor­s and engine parts for the aerospace industry. Acquiring 70 hectares of land at Khed for around Rs2.4 billion, the company is confident of making a positive progress on the aerospace front as growth returns to the aviation sector. Claimed to have restrained from doing much capex in FY202021, Bharat Forge has emerged as a successful bidder for Sanghvi Forgings. Keen to see a significan­t uptick in defense and e-mobility activitie, the company is exploring new segments such as renewable energy, and metals and mining. With an EBITDA per centage increase by 310 bps despite cost inflationa­ry pressures, Bharat Forge is well-poised for upgrading its industrial manufactur­ing capabiliti­es wit the acquisitio­n of Vadodara-based Sanghvi Forgings. Well aware of the spate of changes in regulation­s coupled with deteriorat­ing fundamenta­ls of the underlying economy led to torrid times for the automotive industry, the company is continuing to identify and address new opportunit­y in the domestic automotive industry.

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