Mumbai:
Sluggish economic growth and the absence of new infrastructure
projects, along with a difference in prices across regions, are forcing a
number of smaller cement companies, mostly in South India, to consider a
sale of their facilities.
Bhavya Cements Ltd, Parasakti Cement Industries Ltd and JSW Cement
are three such firms that intend to sell some of their assets but are
finding it difficult to get buyers, according to two people familiar
with the developments, who requested anonymity.
One of
the two people cited above belongs to a large cement manufacturer who
has inspected these assets, while the second is a top official at one of
the companies looking to sell assets.
“Many
of these companies haven’t been able to build a strong brand and are
facing increased competition from larger players like UltraTech, ACC and Ambuja,” said one of the people cited above. He requested anonymity since he belongs to one of the top three cement firms.
The bigger firms, however, are not keen on acquiring these assets, mainly because of their geographical location, he added.
Hyderabad-based
Parasakti Cement was established in 1998, and currently has a capacity
of 1.5 million tonnes (mt) per annum. The brand is available in Andhra
Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Kerala and Karnataka.
Bhavya
Cements, another Hyderabad-based company, was incorporated in April
2007 and has an annual capacity of 1.4 mt. It has approvals to increase
the plant to 4 mt capacity.
JSW Cement, a part of the Sajjan Jindal-controlled JSW Group, started operations in 2009. It has the capacity to produce more than 5.4 mt per year.
Emails
sent to Bhavya, Parasakti and JSW Cement did not elicit any response.
However an official at JSW Cement, on condition of anonymity, said the
company is considering a sale of its cement assets since it is one of
the group’s non-core businesses.
These
companies are struggling to survive at a time when cement demand
remains muted; logistics, transportation and raw material costs remain
high, and prices are under pressure, particularly in the southern parts
of the country.
The
average prices as on 11 April for the southern region rose 2.2% from a
year ago, while the prices for all regions in India rose 8.3%, while
that for the northern region increased 17%, the highest among all
regions, according to a report Centrum Broking Pvt. Ltd, dated 15 April.
In the fourth quarter of fiscal 2014, all-India average cement prices rose 4.5% to Rs.305 per 50kg bag on a year-on-year basis, according to a 16 April report by HDFC Securities.
According to Nitin Bhasin, an infrastructure analyst at Ambit Capital Pvt. Ltd,
a lot of companies in South India are in distress because not enough
projects are coming up, and at a time like this, the smaller groups will
suffer the most because they had never invested in marketing and
branding.
“Many
of the smaller companies in South India continue to be highly leveraged
and are barely able to meet their interest payments; this distress
could lead to some of them closing down or selling out,” Bhasin said.
In
the South, factors such as poor infrastructure project execution, lack
of new projects, and tepid real estate construction are proving to be
major challenges for these companies.
A 24 March report by Ambit Capital highlights that some South India-based companies such as Sagar Cements Ltd, Andhra Cements Ltd, KCP Ltd, Keerthi Industries Ltd and Anjani Portland Cement Ltd,
had in fiscal year 2014 an interest expense that eroded most of the
earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, while most
of them had a debt-to-equity ratio of more than 1.
To be
sure, the southern region also has the lowest capacity utilization
rate, a metric used to measure the rate at which potential output levels
are being met or used. The utilization rate in the region for fiscal
2014 was at 59%.
Consolidation of cement capacities in the hands of larger firms such as the Aditya Birla Group-owned UltraTech Cement Ltd, the Holcim-ACC-Ambuja
combine and Jaypee Cements has also made it tougher for smaller
companies to compete. The top three companies already control around 30%
of the approximately 370 mt per annum total capacity in the country.
Analysts say the recent Holcim-Lafarge
merger will further concentrate capacities in the hands of the top
companies and lead to more consolidation in the industry. In fiscal
2013, the Indian cement industry saw deals adding up to around $3.3
billion, according to a January report by India Ratings and Research Pvt. Ltd. The agency expects the consolidation to continue in fiscal 2015 due to regional imbalances and cost inflation.
onika jaiswal
pgdm 1st year
2013-15
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