In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Anil Jain, managing director of Jain Irrigation Systems spoke about the latest happenings in his company and the road ahead.
Below is an edited transcript of the interview. Also watch the accompanying video. Q: Could you quantify the extent of the damage because of the fire and how much of it is covered by insurance? A: The total damage is really minor considering the entire inventory. The damage should be around Rs 10-15 crore. Overall, inventory for the company is about Rs 1,000 crore. In that regards, it is hardly about 1%. Overall insurance for the company is close to Rs 1,200 crore. This is really a minor issue in the total balance sheet and the operations of the company. The division, for which the pipes got lost in the fire, is expected to do more than Rs 50 crore sales in the month and the production or the remaining stock remains good for that to happen. So this is a small blip on the overall situation. It has no big impact on the operations of the company. Q: Your stock has fallen quite a bit. It could be because a couple of other reasons like the delay in getting the government subsidy payments, which is creating a big strain on your balance sheet and receivables positions. What is the situation on that front? A: Our receivables for the company were about Rs 2,400 crore at the end of March. Within micro-irrigation, they were at Rs 1,700 crore. By September, our overall receivables grew only by Rs 100 crore even though sales had grown by Rs 1,500-1,600 crore. This means money is flowing and we expect that by March 2011 to March 2012 the absolute amount of receivables to remain the same even the business would have grown north to 20%. The days in terms of outstanding sales will come down especially in micro-irrigation division as against 370 days, which were the receivables as on March 2011. We are expecting that to be down to about 300-315 days by March 2012. The delays, which were there by various state governments due to procedural reasons, budget reasons, all are getting resolved. We have maximum amount outstanding with Maharashtra government. Yesterday, the Nagpur Legislative Assembly announced that they are putting another Rs 500 crore to support additional drip irrigation. We expect the situation, which we had over the past three-four quarters, will getting resolved. By March, it should become comfortable. Now the interest cost have also picked up. We expect that the next year should be overall better. Q: What about the forex situation, which is also worrying your investors? What problem do you see cropping up with the rupee above 54? A: There are two things. We have imports and exports and usually our imports and exports match because we have lot of exports of fruit pulp, onion, micro-irrigation where you gain when the rupee is depreciating. We import the polymers and usually both of these get matched. We have long-term foreign loans which are to be paid over the next six-seven years. Now, when rupee goes down, we are taking mark-to-market rate at the end of the quarter depending on the rupee-dollar level, as of the last day of the quarter. I do not know what is going to happen with the rupee-dollar, letDiscover the latest Business News, Sensex, and Nifty updates. Obtain Personal Finance insights, tax queries, and expert opinions on Moneycontrol or download the Moneycontrol App to stay updated!