Tata Steel, a part of Tata Group, is expected to report a profit after tax of Rs 224 crore in the October-December quarter of FY12, a massive fall of 78% as compared to Rs 1,030.3 crore in a year ago quarter.
Net sales are seen going up by 5% to Rs 30,084 crore from Rs 28,606.2 crore year-on-year.
EBITDA is likely to fall 21% to Rs 2,315 crore from Rs 2,941.3 crore during the same period.
EBITDA margin is expected to be falling at 7.7% in the quarter ended December FY12 versus 10.3% in the corresponding quarter of last fiscal.
On quarter-on-quarter basis, net sales are seen going down by 7.5% and even EBITDA is likely to fall 5.9%. However, PAT is expected to go up 5.5%.
Points to watch out for:
In Q2FY12, Tata steel reported disappointing numbers and this quarter is expected to be on the similar lines on the back of:
(i) Lower volumes
(ii) Lower realizations
(iii) Lagged impact of high coking coal prices
(iv) Worse performance from TSE and other subsidiaries
(v) Forex loss: In Q2FY12 the depreciation of the Indian currency against the dollar resulted in a forex loss of USD 1.5 billion reported in other expenditure
Volumes:
- Consolidated sales volumes: Expected to decline at least 10% QoQ to around 5.4 MT
- Indian sales volumes: Estimated to be flattish with a negative bias and should stand at approximately 1.62 to 1.64 MT
- TSE (Corus): Volumes likely to decline 6%QoQ to 3.2mt
Tata Steel India (TSI):
- Expect average steel realization to be flat QoQ and 10% YoY as domestic steel prices are flat due to lackluster demand despite sharp rupee depreciation
- Revenues to be flattish on account of stable steel volumes and realizations
- EBITDA margins will be hampered by higher raw material costs (led by depreciating currency) in standalone operations
- Tata Steel is likely to report stable performance in its standalone business on sequential basis
TSE and others will lead the slide: On the back of a poorer performance of TSE and other subsidiaries
- Lower realizations from European operations is expected to impact revenue growth of Tata steel
- Larger EBITDA loss in Corus due to lower realizations, lower volumes and marginally higher raw material costs on QoQ basis
- A significant sequential rise in operating losses at Corus, led by lower volumes and realization per tonne
- European steel prices would remain under pressure due to much weaker demand
- Higher macroeconomic uncertainty to result in lower utilization coupled with margin pressure at Corus
- Expect a sharp margin squeeze at TSE due to lower steel prices & lagged impact of higher input costs
- South Asian operations are also likely to report deeper EBITDA loss
Future Outlook:
- Watch for management commentary on UK pension liabilities and progress on the Jamshedpur expansion
- Steel pricing environment is expected to remain subdued in light of poor steel demand due to weak world economy and impact of fall in raw material prices
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