HomeNewsBusinessEarningsUltraTech Cement Q3: Firm reports decline in profit YoY but demand hike springs surprise

UltraTech Cement Q3: Firm reports decline in profit YoY but demand hike springs surprise

India's largest cement maker reported a 10.5% increase in domestic demand, with a slight increase in prices over Q2 helping with better realisations.

January 23, 2025 / 20:15 IST
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UltraTech Cement Q3 Earnings Update
Rural demand improved, although the management expressed some concerns on urban housing demand

Aditya Birla Group-backed cement giant UltraTech Cement Ltd reported a 17 percent decline in its consolidated net profit for the October-December quarter to Rs 1,470 crore, but recovering demand from the infrastructure segment as well as from the rural markets, ensured that it beat market expectations. It sent the stock rallying, which made India's largest cement maker the top gainer on the benchmark Nifty50 index today.

A Moneycontrol poll of analysts estimated the company's consolidated bottomline to decline by 26 percent year-on-year to Rs 1,304 crore. Consolidated revenue from operations rose nearly 3 percent YoY to Rs 17,193 crore, ahead of the estimated Rs 16,696 crore.

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In an investor presentation, the company said that its volumes in the quarter ending December 31 grew by 9 percent over the previous quarter to 28.10 million tonne per annum (MTPA), with trade sales growing by 12.5 percent on a year-on-year basis. Rural sales volumes grew by 13 percent on a year-on-year basis, even as the company's chief financial officer Atul Daga conceded in a post-earnings call that demand from the urban housing segment was "slightly slow" during the quarter.

Analysts say that sluggish demand in cement from urban real estate projects is consistent with the same for other building materials as well, such as paints, during the October-December quarter. The decline has been attributed to the affordable housing sector, offtake of which has declined over the past two years in the major real estate markets, with large developers retreating from the affordable ticket size.