India Ratings' report on cement demand
India Ratings & Research (Ind-Ra) has revised its cement sector outlook for FY16 to stable, from stable to negative a year ago, on expectations that demand growth (6.5% to 8%) would outpace supply additions (6.7%) in FY16. Cement capacity utilisation which was around 71% in FY14 is likely to improve to 73% to 75% in FY16, as was last seen in FY11.
The southern region of India, with a significant oversupply, is likely to maintain a supply discipline during FY14-FY16 with a capacity addition of just 7mtpa over this period (5% of its FYE14 installed capacity). This shall improve cement capacity utilisation in this region to 61%-63% in FY16 from 56% in FY14.
The central regions of the country, will likely add 5mtpa during FY14-FY16 (11% of its FYE14 installed capacity), and consequently improve capacity utilisation to around 85% from the current level of 81%. Similarly, the capacity utilisation in regions of northern India, is likely to increase to 80%-81% in FY16 from 78% in FY14 as the region adds 13mtpa (16% of its FYE14 installed capacity).
Ind-Ra expects capacity utilisation of cement companies to improve across all regions barring eastern India. The companies in the east are adding around 17mtpa (31% of its existing installed capacity) during FY14-FY16, and thus supply growth in this region will likely outpace demand growth and thus reduce capacity utilisation in the region to around 70%-71% from 75% in FY14. The companies in the western region are adding 10mtpa (18% of the existing capacity) during FY14-FY16, and thus, the capacity utilisation in this region is expected to remain stable at the current level of 73%.
In line with Ind-Ra’s expectations set forth in the FY15 Outlook, thus far the median margins of integrated players are at around 17%. Power and fuel cost increased around 30% over FY12-FY14. However, there has been a recent global correction in coal and other energy costs. This will benefit players whose fuel cost was entirely market linked and could potentially add upwards of 2.0 percentage point to their margins. However, integrated players who have a significant source of captive power with domestic linkages, would only see the reduced global energy prices adding around 1 percentage point to their margins.
EBITDA/ton of 14 companies (accounting for 64% of total installed capacity) registered a growth of 29% in 1HFY15 on the back of better net realisation (up 13% yoy) and sales volume (up 11% yoy). While the northern region saw volumes grow, the southern region benefited from higher realisations due to a pricing discipline. Ind-Ra expects the slide in the prices of coal and crude oil, as witnessed over the last four-six months, to buttress the cement industry’s EBITDA margins.
Ind-Ra also expects the industry to maintain a stable credit profile over FY14-FY16 with the companies which are not undertaking capacity expansions to improve their balance sheets on higher profitability. Cement companies which are rated by Ind-Ra are also likely to maintain stable credit profiles, supported by their regional market share, cost advantage and absence of debt-led capex.
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