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Urea makers stare at delayed subsidies, gas trouble: CRISIL

While the SBA does provide temporary respite to fertiliser manufacturers in the form of cash-flow relief and lower interest burden, CRISIL believes the problem of under-budgeting, especially when the urea subsidy bill is likely to bloat in the next fiscal, will need to be addressed.

January 29, 2014 / 17:45 IST
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CRISIL Ratings: Special banking arrangements provide temporary relief, but gas re-pricing will raise subsidy burden in the next fiscal

Fertiliser makers are looking at another year of delayed subsidy payments from the government, which will step up pressure on their credit profiles. While the introduction of nutrient-based subsidy in complex fertilisers and a decline in the import parity price (IPP) of urea have helped the government contain the overall subsidy bill, fiscal constraints have meant repeated under-budgeting of subsidy leading to delayed payments.

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This has particularly impacted urea manufacturers and compelled them to seek more working capital loans, which has increased their interest cost burden. Says Sudip Sural, Senior Director, CRISIL Ratings: "Even though payments by the government are a certainty and it supports manufacturers through special banking arrangements (SBA), where it bears most of the interest cost, the stress due to delay is expected to continue into the next fiscal."

Urea makers will continue to face working capital pain in the next fiscal amid uncertainty over the next subsidy budget as a new government takes oath at the Centre following the general elections in May. This fiscal, the IPP of urea has declined as have prices of raw materials to make complex fertilisers. This could translate into a reduction in subsidy in the next fiscal. "However, what will complicate matters is the re-pricing of domestic gas to international benchmarks effective April 1, 2014. This will raise the subsidy burden from urea manufactured using domestic gas as feedstock," Mr. Sural said. For every USD1 per mmBtu (million metric British thermal unit) increase in the price of gas, the government’s additional subsidy outgo is estimated at Rs 30 billion. On the other hand, for urea manufactured using re-gasified liquefied natural gas (RLNG), the subsidy bill will remain vulnerable to high prices of the feedstock.