INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A pick-up in infrastructure and construction jobs has resulted in cement sales volumes growing in strong double digits over past few
quarters and momentum is likely to continue ahead of Lok Sabha elections.
Typically, cement growth spikes in elections years, and experts
believe that 2019 will be a strong year for construction as elections are likely to be held in May 2019 and states, such as Andhra Pradesh
and Maharashtra, too might hold elections.
Despite a potential slowdown in tendering and ordering activities, project execution is seen
increasing boosting cement sales.
“The FY19 saw a trend reversal as demand is expected to grow at 9 per cent- 10 per cent, fastest in
Industry feedback indicates FY19 growth has primarily come from government-led infrastructure and a boost from pre-election spending (states
Across regions, South and East have witnessed strong growth, while west faces challenges
Momentum should continue and we build-in 7 per cent growth for FY20, despite a tough base,” brokerage CLSA said in a report on cement
sector on Tuesday.
Besides infrastructure growth, cement sales also got boosted by pick-up in low-cost and affordablehousing
programmes.
“Issues related to sand mining in states of Rajasthan, Bihar, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu are also now behind, further
fortifying demand trend,” brokerage Motilal Oswal said in a report.
According to ET’s research arm, ET Intelligence, cement shares have
grown 1 per cent in past one month, as against a 0.5 per cent growth in benchmark index Sensex
During this period, J K Lakshmi Cement was top gainer, with share prices increasing over 18 per cent
Shares of Prism Johnson, Ramco Cements, and India Cements rose 8-10 per cent.
“Profitability is expected to get better due to shrinking
petcoke and diesel prices, but impact would be small as price drop began only at quarter’s end
Cement prices have largely been steady
We expect revenue to grow 13 per cent and EBITDA 5 per cent, though profit after tax would contract 27 per cent year-on-year
We prefer some of central and southern companies, such as Heidelberg, Birla Corp, Dalmia and Sagar,” brokerage Anand Rathi said.
The
brokerage also said that it expects around 90 million tonne capacity to be added over FY19-22 and demand would clock a 7-8 per cent
compounded annual growth rate, which could lead to a better pricing scenario as supply pressures eases.
As country gets into election mode,
order tendering by government will slow down
But experts say current orderbook of construction companies give visibility of strong demand for cement.
“Our team tracking Indian
infrastructure sector expects construction activities to pick up from FY20, led by a favorable operating environment and various government
We estimate road construction rate at 33km/day in FY20, resulting in additional cement demand of around 5.75 million ton over FY 20,”