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Street positive on cement stocks despite pricing pressures, demand woes

September 10, 2024 11:20 IST

Cement manufacturers have hiked prices after a challenging Q1FY25, and Q2FY25 (so far) when general elections and seasonal factors cut down on construction activity.

Cement

Image used for representation purpose only. Photograph: Rupak De Chowdhuri/Reuters

The August prices are currently around 3-6 per cent above July 2024 but may not be sustainable in the face of weak demand.

H2FY25 may see realisation growth which, if it happens, would drive average operating profit/tonne improvements in H2FY25 over a muted H1FY25.

The industry continues to see consolidation and the top five will gain aggregate market share due to large capex.

This could lead to more pricing power.

 

Cement prices corrected M-o-M from November 23 to July 24 due to higher competition and slow demand.

All-India average cement price was down 13 per cent in July 24 from a peak in October 24, and average realisation for major players was down 8 per cent in Q1FY25 compared to Q3FY24.

In South India, prices hit decadal lows.

In this backdrop, sustaining price hikes is hard. But industry-watchers believe that another hike may be on the cards, as players try to shore up earnings.

In Q1FY25, most cement companies reported lower-than-estimated profitability, due to weak realisation (average realisation declined 3 per cent Q-o-Q).

Average operating profit/tonne was down 9 per cent Q-o-Q at Rs 827. Given July 2024 weakness, and cautious guidance, further Q-o-Q declines in realisation will have happened in Q2FY25 over Q1FY25.

But Q3FY25 and Q4FY25 may see a realisation rebound as rains ease.

Cement industry is expected to see demand growth of 6-8 per cent Y-o-Y in H2FY25.

In H1FY25, demand was soft due to elections, extended heat-wave, labour shortages and early monsoons.

If power and fuel and freight costs stay stable, operating profit growth should revive.

As consolidation rises and capex is concentrated among top players, capacity share will also be tilted in their favour.

Between FY13-18, aggregated capacity share for top five companies was around 47 per cent and realisation was poor at just 1 per cent annually.

But over FY19-24 and top five cement companies capacity share increased to 54 per cent and realisation grew at 3 per cent over this period.

By FY26, capacity share will grow to 63 per cent.

This will lead to pricing power and higher realisation.

After Q1FY25 results, analysts cut aggregate operating profit estimates for FY25, due to lower cement prices.

If the hikes cannot be sustained, further earnings downgrades are likely. Apart from consolidation, cost reduction measures, increasing green power capacity, alternative fuels, logistics cost optimisations, and brand focus are key positives.

International and domestic petcoke prices were lower by 1 per cent Q-o-Q in Q2FY2025 so far, and diesel prices are also flat, and this is margin-positive.

Operating costs per tonne are likely to be benign Q-o-Q during Q2FY2025.

The expected kick-start of government spending on infrastructure and sustained housing demand are drivers to revive volume offtake in H2FY2025 and may lead to improved cement prices.

Operating profit margins fell by average 225-250 basis points Q-o-Q in Q1FY25 over Q4FY24 and Q4FY24 had lower margins than Q3FY24.

Aggregate operating profit/tonne dropped to Rs 840 in Q1FY25 versus Rs 884 in Q4FY24 and Rs 996 in Q3FY24.

The hoped-for H2FY25 revival would therefore have to push up operating profit margins considerably to recover lost ground.

Many analysts still remain positive about the sector's prospects, but most cement stocks have seen corrections in the last three months.

The exceptions are UltraTech (up 11 per cent), India Cements (up 75 per cent, due to  acquisition) and Ramco Cements (up 4 per cent).


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Devangshu Datta
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