The company's standalone net profit (excluding Corus) fell 14 per cent sequentially to Rs 1,420 crore. Earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation (Ebitda)/tonne fell $35 to $290 on sequential basis.
Though realisations improved marginally, high costs ate into profits. According to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, domestic steel prices are up three-four per cent year-to-date, mainly led by restocking. But the price momentum appears to be fading, due to weak real demand and rising supplies.
The company's European operations disappointed the market far more than India. Tata Steel Europe reported an Ebitda loss of $147 million, compared to a second-quarter loss of $103 million.
However, a large part of this was due to the Rs 740-crore inventory write-down. ThisĀ means the management has decided the inventory isn't worth the value at which it is stated in the balance sheet. This also meansĀ it sees a decline in realisable value of the inventory. The company saw a sequential decline of four per cent in volumes at 3.3 mt, as a result of the weak demand.
While a segment of the market believes the worst is over and demand and realisations will improve, others believe weakness will persist for more time, as supply is expected to increase and demand may remain sluggish. Marwadi Shares & Finance Ltd (MSFL) believes valuations look attractive and Tata Steel is a rerating candidate.
"The four-year European overhang is set to end with the commissioning of the 2.9-mtpa expansion in Jamshedpur," says MSFL. The restructuring and cost-cutting measures in Europe may also help improve margins, believe analysts.
For Rediff Realtime News on Tata Steel, click here...