Financial year 2013 was turbulent for Avantha Group major Crompton Greaves.
It reported a loss of Rs 36 crore (Rs 360 million), the first such negative result in 10 years.
Subdued demand, weak margins, costs in restructuring of foreign business and delayed deliveries added up and it might take another 12 months to improve the profitability.
The revenue and order inflow showed a positive trend and solid growth is expected in the next financial year, too.
Last week, the company's board authorised buyback of shares valuing Rs 265 crore (Rs 2.65 billion), signalling to the stock market that the company's position remains strong.
With foreign operations contributing most to the loss, Crompton Greaves scaled down its manufacturing in Belgium and shifted most of its operations to Hungary.
This is expected to lead to substantial saving in operating costs. In the current financial year, it might restructure its loss-making transformer plant in Canada but the results would be visible only by the end of FY14 or in FY15.
CG’s business is divided into three main segments.
The power business contributes the most (60 per cent) to revenue, followed by consumer products (21 per cent) and industrial systems (15 per cent).
The company earns 55-60 per cent of revenue from its Indian parent and the balance from foreign subsidiaries, spread across Europe, the Americas and Indonesia.
While domestic operations remained profitable, its foreign business dragged down the result.
On a standalone basis, the company made Rs 445-crore (Rs 4.45 billion) profit in 2012-13 but it lost Rs 36 crore (Rs 360 million) on a consolidated level.
Weaker demand for power products, coupled with a drop in prices and increase in commodity prices, especially copper, triggered a crisis for it in 2011-12.
In May last year, the CG management, led by chief executive Laurent Demortier, unveiled a three-year