Business Standard
Tuesday, Jan 06, 2009
drived banner
drived banner
  Site Map | Feedback Advanced Search   RSS | Blogs
| | | | | | | | |

Costs pressure Nagarjuna Construction's margins
Shobhana Subramanian & Varun Sharma / Mumbai November 15, 2008, 0:50 IST

Even in these difficult times, Nagarjuna Construction has bagged a couple of orders. Earlier this month the Rs3,472 crore firm secured orders worth Rs 527 crore from the Hyderabad and the Assam governments to be completed in two years time.

 
 
News Now
Paper
Specials
- Sensex extends gains; HDFC rallies 5%
- Porsche takes over Volkswagen
- L&T bags Rs 1,100 cr add on orders in Q3
- Airtel launches new BlackBerry
- ISRO to launch four foreign satellites this year
- Prism Cement's Q2 net declines 52%
More  

That boosts an already strong order backlog of Rs 12,420 crore, which is now 3.6 times the firm’s net sales in the year to March 2008. However, during the September 2008 quarter, additions to the order book fell 31 per cent, partly due to a high base effect.

That ‘s partly because Nagarjuna earns about a third of its revenues from the buildings and housing segment, a sector that is seeing a downturn and is unlikely to see a reversal in a hurry. Which is why even though Nagarjuna sales have increased by 41 per cent in the first half of this fiscal year, the growth could taper off to around 33 per cent for the current year to levels of Rs 4,500-4,600 crore.

Besides, the firm’s operating profit margin (opm) will continue to be under pressure because it is unable to pass on the increase in raw material prices for almost 30 per cent of its orders. For the remaining orders, the company can pass on the cost either partially or fully.

Although, prices of commodities have started coming off, it could be a while before the impact is felt . Margins are also weaker because of start-up costs for new businesses like power. The opm was down 220 basis points in the September quarter to 10.3 per cent and should remain at these levels for the rest of the year.

In the September quarter, the net profit was up a healthy 26 per cent but analysts have pencilled in a growth of only 13 per cent for the full year to around Rs180-Rs 185 crore, because money is now more expensive and outflows on interest could be higher.

The estimate assumes that all projects will be completed on time and there will be no delays. The NCC stock has given up 83 per cent since the start of 2008 compared to a 54 per cent fall in the Sensex and at the current price of Rs 60 trades at 7.5 times its estimated FY09 earnings.

  Read Business news in 
  Get Home Loan Counselling From HDFC - click here to know more.
  HP 2133 Mini Note PC: Mini in size, Max in performance
  Win a trip to the Malaysian Grand Prix - click here to know more
  India's premier online business magazine
  Free E-book on The Future of Business Intelligence
Share this Story  
 
 
Discussion Board / User Comments
Display Name  
Post your commentMax limit:500 characters 
Most Popular
Read
E-Mailed
Commented
   
- Oracle India trims salaries with hour-based payments
- Co FDs bloom as equity, debt markets dry up
- Dismissal row: Shiv Sena fear haunts Cummins India
- ISB dean Rao 'withdraws' from RBI panel
- Satyam's innovation report a face-saving bid
 
 
 More  

BS Poll
Cast Your Vote
 
   
 
Will the truckers' strike derail govt efforts to rein in inflation?
  Yes  No
Submit


   Hot Searches  
 
Mumbai Terror Attack |  CitiBank  |  Omar Abdullah  | Playstation 3 |  Reliance |  RBI |  Chidambaram |  Jet-Kingfisher |  Gold  |  India US Nuclear Deal |  Ratan Tata |  Singur |  Bailout plan |  ICICI |  Satyam  |  6th Pay Commission |  B-School |  Mukesh Ambani |   |  Chandrayaan |  DLF |  Ranbaxy |  Sensex | Tax calculator |  Anil Ambani |  Infosys  | Home Loan  | Bollywood | Subprime Crisis | Personal Finance |  inflation | oil prices | CitiBank  | Madoff | KV Kamath | Chanda Kochhar  

 
 
  Member Area Write to the Editor RSS Archives Advanced Search
  Subscribe to BS print product BS e-paper Newsletter
  BS Products BS Hindi BS Motoring
FOR HOT PRODUCTS
BS Bazaar.com