Gujarat NRE to double coal production
Following are the excerpts from a recent CNBC TV 18 interview with Mr Arun Kumar Jagatramka MD of Gujarat NRE Coke about the company’s performance and its further growth.
Q. How have your end product prices panned out since the end of the second quarter? In the second quarter while you were better over first quarter, there was a significant drop in margins YoY. Do you think the third quarter is a better story?
A - If you compare on a successive quarter basis right from March quarter, the coke prices have been moving up. Every quarter they have moved up by about INR 2000 to INR 3000. In January, they were up INR 10000 in March to April they were at about INR 12000 to INR 13,000 around June to July they had crossed INR 15000 and in September to October they had been touching about INR 17000 to INR 18,000. This upward trend has been there from INR 10000 INR 11000 to about INR 17000 to INR 18000. So it augers well for the industry.
Last one month they have been stable at around INR 18,000. I would expect the next up move to trigger a big demand review in markets like Europe and South America where there have been enquiries started coming in. Sellers, in the first quarter this year, are looking to augment their supply and they have started floating enquiries. Once these enquiries crystallize into actual orders by them, I would expect prices to move up further.
Q. China has now turned into a net importer. How is that going to impact your demand since the volumes are actually flat on a QoQ basis? If you look at the second quarter, do you sense a major support and an uptick from China? About 61% of your topline still comes from your domestic markets. How is that expected to pan out over the next couple of quarters?
A - Our focus is always on the domestic market because in India there is a very high demand supply gap in coal and coking coal. We are the second largest importers of coking coal from Australia and have been the largest importer of coke from China.
This year, China has stopped coke exports; from about 14 to 15 million tonne they are expected to export less than a million tonne. With respect to coking coal, compared to their imports of about 4million to 5 million tonne this year they are set to import about 25 million to 30 million tonne. This has actually changed the dynamics of the coking coal market and the spot has been tighter at USD 170 as compared to USD 125 to USD 128 at the counter price. I feel that USD 170 to USD 175 would be a pretty high number for coking coal and it will push up costs in the steel industry certainly.
Q. You had plans to raise USD 60 million through a foreign currency convertible bond. Are there any fund raising plans and are your CAPEX plans intact?
A - Our CAPEX plans are more or less on stream. At the moment, we are concentrating on putting up the vested power plants which we expect to start putting up online from next year. The quarter million tonne expansion is already complete and it is in procedure of being heated up. In overseas, we have already started the longwall in the Longville Coal Hearing.
Now we are in the process of placing order for longwall for the first mine, which we would expect to be operational in about two years time. This year, our coal production is almost doubling compared to last year. It is up by 30% to 40%. For fund raising in India, we are contemplating a USD 50 million to USD 60 million FCCB for which the reservations is with the share holders. By next week, once we have the resolution and legal probabilities completed, we will move ahead on that front.
(Source: CNBC TV 18)
« Back
|