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Report No. : |
327093 |
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Report Date : |
12.06.2015 |
IDENTIFICATION DETAILS
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Name : |
JSW STEEL LIMITED |
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Formerly Known
As : |
JINDAL VIJAYNAGAR STEEL LIMITED |
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Registered
Office : |
JSW Centre, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai – 400051,
Maharashtra |
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Country : |
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Financials (as
on) : |
31.03.2015 |
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Date of
Incorporation : |
15.03.1994 |
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Com. Reg. No.: |
11-152925 |
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Capital
Investment / Paid-up Capital : |
Rs.10671.900 Million |
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CIN No.: [Company Identification
No.] |
L27102MH1994PLC152925 |
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TAN No.: [Tax Deduction &
Collection Account No.] |
MUMJ05285A / PNEJ05353F |
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PAN No.: [Permanent Account No.] |
AAACJ4323N / AACT4323N |
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Legal Form : |
A Public Limited
Liability Company. The Company's Shares are Listed on the Stock Exchanges. |
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Line of Business
: |
Manufacturer and Seller of Iron and Steel Products. |
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No. of Employees
: |
12000 (Approximately) |
RATING & COMMENTS
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MIRA’s Rating : |
Aa (72) |
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RATING |
STATUS |
PROPOSED CREDIT LINE |
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|
56-70 |
A |
Financial & operational base are regarded healthy. General unfavourable
factors will not cause fatal effect. Satisfactory capability for payment of
interest and principal sums |
Fairly Large |
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Status : |
Good |
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Payment Behaviour : |
Regular |
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Litigation : |
Exist |
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Comments : |
Subject is one of the largest steel producers in India. It is a
well-established and reputed company having fine track. The company possesses a decent financial profile marked by healthy net
worth along with improvement in operational performance and decent
operational base of the company. The rating also take into consideration the susceptibility of profit
margins to volatility in input cost due to lack of raw material integration
and inherent cyclicality of the steel industry. Trade relations are fair. Business is active. Payment terms are
reported as regular and as per commitments. In view of experienced management with well-established track brownfield
projects and significant presence in the Indian steel sector, the subject can
be considered good for business dealings at usual trade terms and conditions. |
ECGC Country Risk Classification List – March 31, 2015
|
Country Name |
Previous Rating (31.12.2014) |
Current Rating (31.03.2015) |
|
India |
A1 |
A1 |
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Risk Category |
ECGC
Classification |
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Insignificant |
A1 |
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Low |
A2 |
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Moderate |
B1 |
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High |
B2 |
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Very High |
C1 |
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Restricted |
C2 |
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Off-credit |
D |
EXTERNAL AGENCY RATING
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Rating Agency Name |
CARE |
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Rating |
Term loans letter of credit facilities :
“AA” |
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Rating Explanation |
High degree of safety and very low credit
risk. |
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Date |
March 2015 |
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Rating Agency Name |
CARE |
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Rating |
Short term fund based limits : “A1+” |
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Rating Explanation |
Very strong degree of safety and lowest
credit risk. |
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Date |
March 2015 |
RBI DEFAULTERS’ LIST STATUS
Subject’s name is not enlisted as a defaulter
in the publicly available RBI Defaulters’ list.
EPF (Employee Provident Fund) DEFAULTERS’ LIST STATUS
Subject’s name is not enlisted as a defaulter
in the publicly available EPF (Employee Provident Fund) Defaulters’ list as of
31-03-2013.
INFORMATION PARTED BY
|
Name : |
Mr. Rajeev Madhusudan Pai |
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Designation : |
Chief Financial officeer |
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Contact No.: |
91-22-42861000 |
LOCATIONS
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Registered/ Regional Office: |
JSW Centre, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai – 400051,
Maharashtra, India |
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Tel. No.: |
91-22-42861000 |
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Fax No.: |
91-22-42863000 |
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E-Mail : |
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Website : |
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Corporate Office 1: |
Victoria House, 2nd Floor, Pandurang Budhkar Marg, Lower
Parel, Mumbai – 400013, Maharashtra, India |
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Tel No. : |
91-22-24927000 / 43437800 |
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Email : |
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Corporate Office 2: |
The Enclave, Maratha Udhog
Bhavan, New Prabhadevi Road, Prabhadevi, |
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Tel No. : |
91-22-67838000 |
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Fax No. : |
91-22-24320740 |
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Factory 1 : |
Vijayanagar
Works P.O. Vidyanagar, Toranagallu Village, Sandur Taluk,
District Bellary - 583275, Karnataka, India |
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Tel. No.: |
91-8395-250120 to 30 |
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Fax No.: |
91-8395-250138 / 250665 |
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Factory 2 : |
Vasind
Works Shahapur Taluk, District Thane - 421604, Maharashtra,
India |
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Tel. No.: |
91-2527-220022 to 025 |
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Fax No.: |
91-2527-220020 / 84 / 92 |
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Factory 3 : |
Tarapur
Works MIDC Boisar, District Thane – 401506, Maharashtra, India |
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Tel. No.: |
91-2525-270147 / 270149 |
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Fax No.: |
91-2525-270148 |
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Factory 4 : |
Pottaneri, M. Kalipatti Village, Mecheri Post, Mettur
Taluk, District Salem - 636453, Tamilnadu, India |
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Tel. No.: |
91-4298-278400 to 404 |
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Fax No.: |
91-4298-278618 |
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Factory 5 : |
PO Vidyanagar,
Toranagallu, District Bellary – 583275, Karnataka, India |
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Tel No.: |
91-8395-250120 to 30 |
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Fax No.: |
91-8395-250138 / 250665 |
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Works : |
Geetapuram, Taluka-Pen, District: Dolvi – 402107, Maharashtra, India |
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Branch Office : |
123/124, BM Tower, NPII, New Palasia, Indore, Madhya Pradesh, India |
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Foundation : |
Jindal Mansion, 5A, G. Deshmukh Marg, Next to Jaslok
Hospital, Pedder Road, Mumbai – 400026, Maharashtra, India |
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Other Branch Offices : |
Located At:
· Karnataka · Tamilnadu · Andhra Pradesh ·
·
· Madhya Pradesh |
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Additional Main Office : |
Located At: · Mumbai ·
· Rajasthan |
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Overseas Office : |
JSW Steel
(USA) Inc. JSW Steel Service
Centre (UK) Limited |
DIRECTORS
AS ON 31.03.2014
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Name : |
Mrs. Savitri Devi Jindal |
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Designation : |
Chairperson |
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Name : |
Mr. Sajjan Jindal |
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Designation : |
Vice Chairman and Managing Director |
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Name : |
Mr. Seshagiri Rao M.V.S. |
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Designation : |
Joint Managing Director and Group Chief
Finance Officer |
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Date of Birth/Age : |
15.01.1958 |
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Qualification : |
AICWA, LCS, CAIIB, Diploma in Business
Finance |
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Date of Appointment : |
06.04.1999 |
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Name : |
Dr. Vinod Nowal |
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Designation : |
Director and Chief Finance Officer |
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Name : |
Mr. Jayant Acharya |
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Designation : |
Director (Commercial and Marketing) |
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Date of Birth/Age : |
25.01.1963 |
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Qualification : |
BE (Chemical), M. Sc (Physics), MBA
(Marketing). |
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Date of Appointment : |
07.05.2009 |
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Name : |
Mr. V. P. Baligar |
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Designation : |
Nominee Director of KSIIDC |
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Name : |
Mr. Hiromu Oka |
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Designation : |
Nominee Director of JFE Steel Corporation, Japan |
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Name : |
Dr. S K Gupta |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Name : |
Mr. Anthony Paul Pedder |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Name : |
Dr. Vijay Kelkar |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Name : |
Mr. Uday M Chitale |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Name : |
Mr. Sudipto Sarkar |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Date of Birth/Age : |
21.03.1946 |
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Qualification : |
B.Sc. (Maths - Hons), BA (Law Tripos), LLM
(International Law), MA (Law) Barrister, Gray’s |
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Date of Appointment : |
09.05.2005 |
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Name : |
Mr. Kannan Vijayaraghavan |
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Designation : |
Director |
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Date of Birth/Age : |
04.05.1959 |
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Qualification : |
Fellow Member of the |
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Date of Appointment : |
16.06.2008 |
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Name : |
Mrs. Punita Kumar Sinha |
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Designation : |
Director |
KEY EXECUTIVES
|
Name : |
Lancy Varghese |
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Designation : |
Company Secretary |
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Name : |
Mr. Ghanshyam |
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Designation : |
Accounts Manager |
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Name : |
Mr. Rajeev Madhusudan Pai |
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Designation : |
Chief Financial officeer |
SHAREHOLDING PATTERN
As on 31.03.2015
|
Category
of Shareholder |
Total No.
of Shares |
Total Shareholding
as a % of Total No. of Shares |
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As a % of (A+B) |
||
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(A) Shareholding of Promoter
and Promoter Group |
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|
4051047 |
1.68 |
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|
907952 |
0.38 |
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|
86092335 |
35.62 |
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|
91051334 |
37.67 |
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|
11099 |
0.00 |
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|
5704612 |
2.36 |
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|
5715711 |
2.36 |
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Total shareholding of Promoter
and Promoter Group (A) |
96767045 |
40.03 |
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(B) Public Shareholding |
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|
4612402 |
1.91 |
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|
4309133 |
1.78 |
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|
1237500 |
0.51 |
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|
45896595 |
18.99 |
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|
56055630 |
23.19 |
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|
17129460 |
7.09 |
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|
13840286 |
5.73 |
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|
10311315 |
4.27 |
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|
47618308 |
19.70 |
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|
2571668 |
1.06 |
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|
32158 |
0.01 |
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|
3219816 |
1.33 |
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|
41794666 |
17.29 |
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88899369 |
36.78 |
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Total Public shareholding (B) |
144954999 |
59.97 |
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Total (A)+(B) |
241722044 |
100.00 |
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(C) Shares held by Custodians and
against which Depository Receipts have been issued |
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|
0 |
0.00 |
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|
0 |
0.00 |
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0 |
0.00 |
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Total (A)+(B)+(C) |
241722044 |
100.00 |

BUSINESS DETAILS
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Line of Business : |
Manufacturer and Seller of Iron and Steel Products. |
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Products : |
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Brand Names : |
Not Available |
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Agencies Held : |
Not Available |
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Exports : |
Not Divulged |
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Imports : |
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Products : |
Raw Material |
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Countries : |
Germany |
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Terms : |
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Selling : |
Cash / Credit |
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Purchasing : |
Cash / Credit |
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PRODUCTION STATUS (AS ON 31.03.2013)
|
Particulars |
Unit |
Installed
Capacity |
Actual
Production |
|
MS Slabs |
Tonnes |
8300000 |
6541921 |
|
Hot Rolled Coils/Steel Plates/Sheets |
Tonnes |
8200000 |
6202129 |
|
Hot Rolled Steel Plates |
Tonnes |
320000 |
79308 |
|
Cold Rolled Coils/Sheets |
Tonnes |
1825000 |
1658906 |
|
Galvanised/Galvalum Coils/Sheets |
Tonnes |
925000 |
996530 |
|
Colour Coating Coils / Sheets |
Tonnes |
426000 |
188569 |
|
Steel Billets and Bloom |
Tonnes |
2500000 |
1977543 |
|
Long Rolled Products |
Tonnes |
2450000 |
1798173 |
NOTES:
1) As certified by
the management and accepted by auditors, being a technical matter.
2) Production of Cold
Rolled Coils/Sheets includes 59,483 tonnes (previous year 53,438 tonnes) from a
third party on a job work basis.
3) Production of
Galvanized/Galvalum Coils/Sheets includes 61,107 tonnes (previous year 55,734
tonnes) from a third party on a job work basis.
GENERAL INFORMATION
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Suppliers : |
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Customers : |
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No. of Employees : |
11,099 (Approximately) |
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Bankers : |
· Allahabad Bank · Bank of Baroda · Bank of India · ICICI Bank Limited · IDBI Bank Limited · Indian Bank · Indian Overseas Bank · Punjab National Bank · State Bank of India · State Bank of Mysore · State Bank of Patiala · Union Bank of India · Vijaya Bank |
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Facilities : |
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Auditors : |
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Name : |
Deloitte Haskins
and Sells Chartered
Accountants |
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Membership : |
-- |
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Associates : |
· Jindal Praxair Oxygen Company Private Limited · JSW Ispat Steel Limited |
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Subsidiaries (As on 31.03.2014): |
· JSW Steel (Netherlands) B.V. · JSW Steel (UK) Limited · Argent Independent Steel (Holdings) Limited · JSW Steel Service Centre (UK) Limited · JSW Steel Holding (USA) Inc. · JSW Steel (USA) Inc. · Periama Holdings, LLC · Purest Energy, LLC · Meadow Creek Minerals, LLC · Hutchinson Minerals, LLC · R.C. Minerals, LLC · Keenan Minerals, LLC · Peace Leasing, LLC · Prime Coal, LLC · Planck Holdings, LLC · Rolling S Augering, LLC · Periama Handling, LLC · Lower Hutchinson Minerals, LLC · Caretta Minerals, LLC · JSW Panama Holdings Corporation · Inversiones Eroush Ltda · Santa Fe Mining · Santa Fe Puerto S.A. · JSW Natural Resources Limited · JSW Natural Resources Mozambique Ltda · JSW ADMS Carvo Lda · JSW Mali Resources SA (w.e.f. 18.02.2013) · JSW Steel Processing Centres Limited · JSW Bengal Steel Limited · JSW Natural Resources India Limited · Barbil Beneficiation Company Limited · JSW Jharkhand Steel Limited · JSW Building Systems Limited · JSW Steel East Africa Limited · Amba River Coke Limited · JSW Energy (Bengal) Limited · JSW Natural Resource Bengal Limited (w.e.f. 03.04.2012) · JSW Steel Coated Products Limited (w.e.f. 31.08.2012) · JSW Energy (Bengal) Limited (upto 04.03.2012) |
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Joint Venture (As on 31.03.2014) : |
· Vijayanagar Minerals Private Limited · Rohne Coal Company Private Limited · JSW Severfield Structures Limited · Gourangdih Coal Limited · Toshiba JSW Turbine and Generator Private Limited · MJSJ Coal Limited · GEO Steel LLC · JSW Structural Metal Decking Limited · JSW MI Steel Service Center Private Limited |
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Other Related Parties (As on 31.03.2014) : |
· JSW Energy Limited · JSL Limited · JSW Realty and Infrastructure Private Limited · Jindal Saw Limited · Jindal Steel and Power Limited · JSOFT Solutions Limited · Jindal Industries Limited · Jindal Aluminum Limited · JSW Cement Limited · JSW Jaigarh Port Limited · Reynold Traders Private Limited · Raj West Power Limited · JSW Power Trading Company Limited · JSW Aluminim Limited · P Jindal Foundation · JSW Infrastructure Limited · South West Port Limited · JSW Techno Projects Management Limited · South West Mining Limited · JSL Architecture Limited · JSW Projects Limited · Sapphire Technologies Limited · Jindal Technologies and Management Services Private Limited |
CAPITAL STRUCTURE
As on 31.03.2015
Authorised Capital : Not Available
Issued, Subscribed & Paid-up Capital : Rs.10671.900 Million
As on 31.03.2014
Authorised Capital :
|
No. of Shares |
Type |
Value |
Amount |
|
|
|
|
|
|
6015000000 |
Equity Shares |
Rs.10/- each |
Rs.60150.000 Million |
|
3000000000 |
Preference Shares |
Rs.10/- each |
Rs.30000.000 Million |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Total |
|
Rs.90150.000
Million |
Issued, Subscribed & Paid-up Capital :
|
No. of Shares |
Type |
Value |
Amount |
|
|
|
|
|
|
241722044 |
Equity Shares |
Rs.10/- each |
Rs.2417.200 Million |
|
279034907 |
Preference Shares |
Rs.10/- each |
Rs.2790.300 Million |
|
485414604 |
0.01% Cumulative Redeemable Preference Share Fully Paid-up |
|
Rs.4854.100 Million |
|
|
Equity Shares Forfeited [Amount originally paid-up] |
|
Rs.610.300 Million |
|
|
Total |
|
Rs.10671.900
Million |
Reconciliation of
the number of shares outstanding at the beginning and end of the year:
|
Equity Shares |
Number
of Shares |
|
Outstanding at the beginning of the year |
223117200 |
|
Shares issued during the year |
18604844 |
|
Outstanding at
the end of the year |
241722044 |
|
Preference
Shares |
Number
of Shares |
|
10% Cumulative
Redeemable Preference Shares |
|
|
Outstanding at the
beginning and at the end of the year |
279034907 |
|
0.01% Cumulative Redeemable Preference Shares |
|
|
Outstanding at
the beginning of the year |
-- |
|
Issued during
the year |
485414604 |
|
Outstanding at
the end of the year |
485414604 |
Rights, preferences and restrictions attached to Equity shares
The Company has a
single lass of equity shares each shareholder IS eligible for one vote per
share held.
The dividend
proposed by the Board of Directors IS subject to the approval of the shareholders
In the event of Liquidation, the equity shareholders are eligible to receive
the remaining assets of the company after distribution of all preferential
mounts, In proportion to their shareholding.
Rights, preferences and restrictions attached to Preference shares
The Company has
two classes of preference shares i.e. 10% Cumulative Redeemable Preference
Shares (CRPS1] of Rs.10 per share and 0.1% Cumulative Redeemable Preference Shares
(CRPS2) of Rs.10
per share. CRPS1 are redeemable at par in four equal 'quarterly Installments
commencing from 15 December 2017. The shares carry a right to receive 10%
dividend very year till redemption.
Each holder of
CRPS2 is entitled to one vote per share, In proportion to the amount paid on
CRPS2 held, only on resolutions placed before the Company which directly affect
the rights attached to CRPS2. It carries dividend Id 0.01% p.a., when declared.
CRPS2 is redeemable at par eight quarterly Installments commencing from 15th
June 2018. In the event of liquidation, the preference shareholders are
eligible to receive the outstanding amount including dividend after
distribution of all other preferential amounts, in proportion to their
shareholding. In the event of winding-up of the Company before redemption of
preference shares, the holders of CRPSI and CRPS2 will have priority over
equity’s hares in the payment of dividend and repayment of capital.
Shareholders holding more than 5% shares in the company is set out
below:
|
Equity Shares |
Number
of Shares |
% of
Holding |
|
JSW Steel International Europe B.V |
36258307 |
15.00% |
|
JSW Holdings Limited |
17284923 |
7.15% |
|
JSW Investment Private Limited |
12599601 |
5.21% |
|
JSW Energy Investments Private Limited |
6184200 |
2.56% |
|
Preference
Shares |
Number
of Shares |
%
of Holding |
|
10% Cumulative
Redeemable Preference Shares |
|
|
|
ICICI Bank Limited |
125707730 |
45.05% |
|
IDBI Bank Limited |
69734847 |
24.99% |
|
Life Insurance Corporation of India |
36348783 |
13.03% |
|
IFCI Limited |
21262362 |
7.62% |
|
0.01% Cumulative
Redeemable Preference Shares |
|
|
|
JSW Logistics Infrastructure Private Limited |
338586951 |
69.75% |
Shares allotted as fully paid-up pursuant to contracts without payment
being received in cash during the period of five years immediate preceding the
date of the balance sheet are as under:
1,86,04,844 equity shares to the shareholders
of the erstwhile JSW Ispat Steel Limited pursuant to a composite scheme of
amalgamation and arrangement.
48,54,14,604
0.01% cumulative redeemable preference shares fully paid upto the
shareholders of the erstwhile JSW Ispat Steel Limited pursuant to a composite
scheme of Amalgamation and Arrangement.
FINANCIAL DATA
[all figures are
in Rupees Million]
ABRIDGED
BALANCE SHEET
|
SOURCES
OF FUNDS |
31.03.2015 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2013 |
|
I.
EQUITY
AND LIABILITIES |
|
|
|
|
(1)Shareholders' Funds |
|
|
|
|
(a) Share Capital |
10671.900 |
10671.900 |
5631.800 |
|
(b) Reserves & Surplus |
246574.100 |
232169.900 |
193741.900 |
|
(c) Money received
against share warrants |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
|
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|
|
|
|
(2) Share
Application money pending allotment |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
|
Total Shareholders’ Funds (1) + (2) |
257246.000 |
242841.800 |
199373.700 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(3) Non-Current
Liabilities |
|
|
|
|
(a) long-term
borrowings |
254968.900 |
210543.200 |
154342.600 |
|
(b) Deferred tax liabilities (Net) |
29665.900 |
19085.100 |
34502.300 |
|
(c) Other long term
liabilities |
2361.000 |
4664.000 |
1940.600 |
|
(d) long-term
provisions |
567.800 |
406.700 |
395.100 |
|
Total Non-current
Liabilities (3) |
287563.600 |
234699.000 |
191180.600 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(4) Current Liabilities |
|
|
|
|
(a) Short
term borrowings |
2643.400 |
39206.600 |
11095.300 |
|
(b) Trade
payables |
125153.900 |
99912.500 |
92743.600 |
|
(c) Other
current liabilities |
72781.100 |
64159.700 |
48739.800 |
|
(d) Short-term
provisions |
3536.000 |
3437.200 |
3020.500 |
|
Total Current
Liabilities (4) |
204114.400 |
206716.000 |
155599.200 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
748924.000 |
684256.800 |
546153.500 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
II.
ASSETS |
|
|
|
|
(1) Non-current assets |
|
|
|
|
(a) Fixed
Assets |
|
|
|
|
(i)
Tangible assets |
463592.500 |
372251.200 |
276044.700 |
|
(ii)
Intangible Assets |
0.000 |
699.600 |
343.200 |
|
(iii)
Capital work-in-progress |
0.000 |
67896.600 |
50339.700 |
|
(iv) Intangible assets under development |
0.000 |
678.100 |
405.700 |
|
(b) Non-current
Investments |
41972.800 |
43128.500 |
44956.100 |
|
(c) Deferred tax
assets (net) |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
|
(d) Long-term Loan and Advances |
53119.100 |
49614.700 |
30839.900 |
|
(e) Other
Non-current assets |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.800 |
|
Total Non-Current
Assets |
558684.400 |
534268.700 |
402930.100 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(2) Current assets |
|
|
|
|
(a)
Current investments |
0.000 |
677.000 |
1404.500 |
|
(b)
Inventories |
85847.400 |
61965.700 |
47991.000 |
|
(c) Trade
receivables |
20268.300 |
22187.400 |
18622.000 |
|
(d) Cash
and cash equivalents |
17950.600 |
4657.200 |
14017.900 |
|
(e)
Short-term loans and advances |
66173.300 |
60500.800 |
61188.000 |
|
(f) Other
current assets |
0.000 |
0.000 |
0.000 |
|
Total
Current Assets |
190239.600 |
149988.100 |
143223.400 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
748924.000 |
684256.800 |
546153.500 |
PROFIT
& LOSS ACCOUNT
|
|
PARTICULARS |
31.03.2015 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2013 |
|
|
|
SALES |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Income |
460873.200 |
452977.200 |
354918.100 |
|
|
|
Other Income |
4667.700 |
3310.500 |
2608.800 |
|
|
|
TOTAL (A) |
465540.900 |
456287.700 |
357526.900 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
EXPENSES |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cost of materials consumed |
273456.000 |
267058.200 |
225903.700 |
|
|
|
Purchases of traded goods |
3856.400 |
4948.100 |
100.000 |
|
|
|
Changes in
inventories of Finished goods, Work-in-progress and Stock-in-Trade |
(16669.300) |
(2441.000) |
(1724.600) |
|
|
|
Employee benefits expense |
9468.300 |
7995.800 |
6709.700 |
|
|
|
Other expenses |
102045.400 |
87590.200 |
60841.100 |
|
|
|
Exceptional Items |
3963.000 |
16923.000 |
3672.100 |
|
|
|
TOTAL (B) |
376119.800 |
382074.300 |
295502.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
PROFIT
/ (LOSS) BEFORE INTEREST, TAX, DEPRECIATION AND AMORTISATION (A-B) (C) |
89421.100 |
74213.400 |
62024.900 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
FINANCIAL
EXPENSES (D) |
29086.900 |
27401.300 |
17244.800 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PROFIT
/ (LOSS) BEFORE TAX, DEPRECIATION AND AMORTISATION (C-D) (E) |
60334.200 |
46812.100 |
44780.100 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
DEPRECIATION/
AMORTISATION (F) |
27845.000 |
27258.800 |
19738.900 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PROFIT / (LOSS)
BEFORE TAX (E-F) (G) |
32489.200 |
19553.300 |
25041.200 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
TAX (H) |
10824.400 |
6208.200 |
7029.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PROFIT / (LOSS)
AFTER TAX (G-H) (I) |
21664.800 |
13345.100 |
18012.200 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Add |
PREVIOUS
YEARS’ BALANCE BROUGHT FORWARD |
37449.300 |
33060.200 |
19873.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
PURSUANT TO THE
COMPANIES SCHEME OF AMALGAMATION AND ARRANGEMENT |
NA |
3419.500 |
0.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Less |
APPROPRIATIONS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Transfer to General Reserve |
|
1340.000 |
1810.000 |
|
|
|
Dividend on Additional Equity Shares Issued |
|
217.700 |
0.000 |
|
|
|
Dividend on Preferences Shares |
|
279.000 |
279.000 |
|
|
|
Proposed Final Dividend on Equity Shares |
|
2658.900 |
2231.200 |
|
|
|
Corporate Dividend Tax |
|
499.300 |
426.600 |
|
|
|
Transfer To Debenture Redemption Reserve |
|
541.600 |
78.200 |
|
|
BALANCE CARRIED
TO THE B/S |
|
37449.300 |
33060.200 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
EARNINGS IN
FOREIGN CURRENCY |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
F.O.B. Value of Exports |
NA |
80564.500 |
69693.500 |
|
|
|
Sale of Carbon Credits |
|
0.000 |
170.700 |
|
|
|
Commission and Fees |
|
334.600 |
0.000 |
|
|
|
Interest Income |
|
1930.400 |
1808.800 |
|
|
TOTAL EARNINGS |
|
82829.500 |
71673.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IMPORTS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Raw Materials |
|
142583.800 |
104010.900 |
|
|
|
Stores & Spares |
|
4014.100 |
4671.000 |
|
|
|
Capital Goods |
|
15248.700 |
17213.900 |
|
|
TOTAL IMPORTS |
|
161846.600 |
125895.800 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Earnings /
(Loss) Per Share (Rs.) |
88.24 |
53.86 |
79.28 |
|
Expected Sales 2015-2016 : Rs.470000.000 Million
The above information has been parted by Mr. Rajeev Madhusudan Pai
(Chief Financial Officer)
CURRENT MATURITIES OF LONG TERM DEBT DETAILS
|
Particulars |
31.03.2015 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2013 |
|
Current Maturities of Long term debt |
NA |
22094.500 |
13645.700 |
|
Cash generated from operations |
NA |
NA |
NA |
KEY
RATIOS
|
PARTICULARS |
|
31.03.2015 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2013 |
|
Net Profit Margin (PAT / Sales) |
(%) |
4.70 |
6.68 |
6.11 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Operating Profit Margin (PBDIT/Sales) |
(%) |
19.40 |
20.12 |
18.51 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Return on Total Assets (PBT/Total Assets} |
(%) |
4.60 |
6.37 |
6.37 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Return on Investment (ROI) (PBT/Networth) |
|
0.13 |
0.15 |
0.14 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Debt Equity Ratio (Total Debt /Networth) |
|
1.00 |
1.12 |
0.90 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Current Ratio (Current Asset/Current Liability) |
|
0.93 |
0.73 |
0.92 |
STOCK
PRICES
|
Face Value |
Rs.10.00 |
|
Market Value |
Rs.874.00 |
FINANCIAL ANALYSIS
[all figures are
in Rupees Million]
DEBT EQUITY RATIO
|
Particular |
31.03.2013 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2015 |
|
|
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
|
Share Capital |
5631.800 |
10671.900 |
10671.900 |
|
Reserves & Surplus |
193741.900 |
232169.900 |
246574.100 |
|
Net
worth |
199373.700 |
242841.800 |
257246.000 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
long-term borrowings |
154342.600 |
210543.200 |
254968.900 |
|
Short term borrowings |
11095.300 |
39206.600 |
2643.400 |
|
Current maturities of
long-term debts |
13645.700 |
22094.500 |
0.000 |
|
Total
borrowings |
179083.600 |
271844.300 |
257612.300 |
|
Debt/Equity
ratio |
0.898 |
1.119 |
1.001 |

YEAR-ON-YEAR GROWTH
|
Year
on Year Growth |
31.03.2013 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2015 |
|
|
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
|
Sales |
354918.100 |
452977.200 |
460873.200 |
|
|
|
27.629 |
1.743 |

NET PROFIT MARGIN
|
Net
Profit Margin |
31.03.2013 |
31.03.2014 |
31.03.2015 |
|
|
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
(Rs.
In Million) |
|
Sales |
354918.100 |
452977.200 |
460873.200 |
|
Profit |
21684.300 |
30268.100 |
21664.800 |
|
|
6.11% |
6.68% |
4.70% |

LOCAL AGENCY FURTHER INFORMATION
|
Sr. No. |
Check List by Info Agents |
Available in
Report (Yes / No) |
|
1] |
Year of establishment |
Yes |
|
2] |
Constitution of the entity -Incorporation
details |
Yes |
|
3] |
Locality of the entity |
Yes |
|
4] |
Premises details |
No |
|
5] |
Buyer visit details |
-- |
|
6] |
Contact numbers |
Yes |
|
7] |
Name of the person contacted |
Yes |
|
8] |
Designation of contact person |
Yes |
|
9] |
Promoter’s background |
Yes |
|
10] |
Date of Birth of Proprietor / Partners /
Directors |
Yes |
|
11] |
Pan Card No. of Proprietor / Partners |
No |
|
12] |
Voter Id Card No. of Proprietor / Partners |
No |
|
13] |
Type of business |
Yes |
|
14] |
Line of Business |
Yes |
|
15] |
Export/import details (if applicable) |
Yes |
|
16] |
No. of employees |
Yes |
|
17] |
Details of sister concerns |
Yes |
|
18] |
Major suppliers |
No |
|
19] |
Major customers |
No |
|
20] |
Banking Details |
Yes |
|
21] |
Banking facility details |
No |
|
22] |
Conduct of the banking account |
-- |
|
23] |
Financials, if provided |
Yes |
|
24] |
Capital in the business |
Yes |
|
25] |
Last accounts filed at ROC, if applicable |
Yes |
|
26] |
Turnover of firm for last three years |
Yes |
|
27] |
Reasons for variation <> 20% |
-- |
|
28] |
Estimation for coming financial year |
No |
|
29] |
Profitability for last three years |
Yes |
|
30] |
Major shareholders, if available |
Yes |
|
31] |
External Agency Rating, if available |
Yes |
|
32] |
Litigations that the firm/promoter
involved in |
-- |
|
33] |
Market information |
-- |
|
34] |
Payments terms |
No |
|
35] |
Negative Reporting by Auditors in the
Annual Report |
No |
LITIGATION
DETAILS:
|
Case Details Bench:-Bombay |
|
Presentation Date:-06/02/2015 |
|||||||
|
Lodging
No.:- |
CEXAL/33/2015 |
Filing
Date:- |
06/02/2015 |
Reg.
No.: - |
CEXA/82/2015 |
Reg.
Date :- |
11/03/2015 |
|
Petitioner:- |
THE COMMISSIONER CENTRAL EXCISE THANE -1 |
Respondent:- |
M/S JSW STEEL LIMITED |
|
Petn.Adv.:- |
JITENDRA BRIJBHUSHAN
MISHRA (12937) |
|
District:- |
MUMBAI |
|
Bench:- |
DIVISION |
||
|
Status:- |
Pre-Admission |
Category:- |
CENTRAL EXCISE APPEAL
(CEXA) |
|
Next
Date :- |
08/06/2015 |
Stage
:- |
FOR ADMISSION |
|
Coram
|
HON’BLE SHRI JUSTICE B.R.
GAVAI HON’BLE SHRI JUSTICE A.S.
GADKARI |
||
|
Act
:- |
Central Excise & Salt
Act |
Under
Section:- |
35G |
UNSECURED LOAN:
|
Particulars |
31.03.2015 Rs.
In Million |
31.03.2014 Rs.
In Million |
|
Long Term
Borrowings |
|
|
|
Foreign Currency Term Loans from Banks |
NA |
53326.500 |
|
Deferred Sales Tax Loan |
NA |
1017.000 |
|
Total |
NA |
54343.500 |
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS:
(As on 31.03.2014)
The Scheme of
Amalgamation and Arrangement ("the Scheme") between the Company and
JSW ISPAT Steel Limited and others, which became effective June 1, 2013 with
appointed date of July 1, 2012. Therefore, the numbers of FY 2013-14 are not
comparable with FY 2012-13 as the effect of implementation of the Scheme is
included in the current year figures.
STANDALONE RESULTS:
The Company produced
12.17 million tonnes of crude steel in FY 2013-14, up 43% over the previous
year. Its steel sales grew to 11.86 million tonnes, increasing by 34% year on
year. The Company took several initiatives during the last financial year that
helped in achieving impressive growth in production and sales volumes. The
Company commissioned new facilities to enrich product mix, leveraged the export
demand, diversified its inputs sourcing strategy and strengthened market
penetration through wider distribution and newer formats.
The Gross Turnover
and Net Turnover for the year under review was Rs.485270.000 Million and
Rs.445290.000 Million, respectively, and showed a growth of 25% and 26%,
respectively. The Operating EBITDA was Rs.387830.000 Million, and showed a
growth of 39% with an improvement in EBIDTA margin from 17.8% to 19.4%. The net
profit after tax was Rs.13350.000 Million after considering exceptional loss of
Rs.16920.000 Million. The exceptional loss is due to the significant movement
and volatility in the value of the rupee against US dollar.
The net worth of your
Company increased to Rs.3242840.000 Million as on March 31, 2014 from
Rs.199370.000 Million as on March 31, 2013. The Company’s net debt gearing was
at 1.10 (compared to 0.82 as on March 31, 2013) and net debt to EBIDTA was at
3.03 (compared to 2.59, as on March 31, 2013).
SCHEME OF ARRANGEMENT
AND AMALGAMATION:
A ‘Composite Scheme
of Arrangement and Amalgamation’ under Sections 391-394 of the Companies Act,
1956 (the "Scheme") amongst the Company, JSW ISPAT Steel Limited
("JSW ISPAT"), JSW Building Systems Limited ("JSW
Building"), JSW Steel Coated Products Limited ("JSW Steel
Coated") (formerly known as Maharashtra Sponge Iron Limited) and their
respective shareholders and creditors was sanctioned by the Hon’ble Bombay High
Court vide its Order dated May 3, 2013. The Appointed Date in terms of the
Scheme is July 1, 2012. The said Scheme has become effective June 1, 2013,
consequent to the filing of Hon’ble High Court’s Order with the Registrar of
Companies.
PROSPECTS: (As on
31.03.2014)
ECONOMY
In FY 2013-14, India
was besieged by high inflation, rapidly depreciating Rupee, rising NPAs, declining
manufacturing, stagnant investments and subdued exports with adverse downside
risk to future economic growth. However, prudent and timely measures by RBI and
the Government restored macroeconomic stability, lowering Current Account
Deficit to below 2.5% and contained Fiscal Deficit at 4.6%.
World economy is
projected to grow at 3.6% in CY3 2014 up from 3% in CY 2013 majorly aided by
steady growth in Europe from 0.2% to 1.6% and US from 1.9% to 2.8%. Emerging
Markets are projected to exhibit a moderate growth at 4.9%. China is focusing
on ‘Quality’ engineered growth, with emphasis on increasing domestic
consumption demand. Emerging countries remain vulnerable to the ongoing
tapering of quantitative easing in the US, and gradual withdrawal is expected
to reduce this risk.
Global commodity
prices are projected to remain moderate and this could support India’s
recovery. Sustained growth is expected as the Indian economy over-rides the
structural impediments and policy stimulates business confidence and accelerate
fiscal correction.
STEEL SECTOR
Indian steel demand
grew to 73.9 million tonne during FY 2013-14 with Flat Steel down by 2% while
Longs displayed a growth of 2.6%. Impacted by inadequacy and inconsistent
quality of iron ore, capacity utilisation for Indian steel declined from 81% in
FY 2012-13 to 78% in FY 2013-14.
Sluggish domestic
demand with rising capacity and increased production resulted in growing thrust
on import substitution, resulting in a sharp decline of imports by 34%. Expanding
new-age steel capacities and incorporating world-class technologies and rupee
depreciation helped India to increase its steel exports by 13%. This exhibits
growing global competitiveness of Indian steel industry; thus transforming
India into a net steel exporter.
Global crude steel
capacity is projected to increase by 88 million tonnes to 2256 million tonnes
during CY 2014. Steel demand in CY 2014 is expected to increase by 53 million
tonnes or 3.6% to 1534 million tonnes exhibiting significant demand growth for
Europe at 3.1% with Advanced Markets up by 2.5% as against -0.2% in CY 2013.
Chinese steel demand projected at 728 million tonnes with its growth moderating
to 4% as against 6.6% in CY 2013. There is need for the sector to restructure
to increase efficiency.
The Government is
undertaking proactive policy initiatives for Infrastructure development and
Industrial growth, which will accelerate steel demand in line with economic
growth. However, concerns like poor availability of iron ore and inconsistent
quality as well as high import dependency of coking coal need to be addressed.
AWARDS AND ACCOLADES:
The Company and its
employees received the following awards during the year under review:
• Prime Minister`s Trophy
for excellence in performance in 2012-13 for Vijayanagar Works which was
adjudged the Best Integrated Steel Plant in India.
• ‘Industry
Leadership Award’ at Platts Global Metals Awards for achievements in steel,
metals and mining.
• Golden Peacock
Eco-lnnovation Award 2013 by the National Jury.
• IMC Ramakrishna
Bajaj National Quality Award 2013 for `Strong Commitment To Sustainability`
under category E for Vijayanagar Works.
• IMC Ramknshna Bajaj
National Quality (RBNQ) Performance Excellence Trophy 2013-14.
• Silver Prize, 14th
Annual Greentech Environment Award 2013 in Metal and Mining sector.
• Tamil Nadu
Government State Safety Award 2012.
• Best Supplier Award
from Tata Motors and WABCO for Salem Works.
• Green Manufacturing
Excellence Award `Green Challengers` 2014 from Frost & Sullivan.
• Silver Prize, India
Manufacturing Excellence Award 2013 from Frost & Sullivan.
• Commendation
Certificate, CII-EXIM Bank Award 2013 for Significant Achievement at Bangalore.
• Commendation
Certificate, Cll ITC Sustainability Award 2013. Second Prize, National
Sustainability Award 2013-14 from Indian Institute of Metals
INDEX OF CHARGE:
|
S. No. |
Charge ID |
Date of Charge Creation/Modification |
Charge amount secured |
Charge Holder |
Address |
Service Request Number (SRN) |
|
1 |
10556047 |
18/02/2015 |
10,000,000,000.00 |
IDBI TRUSTEESHIP SERVICES LIMITED |
ASIAN BUILDING, GROUND FLOOR, 17, R KAMINI MARG, BALLARD ESTATE, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400001, INDIA |
C46387809 |
|
2 |
10541935 |
19/12/2014 |
16,000,000,000.00 |
SBICAP TRUSTEE COMPANY LIMITED |
202, MAKER TOWER E, CUFFE PARADE, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400005, INDIA |
C39902663 |
|
3 |
10537602 |
25/11/2014 |
2,000,000,000.00 |
IDBI TRUSTEESHIP SERVICES LIMITED |
ASIAN BUILDING, GROUND FLOOR, 17, R KAMINI MARG, BALLARD ESTATE,, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400001, INDIA |
C36871085 |
|
4 |
10532797 |
31/10/2014 |
5,000,000,000.00 |
IDBI TRUSTEESHIP SERVICES LIMITED |
ASIAN BUILDING, GROUND FLOOR, 17, R KAMINI MARG, BALLARD ESTATE,, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400001, INDIA |
C34118307 |
|
5 |
10530052 |
11/02/2015 * |
10,250,000,000.00 |
IDBI TRUSTEESHIP SERVICES LIMITED |
ASIAN BUILDING, GROUND FLOOR, 17, R. KAMANI MARG, BALLARD ESTATE, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400001, INDIA |
C46012951 |
|
6 |
10528989 |
27/09/2014 |
4,925,760,000.00 |
EXPORT IMPORT BANK OF INDIA |
FLOOR 21, CENTRE ONE BUILDING, WORLD TRADE CENTRE, CUFFE PARADE, MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA - 400005, INDIA |
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PRESS RELEASE:
JSPL WORST HIT; SEE LEAST
IMPACT ON TATA STEEL: P LILLADHER
Supreme Court’s verdict that 218 coal blocks allocated since 1993 to 2009 are illegal and unconstitutional has sent ripples across the mining sector with stocks like Jindal Steel and Power , Hindalco and Tata Steel taking a beating.
No clarity has been provided on deallocation of this coal mines hence
there concerns cancellation of these blocks could be a possibility. The
apex court would hear the consequences of illegality of coal blocks September
1, 2014.
Brokerage house Prabhudas Lilladhar belongs to the camp which expects
coal blocks to be cancelled followed by auctions.
Also Read: Neutral on
metals, shun JSPL; like cement, energy, says Religare
“Our interaction with legal fraternity suggests that coal blocks would
eventually be cancelled given the definition provided by the Court.
Simultaneously, the Court would direct the Govt to organise the auctions for
these blocks in time bound manner. Operational coal blocks would be allowed to
operate by the existing allocatees till the auction takes place, the report
says.
On stock specific impact, Naveen Jindal promoted Jindal Steel and Power (JSPL)
would be worst hit because its entire 12 million tonne of production come from
mines allocated after 1993. Further, it will delay the process of securing
mining rights for its much awaited Utkal B-1 mine, critical for its Angul steel
cum power project, it adds.
Second in line would be Hindalco as its Talabira-I mine, which was
allocated in 1994, supplies 2.5MTPA of coal to meet one-third of its coal
requirement.
However, Tata Steel, SAIL
and JSW Steel
will be least impacted. “Our earnings estimates as well as valuations for Tata,
SAIL and JSTL had not factored any contribution from any of their coal blocks
given the slow pace of their clearances,” it adds.
ANALYST VIEWS: HOW WILL COAL
BLOCKS RULING IMPACT METAL COS
The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that the allocation of around 200 coal blocks between 1993 and 2009 were illegal .
A snapshot of what brokerages are saying about the likely impact of the
ruling on various companies:
CLSA: This judgement substantially reduces the probability of Hindalco
getting the Mahan coal mine for the Mahan smelter or the Talabira-II coal mine
for the Aditya smelter, which lowers the long-term profitability outlook for
Hindalco’s India business.
BoAML: We see marginal impact from potential cancellation of Mahan and
Talabira II coal block on our FY16e EPS and valuation as a) we expect Limited
(0.4mt) captive coal from Mahan in 2HFY16 and expect full ramp only by FY19 and
b) we do not factor in Talabira II coal block in our estimates
Macquarie: Even in the worst case scenario where Hindalco is forced to
import their total requirements, it remains profitable enough with interest
coverage ratios in excess of 2x (two times).
CLSA: Our estimates for JSPL don’t include any benefit from the Utkal
coal mine but de-allocation of the existing coal mines will impact our
consolidated FY16-17 EPS estimate by 28-30% (if the company sources entire coal
via
linkage) and by a higher 50-60% (if the entire coal comes from e-auctions).
BoaML: Utkal 1B coal block is critical for profitability of its Angul
Steel and captive power project. We estimate EBITDA/tonne at Angul could be hit
by around USD84/t in absence of captive coal. Assuming, worst casescenario of
all coal blocks being cancelled, we estimate impact on FY16 EBIDTA could be 10-23 percent.
Macquarie: Even in the worst case scenario where JSPL is forced to
import their total requirements, it remains profitable enough with interest
coverage ratios in excess of 2x (two times)
CLSA: : No impact since its captive coking coal mines were allocated pre
1993
Goldman Sachs: Tata Steel India gets 40% of its coking coal needs
through captive coal mines; however, all
these coal mines (mainly in West Bokaro
and Jharia regions) were allocated pre-1993.
CLSA: No impact as JSW does not have any operational/upcoming coal
mines.
Goldman Sachs: JSW has no captive coal or iron ore mines in India and
hence is not impacted.
Goldman Sachs: For Sesa Sterlite the Durgapur II/Taraimar coal block
(4mt capacity) for Balco’s 1,000 MW captive power plant does not impact our
valuation as we assume commissioning post FY16.
CLSA: This judgement means that the probability of Balco (51% sub of
Sesa Sterlite) getting the mining lease signed for its captive coal mine
reduces substantially. This will impact future profitability of Sesa Sterlite’s
aluminium business.
JSW STEEL TO ACQUIRE STAKE
HELD BY WELSPUN ENTERPRISES IN WELSPUN MAXSTEEL
JSW Steel Ltd has informed BSE about Acquisition of entire equity stake held by Welspun Enterprises Limited ("WEL") in Welspun Maxsteel Limited ("WMSL") by JSW Steel Limited. JSW Steel has entered into a definitive agreement with Welspun Enterprises (WEL) pursuant to which the company shall acquire the entire equity stake held by WEL in Welspun Maxsteel (WMSL) for an enterprise value of Rs 1000 crore plus net current assets as of an agreed dated of August 31, 2014.
JSW STEEL CRUDE STEEL
PRODUCTION RISES 12% IN JULY' 14
JSW Steel Ltd has informed BSE regarding a Press Release dated August 08, 2014, titled "Crude Steel production growth : 12% in July' 14". JSW Steel reported crude steel production for July 2014 at 11.13 lakh tons showing a growth of 12 percent over corresponding month of previous year.
JSW STEEL PROMOTER HIKES
STAKE IN CO TO 4.74%
JSW Investments, a promoter group firm of JSW Steel , has increased stake in the company by 0.13 percent to 4.74 percent for nearly Rs 320.000 Million through open market transactions. JSW Investments had 4.61 per cent stake or 11,14,55,761 shares in the steel maker before it started buying, the company said in a filing with BSE today.
On December 20, it bought 4,132 shares for Rs 1.335 Million, followed by
another 12,000 shares for Rs 11.800 Million on December 23. It again bought
0.135 Million shares for Rs 133.500 Million on December 24 and 0.169 Million shares
on December 26 for Rs 169.300 Million. Following the transactions, JSW
Investments now holds 4.74 per cent stake or 0.113 Million shares in JSW Steel.
As on September 30, JSW Steel's promoters held 36.25 per cent stake in
the firm. Jindal South West Holdings and Jindal Energy Investments have more
than five per cent stake in the company. Shares of the company closed at Rs
1,020 apiece, up 1.30 per cent on the BSE today.
JSW STEEL HIKES PRICES BY 2%;
EYES BETTER VOLUMES IN FY15
JSW Steel has decided to hike prices by up to 2 percent across the board from January. Seshagiri Rao, Joint MD & Group CFO, JSW Steel, said though the demand is flat, there are pressure on the cost side, particularly iron ore (there's a shortage of iron ore), thus the prices have gone up substantially. "There's a freight increase and and a cost increase which we need to pass it on. At the sametime, there had been a hike in the steel prices internationally," he said on CNBC-TV 18.
Also Read: Steel makers
may to raise prices by Rs 1,000/tonne nxt mth
According to World Steel Association's estimates, the steel demand is
expected to go up by 48 million tonne in 2014.
JSW Steel has USD 1.6 billion open forex payables.It intends to keep
hedging costs to zero and plans to balance forex exposure. The company has a
net debt of Rs 30,4350.000 Million.
JSW Steel expects the exports In FY15 to be at 4 million tonne versus 3
million tonne (YoY). The company expects sales volumes in FY15 to improve by 1
million tonne to 12.6 million tonne (YoY) and to continue to spend Rs 10000.000
Million per quarter.
Goldman Sachs rates JSW Steel as buy, as the company's major capex phase
is behind it and it is set to generate FCF (free cash flow) in FY15E. "It
is also one of the lowest cost convertors and highest CROCI (cash return on
capital invested) generators globally and stands to benefit from better
domestic iron ore availability," it said.
JSW
STEEL TO ACQUIRE WELSPUN MAXSTEEL FOR RS1,000 CRORE
Mumbai: JSW Steel Ltd, India’s third largest steel
maker by capacity, has agreed to buy Welspun Maxsteel Ltd (WMSL) in a
transaction that values the company at Rs.10000.000 Million as JSW seeks to
expand production of the alloy.
WMSL, a unit of Welspun Enterprises Ltd, has long-term
debt of Rs.10870.000 Million, Welspun Enterprises said in a BSE filing on
Monday.
JSW linked the acqusition to its goal of enhancing its
steel production to 40 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) in the next decade, from
14.3 mtpa now.
“WMSL is situated in close proximity (within 40km) to
company’s Dolvi unit (in Maharashtra), offering complementary infrastructure and
location to augment the current envisaged expansion at Dolvi. In line with this
objective, JSW wishes to acquire the entire equity shares of WMSL,” said JSW
Steel.
WMSL has an installed capacity of 900,000 tonnes per
annum at its gas-based plant, with a captive jetty and a captive railway
siding, at Salav village in Raigad district of Maharashtra. The captive jetty,
with an existing capacity of 2.5 mtpa, is located 1.8km from the plant, while
the captive railway siding is located at Roha junction, 35km from the plant.
“This acquisition is value-accretive to JSW Steel due
to synergies in supplying surplus pellets to Welspun Maxsteel and use of DRI
(direct reduced iron) from WMSL in company’s steel-making operations at Dolvi
plant,” said Seshagiri Rao, joint managing director and group chief financial
officer, JSW Steel.
WMSL also has approximately 480 acres of vacant land
available for future expansions.
“The company (JSW Steel) has surplus pellets in its
subsidiary Amba River Coke Ltd which will be supplied to WMSL. The cost of
production in WMSL is expected to come down due to replacement of significant
portion of its bought-out pellets with captive pellets. The DRI produced by
WMSL shall initially be used partly by the company’s Dolvi unit, and would be
consumed in the entirety post completion of its ongoing expansion to 5 mtpa,”
JSW Steel said in its statement.
EY and Luthra and Luthra carried out financial and
legal due diligence for JSW Steel on the transaction.
JSW Steel Ltd gained 0.14% to Rs.1276.50 on Monday on
BSE, while the exchange’s benchmark Sensex gained 1.1% to 26,390.96 points.
In 2010, the company acquired debt-laden Ispat
Industries Ltd for Rs.21570.000 Million.
“The land and the
port and its integration with JSW’s Dolvi unit seems the main strategy behind
this acquisition,” said Goutam Chakraborty, a metal analyst at Emkay Global
Financial Services Ltd. “This acquisition, together with that of Ispat one made
earlier, will help JSW strengthen its position in the western Indian market.”
Chakraborty said
the 480 acres of free land could be used for brownfield expansion such as
putting up a pellet plant or mills for making value-added products such as a
bars, wire rods and rails and that would be value-accretive since JSW has been
focusing on producing more of the high-margin products.
“This is useful
especially at a time when land is elusive and greenfield ventures are
difficult. This is a strategy they have enforced to overcome the iron ore
problems in Karnataka where their main plan operates,” Chakraborty said.
The logistical
bottlenecks in the country have also prompted JSW management to invest in
facilities near the ports from where shipping in raw materials and shipping out
exports becomes easier.
Sajjan Jindal-promoted
JSW Steel is looking for other strategic acquisitions too; in Italy, it has bid
for parts of the insolvent Lucchini SpA which it can use as a processing centre
to sell to Europe at a low cost. The company has also bid for UK steel trader
Stemcor’s Indian assets that has mines and a plant in Odisha for $750 million,
but talks have not moved further since the January bid.
CRUDE STEEL PRODUCTION GROWTH: 78% IN NOVEMBER’13
JSW Steel Limited has informed BSE regarding a Press Release dated
December 09, 2013 titled "Crude Steel production growth: 78% in
November'13". JSW Steel reports crude steel production foe November 2013
at 10.72 lakh tons showing a growth of 78 percent over corresponding month of
previous year.
AS MINING CURBS
BITE, INDIA OFFERS MARKET TO GLUT-HIT IRON ORE
An
oversupplied global iron ore market may find some relief from an unlikely source
as former No.3 exporter India turns into a big importer due to a cutback in
domestic production.
The
country may ship in up to 45 million tonnes over the next three years as home-grown
iron ore output falls short of domestic steel production needs, an executive at
an influential industry group said.
India
imported just 0.37 million tonnes of the steelmaking raw material in 2013/14,
government data showed. But already JSW Steel, India’s third-largest maker of
the alloy, has said it will import 6 million tonnes of iron ore in 2014/15
against zero a year earlier.
“There’s
no option but to import to meet the shortfall. We’re looking at between 10 and
15 million tonnes every fiscal year over the next three years,” Basant Poddar,
vice president of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, the only
industry group for mining firms in the country, told Reuters by phone.
“The
mine closures all over India, starting from Karnataka, Goa, Odisha and
Jharkhand, have created a massive disruption to supply,” Mr Poddar said.
Mining
in the key iron ore states of Karnataka and Goa was banned in 2011 and 2012,
respectively, following a crackdown on illegal mining by the Supreme Court and
the government. Several mines in top producing Odisha state and in Jharkhand
too were closed this year following government-imposed restrictions on the
renewal of mining licenses.
While
the bans have since been lifted, delays in restarting mining operations in Goa and
Karnataka and the latest mine closures in the other states have Limited local
iron ore supply.
The
disruptions have cut India’s iron ore production to 152 million tonnes in the
year ended March 31, from about 218 million in 2009/10, according to the Indian
Bureau of Mines.
The
prospect of higher demand from India comes at an opportune time for global iron
ore miners, whose margins have been shrunk by a 40 per cent slump in iron ore
prices this year.
Iron
ore fell to $81.90 a tonne last week, its lowest since September 2009.
The
bulk of India’s imports may come from Australia and South Africa, said Mr
Poddar, and unlikely from Brazil where shipments are usually made in big
vessels. “Indian ports are not geared to handle large vessels,” he said.
But
the potential import volume won’t be enough to absorb the total projected
global surfeit. Morgan Stanley, which sees a global surplus of 79 million
tonnes this year doubling to 158 million tonnes in 2015, expects the price to
drop to $70.
In
addition, any relief from Indian demand may be temporary, as the domestic
shortage is due to government policy measures that could eventually be
reversed.
Bureaucratic
Route
For
the present, resuming operations has been slow due to the long bureaucratic
route to renew mining leases, said Mr Poddar.
Only
22 mines out of 122 that are eligible to restart in Karnataka have resumed
operations, said Mr Poddar who owns Mineral Enterprises Ltd which has five
mines in the state that have a combined capacity of 1.2 million tonnes but have
remained shut. Mines in Goa have not reopened.
In
Odisha, around a third of 56 iron ore mines are still closed and in Jharkhand,
the third biggest producer in the past fiscal year, 12 out of 17 mines are
shut.
India
used to be the world’s No.3 iron ore exporter until higher costs along with the
mining bans slashed shipments by 85 per cent, or 100 million tonnes, over the
past two years.
Amid
the shortage in local supply, iron ore prices in India are defying the global
weakness.
In
Odisha, 63 per cent grade iron ore would cost about $105 a tonne, including
taxes and the royalty, to export, way above the current global market price of
$67-$68, said Dhruv Goel, managing partner at industry consultancy SteelMint.
But
miners make a profit of $15-$20 a tonne selling the same grade to local
steelmakers, said Mr Goel.
“It is
certainly profitable to sell in the domestic market.”
JSW STEEL BIDS FOR LUCCHINI'S ASSETS
Private
steel giant JSW Steel
confirmed that it is bidding for assets of Italy’s Lucchini plant. JSW is yet
to receive a response to its bid. This USD 100 million deal will mark JSW’s
entry into Europe. CNBC-TV18 broke this news three months ago.
Lucchini
is Italy's second-largest steel plant by capacity. It was declared insolvent in
2012. The company is engaged in producing speciality long products like
rolling mills manufacturing for European railways, bars for specialised auto
industry and wire rod mills.
JSW INTERESTED IN BUYING ITALY'S ILVA
STEEL PLANT - SOURCES
JSW
Steel is considering buying the Ilva steel plant in Italy, union sources said
on Thursday.
Ilva,
privately-owned by the Riva family, is Europe's largest steel plant by output
capacity and is of strategic importance to the southern European steel sector,
where it supplies carmakers and other manufacturers.
The
Taranto plant, however, is at the centre of an environmental scandal which led
the Italian government to place it under "special administration", a
procedure designed to save large companies and avoid big job losses.
JSW
Steel, controlled by Sajjan Jindal wrote a letter to Ilva's special
commissioner Piero Gnudi to express interest in Ilva, according to the sources.
A JSW
delegation is expected to visit the plant, one of the largest employers in the
southern Italian region of Puglia, in the next few days.
Ilva
declined to comment.
JSW
did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
ArcelorMittal,
the world's largest steelmaker last month sent a letter to express its interest
in Ilva to Gnudi and is expected to propose an industrial plan for the plant by
the end of September, according to sources.
JSW is
also in talks to buy parts of another steel plant, Lucchini, Italy's second-largest.
JSW STEEL
PROMOTER HIKES STAKE IN COMPANY TO 4.74%
NEW DELHI: JSW Investments, a promoter group firm of JSW Steel,
has increased stake in the company by 0.13 per cent to 4.74 per cent for nearly
Rs 32 crore through open market transactions.
JSW Investments
had 4.61 per cent stake or 11,14,55,761 shares in the steel maker before it started
buying, the company said in a filing with BSE today.
JSW STEEL LAUNCHES NEW
RETAIL FORMAT - JSW EXPLORE
Bangalore, 8 September 2014: With an aim to efficiently cater the
customized steel needs of end consumer pan-India, JSW Steel, the flagship
company of $11 billion Indian conglomerate JSW Group, launched its branded
retail format - "JSW explore" in Bangalore.
The franchise-based authorized retail format will create a sustainable
differentiator for JSW Steel’s exclusive value added products and service
offerings. This win-win partnership shall further strengthen JSW’s bond with
its committed JSW Shoppe channel partners taking the association to the next
level.
Mr. Vinay Shroff, Sr. Vice President- Retail, JSW Steel said, “This new
branded retail format will cater to end consumers requirements through value
added products and services, initially in the construction sector. The branded
format will be scaled up in future to cater to customised needs across product
categories and sectors. viz, Hot Rolled, Cold Rolled, Colour Coated, TMT etc.
It will sell superior quality products to brand conscious consumers at the
retail level nurturing innovation and growth.”
The company has a unique strength in terms of reach to the customers,
particularly in Retail segment. This initiative will further enhance its retail
penetration.
The state of the art retail format adhering to JSW prescribed quality norms
and processing standards will provide an opportunity for select channel
partners to open and brand their processing facilities enhancing their
capabilities to create a new benchmark in customer experience.
JSW STEEL FALL OVER 4%
AFTER CBI ENQUIRY ON OFFICIALS
Shares of JSW
Steel fell by over 4 percent in the backdrop of the CBI registering a
Preliminary Enquiry (PE) against unknown officials of the company over alleged
diversion of forest land for a mining project in Jharkhand.
Following this, JSW
Steel's scrip lost 4.43 percent to Rs 1,180 on the BSE. On the NSE, it was down
4.32 percent to Rs 1,180.
The CBI had yesterday
registered a PE against unknown officials of JSW Steel Private Limited and the
Ministry of Environment and Forests over alleged diversion of forest land for a
mining project in Jharkhand.
Sources in the CBI
said the clearance for the project for mining in Ankua reserve forest was given
in 2013.
The allegation made
by the CBI in the PE was that unknown officials of JSW and the Ministry of
Environment and Forests entered into a criminal conspiracy for getting approval
for this mining activity.
A JSW spokesperson,
when asked to comment on the CBI move, had said yesterday, "We are not
aware of any such move nor have we received any official communication to this
effect."
LOOKING FOR TRANSPARENT E-AUCTION OF COAL BLOCKS: JSW
STEEL
JSW Steel has turned
profitable in the quarter ended September 2014 and beat street expectations on
all parameters. The company’s consolidated net profit stood at Rs 7487.000
Million during the quarter as against loss of Rs 1155.000 Million in the
year-ago period. Consolidated total income from operations grew by 7 percent to
Rs 138950.000 Million in July-September quarter compared to Rs 129840.000
Million in same quarter last year, even operating profit jumped 18.9 percent on
yearly basis to Rs 27910.000 Million. In an interview to CNBC-TV18, Seshagiri
Rao, joint MD & Group CFO of JSW Steel, discusses the company’s earnings
and its future plans.
Below is the
transcript of Seshagiri Rao’s interview with Kritika Saxena on CNBC-TV18.
Q: Will you
participate in e-auctions?
A: Any steel company
is looking for backward integration as a long-term strategy. So JSW Steel -
even though we expanded our capacities based on backward integration, which has
been committed both in terms of iron ore and coal by various governments in
India, we have invested a huge amount of money in the steel sector. So we are
very anxiously looking for a transparent policy where the steel companies,
which are doing value addition, creating employment and contributing taxes to
the exchequer, they should get the iron ore mining concessions and the coal
concessions. So if they are available in a transparent manner in e-auction, I
think JSW Steel will definitely participate.
Q: What is the
conversation that you have with the government with respect to the coal block
e-auction or rather what are the demands that you have put forth specifically,
any option from their side that they have given with respect to concessions?
A: JSW Steel has got
some coal concessions but even though they have not reached a stage where it is
in operations but we have invested money in the coal mining concessions, which
have been allotted to JSW Steel and its associates and subsidiaries. So as a policy,
we have been advocating right from beginning that the coal or iron ore or any
natural resource should be allocated in a transparent manner as long as there
is a discretion that is given either to the state government or the central
government, the problem remains that the real user is not getting the mining
concessions. Therefore, I think we welcome the step of the government of India
to do the auction of the coal mining concessions in a transparent manner. I
think JSW Steel will definitely participate in that.
Q: In the race for
pretty much most of the attractive assets available internationally or
domestically, break it up for me, there is the Italian plant that you are
looking at, actively what are the plants that you are looking at so far, how
much would you be open to spending for that?
A: Today, generally
what is happening any acquisition which is there in the steel sector, JSW Steel
name is attributed to that but we have been clarifying from time to time that
JSW Steel strategy is to backward and forward integration and we continue to
expand our capacities in India. First through Brownfield expansion and balance
through either inorganic growth or through Greenfield expansions, so we are
sticking to that. We have been continuously scanning various opportunities
either forward or backward. Unless it is value accretive and it gives the
long-term benefits to the company and the stakeholders, I don’t think we will
go and do the acquisitions just like that. So we are very careful in
acquisitions. Therefore I don’t want to comment any specific target right now.
Once it matures to a stage where we can share, definitely we will share the
information.
Q: This would be
largely international that you are looking at or are there domestic assets that
you are also exploring. If yes, what areas? If you could tell me the areas that
you need to fit the company’s strategy?
A: Even in India or
overseas, we are looking at backward and forward but India there are
opportunities today because of the stress in the steel sector for inorganic
growth, the way we have done Ispat industries and turned around and managed
with JSW Steel today. So there are opportunities in India also in the steel
sector. So we continue to evaluate those options but only one very important
point as per inorganic growth in India is concerned, we are able to set up
capacities at a very low specific investment cost per tonne. We can set up a
million tonne capacity in the steel sector by investing only Rs 30000.000
Million whereas today, the companies which have invested in the steel sector
for creating capacity is close to Rs 6,0000.000-70000.000 Million or even Rs
80000.000 Million. So that is too expensive for us to do any inorganic growth
acquisitions. Therefore it should be attractive and they should fit in our
strategy then definitely we will continue to look at even in India the
inorganic growth opportunities.
JSW STEEL IN ADVANCED STAGES OF ACQUIRING
LONDON MINING
NEW
DELHI: Set to expand its global footprint, the country's third-largest
steelmaker JSW Steel is close to acquiring embattled West
African iron ore miner London Mining in a bid to secure raw material for
its plant.
"JSW
Steel is very close to finalising a deal to acquire London Mining which is
battling big debts amid crashing iron-ore prices and the Ebola outbreak in
Africa, where it operates a mine," a source privy to the information said.
The
announcement of acquisition may be made on October 21 along with the financial
results, the source said without divulging details of the deal or financial
considerations.
Queries
sent to the company about any possible acquisition of London Mining remained
unanswered.
However,
the Sajjan Jindal-led firm last week had said that it is open to expansions
through acquisitions besides augmenting present capacities.
The
statement had followed reports that the steel major is in advanced stages of
acquiring London Mining.
"As
a long term strategy, we would like to expand both organically by means of
brownfield and greenfield expansions and inorganically by acquiring some
existing assets," the company had said in a filing to the BSE.
It
had said that the company kept on scanning suitable opportunities, which have a
strategic fit.
The
debt-ridden UK-firm London Mining operates a small mine in Sierra Leone
producing high grade iron-ore but is expensive to run. Sierra Leone is one of
the worst-affected African nations by the ebola pandemic.
JSW
Steel is about $ 9 billion global conglomerate spread over six locations in
India and a footprint that extends to the US, South America and Africa.
The
flagship company of about $ 11 billion JSW Group, JSW
Steel has steel plants in Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra with a combined
installed capacity of 14.3 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) which it plans to
take to 40 MTPA in the next decade.
Set
to foray into European market with the acquisition of an Italian
steel firm, JSW Steel has on its radar a handful of potential companies for
takeover both in the space of steel making as well as raw material.
Last
month Sajjan Jindal had said there are many such units
which are potential takeover targets, adding, "We are looking at iron ore assets
all over -- in Australia, Africa, North America and South America."
'MAKE IN INDIA' PUSH TO DEPEND ON CHINESE
STEEL
India's steel consumption is expected to grow at its fastest
pace in five years next year on Prime Minister Narendra Modi's infrastructure
push, but a scarcity of raw materials means it will be at the expense of
another key goal - curbing imports.
In his triumphant election campaign, Modi criticised the last government
for exporting iron ore but importing steel. But his first five months as the
prime minister has coincided with a surge in imports of both, denting his
high-decibel drive to make India an export powerhouse.
India's steel imports from China, the world's biggest producer of
the alloy, doubled in April-September from a year ago though the country has
enough capacity to meet its demand.
While India's consumption is expected to rise, China will continue
to see a downtrend, likely leading to a flood of cheap steel from China just as
Modi pushes ahead with a signature 'Make in India' initiative to boost
industry.
Charged by the strongest electoral mandate in three decades, Modi
has staked his reputation on making India an export hub, launching his pet
campaign with much fanfare in September with a lion as its logo.
Soaring steel imports, however, underscore the challenges Modi
faces in realising his dream. Steelmakers, such as JSW, are clamouring for
higher import tariffs.
"The 'Make in India' slogan has to be true for steel
also," said Ravinder Bhan, deputy general manager of marketing at
state-owned Steel Authority of India. "Let steel firms get iron ore and
other raw materials. But that's not happening."
India, Asia's third-largest economy, has become a major importer
of iron ore and coal despite having big reserves of both at home. Once a top
exporter, India is now bringing in shiploads of iron ore due to court action
against illegal mining that has stifled supply, while coal behemoth Coal India
is struggling to boost production.
The shortages mean that India's steel industry is running at 80
percent of capacity. But the World Steel Association expects Modi's
pro-business plans - building 100 new 'smart' cities, creating new logistic
hubs and residential townships - to spur steel demand that has been weak in
recent years.
CHINA IMPORTS JUMP
World Steel expects India's demand to rise 3.4 percent to 76.2
million tonnes in 2014, after growth of 1.8 percent in 2013. Structural reforms
and improving confidence will support a further 6 percent growth in 2015, it
said.
Indian steelmakers such as JSW, Tata Steel and Jindal Steel and
Power Ltd, however, run the risk of being priced out by their Chinese
competitors.
"The global market is such that the only thing that you can
do is take some protective action to save the (Indian) industry," said
A.S. Firoz, chief economist at a Steel Ministry unit. "Otherwise you can't
decide what the global prices will be or at what price China will export steel."
A Steel Ministry spokesman said he had no immediate comment on
whether authorities would consider raising tariffs, although a government
official who spoke on condition of anonymity said the issue was being looked
into.
China, the world's largest steel producer, rolls more steel in a
month than India, the fourth largest producer, manages in nine months. But a
slowdown in China means it is set to end with a surplus of about 100 million
tonnes a year.
"MADE OUTSIDE INDIA"
A tonne of reinforcement steel produced in India for use in
buildings can cost up to 15,000 rupees ($244) more than that from China,
according to Firoz.
Shipments into India jumped 33 percent to 4.19 million tonnes in
April-September from a year ago, with imports from China leaping 108 percent to
1.34 million tonnes. Total steel imports in the fiscal year to next March 31
could nearly double to 9 million tonnes, JSW predicts.
"Through 'Make in India', Modi is saying that India should be
the hub for the rest of the world and of course to meet our full demand,"
said N.C. Mathur, president of the Indian Stainless Steel Development
Association.
"Instead something made outside India is coming into the
country. That's a big threat. It's a week after week, month after month
survival issue."
JSW PLANS
TO RAISE USD 500 MN TO PART-REFINANCE RUPEE DEBT
With the aim to refinance a part of its rupee debt, JSW
Steel is planning to raise USD 500 million through a bond sale to
investors in Asia and Europe, investment banking sources said.
The roadshows for the bond sale would start next week and the
company representatives would visit Singapore, Hong Kong and London to woo
investors, they added.
Confirming the schedule of the roadshows, JSW Steel's Joint
Managing Director and Group CFO M V S Seshagiri Rao told PTI that the proposed
bond sale was aimed at refinancing part of the rupee debt and aimed at reducing
the interest outgo.
He, however, did not confirm the amount, tenor and timing of the
bond, saying the call would be taken on the movement of the market which is
"a little stable" now.
JSW Steel has Rs 357500.000 Million net debt out of which 35
percent is in foreign currency.
In a statement to the stock exchanges, JSW Steel said it "is
contemplating issuing of debt instruments in the form of US Dollar denominated
senior notes. The notes, if issued, will be listed on the Singapore Stock
Exchange."
"A preliminary offering circular has been prepared and shall
be made available to prospective investors in relation to the contemplated issue
of notes. The notes will not be offered or sold in India or in the US,"
JSW Steel added.
Meanwhile, the company has been assigned Ba 1 rating with stable
outlook by Moody's and BB+ rating with stable outlook by Fitch.
Moody's said JSW Steel's Ba1 rating reflects its large scale and
competitive conversion costs and its track record of managing growth, both
organic and by acquisition, while at the same time controlling consolidated
leverage to moderate levels relative to its steel industry peers.
Fitch assigned JSW Steel a senior unsecured rating of 'BB+' and
the company's proposed US dollar denominated notes an expected rating of 'BB+'.
Fitch said JSW Steel benefits from its low cost base due to its
low conversion costs. It's efficient operations were reflected in its strong
profitability, with EBITDA margin of 17.9 percent in FY'14.
The rating agency expects JSW Steel's profitability to remain
strong over the medium term because it would continue initiatives to reduce
costs.
JSW STEEL
FALL OVER 4% AFTER CBI ENQUIRY ON OFFICIALS
Shares of JSW Steel fell by over 4 percent in the
backdrop of the CBI registering a Preliminary Enquiry (PE) against unknown
officials of the company over alleged diversion of forest land for a mining
project in Jharkhand.
Following this, JSW Steel's scrip lost 4.43 percent to Rs 1,180 on
the BSE. On the NSE, it was down 4.32 percent to Rs 1,180.
The CBI had yesterday registered a PE against unknown officials of
JSW Steel Private Limited and the Ministry of Environment and Forests over
alleged diversion of forest land for a mining project in Jharkhand.
Sources in the CBI said the clearance for the project for mining
in Ankua reserve forest was given in 2013.
The allegation made by the CBI in the PE was that unknown
officials of JSW and the Ministry of Environment and Forests entered into a
criminal conspiracy for getting approval for this mining activity.
A JSW spokesperson, when asked to comment on the CBI move, had
said yesterday, "We are not aware of any such move nor have we received
any official communication to this effect."
JSW STEEL
IN MEDIA NEWS
JSW STEEL
CUTS PRICES IN FACE OF CHEAP IMPORTS
The
Economic Times, 1 Oct 2014
JSW
Steel, one of India's largest steelmakers, cut prices by up to Rs. 1,000 per
tonne to thwart increasing imports from China as global raw material prices
slide amid weak demand.
JSW Steel
cut flat steel prices in the range of Rs. 500-750 per tonne and long steel
prices by Rs. 1,000 per tonne. This is likely to hurt margins of the company,
which makes Rs. 8,500 per tonne at operating level` Globally, iron ore and
coking coal prices have been on a decline with demand faltering in China.
Oversupply of both iron ore and coal has also led to weak prices of the
commodities. In the absence of strong demand, global steel prices have also
tumbled along with falling raw material prices.
These
weak global prices are obviously putting a pressure on domestic steelmakers to
cut prices in order to compete with imports, even though iron ore prices are
firm domestically on the back of supply constraints. "We are forced to cut
prices. The issue is that demand is sluggish. On top of that, heavy imports are
coming into the country," said Jayant Acharya, director (commercial &
marketing) at JSW Steel. "China is one of the main countries exporting to
India. It is troubling many other countries too."
Other
steelmakers are likely to follow JSW's move.
JSW Steel
mainly produces flat steel, which is used in cars and consumer durables.
Acharya also said that Chinese steel producers are dumping cheap alloy steel in
the name of TMT steel bars to evade taxes back in their country. TMT steel bars
are used in construction and infrastructure.
JSW Steel
complained that while global iron ore prices are falling, prices of the same
commodity has actually risen in India due to scarcity and hike in government
royalty. "If India wants to push manufacturing and create jobs, the
government should make sure India does not become a dumping ground," Acharya
said.
JSW
STEEL, CEVITAL SUBMIT FINAL BIDS FOR ASSETS OF ITALY'S LUCCHINI
NEW DELHI: Having placed its binding offer to
acquire Lucchini's core assets, JSW SteelBSE -0.04 % is now
waiting to hear from the Italian steel-maker for making a foray into the
European market.
"We have placed the binding bid to acquire
the finishing lines of Lucchini more than a month ago. Now, they have to get back to
us," JSW Steel's Joint Managing Director and Group CFO Seshagiri Rao told
PTI.
Rao, however, did not divulge the details of the
bid. JSW Steel Chairman and Managing Director Sajjan Jindal had earlier said
the cost of Lucchini acquisition would be sub-USD 100 million.
JSW Steel, which has been on an acquisition
spree in the recent times, intends to use the 1.3 million tonnes per annum
finishing line of Lucchini for processing steels manufactured in its facilities
in India for sale in the European market.
An Algerian steel maker is also reportedly in
the race. Lucchini, Italy's second-largest steel plant by capacity, was
declared insolvent in 2012 and placed under special administration after plunge
in European demand for steel since 2008.
It is engaged in producing speciality long products
like rolling mills manufacturing for European railways, bars for specialised
auto industry and wire rod mills.
JSW Steel's interest on acquiring Lucchini stems
from its aim of having an overall steel capacity to 40 mtpa by 2025 from 14.3
mtpa now.
Apart from acquiring a couple of assets in
recent times, the company proposes to raise capacity of its Bellary plant in
Karantaka by six mtpa to 16 mtpa.
JSW STEEL DEFERS ITALIAN STEEL CO
ACQUISITION
JSW Steel Ltd, the third largest Indian steel maker,
today said it has deferred the proposed acquisition of Italy'sLucchini SpV.
"For the time being, plans for India is much
stronger and larger. We want to focus in India.... We have deferred our
decision to invest in the Italian project," JSW Steel chairman and
managing director Sajjan Jindal said.
He was speaking on the sidelines of inauguration
of Ispat Pragati Bhawan, the new office of Institute of Steel Development &
Growth (Insdag) in the city.
In September, Jindal had told reporters that JSW
has offered less than $100 million for three mills of the insolvent Lucchini
and it was in a position to win it.
The company recently also gave a clarification in
the bourses saying, "In line with our long-term strategy to acquire
finishing mills near to the market, we have submitted a binding bid for
takeover of Rolling Mills of the Piombini Plant of Lucchini in Italy subject to
certain terms and conditions. We are yet to get the response on this bid."
Lucchini, with a steel capacity of about 2.5 mt,
was owned by Russia's Severstal but
had to be declared insolvent in 2012 following which the government placed it
under special administration and started the process to find buyers.
JSW currently has a total installed steel making
capacity of 14.3 million tonnes in India.
INDIA IRON ORE IMPORTS HIT
RECORD 6.8 MT AS PRICES FALL
India's
iron ore imports rose to a record 6.76 million tonnes in the first seven months
of its fiscal year as sliding global prices and Limited supply at home pushed
steel producers to buy the raw material overseas, industry data showed on
Friday.
Formerly the world's No. 3 supplier of iron ore, India has been
importing over the last two years due to court-imposed restrictions aimed at
curbing illegal mining in the key producing states of Karnataka and Goa.
The shortage deepened this year as some mines in the states of
Odisha and Jharkhand were ordered closed after the expiry of licences.
But analysts say India is unlikely to absorb a big chunk of the
global surplus that has halved iron ore prices this year.
Global seaborne iron ore supply will grow by around 330 million
tonnes over the next three years, far outpacing demand that will rise by just
194 million tonnes in the same period, Morgan Stanley said in October.
JSW Steel, India's third largest steel producer, imported 4.6
million tonnes of iron ore in April-November, followed by Tata Steel with
nearly 1 million tonnes, according to data from industry consultancy SteelMint,
which tracked shipments at 12 ports.
"Looking at the current scenario, it does not look like
mining will resume soon in Odisha and Jharkhand. Imports are expected to hit
11-12 million tonnes this financial year," said Dhruv Goel, managing
partner at SteelMint.
JSW said in September it was planning to import 10 million tonnes
or more this fiscal year if the domestic shortage continued and prices stayed
low.
The company this week put on hold plans to build a steel plant in
eastern India due to uncertainty in sourcing iron ore and coal.
South Africa was the top source of iron ore imports, accounting
for 40 percent of the April-November volume, with Australia supplying 15 per
cent of the total.
Official Indian government data only covers April-August, with
imports totalling 2 million tonnes.
Increased output of iron ore from top producers Australia and
Brazil has helped widen a global glut at a time of slower economic growth in
China which buys around two-thirds of seaborne supply.
Iron ore has fallen 47 per cent this year, touching $68 a tonne
last week, its weakest since June 2009.
'GOVT FAVOURS AUCTION ROUTE FOR MINES
ALLOCATION'
The Centre appears to be in favour of auction
route for allocation of mines as has been earlier proposed in the draft MMDR
Bill, which it intends to bring in the ongoing session of Parliament for
passage.
"Based on discussions, I think that Mines
Ministry has decided to take the auction route for allocation of mines even as
some industry representatives voiced their reservations," a source present
in a deliberation with Mines Minister NarendraSingh Tomar said today.
The minister held deliberations with
representatives of miners, end-users and other stakeholders on the draft Mines
and Minerals (Development and Regulation) (Amendment) Bill, 2014, seeking
inputs, feedback and suggestions on omission and commission in the proposed
Bill.
Apart from industry bodies such as Ficci and
Assocham, captains of steel industry like T V Narendran of Tata Steel, C S
Verma of SAIL, Sajjan Jindal of JSW Steel and Naveen Jindalof JSPL took
part in the deliberation.
An official release, following the discussions, said
Tomar stated that the auction route suggested in the proposed Bill had been
included after active discussions and inputs from the state governments.
The proposed auction route has already had its
share of criticism from Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI). It said
auctioning of mines as proposed in the draft Bill will sound the death knell of
the industry. It has also written to the Prime Minister Narendra Modi airing
its apprehension.
Contending that the auction route was not pursued
in any resource-rich country, FIMI said, they follow the time-tested principle
of 'first-cum-first-served'.
Tomar also emphasised that the objective of the
Bill was to kick-start the mining sector by removing bottlenecks that are
preventing the industry from becoming a growth-multiplier in the country.
Government was working towards bringing in
transparency in the systems, ensuring fair share of value for government and
creating an investor-friendly environment in the mining industry, he added.
"Government's intention is to bring the Bill
in the ongoing session of Parliament," the statement said.
JSW STEEL SAYS WILL CONTINUE TO WORK WITH
WEST BENGAL TO IMPLEMENT SUSPENDED PROJECT
MUMBAI: JSW Steel said it would continue to work with the
West Bengal government to find alternatives to establishraw material linkages
so as to implement its long-delayed steel project in the state.
The Sajjan Jindal-led company decided to return 294 acres of land
it acquired for the project to farmers at no cost after it was unable to secure iron ore and
coal linkages to its proposed steelmaking factory.
"At this backdrop, financing a capital-intensive greenfield
project will be very challenging. Consequently, the company decided to put the
project implementation on hold until raw material linkages for the project are
reliably established," it said in a statement.
The 10-million tonne project has been on hold since 2007. The
company had planned an investment of Rs 35,000 crore.
JSW STEEL IS BACK TO INCREMENTAL GROWTH
STRATEGY
When billionaire Sajjan Jindal put his plan to build a 10 million tonne (mt)
greenfield steel plant at Salboni in West Bengal on hold, he knew
he had a back up to protect his growth ambitions.
JSW Steel is the largest private sector steel maker in the country
with 14.3 mt capacity. It reached this position on the strength of turning
around sick units and by growing incrementally.
“For JSW Steel incremental growth strategy has worked better
than a big bang approach and this is what they are getting back to when the
plans for greenfield projects are not working out,” says an analyst with an
international brokerage who didnot want to identified.
The company that started with a single steel plant in 1982
never had captive raw material such as iron ore and coking coal. It always
sourced it from domestic and international producers. JSW planned its
greenfield plants close to raw material sources expecting allocation of mines.
But that attempt has so far not been successful.
Its plan to set up another greenfield plant of 10 mt in Jharkhand has also not
taken off in the absence of security of raw material.
However, this has not deterred the company to scale down its
ambition to reach 40 mt capacity by 2025 as it is ready with alternatives. To
compensate for the greenfield plants, the company now plans to double the
capacity of its Vijaynagar plant in Karnataka to 20 mt by 2022, through brown
field expansion.
“Given the hugely constrained domestic iron ore scenario,
JSW Steel has resorted to large scale imports. Any relaxation in iron ore
availability will be a further positive for the company,” said Ankur
Kulshrestha, analyst with HDFC Securities.
“It is also envisaging a slurry pipeline from Jaigarh (Goa)
to Vijayanagar plant to de-risk from domestic iron ore concerns,” he said. The
500 km long slurry pipeline will come at a cost of Rs 2,000 crore, but it would
address the constraint of iron ore for expansion at Vijaynagar.
The company is also discreetly working on another brown
field expansion plan at Dolvi in Maharashtra. It acquired 3.3 mt plant of Ispat
Industries in 2010 for Rs 21570.000 Million. Since then it has turned around
the loss making unit and now it is expanding it to 5 mt capacity. This
expansion is expected to be completed early next year.
But Sajjan Jindal has a much bigger plan for Dolvi. He plans
to make it a mega complex with 15 million tonne capacity. The company has
already started working on this, and acquired a sponge iron facility of Welspun
Maxsteel in August. This facility is very close to the existing steel plant of
the company at Dolvi and has a large land parcel and a private jetty attached
to it. The acquisition has synergy in terms of supplying surplus pellets to
WMSL and use of direct reduced iron from this plant for steel making
operations.
But beyond this, the proximity of these two plants means it
could be developed into a huge plant complex. And the jetty can help in
transportation of raw material. The company has already applied to the
environment ministry for clearance to increase the capacity of Dolvi plant to
10 mt from 5 mt. So if the plan for green field expansion in Jharkhand does not
work out, the company knows how to compensate it to meet its growth ambition.
The company has another 1 mt capacity plant at Salem in
Tamil Nadu, which is another example of the company turning around sick units.
It acquired 0.3 mt capacity from Southern Iron and Steel Company in 2004 when
it was a loss making unit.
With this, the company comes close to achieving 36 million
tonne, a striking distance from the ambition to achieve 40 million tonne
capacity by 2025. Addition of another 4 million tonne capacity for the
billionaire promoter will not be tough as it keeps the route for inorganic
growth open.
JSW STEEL OFFERS TO RETURN LAND AS A
GOODWILL GESTURE
Two days after Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee announced the return
of a parcel of land that JSW Steel had acquired directly from farmers in West
Bengal, the company said that it had offered to return land voluntarily as a
goodwill gesture.
In a filing on the stock exchanges this morning, the company
reiterated its commitment to the project saying that it will continue to work
with the State government to find alternatives to establish raw material
linkages so as to take up the project’s implementation in due course.
Making its first official statement on the land return, JSW said
that considering the hardship of the erstwhile landowners the company decided
to give up "equivalent land out of the total project land “( of 4268
acres) “ to original owners free of cost as a gesture of goodwill through state
government as per applicable laws.”
Ms. Banerjee had announced the group’s decision to return land on
Tuesday saying that the Jindals were doing this as a "token of respect to
the farmers who had given their land.” Ms Banerjee had raised the pitch on
land-return in June, after inaugurating another project at Salboni, once a
hot-bed of ultra left extremism in the state.
The development opened a new chapter in industry-government
`bonhomie’. However there were reports that the industry group was cajoled into
this decision by the government which too was looking for face savers in the
wake of growing agitation by the land losers who were promised jobs at the new
project as well as equity shares of the new company.
Industry-watchers contrasted the development with the Singur
imbroglio, where the entire matter is deadlocked over the issue of returning
400 acres to farmers described as unwilling (to part with their land), by Ms
Banerjee and her party.
Ms. Banerjee said on Monday that land-return at Salboni was the
first step. In the second step they will decide what to do with the balance
land which is vested government land. The project is on hold now and industry
experts felt that the development does not send a very positive message to
prospective investors.
JSW said on Wednesday that its proposed 10 million ton green field
steel plant had made good progress in land acquisition, site development and
coal mine exploration but had stumbled on iron ore linkages in wake of ban on
mining of the mineral. The recent cancellation of coal block allocation further
clouded the project’s prospect. In view of the difficulties in bank-rolling
such a project, JSW decided to put it on hold the company said.
Total
iron ore production in FY 15 Seen sub-105 MT: JSW
Currency devalution has been putting pressure on global steel prices, says Seshagiri Rao, Joint MD & Group CFO of JSW Steel, adding that domestic prices, which have corrected 5-6 percent in Q3, fell in line with international prices. He however feels stability is coming back and further corrections are unlikely. The company’s current annual coking coal requirement stands at 7-8 million tonnes. Rao feels sourcing coking coal locally will reduce operational cost. He however, feels that the state of iron ore production is worrisome. “There is hope that more production will come into operation, but nothing has been happening on the ground. This is leading to an increase in imports. This year around 10-15 million tonnes of iron ore has been imported, which is a matter of concern,” he said. With domestic steel industry not getting adequate iron ore to produce, he expects total iron ore production for FY15 to be sub-105 million tonnes against against 135 million tonne last year.
Stable profit outlook for JSW Steel
Ujjval Jauhari | Mumbai Sep 18,
2014 10:46 PM IST
The market’s nervousness over mining issues is evident from the volatility in metal and mining stocks, some of which have fallen as much as 25 per cent in the past two months. Nevertheless, JSW Steel continues trading firm and, at Rs 0.001,336 (up seven per cent), is near its 52-week high of Rs 1,365.35, seen this month.
While the company does not face risks on the profitability front, unlike many
of its peers, its sales continue to increase, rising 12-13 per cent in the
first five months of this financial year. Also, while the acquisition of
Maxsteel assets in August bodes well, talks to acquire the facilities of
Italian steelmaker Lucchini are being looked at positively. The timing of such
expansion is opportune, as these come at reasonable valuations and are seen
adding to JSW’s profitability.
Analysts say in this backdrop, JSW remains the preferred pick in the steel
segment. The consensus target price for the stock, according to analysts polled
by Bloomberg in September, is Rs 1,463, though some analysts also have target
prices as high as Rs 1,647.
Strong profitability outlook
While most leading steel makers are facing profitability risks due to concerns about coal blocks and recent iron ore mining issues in Jharkhand, this isn’t the case with JSW Steel.
Coal block issues have hurt investor sentiment. For instance, Jindal Steel and
Power faces the risks of profitability plummeting in the event of adverse
decisions on its coal blocks. Analysts at Jefferies feel return on capital
employed on its investment in the 2.5-million-tonne (mt) steel plant and 810-Mw
captive power plant at Angul, Odisha, are likely to be low in the absence of
captive coal from the Utkal B1 coal block.
For Tata Steel and SAIL, the rise in royalty on iron ore mining and some mines
in Jharkhand seeing mining restrictions don’t bode well. Analysts at Motilal
Oswal estimate Tata Steel and SAIL’s earnings before interest, tax,
depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) per tonne taking a hit of Rs 5,940 and
Rs 6,400, respectively, post the captive iron-ore mine closures. They add for
every Rs 1,000 fall in Ebitda per tonne, the target price of Tata Steel and
SAIL will be impacted by 10 per cent and 20 per cent, respectively.
Non-integrated steel producers as JSW Steel might not see significant pressure
on margins, as cheaper iron ore and coking coal will mean reduced costs for
them. For JSW, which is expected to import 25 per cent of its requirement,
declining global iron ore prices will mean additional gains. Currently, global
prices stand at about $80 a tonne.
Acquisitions to give boost
After acquiring smaller rival Welspun Maxsteel for about Rs 1,100 crore in
August, JSW Steel is now eyeing the facilities of Italy-based Lucchini. The
Maxsteel acquisition was thought to be a good move, one that would not only
improve profitability at the Dolvi plant (acquired from Ispat), but also
increase JSW’s presence in the northern and western markets. The facilities
included a 900,000-tonnes-per-annum (TPA), gas-based direct reduced iron (DRI)
plant, a captive jetty, railway siding, and vacant land of 480 acres. Analysts
say JSW Steel will send pellets from the recently commissioned four million TPA
Dolvi plant (to Maxsteel’s facilities) to substitute expensive imports and
transport DRI back to Dolvi for use in Conarc furnaces for steel-making.
JSW Steel has also bid for three Piombino-based facilities of Lucchini,
declared insolvent in 2012 and placed under special administration. JSW’s move
is a positive, says Goutam Chakraborty at Emkay Global. He feels while
valuations are cheap (deal value estimated at sub-$100 million, or about Rs 600
crore), the company can turn around the unit and use the facilities to
manufacture value-added products.
The only risk on the profitability front is posed by domestic steel prices.
International steel prices remain low, alleviating the threat of imports. The
demand growth during April-August, too, has been tepid. But with increasing
automobile sales and an expected pick-up in construction activity, there is
optimism demand will improve.
Mineral-based projects will get sorted in 2
yrs: JSW Steel
The new Narendra Modi government is doing a lot to make it easier to do business in the country. But it has miles to go before India's ranking in this area improves significantly. That's the word from captains of Indian industry including Sajjan Jindal, Dilip Shanghvi and Tulsi Tanti, who together command a market capitalisation of nearly Rs 5 lakh crore.
However, speaking at a conference on how to build a new India organised by Antique, these captains agreed that the government's efforts would not amount to much unless corporate India pitched in.
Here's a list of areas the industry bigwigs believe
have seen some progress, and some areas where a lot still needs to be done.
Sajjan
Jindal, Chairman & MD, JSW Steel -
On govt boosting industry confidence
Prop up the confidence level that we are with you, we want to support you, we want industry, we want manufacturing and that is what this government has done - whether it is the Prime Minister or his colleagues -they are giving this confidence back to the investor community and that is the first very important step.
In the UPA-II where we suffered, there was no clarity of thought whether the government wanted projects to happen. One wing or one arm was saying we have to move forward and the other one was saying no we have to go back.
This government is putting all these things into order. Similarly on the ordinances that they issued on iron-ore and mining minerals, it has become very clear that now it will be through the auction route, through a transparent route. So, I think over the next two years my belief is that all these large projects which are mineral based will get sorted out.
Ashwin
Dani, VC & MD, Asian Paints -
On demand on the ground
Signals are very clear that on the ground demand is yet to pick up and until the demand really picks up I think the consumer industry is still not feeling the positive vibes that we see in the environment.
Dilip
Shanghvi, Founder, Sun Pharma -
On employable and skilled youth
We see that availability of graduates from college who are employable is Limited. So, typically most of the people that we hire they go through an extensive training programme .So, I think the important focus before we can become a supplier of products globally is to look at education and create capacity in our education system to generate employable youth.
On the other side, you have industry problem of not getting enough people of the skill that they require. We have to find a way to bridge this because manufacturing unlike services require specific skills and capability for us to succeed and to be able to compete globally. The other issue is the issue of innovation for our business. Philosophically, as a country we have never given premium for original thinking. It is easier to copy, safer to copy because you have less risk of failure.
Sajjan
Jindal, Chairman & MD, JSW Steel - On dumping
We don't have very quick redressal system on dumping. So when, for example lets take an example of Russia and Ukraine where their currencies have crashed by nearly 100 percent they have become double of what it used to be. Demand within Russia and Ukraine has collapsed. So, they are now dumping steel into India. Our government does not have a very quick mechanism or even the industry is not prepared to apply to the government to take a very quick action on this redressal to bring in countervailing duties or bringing in anti-dumping or safeguard duties. So, now the industry is working together to create this concept. We are already in discussion with the government.
Dilip
Shanghvi, Founder, Sun Pharma - On R&D
I think there are lot of bureaucratic restrictions in research. So, for doing animal experiments, for import of large animals, for doing lets say phase 1, phase 2 studies, human studies, lets say when you are doing clinical trial for cancer drug. So there would be some deaths in clinical trial possibly because of the drug, the number of deaths would be lower than it would have been otherwise if they were not treated. However, the regulatory process that is now in place for any company to do clinical trial in India and the kind of responsibility on the sponsor for any kind of potential - say like normally in India you can't do a placebo control study. Globally you can do placebo control study. So, large number of unrealistic restrictions prevent the industry to be able to invest in research.
Tulsi
Tanti, Chairman & MD, Suzlon Group - On policy initiative and target versus
momentum
Two, three policy initiatives already government has taken which has accelerated investment into the industry. However, when we see the size of the target versus the momentum it is not good enough.
200 gigawatt target and even countries future requirement, 30 percent energy we have home resources – green and solar. Huge potential is there. We have technology within the country. We are exporting technology to developed economies also. More focus is required on financeable PPA and security of the payment. That is the key bottleneck to unlock the size of the market.
JSW's Bengal project on 'hold'
JSW Steel has put its West Bengal steel and power plant on 'hold' over uncertainty of raw material linkages for the proposed Rs 35,000 crore project.
"We have put the project on hold. Without both raw material (coal and iron-ore) it is very difficult to go ahead with the project," JSW Steel Chairman and Managing Director Sajjan Jindal said here today on the sidelines of inauguration of Ispat Pragati Bhavan of Insdag.
He said as JSW Bengal has already invested Rs 7000.000 Million into the project at Salboni, in West Midnapur, it was keen about the project but given the unclear situation about coal and iron-ore it was not practical to go ahead with the project.
JSW Bengal currently do not have either coal or iron-ore linkages for the Salboni project. However, Jindal said they will bid for the three coal mines, if put on auction, which were offered by the West Bengal government agencies for the proposed 10 million tonne integrated steel plant.
Asked whether JSW will go ahead with the power project in case it won back the coal mines, Jindal said everything will be looked afresh and definitely "We have hope and desire to build industry here (Bengal)."
He says even Bellary's plant situation is better as it has atleast 50 per cent of iron-ore linkages and setting up a slurry pipeline to pump imported iron-ore into plant was not feasible. JSW was awaiting "minor changes" in its agreement with the West Bengal government before kick-starting construction at its 600 MW power plant at Salboni.
JSW had proposed to sell power to state utilities to the tune of 60 per cent of the generation capacity but West Bengal government had scrapped the power purchase agreement. The other demand was to change in agreement to allow use of captive coal for power generation.
NMDC slashes iron ore prices
In a relief to major domestic steel firms, state-run iron
ore miner NMDC has
reduced price of lumps by Rs 200 a tonne and Rs 100 per tonne for fines for the
current month on tumbling global prices and lower demand.
NMDC, India's largest iron ore producer, had reduced the
price for lumps by Rs 200 per tonne in November. It, however, did not change
the price for fines last month.
Following the reduction, the price of lump ore, which has
more iron content and is used mostly by domestic steel makers, now stands at Rs
4,200 per tonne. The prices of fines, having less content of iron or the
inferior grade, now comes down to Rs 3,060 per tonne.
The miner reviews the prices of the key steel-making raw
material every month going by the global prices and domestic demand, had not
tweaked rates during the July-October period.
Global iron ore prices have nosedived to five-year low at
around USD 70 per tonne mainly because of subdued demand from China, the
largest producer of steel in the world. The holding on of the price by NMDC
during the four-month period coupled with inadequate availability within the country
have forced JSW Steel,
a major customer of NMDC, to import the raw material. Essar Steel also buys
large quantity of iron ore from NMDC.
The price cut, which might be followed by other miners,
would benefit domestic steel firms which are now in a precarious situation now
with rising imports from China, Japan and Korea. The price cut could help them
to better their margins.
The demand for iron ore has also come down in line with the
fall in steel production. NMDC's sales in October actually fell from the
previous month even as its sales in first seven months of current fiscal rose
to 17.65 million tonnes against 16.03 MT during the corresponding period last
year.
Domestic crude steel production also declined by 0.5
percent in October, 2014 from the immediate past month, mainly by a decline of
0.9 percent in production by major producers and a 0.1 percent decline in
production by non-major producers.
The price cut might impact NMDC's net sales realisation a
little during the current quarter, although it is confident of imporving the
bottom-line for the entire fiscal.
NMDC had clocked Rs 64200.000 Million net profit in the
2013-14 fiscal. In the first two quarters of the current fiscal, it has
reported Rs 3,482 crore. The company also hopes to improve its sales volume to
around 32 million tonnes for the current fiscal.
India's steel consumption grows by 1.3% in
Apr-Nov
India's steel consumption grew by a moderate 1.3 per cent
to 48.62 million tonnes during the April-November period of current fiscal on
lingering effect of the economic slowdown and slow growth in production.
The country, the world's fourth largest steel producer, had consumed 48 MT
steel in the corresponding period of the last fiscal, Joint Plant Committee
(JPC), a unit under Steel Ministry, said today.
"The slow growth numbers appear to reflect the lingering effect of the
economic slowdown and is further depressed by the slow growth in production for
sale in April-November, 2014 as compared to the same period of last year,"
it said in a note sent to the Ministry.
Domestic real consumption of steel in November 2014 at 5.488 MT was down by 9
per cent compared to October. Year-on-year, it increased by 8 per cent, it
said.
Production of crude steel during April-November period of the current fiscal
was higher by 2.5 per cent at 55.29 MT to which main producers SAIL,
RINL, Tata Steel,
Essar, JSW and
& JSPL together
contributed 29.769 MT. The rest produced 25.52 MT during the period.
The production in November at 6.81 MT was higher by 3.5 per cent over the same
month last year.
Export of total finished steel was down by 5.3 per cent during the first eight
months of the current fiscal at 3.5 MT over the same period last year.
Also Read: WTO issues mixed
ruling in Indian challenge on steel duties
Imports, however, zoomed to 5.5 MT, a 49 per cent growth during the
April-November period. "India remained a net importer of total finished
steel in April-November, 2014," JPC said.
JSW Steel in
talks to buy Bhushan Steel's Odisha plant
Mail Today
Bureau New Delhi Last Updated: December 2,
2014 | 08:26 IST
Sajjan Jindal-controlled JSW Steel is
reported to be in talks to acquire Bhushan Steel 's
Odisha plant and also looking at picking up the company's stake in Orissa
Sponge Iron and Steel Limited.
The total value of the deal could be around Rs 300000.00
Million, according to banking sources.
The move is reported to have been initiated by the
consortium of banks that have lent money to Bhushan Steel, which has a total
debt of around Rs 350000.000 Million on its books. Bhushan Steel has been asked
by the banks to sell its Odisha steel plant, which has a capacity of 5.6 million
tonnes per annum.
However, promoters of Bhushan Steel have been trying to
find ways of bringing down the Odisha unit is up for sale.
Bhushan Steel had informed the Bombay Stock Exchange
recently that the Board of Directors at its meeting held on November 14 inter
alia approved the draft notice of postal ballot for passing special resolutions
for payment of managerial remuneration, appointment of Ajoy Kumar Deb nominated
as nominee director by the State Bank of India (SBI) and accepted the
resignation of Sushant Jain as independent additional director.
Sources pointed out that this reflects that the banks are
strengthening their control over running the company. JSW Steel neither
confirmed or denied the move. "We do not want to comment on market rumour
or speculation," a JSW spokesman told Mail Today.
Bhushan Energy has about 15 per cent stake in Orissa
Sponge, in which Monnet Ispat holds 41-per cent stake. JSW Steel has put its
West Bengal steel and power plant on hold due to uncertainty of raw material linkages
for the proposed Rs 35,000-crore project. JSW Bengal has already invested Rs
700 crore in the project, at Salboni, West Midnapur.
"It was keen about the project but given the unclear
situation about coal and iron ore, it was not practical to go ahead with the
project," Jindal had told journalists on Sunday. According to industry
sources, JSW would be looking for alternative expansion through the merger and
acquisition route and acquisition of the Bhushan Steel assets would be a good
strategic fit for the company.
India's iron ore imports jump to record 15
MT in FY'15
India's iron ore imports jumped manifold to a record 15
million tonnes in the financial year 2014-15 owing to ban on mining activities
and declining global prices, a report said on Monday.
A report by industry consultancy SteelMint said that FY'15
marked an all time high of 15 MT iron ore imports into India.
The huge import of Iron ore last fiscal, ended March 31, by
an iron ore rich India is attributed to the bans on various mines by the
Supreme Court and declining global prices of the commodity.
In 2013-14, the imports stood at a mere 0.320 Million
tonne. The report said the imports last fiscal were largely from South Africa
(5.9 MT) followed by Brazil (3.7 MT), Australia (1.9 MT) and Oman (1.4 MT)
among others. Exports were recorded at 4.5 MT during the fiscal.
JSW Steel, India's third largest steel producer
imported 8.4 MT iron ore followed by Tata Steel at 3.04 MT.
Other major importers were Tata International, Essar Steel
and Jindal Saw. Mining ban in mineral rich states like Odisha and Jharkhand
forced the largest buyer of raw material, JSW, to import the principal steel
making commodity.
JSW Steel’s crude steel production for Feb
2015 at 9.47 lakh tones
JSW Steel Ltd has informed BSE regarding a Press Release dated March 13, 2015 titled "Crude Steel Production: 0.95 Million tons in Feb’15".Source: BSE
Read all announcements in JSW Steel
Welspun
Enterprises completes sale of WMSL to JSW Steel
Welspun Enterprises (WEPL), part of the USD
3 billion Welspun Group, said here today that it has completed the sale of
Welspun Maxsteel (WMSL) to JSW Steel (JSW) in follow up to the
definitive agreement between the two companies on August 18.
The deal, which included the sale of the entire
shareholding of WMSL held by WEPL to JSW Steel, was cleared by 'the Competition
Commission of India' on September 23, the company said in a release issued
here.
The deal concluded with further infusion of about Rs
1940.000 Million by WEPL after adjusting the value of net current assets
receivable by it to fulfill the gap between the current long term loan
liabilities of WMSL and amount infused by JSW in WMSL.
As a result, WMSL's long term loan liability of about Rs
10950.000 Million stands fully repaid.
Welspun Group had earlier identified Welspun Maxsteel, as
its non-core business, hence has accordingly exited the same.
CMT REPORT (Corruption, Money Laundering
& Terrorism]
The Public Notice
information has been collected from various sources including but not Limited
to: The Courts, India Prisons Service, Interpol, etc.
1] INFORMATION ON DESIGNATED PARTY
No records exist designating subject or any
of its beneficial owners, controlling shareholders or senior officers as
terrorist or terrorist organization or whom notice had been received that all
financial transactions involving their assets have been blocked or convicted,
found guilty or against whom a judgement or order had been entered in a
proceedings for violating money-laundering, anti-corruption or bribery or
international economic or anti-terrorism sanction laws or whose assets were
seized, blocked, frozen or ordered forfeited for violation of money laundering
or international anti-terrorism laws.
2] Court Declaration :
No records exist
to suggest that subject is or was the subject of any formal or informal
allegations, prosecutions or other official proceeding for making any
prohibited payments or other improper payments to government officials for
engaging in prohibited transactions or with designated parties.
3] Asset Declaration :
No records exist to suggest that the
property or assets of the subject are derived from criminal conduct or a
prohibited transaction.
4] Record on Financial Crime :
Charges or conviction registered
against subject: None
5] Records on Violation of
Anti-Corruption Laws :
Charges or investigation
registered against subject: None
6] Records on Int’l Anti-Money
Laundering Laws/Standards :
Charges or investigation
registered against subject: None
7] Criminal Records
No available information exist that suggest
that subject or any of its principals have been formally charged or convicted
by a competent governmental authority for any financial crime or under any
formal investigation by a competent government authority for any violation of
anti-corruption laws or international anti-money laundering laws or standard.
8] Affiliation with Government :
No record exists to suggest that any
director or indirect owners, controlling shareholders, director, officer or
employee of the company is a government official or a family member or close
business associate of a Government official.
9] Compensation Package :
Our market survey revealed that the amount
of compensation sought by the subject is fair and reasonable and comparable to
compensation paid to others for similar services.
10] Press Report :
No
press reports / filings exists on the subject.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
MIRA INFORM as
part of its Due Diligence do provide comments on Corporate Governance to
identify management and governance. These factors often have been predictive
and in some cases have created vulnerabilities to credit deterioration.
Our Governance Assessment
focuses principally on the interactions between a company’s management, its
Board of Directors, Shareholders and other financial stakeholders.
CONTRAVENTION
Subject is not
known to have contravened any existing local laws, regulations or policies that
prohibit, restrict or otherwise affect the terms and conditions that could be
included in the agreement with the subject.
FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATES
|
Currency |
Unit
|
Indian Rupees |
|
US Dollar |
1 |
Rs. 63.89 |
|
UK Pound |
1 |
Rs. 98.89 |
|
Euro |
1 |
Rs. 72.31 |
INFORMATION DETAILS
|
Information
Gathered by : |
PRP |
|
|
|
|
Analysis Done by
: |
KAR |
|
|
|
|
Report Prepared
by : |
JYTK |
SCORE & RATING EXPLANATIONS
|
SCORE FACTORS |
RANGE |
POINTS |
|
HISTORY |
1~10 |
8 |
|
PAID-UP CAPITAL |
1~10 |
8 |
|
OPERATING SCALE |
1~10 |
8 |
|
FINANCIAL
CONDITION |
|
|
|
--BUSINESS SCALE |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--PROFITABILITY |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--LIQUIDITY |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--LEVERAGE |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--RESERVES |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--CREDIT LINES |
1~10 |
8 |
|
--MARGINS |
-5~5 |
-- |
|
DEMERIT POINTS |
|
|
|
--BANK CHARGES |
YES/NO |
YES |
|
--LITIGATION |
YES/NO |
YES |
|
--OTHER ADVERSE INFORMATION |
YES/NO |
NO |
|
MERIT POINTS |
|
|
|
--SOLE DISTRIBUTORSHIP |
YES/NO |
NO |
|
--EXPORT ACTIVITIES |
YES/NO |
NO |
|
--AFFILIATION |
YES/NO |
YES |
|
--LISTED |
YES/NO |
YES |
|
--OTHER MERIT FACTORS |
YES/NO |
YES |
|
DEFAULTER
|
|
|
|
--RBI |
YES/NO |
NO |
|
--EPF |
YES/NO |
NO |
|
|
|
|
|
TOTAL |
|
72 |
This score serves as
a reference to assess SC’s credit risk and to set the amount of credit to be
extended. It is calculated from a composite of weighted scores obtained from
each of the major sections of this report. The assessed factors and their
relative weights (as indicated through %) are as follows:
Financial condition (40%) Ownership background (20%) Payment
record (10%)
Credit history (10%) Market trend (10%) Operational
size (10%)
RATING EXPLANATIONS
|
RATING |
STATUS |
PROPOSED CREDIT LINE |
|
|
>86 |
Aaa |
Possesses an extremely sound financial base with the strongest
capability for timely payment of interest and principal sums |
UnLimited |
|
71-85 |
Aa |
Possesses adequate working capital. No caution needed for credit
transaction. It has above average (strong) capability for payment of interest
and principal sums |
Large |
|
56-70 |
A |
Financial & operational base are regarded healthy. General
unfavourable factors will not cause fatal effect. Satisfactory capability for
payment of interest and principal sums |
Fairly Large |
|
41-55 |
Ba |
Overall operation is considered normal. Capable to meet normal
commitments. |
Satisfactory |
|
26-40 |
B |
Capability to overcome financial difficulties seems comparatively below
average. |
Small |
|
11-25 |
Ca |
Adverse factors are apparent. Repayment of interest and principal sums
in default or expected to be in default upon maturity |
Limited with
full security |
|
<10 |
C |
Absolute credit risk exists. Caution needed to be exercised |
Credit not
recommended |
|
NB |
NEW BUSINESS |
||
This report is issued at your request without any
risk and responsibility on the part of MIRA INFORM PRIVATE LIMITED (MIPL)
or its officials.