CHETAN TAMBOLI
CHAIRMAN AND MANAGING DIRECTOR
Steelcast
is poised at a sweet spot in its existence
OVERVIEW
During the year under review, the company's revenues declined from
INR 478.65 Cr in FY 2022-23 to INR 412.51 Cr in FY 2023-24 while the profit after tax
increased from INR 70.52 Cr in FY 2022-23 to INR 75.00 Cr in FY 2023-24. This represented
profitable growth, a validation of the Company's business model. I must assure our
stakeholders that this decline in revenue does not represent the conclusion of the growth
trend at our company; it represents a period of brief consolidation before the company
returns to its erstwhile revenue growth journey.
The principal reason for the revenue decline was that the downstream
sector especially in North America and Europe selected to liquidate its inventory,
staggering purchases from companies like ours. Consequently, customers' worked with a
lower inventory but there will soon come a time more likely during the current financial
year when these customers will scale their output to respond to the needs of higher
infrastructure spending by the countries where they are based. This investment could be a
complement of fresh infrastructure spending in line with a growing global trend of
deepening infrastructure investments; it could also be catalysed by replacement spending
that is critical to infrastructure effectiveness in those countries. Based on engagements
with our customers, we believe that this resumed capital expenditure is likely to
transpire starting the current financial year, strengthening our revenues and profits.
At Steelcast, we invested in our business across initiatives with the
objective to be prepared for this projected upturn.
Our priority is a commitment to moderate our cost of staying in
business. During the last financial year, the company made a decisive INR 32 Cr investment
in renewable energy. This investment was directed at two outcomes: one, the aggregate 10
MW investment will empower the company to reduce its manufacturing cost, considering that
the cost of renewable energy generation is considerably lower than conventional thermal
energy. For the company, the switchover to renewable energy has started generating a INR
12 Cr annual saving. This investment in renewable energy is likely to be recovered in
around 30 months, validating our commitment to prudent capital expenditure and business
model competitiveness. We believe that this lower cost structure will enhance our
viability across market cycles, reinforcing our position as one of the most competitive
producers in our sector the world over.
The other priority is broadbasing and deepening our customer presence.
During the last few years, Steelcast selected to broadbase from an excessive dependence on
customers from the earthmoving, mining and construction sectors by extending into the
large railroads sector. The extension of the company's sectoral presence was also
justified by the emergence of the China plus one' reality where a number of
American railroad companies sought to supplement their supply chains by stepping up
purchases from non-China suppliers and securing their supply chains. Besides, American
railroads continue to be the preferred transportation mode on account of their
competitiveness vis a vis roadways, indicating that this continues to be a growth segment.
This broadbasing was easier said than achieved; this required the
company to be benchmarked against demanding certifications relevant to the North American
railroad sector; this also required the company to present its credentials to large
railroad companies. I am pleased to report that this commitment is paying off; the company
is engaged in fruitful discussions with American railroad companies and the initial
enquiries should translate into orders during the current financial year when the
sector's capex cycle revives, and the US government increases its spending in the
North American railroad sector. This broadbasing is expected to enhance the proportion of
the company's revenues derived from the railroads business from around 3% during the
year under review to nearly 20% three years from now. The combination of a growing
addressable market and a larger corporate priority is expected to deepen our business
model robustness leading to enhanced sustainability across market cycles. The third
corporate priority that we successfully addressed during the year under review was debt
moderation. During the last few years, the surplus generated by the company was higher
than the need to reinvest (considering that the company possessed adequate manufacturing
capacity). This surplus was progressively used to moderate long-term debt and replace
short-term debt with surpluses earned by the company. During the year under review, the
company emerged completely debt-free for the first time in six decades, a seminal moment
in a capital-intensive business. By replacing all the debt on our books, we have moderated
our operating costs; by enhancing cash on our books INR 31 Cr as on 31st March 2024 we
have secured our accruals to address a range of projects intended to capitalise on
emerging opportunities. Besides, this shift from debt funding to an accruals-driven
business model signifies a sweet spot that is likely to translate into enhanced
stakeholder value across the coming years. At Steelcast, we are prepared to win across
competitive markets through a combination of cash-enhancing capabilities on the one hand
and a capital allocation discipline on the other. We believe that sustainable growth will
be derived from capacity creation ahead of peak asset utilisation, which we believe should
transpire by 2027-28. Our first step in addressing this reality would be to build a
sizable corpus derived from accruals, empowering the company to embark on a capex cycle
from 2026 so that it possesses increased manufacturing capacity by the time peak asset
utilisation is reached. At our company, we will continue to strengthen our business
through various initiatives in the interim before we embark on our next decisive capex
cycle.
One, the company intends to strengthen its portfolio through the
manufacture of a wider range of products. The maximum weight of casting products that the
company can presently manufacture is 2.5 tonnes; the company intends to make prudent
investments that empower it to address larger piece weights, which is likely to widen its
addressable market on the one hand and enhance value-addition on the other.
Two, the company intends to commission a dedicated facility to
manufacture products for the product replacement market. This is likely to broadbase the
company's customer mix and deepen its relationship-driven business model. Three,
the company intends to undertake a part of the operations that is presently conducted by
customers. This could relieve customers of engaging in capital expenditure; it could also
liberate customers of investing in their managerial and manufacturing bandwidth. In turn,
this arrangement is likely to widen the company's value chain, increase realisations,
graduate a product towards a complete solution and secure customer engagement. Four,
the company will continue to invest in its marketing across USA and Europe, widening its
presence in 15 countries to 18 in two years. We believe that this geographic broadbasing
is expected to empower the company to capitalise on the growth plans of a wider range of
countries on the one hand while moderating the risk of an excessive dependence in a few.
Five, the company will continue to invest in superior process flows
and automation with the objective to enhance productivity by at least 25%, a competitive
advantage in a business marked by labour intensity. On the overall, I need to send out a
message to customers that Steelcast is poised at a sweet spot in its existence: the
company is secured by multi-year customer relationships, broad-based products portfolio
and moderated cost structure. We are optimistic that this complement will translate into
not just superior stakeholder value; it could achieve this outcome quicker, enhancing our
brand.
Chetan Tamboli |
Chairman and Managing Director |