Cement, Energy & Environment

.,, waste is compacted at landfills. The city corporation has received several proposals for setting up power plants in these landfills. An appropriate tariff structure and sale of renewable energy certificates would ensure continuous cash flows and add to the financial viability of WtE projects. Municipal authorities should ensure that the true cost of waste disposal and its management is apportioned to waste generators, which would pave the way for a financially viable WtE segment. Further, the industry needs to improve the technology in terms of environmental performance and address the health concerns associated with it. Courtesy: Renewable Watch, November 2012, Pp 46-47. INDIA INC LOOKS AT CONSOLIDATION .... I ,.. f"\\1\{TLI Declining GOP growth, persistently high consumer inflation, poor public finances and worsening macro-economic indicators. In such a scenario, should Indian companies chase growth or consolidate their market position? Many analysts and businessmen have now begun to ask this question. "We have just completed a big capex cycle and don't require further capacity for the next three to four years. Now it is time to consolidate our market position and build a lead over the competition," says AniI Gupta joint managing director of Havells India, a leading manufacturer of household electrical equipment. According to him, the macro-economic headwinds provide financially stronger companies an opportunity to build a lead over their peers. "Our focus has now shifted to market development, brand-building and deepening our sales and distribution network, so that we gain the most when economic growth picks up a few quarters from now," he adds. In the past five years, Havells has spent Rs 702 crore on building new factories and expanding capacity of its old units. The amount is around 70 per cent of all its capex till date. Experts agree. "Growth is good, but this should not be our primary concern right now. Let companies strengthen their balance sheets, improve capacity utilization and weed out inefficiencies from their system. Similarly, banks need time to stabilize their NPAs (non-performing assets) before project lending could resume," says Deep Narayan Mukherjee d1rector (corporate ratings), India Ratings & Research. According to him, the economy is in a bottoming-out phase and this process of consolidation , if allowed to play out fully, will kickstart the next cycle of growth. Others says that the new growth cycle will be led by better utilization of existing capacity rather than fresh capex. "A lot of industrial capacity has been created in the past five to six years and a significant portion of that is under-utilized. If companies start improving their capacity utilization , this will start a virtuous cycle in corporate earnings and a new growth cycle will emerge," says Revati Kasture, head of research at Care Ratings. This is very important as Indian companies face "balance sheet stress" due to a mismatch between capex ar d actual production of goods and service, which ilas worsened their financial ratios. According to analysts, thi-:; h1ms at a U-shaped recovery rather than the V-shaped spike in economic growth witnessed in the aftermath of the global financial crisis in 2008. "Indian earnings downgrades bottomed in Octorber 2011 . However, we still see more downgrades than upgrades. We expect the revisions and earning upgrades to be more U– shaped than V-shaped," says Aditya Narain, analyst at Citi Group Global Markets in his recent report on India equity strategy. According to him, greater corporate focus on returns than growth should support earnings in India. The trend is also visible in the earning trajectory of India's toplisted companies. The real deceleration in revenue growth for India's top 100 companies (excluding oil & gas, banks and finance) occurred sometime in March 2012 quarter and is likely to hit the bottom in the next two to three quarters. It will remain there for some time and then recover gradually. Profit growth during the period has been highly volatile due to fluctuations in foreign exchange rates, commodity prices and the inflationary environment in India. "Overall, inflation has remained elevated and persistent pressure on nominal sales growth suggests that real economic growth has not bottomed out yet," say Nomura analysts led by Prabhat Awasthi. According to him, net earnings revisions remained negative during the September quarter earnings season , although the extent of downward revisions was less than in the preceding quarter. 36 I

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