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Corporate profitability to decline for fourth consecutive quarter
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IANS | 12 Oct, 2022
Corporate profitability is seen declining 300 basis points (bps) due to
elevated commodity prices, Crisil said in a report.
On
its part, corporate profitability -- or earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) margin -- contracted 300 basis
points (bps) on-year in the second quarter, marking the fourth
consecutive quarter of on-year decline.
The margin contracted sequentially as well, albeit slightly.
Ebitda
margins of 70 per cent of the 47 sectors tracked by CRISIL Research
shrunk on-year. The sharpest reduction was in construction-linked
sectors, at over 1,000 bps on-year, largely due to high input costs and
delay in passing those on to customers.
Among these sectors,
Ebitda margin in steel products is likely to have contracted 1,500 bps
on-year due to elevated coking coal prices and lower realisations amid
drop in flat steel prices and sales to the lucrative export segment
being limited.
Says Sehul Bhatt, Associate Director, CRISIL
Research, "Rising revenue momentum is not translating into profit margin
proportionately. Although key commodity prices such as coking coal and
crude oil have cooled sequentially, they remain elevated on-year, eating
into corporate profits, with absolute Ebitda profit remaining flattish
during the quarter, both on-year as well sequentially. Sustenance of
commodity prices at current levels is crucial to limit further margin
contraction."
A combination of factors such as moderate price
hikes and steadily rising volumes is expected to lift corporate revenue
15 per cent on-year to Rs 10.2 lakh crore in the second quarter of this
fiscal.
CRISIL's analysis of over 300 companies (excluding those in the financial services, and oil and gas sectors) indicates as much.
Of
the total 47 sectors tracked by CRISIL Research, nearly half are
estimated to have outpaced overall revenue growth during the quarter,
with key sectors within consumer discretionary services logging maximum
on-year growth.
The underperformance of the remaining sectors
compared with overall growth was largely broad-based across the
construction-linked, consumer staples, and industrial commodities
verticals.
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