Tata Steel has been closing and selling plants in the UK since the 2008 financial crisis to make its business there more profitable.
Market
News : A revamp of its European operations, an improved
product mix and a ban on cheaper steel imports to India may bolster
the fortunes of Tata Steel Ltd.’s shares, the least valued stock on
the South Asian nation’s benchmark equities gauge.
Tata
Steel shares have lost nearly half of their value since Jan. 2018 to
trade at a price-to-earnings ratio of 4.7, the lowest on the S&P
BSE Sensex Index. The company, which last year got more than 50 per
cent of its sales abroad, last week outlined job cuts and other
measures aimed at cutting costs in Europe, which it called a “dumping
ground” for steel.
“Indian
steel prices may have found a floor, thanks to the minimum import
price, and have already started moving up,” said Siddharth Gadekar,
an analyst at Equirus Securities Pvt., “That kind of stability in
prices gives investors confidence.”
Tata
Steel has been closing and selling plants in the UK since the 2008
financial crisis to make its business there more profitable.
It’s
now focusing on India, and aims to ramp up capacity as demand is set
to expand by as much as 7 per cent in 2020, according to the World
Steel Association. That’s the most among the top 10 steel using
countries.
While
protection from cheaper shipments from abroad will also benefit Tata
Steel’s domestic peers, its valuation advantage, product mix and
debt reduction steps may increase its appeal to investors. India
imposed a minimum import price for steel products in 2016.
“Tata’s
volume of sales should beat the rest of the industry because of their
value for money offering, and their entrance into the pipeline steel
category,” said Richard Leung, an analyst with Bloomberg
Intelligence, “The rest of the industry may see muted growth next
year because of reliance on legacy demand like automobiles.”
To
be sure, Tata
Steel’s debt-to-equity ratio is higher than most local peers,
largely due to its 2007 purchase of Corus Group Plc for about $13
billion and its acquisition of Bhushan Steel for about $5.3 billion
last year. Still, Moody’s Investors Service said in a Nov. 25 note
that the company’s European cost cuts will support a turnaround in
less profitable operations that have hurt the company’s overall
credit quality.
“In
a down cycle the companies that have higher debt tend to trade at a
discount,” said Equirus Securities’ Gadekar, “With their
earnings profile and current steel prices, they can service their
debt easily.”
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