Jindal Metal, India’s fourth-largest steelmaker, announed its Q3 earnings after market hours on Friday, reporting a decline in revenue through the December quarter as a consequence of weak metal costs, greater prices and one time loss associated to labour code implementation. Earlier, its shares closed 1.91% decrease on the Bombay Inventory Trade whereas the Sensex closed 0.36% decrease.
The corporate, headed by billionaire Naveen Jindal, reported an virtually 80% drop in internet revenue attributable to the homeowners, to ₹190 crore from to ₹951 crore in similar quarter final yr, in response to the corporate’s alternate filings. Revenue fell effectively wanting the ₹526-crore common estimate from a Bloomberg ballot of 11 analysts.
Income for the quarter rose 10.9% to ₹13,026 crore from to ₹11,751 crore in the identical quarter final yr. The rise in income was as a consequence of a rise in metal manufacturing and better gross sales quantity, although these advantages have been offset by decrease metal costs.
The steelmaker’s consolidated crude metal manufacturing rose 25% to 2.51 million tonnes from the September quarter, whereas gross sales volumes climbed 22% to 2.28 million tonnes. Ebitda fell 25% to ₹1,634 crore from ₹2,184 crore in the identical quarter final yr, on account of upper enter prices.
Suman Kumar, assistant vice-president for metals and mining at brokerage Philip Capital, mentioned, “The outcomes clearly point out an affect on Ebitda, which has declined as a consequence of higher-than-anticipated raw-material prices. Past this expense, profitability has seen an extra drop as a consequence of a rise in depreciation and curiosity bills.”
He added, “Weak metal costs through the quarter additionally weighed on efficiency. Whereas revenues have been greater as a consequence of elevated manufacturing and volumes, the good thing about greater volumes was greater than offset by decrease realizations.”
Internet debt rises
Internet debt elevated to ₹15,443 crore as of 31 December from ₹14,156 crore on the finish of September, primarily as a consequence of ongoing capital expenditure. The corporate incurred ₹2,076 crore of capital expenditure through the quarter due to enlargement initiatives on the Angul facility. The three-million-tonnes-per-annum primary oxygen furnace-III at Angul stays on monitor for commissioning within the fourth quarter of FY26, the steelmaker mentioned. As soon as operational, it’s going to improve the corporate’s steelmaking capability to fifteen.6 million tonnes every year.
Jindal Metal additionally recognised a one-time distinctive cost of gratuity and compensated absences of ₹55 crore through the quarter, including that it was within the strategy of evaluating whether or not the brand new labour codes would have another affect on worker advantages.
Costs of metal utilized in vehicles and residential home equipment fell to a nine-month low in November, whereas metal utilized in building and infrastructure was at its most cost-effective in almost 5 years, owing to oversupply and weak demand from giant infrastructure initiatives, Mint reported final week. Demand was additional dented after a short lived safeguard responsibility lapsed on 7 November, with no readability on an extension till the tip of December.







