In an otherwise bleak operating environment for shipbuilders, state-owned shipyards such as Mazagon Dock, Garden Reach Shipbuilders & Engineers, Cochin Shipyard and Goa Shipyard have bucked the trend, thanks to a bulging order book courtesy the Indian Navy and Coast Guard.
In FY13, five state-owned shipyards (Vishakhapatnam-based Hindustan Shipyard is the fifth) together reported net sales of Rs 6,341 crore (Rs 63.41 billion) and a net profit of Rs 689 crore (Rs 6.89 billion).
In the past five years, their combined net sales have grown at a compounded annual rate of 30 per cent, while net profit expanded at 7.1 per cent.
The growth in total revenues, which includes changes in inventory and treasury income, was lower at 10 per cent a year.
Year-on-year revenue growth is highly volatile in the industry, due to long lead times in ship-building.
Besides, a few months’ delay in commissioning (not uncommon for warships) have a big impact on revenue and profit growth for that year.
The growth has resulted in a sharp improvement in the financial health of these public-sector units.
For example, the combined debt-to-equity ratio of these five companies has declined to 0.17 in FY13 from a high of 0.88 in FY09.
Except Hindustan Shipyard, all PSU shipbuilders are now debt-free, cumulatively sitting on cash and bank balances worth Rs 8,700 crore (Rs 87 billion) at the end of March 2013, two-and-a-half times their networth.
In contrast, private-sector shipyards struggle with stagnant revenues and rising indebtness.
The combined leverage ratio for three listed ones -- Bharati Shipyard, ABG Shipyard and Pipavav Defence and Offshore Engineering (formerly Pipavav Shipyard) rose to 3.2 in FY13 from 0.53 in FY08.
Their combined borrowings during the period ballooned to Rs 14,000 crore (Rs 140 billion) in the last financial year from Rs 1,346 crore (Rs 13.46 billion) in FY08.
This has resulted in a sharp spike in interest burden that now exceeds their operating profit. Bharati and ABG have applied for corporate
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