Conflicting views on Coal India (CIL) would possibly depart buyers confused.
Photograph: Amit Dave/Reuters
The bullish perspective that India has robust energy demand (and likewise excessive metal manufacturing) means excessive demand for coal.
As CIL is the monopoly producer of coal — supplying over 80 per cent of the home requirement – the general public sector enterprise ought to be a beneficiary of the rising energy demand.
As a outcome, metal producers who don’t have entry to CIL’s coal or their very own captive mines, are pressured to import coal.
The bear case is as follows.
A big a part of CIL’s manufacturing should be offered at fastened long-term charges below its FSA (Fuel Supply agreements) with energy crops.
The FSA charges are hardly ever revised, and are unlikely to go up in an election yr since an FSA hike interprets straight into greater energy tariffs.
The final such revision came about in 2018.
CIL manages to promote between 8-15 per cent of manufacturing at e-auctions, at greater realisations.
In addition, CIL has excessive capex spends however in keeping with the bears, it has not managed to generate commensurately greater volumes of manufacturing.
In addition, CIL is due for a wage hike.
There’s sturdy demand for coal — each bulls and bears agree on that.
CIL hopes to ramp up manufacturing to 1 billion tonnes per yr (from an estimated 700 million tonnes every year or MTPA within the 2022-23 monetary yr (FY23), and envisages improved e-auction volumes and premiums.
While e-auction costs are linked to imported costs (therefore world costs), and world costs have eased, greater e-auction volumes would compensate.
After protracted negotiations, wage hikes are anticipated to be decrease than provisioned and the PSU could use wages as a lever to lift FSA costs.
The firm has diminished hiring amongst older age teams, and as retirements happen, the wage invoice ought to cut back.
However, it’s doable that additional negotiations will lead to greater wage payments and likewise greater pensions.
The premium of e-auction costs over the FSA is 200 per cent, or greater.
This does point out FSA costs are too low.
Analysts consider that quarter 4 e-auctions will cowl round 10 per cent of manufacturing and that the premiums and volumes will probably be good.
Is this sustainable – particularly the e-auction volumes – in the long term?
As importantly, can CIL (a PSU with its largest buyer NTPC, additionally a PSU with locked-in FSA) hike FSA costs even when it has to decide to greater FSA volumes?
CIL has FSA commitments for as much as 600 MTPA in the long run and it’ll despatch round 696 MT (estimated) in FY23.
The capex should translate into pushing manufacturing volumes in direction of the 1 billion goal.
Analysts challenge CIL will despatch 765 MTPA by FY25.
Returning to the bear case, productiveness when it comes to coal produced per worker could be very low.
The capex goals to enhance productiveness and lowering the workforce might assist.
The firm had Rs 44,500 crore in money on its steadiness sheet (Sep 22) which is 30 per cent of its market capitalisation.
Hence, you possibly can argue CIL is under-valued.
But the PSU additionally has persistently excessive receivables and huge long-term provisions.
Is it under-valued or a worth entice?
The bears calculate truthful worth at round Rs 198 whereas the bulls estimate it to be between Rs 259 and Rs 275.
At the present worth of Rs 208, the doable upside appears greater than the doable draw back.



























