Why
this midcap company could be spinning its way to the top
Although Nitin Spinners
doesn’t have a unique product line or process, what puts it on the map for
investors is its performance potential for the forthcoming years.
For Nitin Spinners Ltd (NSL), a Bhilwara-based textile
company, growth prospects look bright on the back of capacity additions and
sale of high-value products. It manufactures cotton yarn and knitted cotton
fabric. Barring a few major players, the USD 108 billion Indian textile
industry is made up of numerous small and mid-size companies, NSL being one of
them.
Although NSL doesn’t
have a unique product line or process, what puts it on the map for investors is
its performance potential for the forthcoming years.
Capacity expansion completion
NSL added 72,960
spindles in February 2017 to take its overall spinning capacity from 150,096
(at the start of FY17) to 223,056. As a result, the company’s cotton yarn
manufacturing capacity increased from 38,000 tonnes per annum (TPA) at the end
of FY16 to 58,500 TPA (including 8,500 TPA allocated to the knitted fabric
segment) at the end of the recently concluded fiscal year.
The utilization rate
for cotton yarn, which stands at roughly 90 percent at the moment for the
company, will scale up gradually to nearly 100 percent by the end of FY18. This
is expected to result in top-line volume growth. Furthermore, the increase in
cotton yarn output can translate to a 30-40 percent rise in FY17's annual
turnover. On the other hand, for knitted fabric, the utilization will remain at
80-85 percent in FY18, similar to the existing level.
Prospective Tailwinds
NSL stands to benefit
on the margin front with additional capacity coming on steam. Its per-unit sale
price is likely to be higher on the back of management’s emphasis on
value-added products like finer count, dyed and melange yarn variants.
These products, which
typically contributed no more than 30 percent to the company’s revenues, will
bring in over 40 percent of the revenue starting this fiscal.
Consequently, FY18’s
peak sales and operating margin are estimated to be in the range of Rs
1100-1200 crore and 16-18 percent, respectively. In FY17, the corresponding
figures were Rs 934 crore and 14.3 percent, respectively.
NSL spent Rs 290 crore
for upgrading its spinning plant last fiscal, of which Rs 215 crore was funded
through long-term borrowings under the Technology Upgradation Fund (TUF)
Scheme. Under this scheme, the company is eligible to avail cheaper loans at an
effective interest rate of about 5-6 percent.
We anticipate the
company’s interest coverage to go up from 4.25x in FY17 to 6.3x in FY18. The
company aims to repay Rs 70 crore worth of debt in FY18. This, along with
increased savings in finance costs, is likely to improve the profit after tax
(PAT) margin of the company from 6.1 percent in FY17 to 7.5 percent in FY18.
As a result, the
overall return on net worth could also marginally trek up from 22.3 percent to
23 percent.
Valuation
At 6.7 times FY18 projected earnings, NSL is a good value
proposition, given its operational efficiency and profit trajectory.
Happy Investing
Source:Moneycontrol.com
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