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Auditor flags RINL’s ability to carry on as a ‘going concern’ as debt widens to over ₹20,000 crore

A high debt to equity ratio is indicative of a leveraged firm and stress on finances

Auditor flags RINL’s ability to carry on as a ‘going concern’ as debt widens to over ₹20,000 crore
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State-owned steel-maker Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd (RINL) has seen its net debt spiral to over ₹20,400 crore in FY23, up 20 per cent Y-o-Y; with the debt-equity ratio going up ten-fold to 52.29. Independent auditors have raised concerns about the company’s ability to continue as a “going concern”, and indicated that the entity “is facing cash-flow problems”.

A high debt to equity ratio is indicative of a leveraged firm and stress on finances.

According to the auditor’s report, assumptions made by RINL depend on “many major factors” - demand for its products in a competitive market, quantity of sales, realizable prices, raw material availability and index price fluctuations – most of which “are beyond the control of the company”.

Current liabilities exceeded current assets by ₹13,725.67 crore as on March 31, 2023.

As per the company’s Annual Report, the net debt was ₹17,187 crore in the year-ago period (FY22), while the debt-equity ratio was just 5.41. In a year, the debt-equity ratio surged 866 per cent, caused by increased borrowings and stress on earnings.

Claims against the company, which are not considered as a debt, was at ₹4,559 crore for FY23, up three per cent Y-o-Y.

The company, which is under the Ministry of Steel, and is the second largest PSU steel-maker after SAIL, saw its adjusted equity fall to ₹341 crore in FY23. The year-ago adjusted equity was ₹3,175 crore.

Debt servicing capacity of the company also went down significantly as earnings dipped.

The debt servicing coverage ratio (dependent on earnings) which previously stood at around ₹3,000–₹4,000 crore-odd annually, was down to just ₹83 crore.

Unfavourable market conditions, which includes the adverse impact of the energy crisis and the continued Russia-Ukraine war, saw the company operate with two blast furnaces (with the third remaining idle/unused).

Even the production from the two Blast Furnaces had to be restricted based on the availability of imported coking coals & PCI coal for injection.

RINL’s top brass is expecting a gross sales turnover of ₹35,857 crore for FY24, as against the actual turnover of ₹22,778 crore for FY23, banking primarily on higher capacity utilisation.

The management also expects to generate positive cash flows from operations during FY24.

The company’s management claimed that it has a track record of debt servicing without default, and hence is of the belief that the company has “the ability to continue as a going concern”.

Atul Bhatt, Chairman and Managing Director, RINL, during a January 1 address to employees, said technical bottlenecks, financial issues and working capital issues were being worked on; and a debt reduction strategy was being looked into.

The CPSE is also looking at ways to ensure raw material linkages. RINL continues to be among the only steel makers in the country to not have captive iron ore and coal mines.

For the nine-month period (April–Dec) of this fiscal, the steel-maker reported ₹16,776 crore worth of sales, up 21 per cent in volumes. Value-added steel sales increased by 47 per cent Y-o-Y.

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