Cement prices declined across the country in the last fortnight except
in South despite efforts by manufacturers to arrest price fall ahead of
the lean monsoon season.
Prices fell Rs 10-20 per 50-kg bag in the last 10 days of June after
rising Rs 5-25 per bag between May-end and early June in northern,
eastern and some pockets of western India, according to a pricing trend
report by Motilal Oswal Securities.
The demand too remains sluggish in most regions and may worsen in the
next one month due to monsoon. Prices are likely to fall further due to
weakness in demand.
Jinesh Gandhi, vice-president - research (cements), Motilal Oswal, said
in the report that after rising till mid-June, prices on a
month-on-month basis in north and east were down by Rs 8-15 per bag.
“However, central India posted relatively lesser volatility, albeit
exit prices (June-end price) were down by Rs 10-15 per bag. Markets in
west – Mumbai and Nagpur – remained mostly stable though Pune and
Ahmedabad saw strong swing during June. Raipur (east) and Bhopal
(central) showed stable to marginal increase in prices,” he said.
Cement firms generally raise prices ahead of monsoon as June to September is a lean period for sales.
In Pune, after rising by Rs 10 in May, prices went up by another Rs
20-25 in June. However, in the second fortnight of June, they fell by Rs
20.
Prices fell Rs 40 per bag to Rs 225 in Ahmedabad, before rising to Rs
260-265 per bag due to production discipline, which, some dealers said,
was about 30% by Tier I players.
According to the report, mid-June prices of Tier II/ outside brands
(like Wonder cement) went down to as low as Rs 197 per bag in Ahmedabad.
In Delhi, Jodhpur and Chandigarh, prices were down Rs 5-10 per bag.
After Rs 15-20 per bag increase in May, Delhi and Jodhpur saw another
increase of Rs 10 per bag in June before reversing by Rs 20 per bag in
the last couple of weeks.
Contrary to the declining trend, markets in south India (the first to
hike prices) saw cement prices either remain stable or increase.
“Prices in AP were up by Rs 90-100 per bag over past 45 days, led by
production discipline. AP dynamics impacted the adjacent markets
positively with Bangalore and Chennai seeing Rs 15-20 increase,” said
Gandhi.
Some dealers from central and eastern parts see good harvesting season boosting rural demand, he said,
“Overall, while visibility remains weak for the near term, medium-term
demand outlook has optimism with several infrastructure/power projects
underway,” he said.
Source: http://to.ly/mgMr