Hit By Covid-19, ITC's Profit Before Tax Dips 34% To Rs 3,435 Crore

A sharp decline in cigarettes, hotels, paper and paperboard revenues because of the nationwide to contain the Covid-19 pandemic dragged diversified conglomerate, ITC’s profit before tax (PBT) 33.81 per cent to Rs 3,435.88 crore in the June quarter.

Revenues from operations saw a dip of 17.21 per cent to Rs 10,478.45 crore. Profit after tax was down by 25.5 per cent to Rs 2,562.73 crore. Unprecedented disruption in operations because of the lockdowns weighed on performance, the company said.

Revenues from cigarettes were down by about 29.5 per cent to Rs 4,330.05 crore, as manufacturing operations resumed mid-May. However, operations have been rapidly scaled up thereafter to pre-Covid levels and currently all factories are operational, said.

The pandemic also weighed heavily on hotel operations with revenues down to Rs 24.92 crore during the quarter compared to Rs 411.60 crore in the same period last year.

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Paperboards, paper & packaging segment's performance was impacted by lower offtake from end-user industries, with revenues dropping by 32.80 per cent to Rs 1,026.44 crore.

However, growth in exports partly mitigated the weak domestic demand. The silver lining, however, was the non-cigarettes FMCG business.

Revenues from the segment were up 10.12 per cent to Rs 3,378.84 crore and profits up by 61.54 per cent.

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Segment Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation) grew by 42 per cent to 257 crore, with margins expanding by 170 bps YoY, notwithstanding the gestation costs of new categories/facilities and the incremental operating costs due to the pandemic, said. “The branded packaged foods businesses delivered a robust performance during the quarter driven by atta, noodles, biscuits and fresh dairy. Most major categories gained market share during the quarter,”the company added.

In the segment, while the personal care products business recorded substantial growth in revenue driven by demand for hygiene products such as hand sanitizers, handwash, antiseptic liquids and floor cleaners in the wake of the pandemic, the ‘Engage’ range of fragrance products witnessed a tepid quarter because of significant decline in demand. Revenue from the agri business was also up by about 3.9 per cent driven by trading opportunities, mainly in oilseeds and rice.

Abneesh Roy, executive vice-president - institutional equities, at Edelweiss Securities, said cigarette volumes and food had done better than expectations but overall sales were in line.

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