In the near term, JSPL has secured a few contracts in Europe filling the gap caused by the Ukraine War. In the longer term, it hopes the capacity expansions will result in volumes compensating for possibly lower realisations. The company has been committed to deleveraging for several years and it targeted Net Debt-to-Ebitda of 3x before embarking on capex. Jindal Power's separation should also result in cash accrual of Rs 3,000 crore which may be used to pay down debt.
Most steel industry analysts expect steel prices to soften by the end of the calendar year. While 2022-23 may average out at slightly lower, steel prices in 2023-24 may drop. However, once the coal production kicks in, cost savings should lead to a stabilisation of Ebitda per tonne albeit at lower levels. Given higher volumes, and lower debt, the bottomline should improve.