During April-September 2016-17, cement prices in the North were higher by around Rs 60-65 per bag, compared to the same period in 2015-16, ICRA said in a statement.
ICRA expects most North Indian cement manufacturers to report better profit numbers for the first half of 2016-17 vis-a-vis same period of 2015-16.
While production growth during April-August was higher at 4.4 per cent compared to April-August 2015 at 2.1 per cent, it still remains moderate, ICRA Senior VP Sabyasachi Majumdar said.
The demand picked up only during June 2016, with a production growth of 10.4 per cent y-o-y, driven by increased demand from the northern region, primarily Uttar Pradesh due to increased government spending on infrastructure and irrigation projects, Majumdar said.
With the onset of monsoons in most regions, demand for July and August has shown a decline of 10.5 per cent and 4.5 per cent, respectively on an month-on-month basis.
"Demand growth during 2016-17 is likely to be driven by pick-up in the infrastructure segment, primarily road projects and the housing segment, during the next one year; this apart, there is a likelihood of a recovery in the rural demand from H2 FY2017, given the expectations of a better monsoon," Majumdar said.
With the pace of new capacity addition slowing down, ICRA expects capacity utilisation and the supply-demand scenario to record an improvement, especially in 2017-18, which should support cement prices and profitability indicators for cement manufacturers, he added.
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