Deepak Korgaonkar in Mumbai

Engineering, constructions and capital goods firms have reported a 10 per cent 
growth in order-flow in the quarter ended December 2008 -- a new low in the 
last eight quarters. 

On sequential basis, orders have declined by a record 36 per cent.

In the first quarter of calendar year 2008, the order book of these firms grew 
by 128 per cent, followed by 136 per cent in the second quarter and at a slower 
pace of 52 per cent in the third.

These firms receive orders for engineering, infrastructure development, gas and 
oil pipeline and power equipment projects from overseas and local firms as well 
as central and state governments on a turnkey basis.

So, the decline in order-flow indicates a cautious approach towards expansion 
and modernisation during the current credit crisis and slowdown in global 
economy.
Though there has been a marginal growth in orders from the Centre, states and 
local firms, the same from overseas entities have slumped substantially.

In fact, orders from overseas firms have declined by 26 per cent during the 
quarter under review.

While orders from local firms grew by a modest 6 per cent, the same from states 
grew by just 3 per cent during the quarter. However, orders placed by the 
Centre have more than doubled.

The Centre awarded orders worth Rs 9,324 crore (Rs 93.24 billion) in the 
October-December quarter, up by 114 per cent.

Of these, orders of Rs 3,574 crore (Rs 35.74 billion) were received for power 
projects, while the oil and gas, railway, shipping and engineering-related 
sectors accounted for works worth over Rs 500 crore (Rs 5 billion) each.

Overall, orders in the December quarter for 43 companies added up to Rs 38,770 
crore (Rs 387.7 billion), compared to Rs 35,177 crore (Rs 351.77 billion) in 
the same period of 2007.

The top four companies -- Bhel, Larsen and Toubro, Patel Engineering [Get 
Quote] and ABG Shipyard [Get Quote] -- accounted for 60 per cent of the total 
orders with the top two cornering 41 per cent.

Companies in the capital goods sector such as ABB, Pratibha Industries [Get 
Quote] and Lanco Infratech [Get Quote] received orders between Rs 200 crore (Rs 
2 billion) and Rs 500 crore (Rs 5 billion) in the December quarter.

However, for each of Nagarjuna Constructions, Punj Lloyd [Get Quote], Siemens 
and Subhash Projects, the order-flow has declined by more than 40 per cent.

Reliance [Get Quote] Infrastructure, Bharat Earth Movers [Get Quote] and 
Simplex Infrastructure, which bagged contracts worth over Rs 1,000 crore (Rs 10 
billion) during the fourth quarter of CY07, received no orders during the same 
period of CY08.

Central and state governments have given orders to Bhel, L&T and Maytas Infra. 
KEC International [Get Quote], Bhel and Aban Offshore [Get Quote] bagged some 
orders from overseas firms too.

Bhel, India's largest power equipment maker in the public sector, showed a 
robust 220 per cent rise in orders during the quarter, but reported a 13 per 
cent drop on sequential basis. 

L&T, India's largest engineering company, showed 37 per cent decline in order 
flow on sequential basis, while on year-on-year basis, the company registered 
an order growth of 81 per cent.


http://www.rediff.com/money/2009/jan/06bcrisis-engg-construction-firms-post-10-pc-order-book-growth.htm

ekamber

Smooth Roads Never Make Good Drivers.
Problem Free Life Never  Make A Strong Person.
So, Never Ask Life "Why Me?"
Instead Challenge It And Say 'Try Me'




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