Hindustan Zinc has been on an uptrend since it hit a 52-week low in August last year. In seven months, it is up about 70 per cent and it hit a 52-week high of Rs 199.80 on intra-day basis last Thursday. Although gains in the past few sessions may be attributed to the 1,200 per cent dividend announcement, a large part of the rally has been fuelled by the company’s improving prospects.
The company is in the process of gradually scaling up production from the current 0.9 mt per annum (mtpa) of zinc and lead to 1.2 mtpa in the next three to four years, as part of capex plans. Also, even as the bulk of its production is moving from opencast to underground mining, analysts feel the cost of production is unlikely to increase much.
Zinc prices have rebounded to $1,800 levels. The closure of large mines has helped curtail supplies. Falling premiums (extra price over benchmark rate that buyers pay) too have stabilised. Analysts at Macquarie are bullish on zinc’s prospects, and expect it to reach $2,400/tonne in FY18. However, they add even with prices as low at $1,750, the company is comfortably placed with 60 per cent Ebitda (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation) margins. The company’s cost of production, including royalties, is pegged below $1,000 a tonne. Even assuming realisation of $1,750/tonne over the next four years, cash (surpluses) and dividends will be equal to 90 per cent of current market cap (indicating a minimum 18 per cent compounded growth), says Macquarie.
Though in the near-term the stock may correct as it goes ex-dividend (Rs 24 per share) on April 7, investors could utilise this to invest for the long-term given strong prospects.