By Kaustubh Kulkarni and Sumeet Chatterjee
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Larsen & Toubro Ltd (L&T)
Shares in L&T ended down 7.4 percent, their biggest drop in nearly four years, after the company said net income fell 12.5 percent in the quarter ended June from a year earlier.
L&T, seen as a bellwether for the Indian economy, has been looking to boost sales in overseas markets as Asia's third-largest economy grows at its slowest pace in a decade. Project bottlenecks, largely because of problems in acquiring land and high funding costs, have also sapped investment in the infrastructure industry.
But with India accounting for about 80 percent of its sales, an investment slowdown in roads, ports and power plants is a major concern for L&T.
The company, which makes equipment used in power stations, said revenue from its key power segment dropped 44 percent in the April-June quarter due to delays in the awarding of large orders.
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"The fact is the situation is very challenging on the ground," said its chief executive officer Krishnamurthi Venkataramanan. "Overall, if you see the situation, for the next two years, looks quite challenging from the Indian context."
Reflecting the poor economic climate, the earnings outlook of many mid-sized Indian infrastructure builders such as Jaiprakash Associates Ltd
ArcelorMittal SA
India has seen a slew of economic growth downgrades in the recent weeks due to the slow pace of reforms, high inflation and a record high current account deficit. Deutsche Bank last week cut its growth forecast for the year ending in March 2014 to 5 percent from 6 percent.
OVERSEAS BUSINESS
Net profit fell to 7.56 billion rupees from 8.64 billion a year earlier, said L&T, which builds roads and develops real estate. Analysts expected the company to post a profit of 9.5 billion rupees, according to Thomson Reuters data.
The company's order book grew 8 percent from a year earlier to 1.65 trillion rupees at the end of June. Its international order book increased 16 percent.
L&T said it was maintaining its earlier forecast of a gain of 15-17 percent in net sales for the current fiscal year and a rise of about a fifth in new orders, thanks to expansion in the Middle East and Africa.
In recent months, the company's overseas orders include a $350 million road project in Oman and a contract worth nearly $300 million from Saudi Aramco
"Internationally, the sentiment is good. The real issue for us is to gear up to be able to execute them well and maintain good margins," Venkataramanan said, adding that the overseas sales would cushion the impact of the slowdown in its Indian business.
(Additional reporting by Abhishek Vishnoi; Editing by Ryan Woo)