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Turnaround at Thermax
By N. N. Sachitanand
PUNE, SEPT. 9 The last few years have been turbulent for Thermax
Ltd., the Pune-based engineering company specialising in energy
and environment systems. Board level tussles, labour problems and
a general lull in capital investment in the country brought this
once premium engineering company almost to its knees.
Fortunately, some sound analysis by the Boston Consulting Group
and quick implementation of its recommendations has led to a
turnaround last year.
Despite a stagnant capital goods market, sales increased by 16
per cent to Rs. 473 crores and export income went up by 32 per
cent to Rs. 101 crores in 2000-01 while the operating loss was
brought down to Rs. 8 crores from Rs. 21 crores in 1999-2000. The
first quarter (April-June) of the current financial year shows a
continuation of the improved working with an increase of 14 per
cent in domestic sales and 38 per cent in export revenues,
compared to the first quarter of 2000-01. What is even more
encouraging is that the net loss in the first quarter this year
has come down to Rs. 1.65 crores from Rs. 7.59 crores in the same
period last year.
So, what has Thermax done to accomplish this reversal of
fortunes? In an interview with this correspondent at the
corporate headquarters in Pune, the Chairperson, Ms. Anu Aga,
emphasised four major steps: shedding of non-core activites,
rightsizing, reconstitution of the board and focus on cost
reduction.
The company exited most of the peripheral businesses such as
transmitters (a joint venture with Fuji Electric), electronic
components, software, bottled water (a joint venture with
Culligan), lease financing, fans, and the painting systems of the
surface coatings subsidiary. A buyer is now being scouted for the
industrial washing machines business. What Thermax is left with
now is its backbone businesses: boilers, chillers, cogeneration
and captive power systems, pollution control systems and special
chemicals.A major part of the restructuring exercise has been the
reconstituion of the board. As Ms. Aga explains it: ``Earlier we
had a preponderance of executive directors on the board. This led
to a conflict of interest and a tendency to push things under the
carpet when explanations were demanded for things going wrong. We
were advised by the Boston Consulting Group to reconstitute the
board with more non-executive directors who could lend a more
impartial look at company operations."
Accordingly, a new board has been formed with four external non-
executive directors - Mr. Tapan Mitra (ex-MD of Indal), Mr.
Vallabh Bhansali (director of ENAM Financial Consultants),
Mr.Manu Seth (ex-MD of Tata Chemicals) and Mr. Ravi Venkatesan
(Chairman of Cummins India), along with Meher and Pheroz Pudumjee
(daughter and son-in-law of Ms. Aga) and Ms. Aga herself as the
Chairperson. The only whole-time working director on the board is
Mr. Prakash Kulkarni, who is the Managing Director.
The operational aspects of the company are overseen by an
Executive Council led by the MD and manned by the chiefs of the
various divisions. This council ensures that the various
operating units work together, there is a corss-fertilisation of
ideas and practices as well as implementation of such things as a
common supply chain for the whole company.
The right sizing exercise involved a VRS that was offered to
white collar employees rendered surplus. Around 270 persons opted
for this scheme. Earlier, about 150 persons were sent out because
of non-performance. Along with those who went out with the
offloaded businesses, the total employee strength is now around
1,200 from the 2,000 before the restructuring exercise. Ms. Aga
hinted that the company is now exploring the possibility of
offering VRS to shopfloor workmen rendered surplus due to
streamlining and integration of operations.
The cost cutting exercises include detailed cost reviews,
improving operational efficiencies, global sourcing, reduction in
design to market cycle time, reduction in replacements and
improvement in project management so that fines for delays are
avoided. According to Ms. Aga, already 5 to 7 per cent reduction
in material costs has been achieved.
So, what are the prospects for this year? Ms. Aga refused to give
specific numbers for topline growth as the investment climate in
the country is still in the doldrums. There had been some
encouraging sparks such as a recent order worth Rs. 90 crores
from a cement company in Rajasthan for the supply of a 36 MW
cogeneration plant. There was tremendous interest among
industries for cogen and captive power plants, pointed out Ms Aga
, who is also the Chairperson of the CII Western Region. But
hostility of state-owned power utilities is depressing the
demand. The overseas subsidiaries of Thermax - ME Engineering,
U.K., and Thermax Inc., U.S., - have picked up some good orders,
though the gestation period is from 6 to 18 months.
However, Ms. Aga is more confident of a pickup in the
profitability of the company this year, thanks to the
restructuring exercise.
Thermax is also exploring some new business areas. For example,
it has entered into a tie-up with Cummins for supply of heat
recovery systems for their engines. Talks are on with Wartsila
for the same purpose.
Energy audit is another promising area. Thermax has a joint
venture with a U.S. company called Thermax Energy performance
Services which studies a customer's energy practices, makes a
plan for reduction of energy consumption, implements the scheme
and shares the resultant profits. The joint venture has already
landed seven contracts for such work from textile, glass, paper,
cigarrette and hotel companies in India and Sri Lanka. Thermax is
now contemplating a joint venture in Thailand for a similar
purpose.
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