Never miss a great news story!
Get instant notifications from Economic Times
AllowNot now


You can switch off notifications anytime using browser settings.

Portfolio

Loading...
Select Portfolio and Asset Combination for Display on Market Band
Select Portfolio
Select Asset Class
Show More
Download ET MARKETS APP

Get ET Markets in your own language

DOWNLOAD THE APP NOW

+91

CHOOSE LANGUAGE

ENG

  • ENG - English
  • HIN - हिन्दी
  • GUJ - ગુજરાતી
  • MAR - मराठी
  • BEN - বাংলা
  • KAN - ಕನ್ನಡ
  • ORI - ଓଡିଆ
  • TEL - తెలుగు
  • TAM - தமிழ்
Drag according to your convenience
ET NOW RADIO
ET NOW
TIMES NOW
GST

Poultry industry hopes demand will offset rising feed prices

, ET Bureau|
Updated: Nov 09, 2017, 11.45 AM IST
0Comments
The increase in feed prices was mainly on account of the goods and services tax levied on soya oil meal, a major feed ingredient, which was tax-free previously .
The increase in feed prices was mainly on account of the goods and services tax levied on soya oil meal, a major feed ingredient, which was tax-free previously .
Rising prices of poultry feed are likely to strain margin growth of India's poultry industry after a consistent improvement in operating profit margin for three financial years.

However, the industry hopes that increasing demand for poultry products in the wake of the beef ban will help offset the impact of rising feed prices. After a hiatus of a few years, many players are looking at capacity expansion to meet the growing demand for poultry products.

According to Ashish Modani, assistant vice-president at Icra, average operating margin for the poultry industry grew to 8.5% in 2016-17 from 4.5% in the previous fiscal. In 2012-13, it was 3.5%.

Analysts expect the EBITDA margin growth to remain flat this year mainly on account of firming up of feed prices.

Prices of soya oil meal and maize had declined to Rs 20-25 per kg and Rs 13.5-14 per kg in 2016-17 from Rs 32-34 and Rs 17-18 respectively in 2013-14. However, prices have started to firm up to Rs 26-27 per kg for soya meal and about Rs 15-16 per kg in the case of maize.

The increase in feed prices was mainly on account of the goods and services tax levied on soya oil meal, a major feed ingredient, which was tax-free previously .

“With the imposition of 5% GST on soya oil meal, we are seeing an increase of nearly Rs 400 per tonne in feed prices, which is 75% of the cost of the broiler chicken,“ said Subramani Kannan, CFO at Suguna Foods.

“As both broiler chicken and table eggs are not taxed, there is no input credit provided.Hence, it is causing some strain on our margin growth.“
0Comments

Also Read

Low feed prices take poultry industry’s profits to four year high

Avian flu hits poultry feed prices

Comments
Add Your Comments

Loading
Please wait...