--India body imposes penalty on ACC, Ambuja, Ultratech,
Jaiprakash
--Penalties also on Lafarge unit, Madras Cements, India
Cements
--Antitrust body asks cement firms to pay fine within 90
days
(Adds comment from Ultratech Cement in 9th paragraph)
By Prasenjit Bhattacharya
NEW DELHI--India's antitrust body Thursday imposed a penalty of
a combined 60 billion rupees ($1.1 billion) on 11 cement companies
for price fixing, in the biggest fine during the regulator's
three-year-old existence.
The companies penalised by the Competition Commission of India
include ACC Ltd. (500410.BY), Ambuja Cements Ltd. (500425.BY),
UltraTech Cement Ltd. (532538.BY), Jaiprakash Associates Ltd.
(532532.BY), India Cements Ltd. (530005.BY), Madras Cements Ltd.
(500260.BY), and the local unit of France's Lafarge SA (LG.FR).
"The commission has found that the cement companies have not
utilised the available capacity so as to reduce supplies and raise
prices in times of higher demand," it said in its judgement.
It said the penalty on each company amounted to 50% of profit
for the financial years 2009-10 and 2010-11.
The commission started accepting cases in 2009, replacing a
relatively toothless antitrust body that had been in place since
1970, and has been becoming increasingly assertive. The biggest
penalty it had imposed so far was last year when it ordered DLF
Ltd., India's biggest property developer by sales, to pay $120
million for abusing its dominant market position by changing
agreements signed with some property buyers.
Thursday, the regulator said that the cement companies' action
of limiting supplies to the market through an "anti-competitive
agreement" was not only detrimental to consumers but also to the
economy, as the building material is a critical input for
infrastructure projects. The regulator asked the companies to pay
the fine within 90 days.
The judgement comes at a bad time for cement companies, as
demand for the construction material is weak due to sluggish
economic growth and a fall in spending on infrastructure projects.
The cost of raw materials such as coal is on the rise as well,
pressuring margins.
Also, the order isn't likely to result in any reduction in
product prices by manufacturers, said Sanjay Ladiwala, president of
the Cement Stockists & Dealers Association of Bombay.
Companies can challenge the regulator's orders in the
Competition Appellate Tribunal, a quasi-judicial body, and can then
appeal to India's Supreme Court.
UltraTech, India's largest cement producer by sales, said that
it hasn't indulged in any cartelisation and that it would appeal
against the order in the appellate tribunal.
Ambuja Cements spokesman Nandkumar Sanglekar said the company
hasn't got a copy of the order, which it would study before making
any comment.
Write to Prasenjit Bhattacharya at
prasenjit.bhattacharya@dowjones.com