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Rediff.com  » Business » Marginal player

Marginal player

November 20, 2007 13:28 IST
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Issue Opens: November 20, 2007
Issue Closes: November 23, 2007

Kaushalya Infrastructure has plenty to prove since it is yet to gain a critical mass.

Kaushalya Infrastructure Development (Kidco), a construction and engineering company focussed on eastern India plans to raise Rs 42-51 crore from the public by offering 85 million shares, a 43.4 per cent share of its fully-diluted equity capital.

The price band for the issue is fixed between Rs 50-60 a share. The company aims to garner a market capitalisation of about Rs 98-118 crore upon listing.

From the issue proceeds, Kidco will acquire construction and infrastructure equipment and make investments in its build-operate-transfer (BOT) and build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT) projects. It also plans to acquire land for real estate development.

Kidco operates in three verticals, which include construction and engineering, rural electrification and irrigation infrastructure, and residential and commercial real estate.

The company has carried out projects in West

Bengal, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh and Sikkim. Central and state governments, state public works departments and a few private entities have been its main clients.

At present, the company has 16 ongoing projects aggregating to an order book of Rs 144.8 crore, of which work worth Rs 76 crore is yet to be completed. These projects will be executed over a time-frame of 12-18 months.

The top three projects are of the size of Rs 25-30 crore, which appears small. Kidco owns 28.4 acres of land at Zaheerabad, Andhra Pradesh, and 4 acres in Rajarhat, a Kolkata suburb. It is in the process of acquiring another 8 acres in Rajarhat, which will be concluded with a part of the issue proceeds.

The company registered a top line of Rs 54 crore in FY07, with operating margins of about 8 per cent.

Going forward, the poor margins are unlikely to improve significantly, unless the ticket size and the nature of projects changes drastically, along with the company's clientele. Investors may want to wait for the company to gain some more ground, before betting on it.

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