ISLAMABAD - Fauji Fertilizer Co., Pakistan’s biggest maker of the farm input by market value, plans to set up a plant in Africa as domestic gas shortages undermine profits and prospects of increasing output at home.
The company has formed a consortium with foreign companies to invest at least $1.25 billion, Chief Executive Officer Naeem Khalid Lodhi, said in Rawalpindi yesterday in his first media interview quoted by Bloomberg. Fauji, which has yet to complete the selection of the site for the facility, plans to start building it in 18 to 24 months, Lodhi said.
Fauji is planning its first overseas venture as the company run by a group of retired army officers braces for its second annual drop in profit in three years in 2014. Pakistan’s gas shortfall has widened to more than 2 billion cubic feet of gas a day, shutting factories and resulting in protests in the nation of more than 196 million people.
“Fauji needs to identify projects to increase profitability,” Muhammad Asad, chief investment officer at Al Meezan Investment Management Ltd., which oversees over 58 billion rupees ($587 million) of Shariah-compliant assets, including Fauji Fertilizer, said by phone from Karachi. “Growth depends on whether they can make any concrete diversifications.”
The company’s net income is set to fall this year to its lowest in four years and may also decline in 2015 before stabilizing, Lodhi said. Net income fell 3 percent to 20.1 billion rupees in 2013. “In the long term, say eight to 10 years from now, unless there are new finds in gas, the fertilizer industry will be hit hard,” he said. Engro Corp. and Fatima Fertilizer Co. are also looking overseas and diversifying into other areas. Fatima participated in a global consortium to set up a nitrogen fertilizer plant in the US. Engro has expanded its food business to improve profit as gas supplies decline. Fauji’s shares rose 0.1 percent to 112.60 rupees on the Karachi Stock Exchange at 10:03 a.m. local time.
The stock has declined 2 percent in the past year, compared with a 30 percent gain in the benchmark KSE100 Index.
The company has invested in a plant that will begin commercial operations by early 2015 to freeze fruit and vegetables for local and overseas sales, said Lodhi, a retired army general, who has been CEO since March 2012
“It’s not a very large project to start but can become our main business in the future if we get more opportunities,” he said. The company first entered into the food business in 2013 when it acquired Lahore-based Al-Hamd Foods, a maker of frozen fruit. Fauji has so far invested 6 billion rupees in the food business.
Fauji Fertilizer may also invest $400 million in setting up a coal-fired electricity generating plant or expanding in wind power. The company set up Pakistan’s first wind power project in the southern Sindh province in 2013.