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Capex at small private airports to rise up to 60% by FY28: Crisil
2025-05-12 00:00:00.0     商业标准报-经济和政策     原网页

       

       Capital expenditure (capex) of small private airports is expected to rise 50-60 per cent on an average over the next three years on the back of capacity expansion on account of substantial increase in terminal utilisation levels, ratings agency Crisil said on Monday.

       On the other hand, capex at large private airports will see a decline during the same period as much of the capacity expansion has been completed or is nearing completion, it said.

       However, the overall capex of private airports will slightly slow down by 10-15 per cent to about Rs 40,000 crore over the next three years, as per the ratings agency.

       Crisil said its analysis is based on the capex of 11 operating private airports and two soon-to-be-operational private airports, which together account for more than 95 per cent of India's private airport passenger traffic.

       For this study, small private airports were classified as those with capacity of less than 20 million passengers per annum and located in Ahmedabad, Guwahati, Jaipur, Trivandrum, Mangalore, Lucknow, and Goa while the large private airports are classified as those with more than 20 million passengers, or located in Delhi-NCR, Mumbai MMR(Mumbai Metropolitan Region), Bengaluru, and Hyderabad, said.

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       Capex at small private airports will be up 50-60 on average in during 2026-2028 compared with previous three fiscal years. This will be driven by capacity expansion due to substantial increase in terminal utilisation levels, Crisil said.

       On the other hand, capex at large private airports will see a decline during the same period as much of the capacity expansion has been completed or is nearing completion.

       "Small private airports are expected to embark on a significant expansion of up to 1.5 times of their current base by fiscal 2028. This is in response to escalating travel demand and moderate capacity on the ground," said Ankit Haku, Director at Crisil Ratings.

       Strong demand leading to recovery of air traffic movement has yielded a remarkable compound annual growth rate of about 45 per cent in passenger traffic at small private airports between FY22 and FY25.

       However, capacity growth at these airports has been relatively sluggish, with a modest CAGR of around 20 per cent over this period, resulting in terminal utilisation levels increasing from around 60-90 per cent and a need to build additional capacity, Haku added.

       In contrast, large private airports are expected to see a significant reduction in capacity addition following substantial expansion over the past three years, which has absorbed high traffic growth and kept terminal utilisation stable at 80-85 per cent, Crisil said.

       "While capex intensity for small private airports will rise to over 2 times, project risk will be manageable since these are expansions of existing sole airports in their respective cities. Further their sponsors' expertise in operating large private airports and their strong fund-raising capabilities also mitigates some of the risks," said Gauri Gupta, team leader at Crisil Ratings.

       Capex intensity is the ratio of capex-to-earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation.

       As for large airports, a slowing of capex will provide an opportunity to further sweat out of their capacities, with traffic growth rising to around 30 per cent CAGR over the last three fiscal years.

       Further, established regulatory tariff framework that provides a pass through of capex costs with reasonable returns remains conducive for the sector, Gupta added.

       (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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       Indian consumer inflation likely eased to a near six-year low in April after a further moderation of food price rises, keeping it below the Reserve Bank of India's 4 per cent medium-term target for a third straight month, a Reuters poll of economists found.

       Intense heatwaves this summer did little to affect a robust harvest, offering much-needed relief to many Indian households which allocate a significant portion of their budgets to food.

       Food prices account for nearly half of the consumer price basket.

       ALSO READ: Retail inflation slid further to 3% in Apr; easing room for RBI rate cut

       The May 5-8 Reuters poll of 43 economists suggested inflation, as measured by the annual change in the consumer price index (CPI), fell to 3.27 per cent in April from 3.34 per cent in March.

       Forecasts for the inflation data ranged between 2.8 per cent to 4.0 per cent. Due to a government holiday on Monday, it announced that April's CPI data would be released on Tuesday at 1030 GMT.

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       Survey medians suggested prices rose at the slowest pace since mid-2019 last month.

       "The slight decline we will see is because food inflation continues to ease on a month-on-month basis. Vegetable prices, pulses, cereals ... even fruits declined," Gaura Sengupta, chief economist at IDFC First Bank, said.

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       "The fact is we are in April, and you're entering the summer months. The expectation is seasonally you should see a pick-up in vegetable prices, but for now we're not seeing that."

       A separate Reuters poll conducted last month suggested inflation would average 4.0 per cent this fiscal year, in line with the RBI's projection.

       Meanwhile, the price of gold - a prized commodity in India - rose around 5.0 per cent in April as investors sought a safe haven from global trade tensions, offsetting the sharp slowdown in headline inflation observed over the past few months.

       With inflation predicted to stay subdued, the RBI has more room to cut interest rates to support a slowing economy.

       Early predictions of above-average monsoon rains this year have raised expectations of stronger agricultural output and higher rural demand in a largely agriculture-dependent economy.

       Core inflation, which excludes volatile items such as food and energy and is a better gauge of domestic demand, was expected to have moderated to 4.0 per cent year-on-year in April, down from the 4.1 per cent estimated by economists in a April survey, the latest poll found.

       ALSO READ: RBI launches 3 surveys for inflation, consumer confidence, policy input

       The Indian statistics agency does not publish core inflation data.

       Wholesale price index-based inflation is expected to have eased to 1.76 per cent last month, down from 2.05 per cent in March, the survey also showed.

       (Reporting by Pranoy Krishna; Polling by Susobhan Sarkar, Rahul Trivedi and Vijayalakshmi Srinivasan; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Rachna Uppal)

       (Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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标签:经济
关键词: capex     inflation     capacity expansion     small private airports     ratings agency Crisil     India    
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