1HP = 746 watts (.746kW)
AC or DC has nothing to do with that. The amps / volts go into the equation, but the kW remains the same. Mechanical "HP" is a short hand expression of torque and speed, so if your press needs 75HP mechanically, then how you get there is irrelevant, except as noted below.
What DOES make a difference is the efficiency of delivering that power from the utility source to the load. As DickDV said, there are differences in the total throughput efficiency (electrical line to mechanical load) between AC and DC, with the newest AC motors and drives having a slight edge over DC. Add to that the fact that there is less maintenance on the AC motors compared to DC and the overall operating and ownership cost is going to be lower for AC.
If you were starting from scratch however, the AC systems would likely cost you slightly more up front. But for you to make a reasonable ROI decision, you must weigh in the fact that you already have the DC system in place. So your change-out cost is going to be very high, even compared to upgrading your DC drives (if they are giving you trouble), so that must be weighed against the operating cost savings.
In the 3 systems I have worked on proposing a DC-to-AC change out all ended up having an ROI that exceeded what the bean counters considered acceptable (3+ years), even factoring in the DC motor maintenance. In one case they did it anyway because they had been told by an AC drive vendor that "there is no future for DC drives, in 5 years you won't be able to get them serviced". That was 15+ years ago...
"If I had eight hours to chop down a tree, I'd spend six sharpening my axe." -- Abraham Lincoln
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