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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    13 Aug 2022
    The Big Fight: Contest between ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank | 11 profitable stocks outperforming the Nifty500

    The Big Fight: Contest between ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank | 11 profitable stocks outperforming the Nifty500

    By Deeksha Janiani

    India turns 75 on Monday. Our generation has been especially lucky, living in a free country and post 1991 liberalization. This week in Analyticks, we do a special face-off between India's top two private banks, who have been pivotal in fuelling the nation's financial growth since 1991. 

    • ICICI Bank has gained on HDFC Bank since FY20. Can the leader get back its momentum?
    • Screener:  11 profitable stocks that are outperforming the Nifty 500 index

    Let’s get into it.


    ICICI Bank has outperformed HDFC Bank in the last two years

    The pandemic caused a tectonic shift in the banking space, especially with customer behavior. A typical savings account holder downloaded the banking app, rather than risk a visit to a crowded bank. For many customers, this was the first time they were doing this.

    In the process, they discovered convenience: no searching for their passbook, or waiting in queues, or trying to talk through bulletproof glass to a bank teller. Best of all, their applications got processed much faster.  

    Banking customers now increasingly prefer a digital app to meet their regular banking needs, rather than making a branch visit. With this big shift, the growth trajectory of the top two private banks changed. 

    ICICI Bank lagged HDFC Bank in terms of topline and bottomline growth between FY16 and FY20. This was owing to the turbulent years of 2016-2018, when the former was caught in a cobweb of rising non-performing loans and misgovernance. Meanwhile, HDFC Bank was like the Rahul Dravid of this space, thanks to its growth consistency during the period.

    Cut to the present, and ICICI Bank has found its inner Tendulkar. It has overtaken HDFC Bank in terms of growth pace in the last 8-9 quarters. 

    ICICI Bank jumps post-Covid

    ICICI Bank’s net interest income (NII) grew at a compounded quarterly growth rate of 4.5% between Q1FY21 and Q1FY23. This was driven by the growth in retail advances as well as SME and business banking loans. 

    While the bank’s advances in these segments witnessed 20%+ growth CAGR in this period, other segments were also not far behind. Basically, ICICI Bank’s strategy of ‘One Bank, One ROE’ which focuses on tapping growth opportunities across products worked well in these two years. 

    HDFC Bank’s NII growth lagged that of ICICI Bank between Q1FY21 and Q1FY23. This was owing to the slow rise in its retail advances. Sluggishness in auto and credit cards loans hurt growth in retail.

    RBI had also barred HDFC Bank from fresh issues of credit cards and new digital initiatives between December 2020 and March 2022. This hit customer acquisition for the bank - and the news headlines covering the RBI ban didn’t help. It was a virtual advertisement to banking customers to go to the competition.

    If we compare the NII growth of the top five private banks, ICICI Bank and Axis Bank stand out in terms of sequential and YoY growth in Q1FY23. HDFC Bank’s NII grew the slowest among other private banks. 

    A higher share of retail loans, especially mortgages also led to a steady improvement in ICICI Bank’s net interest margins in the past nine quarters. 

    If we look at ICICI Bank's loan portfolio, mortgages as well as the SME and business banking segments stand out. The bank’s cross-selling initiatives and its digital offering InstaBIZ aided the growth in SME and business banking loans. Infact, the InstaBIZ application saw an over 55% YoY rise in the value of transactions processed through it in Q1FY23 as the bank made this platform interoperable. 

    HDFC Bank sees weaker growth, but has the lowest NPAs

    For HDFC Bank, the rural banking and commercial segment grew in prominence between Q1FY21 and Q1FY23. Meanwhile, the corporate segment share reduced in its portfolio, as India Inc made its balance sheet leaner during this period. According to the management, HDFC Bank also lost Rs 40,000 - 50,000 crore worth of corporate business in Q1FY23 by deciding not to lend at lower interest rates.

    HDFC bank continues to be the clear winner in terms of its asset quality. The bank had the lowest net non-performing asset ratio both in Q1FY21 and in Q1FY23, among others. A lower proportion of riskier retail loans definitely helped the bank here. 

    Game on: HDFC Bank is investing in digital, ICICI Bank to benefit from rate hikes

    HDFC Bank now has some serious catching up to do. Its first point of action is to increase the share of high-margin retail advances to 55% from its current 40%. When it does merge with HDFC, mortgage loans will automatically occupy a higher portion in the loans pie, helping the bank achieve its target loan mix. 

    A lot is happening in Q2FY23 under the bank's new CEO Sashi Jagdishan. HDFC Bank is launching ‘PayZapp 2.0’, an advanced version of its payment app, which will enable the bank to tap the retail customer base. It launched the ‘Xpress Car Loans’ app in April 2022 to improve the digital experience for customers seeking auto finance. Jagdishan hopes to transform it into a Neo bank or a virtual bank backed by such products. 

    HDFC Bank is also deepening its rural footprint and expanding its network coverage to two lakh villages, from one lakh currently. It sees potential in this region as banking penetration remains low at 20-25%. On an overall level, the bank is looking to double its network by adding 1,500-2,000 branches every year from FY23 till FY28.

    ICICI Bank, which is already riding high on growth, will see a positive change in its NIMs with RBI hiking repo rates by 140 bps from May 2022. Nearly 70% of its loans are linked to external benchmarks and its credit costs remain benign. ICICI Bank is also seeing good credit demand in the retail segment, but sounded some caution for quarters ahead given the interest rate rise. 

    All in all, the dynamics within the sector may change again in next 3-5 years as HDFC Bank works to reclaim its top spot in terms of growth. It has an ambitious target of doubling its balance sheet size on a merged basis in this period. The Rahul Dravid of the banking space is firmly set on the pitch after some yorkers, and is now hoping for a successful innings.  


    Screener:Stocks with positive profit growth, outperforming the Nifty 500 index

    As most of the results for Q1FY23 are out, we take a look at companies whose net profits consistently grew in the past four quarters, have low debt and outperformed theNifty 500 index in the past month.

    This screener reflects 11 Nifty 500 stocks that qualify. Notable ones among these are Hindalco Industries, Tata Elxsi, Schaeffler India, L&T Technology Services and IDFC First Bank.

    IDFC First Bank clocked a net profit of Rs 485 crore in Q1FY23 as against a loss in Q1FY22 on lower provisions and higher NII. This banking stock outperformed the index by over 24 percentage points in past month. 

    Hindalco Industries comes in next with a 2X rise in its net profits in Q1FY23, led by healthy sales realizations. It recorded consistent net profit growth in the past four quarters and outperformed the Nifty 500 by over 14 percentage points. 

    Meanwhile, Tata Elxsi’s net profit grew by over 60% YoY in Q1FY23 on robust demand from foreign automotive OEMs. Despite its pricey valuations, the stock has outperformed the index by 10 percentage points in past month. 

    You can find some popular screeners here.

    Signing off this week,

    The Trendlyne Team

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    The Baseline
    12 Aug 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. IRB Infrastructure Developers: This road construction company’s stock rose 6.6% on Monday after announcing its Q1FY23 results. Its net profit jumped more than 5X YoY to Rs 363.2 crore and revenue rose 18.4% YoY. Higher traffic volume and a tariff hike of 10% led to robust growth in toll collections, which aided profit growth. However, the company’s profit was mainly boosted by an arbitration award of Rs 419 crore it received from the National Highways Authority of India. It received 75% (Rs 308 crore) of the compensation but recognised the entire amount as revenue in Q1FY23. This helped the company beat Trendlyne Forecaster’s revenue and profit estimates by 22% and 107.7%, respectively. According to the management, the arbitration award had a net impact of Rs 270 crore on the net profit. The boost in revenue by the arbitration award, and the resultant surge in profit, also helped the company to make it into this screener that lists companies with sequentially rising profits for the past three quarters.

    The board of directors approved the transfer of the Vadodara Kim expressway project to the IRB InvIT Fund (trust) for a consideration of Rs 342 crore. This transaction will reduce IRB Infra’s debt by Rs 955 crore. Even though there was no new order wins the management sees healthy revenue visibility for the next three financial years.

    1. Hindustan Aeronautics (HAL): This aerospace company’s stock rose 8.1% and touched its 52-week high on Monday. This comes on the back of a strong business outlook given recent deal wins, according to reports. The stock is up 29.7% over the past month. The stock reacted positively to reports suggesting that the company is working on the development of AI-driven advanced multi-role drones for use in high-altitude areas. The company plans to conduct flying tests in the middle of next year and produce 60 drones in the first phase of the project. In July, the company also signed a contract worth $100 million with Honeywell for the supply and manufacture of 88 engines for the Hindustan Trainer Aircraft. The company shows up on a screener with improving cash flows and a good durability score.

    According to the company’s annual report, its order book stood at Rs 82,000 crore at the end of FY22. The management expects a rise in orders as the Centre’s defence budget increased by 9.8% YoY for FY23. The company also plans to foray into civil aviation for both manufacturing and maintenance, repair, and overhaul, or (MRO) opportunities going forward.

    1. Zensar Technologies: This IT services company’s stock fell 7.3% on Monday and hit a 52-week low post its Q1FY23 results. This is despite Zensar Technologies’ revenue rising sequentially for the past five quarters till Q1FY23. Investors were left disappointed due to the 300 bps QoQ fall in its EBITDA margin to 11.2%, in addition to the 43% QoQ fall in net profit fall in Q1. An increase in the cost of delivery, and lower utilisation hurt the company’s EBITDA margin even without wage hikes in Q1. Add to this the 28% attrition (up 20 bps QoQ), and its clearer why investors might be fretting.

    With all these factors at play, the management’s original guidance to reach an EBITDA margin in the mid-teens in FY23 was pushed forward to Q2FY24. This probably led to the sharp sell-off on Monday. This stock features in a screener that lists stocks that are near the oversold zone according to the relative strength index, or RSI.

    However, brokerages like HDFC Securities and ICICI Securities maintain a positive outlook on the company on the back of strong revenue growth across all verticals. While HDFC Securities’ target price indicates a 36% upside, ICICI Securities’ indicates an upside of about 20%. However, the macroeconomic slowdown in the US (71% of total revenue) may lead to slow top-line growth.

    1. Delhivery: This logistics company’s stock was trading up from June 27 - July 24 until it started falling and slumped 6.6% on Wednesday after it reported a widening in its net loss to Rs 399 crore in Q1FY23 compared to Rs 129.5 crore in Q1FY22. The stock has seen choppy waters since it listed on May 24, falling 2% on listing day. But this coincided with weakness in the broader market as foreign investors were selling Indian shares, which brought the Nifty 50 to 16,000 levels.

    After that, the stock rose in June and July, till the company announced its Q1FY23 results. The management attributed the widening loss to integration issues with Spoton (which it acquired in August 2021). The third phase of integration took longer than expected. Going forward, the management says the company is well-capitalized to carry out its expansion plans. But analysts aren’t enthused as ICICI Securities downgraded the stock to a ‘Sell’ from ‘Hold’. It believes that Delhivery will not be able to 'deliver' in the cross-border freight and parcel industry anytime soon, given the competition from Chinese players.

    1. JSW Energy: This power company’s stock rose 3% on Wednesday after it announced that its renewable energy arm, JSW Neo Energy, will buy Mytrah Energy’s 1.75 GW renewable portfolio. JSW Neo will pay Rs 10,531 crore to buy these solar and wind power assets. This sent JSW Energy’s stock higher by 3% on Wednesday, but the stock gave up some of these gains on Thursday.

    This acquisition will help JSW Neo Energy to achieve its goal to have a power generation capacity of 10 GW by 2025, up from 4.8 GW currently. Moreover, once the company completes its under-construction project of 2.5 GW by June 2023, 65% of its generation capacity will be renewable power.

    Mytrah Energy was on the lookout for buyers for its renewable assets since 2021 due to working capital concerns. In fact, around 205 MW of its capacity is not in operation due to pending dues from power distribution companies in Telangana and Andhra Pradesh. JSW Energy will also take over a considerable portion of debt of this company i.e., Rs 9,132 crore. Its net debt rose 11% QoQ to Rs 7,720 crore in Q1FY23. Moreover, management is most likely to fund a large part of the deal value through debt, according to reports. Hence, its net debt-to-EBITDA ratio is set to rise to 4X from 1.75X currently, after the acquisition is completed. Understandably, the market is on a wait and watch mode on this highly leveraged deal.

    Trendlyne's analysts identify stocks that are seeing interesting price movement, analyst calls, or new developments. These are not buy recommendations.

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    The Baseline
    11 Aug 2022
    Which stocks did superstar investors sell in Q1FY23?

    Which stocks did superstar investors sell in Q1FY23?

    By Suhas Reddy

    The buys and sells of Superstar investors are closely watched by the market, providing us insights into which industries and sectors they are bearish or bullish on.

    Earlier, we took a look at which stocks superstars bought in Q1FY23.

    Now we dig deeper into the stocks ace investors (or Superstars) like Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Ashish Kacholia, Sunil Singhania, and Dolly Khanna sold in Q1FY23.

    Rakesh Jhunjhunwala takes his stake below 1% in five companies

    Rakesh Jhunjhunwala sold most of his shares in Delta Corp, with his stake falling below 1% at the end of Q1FY23 (vs at the end of Q4FY22.) Investors were left wondering why this happened considering the company's net profit grew nearly 4X YoY to Rs 57.1 crore in Q1FY23. The company’s stock price plummeted nearly 42% from April 1 till August 8.

    Jhunjhunwala also cut his stake below 1% in Indiabulls Real Estate, National Aluminium Co, and TV18 Broadcast from 1.1%, 1.4%, and 1.2%, respectively.

    The big bull sold a 0.2% stake in NCC, bringing his stake in the company down to 12.6%. He also reduced his stake in Tata Motors, Nazara Technologies, DB Realty, Autoline Industries, and Indiabulls Housing Finance by 0.1% to 1.1%, 10%, 1.9%, 4.5% and 1.2%, respectively. He sold minor stakes in Federal Bank, and Geojit Financial Services.

    Sunil Singhania cuts stake in  Saregama

    Sunil Singhania’s Abakkus Fund sold a 0.3% stake in Saregama India in Q1FY23, bringing the fund’s holding in the stock down to 1.1%. He has been selling small stakes in the company in each quarter since Q1FY22. The investor also sold 0.1% of Abakkus’ stake in ADF Foods during Q1 and now holds 1.5%  in the company.

    Ashish Kacholia sells part of his stake in Igarashi Motors

    Ashish Kacholia cut his stake in auto part maker Igarashi Motors India, and now holds below 1% stake in the company. He held a 1.3% stake in Igarashi at the end of Q4FY22. The stock fell by 22.4% to Rs 278.2 during the quarter.

    His largest stake sale in Q1FY23 was Mold-Tek Packaging where he pared his stake by 1.2% QoQ to 1.9%. He also sold a 0.8% stake in Vishnu Chemicals and now holds a 3.4% stake in the company. 

    Kacholia also sold a 0.2% stake in Mastek, a 0.1% stake in ADF Foods, and a 0.1% stake in Kwality Pharmaceuticals during the quarter. He now holds a 1.8% stake in Mastek, a 1.0% stake in ADF Foods, and a 1.9% stake in Kwality Pharmaceuticals. He also reduced part of his stake in Acrysil during the quarter.

    Dolly Khanna reduces her stakes in cyclical stocks

    Dolly Khanna went on a selling spree in Q1FY23 as she reduced her stake in all the fertiliser, agrochemical, and cement companies in her portfolio. Among six newly bought stocks in Q4FY22, she reduced her stake in five of them in Q1FY23. Among these five companies, she reduced her stake in Goa Carbons by 0.3% to 1.1% and inSharda Cropchem by 0.2% to 1.2%.

    Khanna’s stakes in Nahar Spinning Mills, Sandur Manganese & Iron Ores, Butterfly Gandhimathi Appliances, Rain Industries, Indo Tech Transformers, and Khaitan Chemicals & Fertilizers are now below 1%.

    The ace investor sold her stakes in fertiliser makers Rama Phosphates (sold a 0.3% stake) and Mangalore Chemical & Fertilizers (sold a 0.2% stake). Khanna also reduced her stake in agrochemical firm Aries Agro (sold a 0.1% stake) and textile companies Nitin Spinners and RSWM (sold 0.2% stake in each.)

    She sold minor stakes in Polyplex Corp, New Delhi Television, Simran Farms, KCP, NCL Industries, Deepak Spinners, Control Print and Talbros Automotive Components.

    Vijay Kedia cuts in Tejas Networks and Ramco Systems

    Vijay Kedia sold a 0.8% stake in Tejas Networks during Q1FY23 and now holds a 2.6% stake in the company. The company is a broadband and data networking service provider to telecom and internet service providers. Tejas Network hit an all-time high of Rs 570.9 on April 8, after which it fell to Rs 385.1 on May 12. But since then the stock is on a rising trend.

    Kedia also sold a 0.4% stake in Ramco Systems and now holds 2% in the company.

    Porinju V Veliyath sells stakes in small-cap companies

    Porinju V Veliyath pared his stake in Swelect Energy Systems in Q1FY23 and now holds below 1% compared to 1.1% at the end of Q4FY22. This heavy electrical equipment manufacturer’s stock fell in the recent period, declining 7.7% from April 1 till August 8. Veliyath also sold a minor stake in Orient Bell, a ceramic tiles manufacturer.

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    The Baseline
    10 Aug 2022
    Chart of the week: Maruti Suzuki’s limited SUV lineup causes market share loss

    Chart of the week: Maruti Suzuki’s limited SUV lineup causes market share loss

    By Abdullah Shah

    Consumer tastes can change quickly in the auto industry. And the gain in popularity of SUVs  over the last two years has left India’s market leader Maruti Suzuki flat-footed, and on the defensive. 

    The July retail sales data, released by the Federation of Automobile Dealers Associations (FADA) shows Maruti Suzuki’s stranglehold on the Indian car market waning as a result of this shift.

    Maruti Suzuki’s retail market share fell 11 percentage points to 39.2% over the past two years (till end July 2022). Its retail sales fell below 1 lakh units in July 2022 for the first time in ten months. 

    The two companies that have gained at Maruti Suzuki’s expense are South Korean carmaker Hyundai Motor India, and Tata Motors. Both these companies are vying for the second spot in the Indian car market., Tata Motors and Hyundai were neck-to-neck at second place in retail market share in June this year, but the South Korean carmaker pulled ahead of Tata Motors in July to take the second position.

    The preference towards sports utility vehicles is helping Tata Motors, Hyundai, Mahindra & Mahindra and Kia Motors grab market share from Maruti Suzuki.

    Maruti is still India’s largest car maker, but it’s playing catch-up in the SUV market. Its new launches in the SUV space however, are making waves with record bookings. Investors will be watching to see if its new products help it claw back the customers it lost over the past two years.

    COTW-10082022

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    The Baseline
    08 Aug 2022
    Which stocks did superstar investors buy in Q1FY23?

    Which stocks did superstar investors buy in Q1FY23?

    By Abhiraj Panchal

    Investors take a keen interest in the stocks that superstar investors like Big Bull Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Sunil Singhania, Ashish Kacholia, Dolly Khanna and others are buying. We take a look at which stocks some of these Superstars bought during Q1FY23.

    As the market took a bearish turn in Q1FY23, Rakesh Jhunjhunwala, Sunil Singhania, Ashish Kacholia, and Porinju Veliyath’s net worth also fell as a result. They still made new bets and doubled down on some older ones. However, Radhakishan Damani did not make any new additions to his portfolio during the quarter. 

    Rakesh Jhunjhunwala buys Escorts Kubota in Q1FY23, after cutting his stake in Q4FY22

    Rakesh Jhunjhunwala’s net worth in Q1FY23 fell 24.7% QoQ to Rs 25,425.9 crore. He did a U-turn on Escorts Kubota – he  bought a 1.4% stake in the company in Q1FY23, after he had cut his stake to below 1% in Q4FY22.  Before that cut, he had a 5.2% stake in the auto company in Q3FY22. 

    While the auto sector is in recovery, Escorts Kubota is still struggling with costs - the company’s net profit declined 26.3% QoQ in Q1FY23 due to a steep rise in commodity prices. During Q3FY22 the stock rose by 22.9% but fell 11.1% in Q4FY22. It looks like the big bull bought the stock when it was trading at lower levels in Q1FY23. From April 1 till August 8 the stock has fallen 3%.  

    Sunil Singhania’s Abakkus Fund adds five new stocks in Q1FY23

    Sunil Singhania’s Abakkus Fund saw its consolidated net worth fall 28.5% QoQ in Q1FY23 to Rs 1,613.3 crore. During the quarter, the Abakkus Fund purchased new stakes in multiple companies - a 2.7% stake in J Kumar Infraprojects, a 1.9% stake in Stylam Industries, a 1.3% stake in Paras Defence and Space Technologies, a 1.1% stake in CMS Info Systems, and a 1.3% stake in Ethos. 

    The fund also added stakes in small-cap companies like HIL, Ion Exchange (India), Technocraft Industries (India), Sarda Energy & Minerals, Siyaram Silk Mills, IIFL Securities, and HG Infra Engineering during the quarter.

    The Abakkus Fund also bought additional stakes in existing holdings, like a 1.2% stake in Hindware Home Innovation (now holds 4.8%) and a 0.9% stake in Rupa & Company (now holds 4.1%).  

    Ashish Kacholia was the most active Superstar buying stocks in Q1FY23

    Ashish Kacholia’s net worth fell 21.6% QoQ to Rs 1,536.3 crore in Q1FY23. Kacholia bought a fresh 4.2% stake in micro-cap company Inflame Appliances. The company makes kitchen appliances like gas stoves, cooker hoods, and cooking ranges. Kacholia also bought a new 3.6% stake in another micro-cap firm – Repro India. He added the restaurant chain Barbeque-Nation Hospitality to his portfolio with a 1.1% stake during Q1. He increased his stake in another houseware company La Opala RG by 0.4%, bringing his stake to 1.4%. 

    The marquee investor also added a 0.5% stake in Gravita India and a 0.4% stake in Faze Three, and he now holds total stakes of 1.8% and 5% in these companies respectively. In Xpro India, Kacholia increased his stake for four consecutive quarters since Q2FY22 and now holds a 3.9% stake. The other companies where he increased stakes are United Drilling Tools, Fineotex Chemical, Yasho Industries and Genesys International Corporation.

    A Vijay Kedia pick more than doubles since the start of Q1FY23

    Vijay Kedia’s net worth rose 13.8% QoQ to Rs 493.9 crore. He added a 0.7% stake in industrial machinery producer Elecon Engineering Company. He now holds a 1.9% stake in the company. The stock rose by nearly 125.7% since April 1, 2022. Kedia also added a 0.1% stake in Vaibhav Global, an online retailer that manufactures fashion jewellery and lifestyle accessories. 

    Dolly Khanna adds six small-cap companies to her portfolio in Q1

    Dolly Khanna’s net worth rose 30% to Rs 511.8 crore in Q1FY23. She bought a fresh 3.3% stake in Chennai Petroleum Corp, which has gained 103% since the beginning of Q1FY23 till August 8. She purchased a 1.8% stake in Monte Carlo Fashions, a branded apparel company. Her stake in Monte Carlo fell below 1% in Q4FY22. 

    Khanna also bought a 1.2% stake in Zuari Industries and Suryoday Small Finance Bank and a 1.1% stake in both National Oxygen and Manali Petrochemicals. She increased her stake in Pondy Oxides & Chemicals by 0.3% to 3.9% during Q1FY23. She also bought minor stakes in Tinna Rubber & Infrastructure, Ajanta Soya, and Prakash Pipes.

    Porinju V Veliyath adds two micro-cap companies to his portfolio in Q1FY23

    Porinju V Veliyath bought a 1.3% stake in the agrochemical maker TCM. The company’s stock rose 43.5% from the beginning of Q1FY23 till August 8. The other purchase he made in Q1 was a 0.6% stake in micro cap real estate technology company Aurum Proptech. He now holds a 1.7% stake in the company.

    Mohnish Pabrai ups his stake in a petrochemical maker

    Mohnish Pabrai’s net worth fell 7.4% QoQ to Rs 1,185.6 crore in Q1FY23. He raised his stake in Rain Industries by 0.5% to 8.4%. Otherwise, there were no major changes to his portfolio in Q1FY23. Rain Industries’ stock is down 4.7% since the beginning of Q1FY23 till August 8.

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    The Baseline
    05 Aug 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Dr. Lal Pathlabs: This diagnostic company’s stock rose close to 11% in the past week till Thursday despite its weak Q1FY23 results. Both revenue and net profit fell YoY in Q1FY23 mainly due to a high base in Q1FY22 as the company benefited from Covid testing revenues. As a result, it features in this screener which lists companies that posted a YoY fall in quarterly revenue and net profit.

    Revenue fell 17.1% YoY to Rs 502.7 crore in the June quarter while the net profit declined by 56%. However, what cheered investors could be the 25% YoY growth in non-Covid revenue and the bounce back of preventive tests, which contributed to 21% of the total sales. Managing Director Om Manchanda said that the bundling of tests, especially in the preventive segment, led to a higher number of tests per patient (2.6 tests per patient). He further added that bundling may lead to lower revenue per test, but the realization per patient rises with the increase in number of tests per patient.

    The diagnostic labs space has intense competition with companies across different industries entering the segment. Due to this, a rise in marketing and IT costs led to a 7.8 percentage point YoY fall in EBITDA margin to 23.4% in Q1FY23. Although the management expects the EBITDA margin to go lower in the short term, it expects it to revert back to its pre-Covid level of 25% in FY23.           

    1. Escorts Kubota: This tractor maker’s stock fell nearly 6% on Monday due to its disappointing Q1FY23 results and July wholesales. Its Q1 net profit fell over 20% YoY despite its revenue rising.

    Escorts Kubota’s Q1FY23 profit fell due to a four percentage point contraction in its EBITDA margin to 10%. Its market share in the tractors space also declined by over 2% sequentially led by its mainstay markets like Uttar Pradesh and Bihar. In its recent earnings call, the company’s management said the loss of market share was mainly among price sensitive buyers. Escorts hiked prices by 12-13% in the last 18 months and it looks like this led to customers switching to lower end brands. This is probably visible in Escorts Kubota’s July tractor wholesales number falling to 18%. Then there is the uneven distribution of India’s monsoon that may play spoilsport for tractor makers. Although Escorts' management believes that the southwest monsoon will soon catch up, it expects the tractor industry’s growth at just 3-5% YoY in FY23, down from its earlier forecast of 6-8%.

    1. IDBI Bank: This bank’s stock was one of the top gainers on Wednesday as it surged 13% and was trading 3.5X its weekly average trading volumes. It also outperformed the Nifty 500 by 24.4% over the past. The bank’s net profit rose 25% YoY to Rs 756.4 crore because of a fall in provisions while its net interest income fell marginally during the quarter.

    The bank’s gross and net NPA ratios in Q1FY23 were 19.9% and 1.2%, respectively, compared to a gross NPA of 22.7% and a net NPA of 1.6% in Q1FY22. The management is positive about the asset quality of the bank and expects NPAs to further decrease. It expects recoveries from insolvency and bankruptcy processes to be close to Rs 4,000 crore in FY23.

    There is also the impending stake sale by the Centre in the bank. This has been on the table for a while, and the Centre hopes to conclude the stake sale by FY23. Both Life Insurance Corporation of India and the Centre will sell their stakes as part of the planned strategic stake sale . But any new majority owner in the bank will have to contend with the Reserve Bank of India’s rule that a bank’s promoter must bring down their stake to 26% over a period of time.

    1. Godrej Properties: This real estate developer’s stock had a topsy-turvy week. After the company announced land acquisition in Mumbai on Monday the stock started trading higher. And then came its stellar Q1FY23 results on Tuesday. But the market wasn’t enthused and the company’s stock fell 7% over the next three days.

    The company performed well, with a surge in net profit by 2.5X YoY to Rs 140.5 crore, but investors were more focused on another event. The Managing Director and CEO Mohit Malhotra resigned and will leave the company on December 31. The management assured investors that the change in leadership will not hamper business development and that there will be a smooth transition. The management also increased the sales guidance for FY23 to Rs 10,000 crore and declared that the company’s sales may grow 20%. But the stock’s reaction shows investors are still concerned about the change of guard at the top.

    1. Lemon Tree Hotels: This hotel company is in the black after nine consecutive quarters of losses, yet it fell by 3.5% after its Q1FY23 results were announced on Wednesday. The company’s revenue grew more than 4.5X YoY to Rs 192 crore, driven by robust demand from corporate travellers. It posted a net profit of Rs 13.9 crore compared to a loss of Rs 40.1 crore in Q1FY22, despite increasing input costs. It beat Trendlyne Forecaster’s revenue and profit estimates by 14.8% and 51.1%, respectively.

    The rise in demand for travel led to the company’s average room rate (ARR) rising to Rs 4,822 in Q1FY23 which was higher than its ARR in the pre-Covid quarter of Q1FY20.  Its EBITDA margin rose by 16 percentage points to 48% compared to 32% in Q1FY20 (pre-Covid). The management said that cost optimization measures led to its margins beating pre-Covid margins. However, the company’s occupancy rate of 65.1% in Q1FY23 was lower than its peers like EIH and Chalet Hotels which had occupancy rates of 72% and 78%, respectively.

    As social restrictions began to ease around Q3FY22, demand for travel started to pick up. Since then, the promoters’ pledged shares are down by half since Q3FY22 to 14.7% at the end of Q1FY23. This coincided with Lemon Tree’s stock rising 42.2% over the past seven months.

    The management expects the leisure travel and corporate travel segments to continue to gain traction in FY23. They believe customer preference is shifting toward branded hotels, which should bode well for the company.

    Trendlyne's analysts identify stocks that are seeing interesting price movement, analyst calls, or new developments. These are not buy recommendations.

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    The Baseline
    03 Aug 2022
    Chart of the week: European customers are paying much more for petrol, compared to India

    Chart of the week: European customers are paying much more for petrol, compared to India

    By Abdullah Shah

    With energy demand rising  to pre-covid levels since March 2022, and the Ukraine-Russia war leading to sanctions on Russian crude oil exports, motor fuel prices are going through the roof.

    Although pump prices in India are elevated with the average price of petrol hovering over Rs 100, Indians aren’t really the worst affected. European countries are worse off - the United Kingdom’s pump prices for petrol (in rupee terms) are among the highest in the world at Rs 178.9/litre, as of July 25. 

    The UK’s high pump prices are also a function of the shortage in fuel supply due to environmentalist groups blocking supply of fuel, which resulted in long queues at petrol pumps. This was compounded by the recent depreciation of the pound sterling against the US dollar.

    Petrol prices in France and Germany are the second and third highest with petrol prices at Rs 150.8/litre and Rs 141.3/litre, respectively. In rupee terms, India, China and Japan’s petrol prices are lower than European countries. 

    China has a marginally higher pump price at Rs 111/litre as compared to India’s average of Rs 104/litre. Japan’s petrol price is lower than India's at Rs 96.8/litre.

    With many Indian states and the Centre cutting sales and excise taxes on motor fuel, Indian petrol prices have been lower than global averages.. India’s fuel prices haven’t changed since April 7. 

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    The Baseline
    01 Aug 2022
    Five analyst stock picks with revenue and profit growth in Q1FY23

    Five analyst stock picks with revenue and profit growth in Q1FY23

    As results come in for Q1, we look at companies that have analysts bullish on their prospects, and have delivered over 10% revenue and net profit growth YoY this quarter. 

    1. Larsen & Toubro: HDFC Securities maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this construction and engineering company, but reduces the target price to Rs 2,135 from Rs 2,296. This indicates an upside of 17.9%. In Q1FY23, the company’s net profit rose 44.9% YoY to Rs 1,702.1 crore and revenue increased 18.2% YoY to Rs 35,853.2 crore.

    The company beat the brokerage’s Q1 revenue and profit estimates by 1% and 1.1%, respectively. Analysts Parikshit D Kandpal, Nikhil Kanodia, and Manoj Rawat remain positive on the company’s prospects given “its record high order book of Rs 3.6 lakh crore.” They also see its plans to cut its stake in the Hyderabad metro project and revival in private capex as key positives. 

    The analysts reduced their target price on account of Mindtree’s proposed merger with Larsen & Toubro Infotech, both subsidiaries of the company. Orders from India constitute 72% of the order book and 73% of all the orders are infrastructure projects, at the end of June 2022. The analysts anticipate the company’s revenue to grow at a CAGR of 13.2% over FY22-24.

    1. Coforge: Chola Wealth Direct maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this IT consulting & software company with a target price of Rs 4,760. This indicates an upside of 20.2%. In Q1FY23, the company’s net profit rose 21.1% YoY to Rs 149.7 crore and revenue was up 25.2% YoY to Rs 1,829.4 crore.

    Analyst Mugilan K expects the company’s profits to increase on the back of “strong growth in repeat business, improving order book, and increasing offshore revenues”. The analyst believes the near record-high total contract value of $315 million including two-large deal wins this quarter will boost profit growth in FY23. 

    Mugilan added that executable projects in the order book stood at $745 million at the end of Q1FY23, which suggests high growth visibility in the medium term. He sees the company increasing its revenue growth guidance for FY23 to 20% or more as a key positive. He also anticipates the company’s EBITDA margin to expand 150-200 bps YoY “on account of continued offshoring, improvement in utilisation and pyramid rationalisation”, and expects the company’s profit to grow at a CAGR of 18.7% over FY22-24.  

    1. Asian Paints: Prabhudas Lilladher gives a ‘Buy’ call to this paint company with a target price of Rs 3,363. This indicates an upside of 1.2%. In Q1FY23, the company’s profit grew by 78.9% YoY to Rs 1,016.9 crore and revenue grew 53.4% YoY to Rs 8,705.9 crore. 

    Amnish Aggarwal, Harish Advani, and Aashi Rara remain positive on the company on the back of market share gains in decorative paints, increased distribution, innovations & focus on high-growth waterproofing/wood finishes segment, as well as scalability plans in home décor. They added, “We expect Asian Paints to sustain premium valuations given strong growth visibility. The analysts are cautious given Grasim’s aggressive entry plans in decorative paints in FY24. The company expects commodity prices to remain volatile in the near term despite strong demand.

    The analysts lower upside expectation from current levels on the stock may be because the company’s current TTM PE of 91.3, which is higher than its three-year and five-year PE ratios of  81.1 and 73, respectively.

    1. SRF: ICICI Direct retains a ‘Buy’ call on this specialty chemicals company. This indicates an upside of 12.1%. In Q1FY23, the company reported profit growth of 53.8% to Rs 608 and revenue growth of 43.9% to Rs 3,904.6 crore. 

    According to analysts Siddhant Khandekar and Dhavan Shah, the company’s revenue growth was better than their estimates, led by chemicals, and packaging film segments. The analysts added, “The growth from the chemical segment was driven by robust demand for flagship products.” Operating margins for the quarter expanded 60 basis points YoY to 25.5%. The analysts believe that higher operating margins led to strong performance.

    The company has planned capex of approximately Rs 560 crore towards projects like a dedicated facility to produce agrochemical intermediate, pharmaceutical intermediates, and belting fabrics, among others. Khandekar and Dhavan said, “continuous capex towards specialty chemicals on the back of higher consumption of fluoro compounds across agrochemical and pharma supports strong business performance in the years to come.”

    1. Axis Bank: Edelweiss reaffirms its ‘Buy’ rating on this bank with a target price of Rs 727, indicating an upside of 30.6%. In Q1FY23, the bank’s profit grew by 85.9% YoY to Rs 4,380.6 crore and revenue by 11.8% YoY to Rs 22,686.5 crore.

    The bank’s advances grew 14% YoY to Rs 7 lakh crore, and deposits grew 12.6% to Rs 8 lakh crore. Net interest income (NII) increased by 20.9% YoY to Rs 9,384 crore, and analyst Raj Jha said that this was driven mainly by net interest margin (NIM) expansion. NIM increased by 14 basis points YoY to 3.6%.

    Jha noted, “We believe this (the growth in NII and NIM) is a very positive outcome achieved through both the impact of asset repricing and changes in business mix.”  He observes that the bank performed well in terms of operating parameters and asset quality.” He adds, “We believe credit growth will remain in the mid-to-high teens over FY22-24, as the wholesale segment makes a comeback.” He concludes that eventual growth in NIM expansion should result in a steady increase in the bank’s return ratios.

    Note: These recommendations are from various analysts and are not recommendations by Trendlyne

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    The Baseline
    30 Jul 2022, 11:21AM
    India keeps growing as global economy struggles, brokers upgrading stocks in past one month

    India keeps growing as global economy struggles, brokers upgrading stocks in past one month

    By Deeksha Janiani

    The phrase may you live in interesting times can easily be a curse. That's where we are in the global economy - every day there is fresh drama. We check the daily news with some nervousness: what has Putin done now? Is there a new Covid variant? Are the inflation numbers out?

    In these interesting times, where does India stand?

    In this week’s Analyticks:

    • India keeps growing in a tough global climate
    • Screener: Stocks with new target price/recommendation upgrades from brokers

    Let’s get into it.


    India keeps its head up in a tough global environment 

    The United States' dominance in the global economy meant that everytime it caught a cold, the world sneezed. The US has gone into an economic recession three times since the start of the 21st century. How did Asia fare during these situations? 

    Each of these times, Asian countries underperformed the US economy in real GDP growth rate by a percent or more. For instance, when real GDP for the US fell 3% YoY between Q1 2008 and Q1 2009, Asian GDP (excluding Japan) proved to be more vulnerable, and fell by close to 6%. 

    Cut to 2022, the US saw its real GDP shrink by 1.6% YoY in Q1 2022. It may shrink further in Q2 this year, according to Atlanta Federation’s economy tracker. In simple terms, an economic recession is defined to occur when there is a fall in national output for two back-to-back quarters. 

    The situation in the European Union is not encouraging either. Its Purchasing Managers index (PMI) fell below the psychological mark of 50 in July 2022. This indicates contraction in economic activity last seen only in the pandemic months, and in June 2013. 

    The key question here is whether emerging economies, particularly the Asian behemoths India and China, will behave differently should a recession in the US happen now. 

    Decoupling?: India’s inflation levels ease, as situation worsens in US and Europe

    The consumer price inflation (CPI) levels in the US climbed to 40-year highs in June 2022 led by a spike in energy prices. Meanwhile, the European Union (EU)’s inflation rate has been rising sharply over the past one year. 

    The European economy is heavily reliant on Russian natural gas for its energy needs. But gas flows from Russia to the EU are being reduced, with the Russians giving increasingly hard to believe, dog-ate-my-homework reasons for not restoring gas supplies, like 'maintenance' and 'engine failure'.

    As a result fuel and electricity prices are soaring in EU. This is pushing inflation levels up and setting the stage for a difficult winter, with looming fuel shortages for heating. German winters have temperatures that regularly fall below zero degrees.

    On the other hand India's inflation levels remain lower than that of US and Europe. CPI for India fell from peak levels seen in April 2022. This was backed by lower fuel prices and the rate hikes by RBI. 

    If there is one country that has significantly beaten the global inflationary trend, it is China. Although its inflation levels touched a 2-year high in June, they are very low compared to others. Reports suggest that lower consumer demand, Covid lockdowns, and the export-oriented nature of the Chinese economy are key reasons. 

    Indonesia’s inflation levels have also remained lower at 4.4% in June, owing to robust commodity exports as inflation this time is largely due to supply-side constraints. It's been one of the best performing markets in 2022 so far. 

    Economic recovery uneven for India, as growth slows down in China

    India’s composite PMI level has been on a sustained uptrend since the past six months and remained at healthy levels in June 2022. This growth is led by the expansion in services activity which touched a 11-year high last month.

    However, the rate of expansion in manufacturing activity dropped between February and June. 

    More evidence of a slowdown in manufacturing activity comes in the Index of Industrial Production (IIP), a measure of India’s industrial output. Manufacturing output in May 2022 fell 1% compared to the pre-Covid era. Within the manufacturing sector, it is base metals and chemicals which saw some real recovery, while pharma, electronics and textiles lagged May-19 levels. 

    Now we come to China, the biggest emerging economy in the world by GDP, which stood at $17.7 trillion at the end of 2021. A distant second is India, whose GDP is just 19% of China’s national output. Hence, a growth slowdown in the poster boy of emerging nations changes the equation altogether.  

    If we go by the PMI figures, the Chinese economy saw a consistent contraction between March and May due to strict Covid related lockdowns in key economic centres like Shanghai. Moreover, the ‘official’ real GDP growth for the country was nearly zero for Q2 2022. 

    Other systemic risks are also emerging for the Chinese economy. There is a wave of homeowners refusing to pay their mortgage instalments due to stalled construction work. According to China’s major banks, there are about $311 million worth of loans at risk from this. 

    India set to register fastest economic growth in 2022 and 2023

    According to a recent IMF release, the world economic outlook has become gloomier and more uncertain in FY23. This is backed by higher-than expected inflation and disrupted supply chains, leading to reduced consumer demand across major nations. 

    Further, the dragon is losing its fire. China’s GDP growth rate is set to fall to just 4% in 2022. And this could have spill-over effects on other emerging nations. This is a country whose GDP growth rate averaged 9.5% between 1978 and 2018.

    India is a bright spot here, and set to be the fastest growing economy in the world over the next two years. However, the US Fed announced a federal funds rate hike of 75 bps this week, and there are more hikes likely from the US Central Bank.

    This may lead to fresh capital flight in the short term from emerging nations like India, possibly causing their currencies to weaken further. A weaker rupee is a key challenge for India as it is a net importer of crude oil and commodities. 

    The next few months are crucial for India. If it comes through the current global turmoil unscathed, this decade could be the one when this South Asian giant fulfills its long awaited economic promise. 


    Screener:Retail sales and banks’ credit growth revives in Q1FY23

    As Q1 results come in, analysts have been picking out their potential winners. This screener reflects 20 companies, all within the Nifty 500 group, for which the brokers have either upgraded the recommendation or the target price in the past one month. Avenue Supermarts stands out in this list as the company received the highest number of broker recommendation upgrades. 

    This retail major saw its revenues nearly double YoY in Q1FY23 backed by rising customer footfalls, high store additions and a low base effect. This is also indicative of improving consumer sentiments at the retail level. 

    Mid-tier IT companies like L&T Infotech and L&T Technology Services also turn up in this list. These companies managed to beat their larger peers in terms of sequential revenue growth in Q1FY23. However, they are cautious on the outlook for H2FY23 considering the slowdown in developed world, and they saw a sharp jump in valuations during the recent bull run.

    Meanwhile, large-cap and mid-cap banks like ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, IndusInd Bank and Federal Bank received a good no. of target price upgrades from analysts. These banks saw double-digit growth in their loan advances, leading to higher net interest income in Q1FY23. 

    You can find some popular screeners here.

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    The Baseline
    29 Jul 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Tanla Platforms: This internet software services company’s stock is down almost 57.7% over the past three months. The stock crashed 20% on the bourses on Tuesday locking into the lower circuit after a dismal Q1 performance and hit a 52-week low of Rs 731. The company’s profit fell both on a sequential (28.6%) and YoY basis (3.9%) to Rs 100 crore, and hence shows up in the screener of companies that declared results in the past week with declining net profit.

    Although both profit and margins are down in Q1FY23, the CEO’s message remains positive because of upcoming projects in its platform segment in Q2FY23. He also talks about the problems faced in Q1FY23 - the company’s margins were hit because of internal and external factors of pricing issues with select customers and the fall of the euro against the US dollar.

    Brokerages like YES Securities and HDFC Securities maintain a ‘Buy’ rating on the stock. They believe that the seasonally weak quarter will not impact revenue growth for FY23. HDFC Securities expects the Platform business to drive revenue CAGR of 35% for Tanla. The management is positive of maintaining the margin in the range of 19%-20% in Q2 and Q3FY23.

    The company also believes that their recent deals with VI and Truecaller will begin to show results by the next quarter which will boost revenue and ease out margins. Right now, the stock is underperforming its industry by 42% in the past 90 days. It’ll be interesting to see how the company bounces back in the next quarter given the fear of recession looming around in the American and European economies.

    1. Craftsman Automation:This auto ancillary company’s stock touched a 52-week high on Wednesday, two days after its Q1FY23 results. The stock outperformed the Nifty 50 by over 15% in the last one month alone.

    Craftsman Automation’s net profit rose nearly 2.4X to Rs 55.6 crore led by its revenue rising over 55% YoY to Rs 677.1 crore in Q1FY23. Although there was a low base in Q1FY22, a healthy revival in demand from OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) also helped boost its profit. In fact, the company’s Q1FY23 revenue beat Trendlyne Forecaster’s estimates by 8%. Craftsman manufactures critical engine and transmission components, especially for the medium and heavy commercial vehicle segment. Though it does cater to the two-wheeler and passenger vehicle segment as well, more than 70% of its annual revenue comes from commercial vehicles (54%) and tractor makers (18%).

    Listed commercial vehicle (CV) makers like Ashok Leyland, Eicher Motors and Mahindra & Mahindra crossed pre-pandemic wholesales levels in Q1FY23. However, Tata Motors’ CV wholesales were still at 75% of the pre-Covid figure, although they rose 2X on a YoY basis in Q1FY23. Based on these positive trends in wholesales and a rebound in industrial activity, Crisil recently upgraded the credit rating of Craftsman’s long-term loans to A+ from A, while its outlook remained ‘stable’. Consensus estimates from Trendlyne’s Forecaster shows that revenues of this company may grow close to 20% in FY23, in line with the management’s commentary. It’s no surprise that the consensus among analysts is a ‘Strong Buy’ for this auto component player.

    1. Zomato: This restaurant aggregator and food delivery company’s stock fell over 23% in two days at the beginning of the week after the one-year lock-in period on the shares held by its pre-IPO (initial public offering) investors ended. The lock-in period applies to institutional investors who were allotted shares just before the IPO. Though the stock recovered about 8% of its losses by Thursday, it is down 73% from its all-time high of Rs 169 seen on November 16, 2021, and trades below its IPO issue price of Rs 76.

    The company is backed mainly by private equity and venture capital funds and has no listed promoter. A diverse shareholding could’ve contributed to the sell-off after the one-year freeze on pre-IPO investors’ holding ended. The sell-off continued on Tuesday with Zomato's pre-IPO investor Moore Strategic Ventures selling its entire stake for Rs 187 crore.

    Despite a sharp fall in Zomato’s share price, foreign brokerages like Jefferies and Credit Suisse maintain a positive outlook on the company, according to reports. Both brokerages’ target price for the stock indicates an upside of over 100%. Credit Suisse maintained its ‘outperform’ rating with a target price of Rs 90 as it believes the company is on a “clear road” to profitability with its existing customers driving the food business. However, investors continue to reassess the profitability timeline post its acquisition of Blinkit for Rs 4,447 crore in July. Zomato’s Q1Y23 results are to be declared on Monday and may throw some light on the company’s road to profitability.

    1. Tata Steel: This steel maker’s stock was very volatile and closed 2.3% lower on Tuesday after it announced its Q1FY23 results. Elevated coking coal prices and the export duty on steel impacted the overall performance of the company in Q1. Its net profit fell 12.8% to Rs 7,765 crore as raw material costs rose 56.7% YoY. Revenue, on the other hand, grew 18.8% YoY to Rs 63,430 crore driven by higher steel realisations in India and Europe. Even though the company’s profit fell YoY, it managed to beat Trendlyne’s Forecaster profit estimates by 26.1%.

    The silver lining in Q1 for the company was its European business achieving its highest quarterly EBITDA of 621 million pounds (or Rs 6,037 crore), up more than 2X YoY. This made up for the 39% YoY fall in the Indian business’ EBITDA. The margin expansion was driven by long-term contracts and a healthy product mix.

    This is surprising considering the European business dragged the overall performance of the company for many quarters. EBITDA per tonne jumped nearly 4.3X YoY to Rs 28,220. In India, even though its steel deliveries marginally fell due to a reduction in exports, revenue per tonne rose 11.4% QoQ aided by a robust marketing network.

    Going forward the management expects the rest of FY23 to be challenging for the Indian steel industry due to the Russia-Ukraine war, elevated input costs and imposition of export duty. However, sales volumes and margins are expected to improve from H2FY23 onwards as demand may improve  and rising raw material costs ease, the management added. The company anticipates a rise in demand from H2FY23 as the monsoon season ends. It expects a revival in the automobile sector and the Centre’s increased spending on infrastructure to boost steel demand.

    1. Navin Fluorine International: This chemical company rose 11.1% on Monday after announcing its Q1FY23 results. The surge in its stock price was mainly due to the company’s Q1FY23 EBITDA margin expanding 110 bps YoY to 24.9%. Margins improved due to price hikes and a change in the product mix towards high-margin products. The company’s net profit grew 33.1% YoY to Rs 74.4 crore and revenue rose 21.7% YoY to Rs 397.5 crore. 

    However, it missed Trendlyne’s Forecaster revenue and profit estimates by 6.4% and 3.9%, respectively. The revenue growth was driven by the speciality chemicals and high-performance products (HPP) segments. The HPP segment involves mostly the production of refrigerant gas and inorganic fluorides. The company also shows up on this screener that has companies outperforming their industries over the past 90 days. 

    The company’s margin expansion beat the street’s expectation, according to Edelweiss. Its margin rose amid concerns over margin pressure faced by chemical companies in India due to rising fuel costs. Surprisingly, the company’s specialty chemicals and HPP segments derive a majority of their revenue from the Indian market. According to the company, repeat orders drove the speciality chemicals segment’s revenue growth, and higher volume and better realisations drove the HPP segment’s revenue growth.

    Going forward, the management expects strong demand for fluorine-based specialty chemicals in FY23. Motilal Oswal expects the demand for fluorine from the pharmaceutical and agriculture industries in the coming quarters. The company plans to expand its product portfolio through capacity expansion and new product launches to meet rising demand over the long term.

    Trendlyne's analysts identify stocks that are seeing interesting price movement, analyst calls, or new developments. These are not buy recommendations.

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