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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    19 Jan 2023
    Banks to see a boost in margins from credit growth

    Banks to see a boost in margins from credit growth

    By Shreesh Biradar

    The Indian banking sector is in the spotlight for investors, with the highest credit growth in a decade. Credit growth is expected to rise in tandem with rising corporate demand. PSU banks valuation has risen in the last two quarters. The Nifty Bank index has risen more than 20% in the last six months with Nifty PSU Bank rising 60%. …

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    The Indian banking sector is in the spotlight for investors, with the highest credit growth in a decade. Credit growth is expected to rise in tandem with rising corporate demand. PSU banks valuation has risen in the last two quarters. The Nifty Bank index has risen more than 20% in the last six months with Nifty PSU Bank rising 60%. The broader Nifty 50 index is also up by 11.33%.

    Private banks have historically beaten PSU banks in terms of profitability, asset quality, liquidity, and credit growth. PSU banks are now catching up, but with a delayed effect.

    The one underlying change affecting all major banks is the uptick in repo rates. The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has been taking an aggressive stance since the start of FY23 to control inflation. RBI has increased the repo rate by 225 bps since the start of FY23. Repo rate changes have a profound impact on banking fundamentals.

    In an ideal scenario, a higher repo rate means an increase in cash coming in (deposits, savings) and a decrease in cash outgo (advances) for the banking system. Current Accounts and Savings Accounts (CASA) deposits trend in a downward direction. Also, in such a situation, deposit growth will outpace credit growth and higher deposits will increase the cost of funding for banks. But the current state of Indian banks tells a different story. Banks are seeing credit growth exceeding deposit growth.

    Credit growth exceeds deposit growth for banks

    PSU Banks have seen average YoY credit growth of 18.40% in Q2FY23, outpacing the deposit growth of 9.40%. The same has been true with private banks. Private banks achieved YoY credit growth of 21% in Q2FY23, beating the more modest deposit growth of 13.90%.

    The credit growth of the Indian banking industry for H1FY23 touched a decadal high of 17.4%. One of the major reasons for banks’ aggressive lending is increased liquidity in the system. Since the beginning of COVID-19, banks have been wary of lending, citing the economic slowdown. This, in turn, has led to a lower Credit Deposit ratio (CD ratio). As the economy picked up, banks increased their lending to take advantage of a lower CD base. A higher CD ratio means better utilization of deposits, and better interest margins and profitability.

    State Bank of India (SBI) and Canara Bank reported YoY credit growth of 19.93% and 20% in Q2FY23 respectively. SBI’s CD ratio increased from 76.50% in Q2FY22 to 80.12% in Q2FY23. Canara Bank’s CD ratio improved from 68.34% in Q2FY22 to 76.26% in Q2FY23. 

    ICICI Bank and Axis Bank reported YoY credit growth of 22.70% and 17.56% respectively. The improvement was backed by a change in CD ratios of 7.85% and 5.70% respectively. The largest private lender HDFC Bank saw a credit growth of 19% YoY.

    Credit growth was also supported by the liquidation of High-Quality Liquid Assets (HQLA). Banks ideally need to maintain a Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) above 100%. The overall LCR of banks dropped from 173% in Q2FY21 to 136% in Q2FY23.

    Corporate lending to drive further credit growth

    Corporate lending was taboo post-NPA unwinding. Banks increasingly concentrated on retail lending, which is considered much safer. Housing loans in particular, have been the go-to segment for banks for the last couple of years. Post Covid, banks relied more on auto and personal loans, which remained the major drivers for credit growth in the past four quarters.

    Q1FY23 saw a change in lending patterns. Banks are back to wooing corporations for borrowings. The share of corporate lending in the overall banking portfolio has seen an uptick.

    Canara Bank has seen a QoQ increase of 75 bps in its corporate lending share in Q2FY23. Bank of India saw an increase of 100 bps in the same period. SBI’s corporate loan book has grown over 21% YoY in Q1FY23 compared to its retail loan book growth of 18%. Axis Bank and IndusInd Bank reported a QoQ increase of 65 bps and 100 bps in Q2FY23 respectively.

    The bigger banks are going after corporate lending to aid credit growth. Smaller banks are still cautious in their approach and playing safe by lending mainly to retail portfolios.

    Pressure on margins due to lower CASA deposits offset by credit growth

    Traditionally, CASA has been the cheaper source of funds for banks. This doesn’t mean higher CASA ratios are good for banks. A very high CASA ratio might lead to liquidation problems if a bank goes bust. Thus, most banks maintain the CASA ratio in the range of 30-50%.

    The recent increase in interest rates has enticed customers to lock in higher interest rates by opting for term deposits. This has led to a decrease in CASA shares in bank deposits. The fall in CASA share has been more visible since the end of Q4FY22.

    Bank of Baroda saw its CASA share drop from 44.24% in Q4FY22 to 37.62% in Q2FY23. SBI, on the other hand, saw its share of CASA deposits fall to 42.90% in the same period.

    Private banks are fairly better due to their high interest rates on savings accounts. ICICI bank and HDFC Bank saw a drop of 211 bps and 142 bps in CASA for H1FY23 respectively. Federal Bank has been more stable with a 53 bps change in the same period.

    The decrease in CASA has led to an increase in the cost of deposits for the banks. The numbers reported for Q2FY23 make it more evident.

    However, the increase in the cost of deposits has been offset by the higher credit growth banks are seeing. Banks were parking their deposits with RBI instead of lending, constricting margins. With higher lending offtake, margins have remained stable for banks over the last four quarters. In turn, the margins have improved slightly in the past two quarters.

    Further margin expansion is expected due to the higher linkage of loans to floating rates

    The Marginal Cost of Lending Rate (MCLR) was introduced in April 2016. Earlier, banks were not transferring the benefits of the change in repo rate to customers across segments. The retail segment and MSMEs were not able to get the complete benefit of MCLR. Hence, RBI introduced the External Benchmark Lending Rate (EBLR) which is directly linked to its repo rate for the benefit of retail and MSME loans.

    RBI has taken a keen interest in loan linkages to MCLR and EBLR which has resulted in more advances linked to these floating rates. SBI has linked 34% of its loan to EBLR and another 45% to MCLR. The only hiccup is that these loans reflect the changes in interest rate with a delayed effect of 3-6 months.

    RBI has increased the repo rate by 225 bps since May 2022. The pass-on effect has not been evident in the banks. Banks, on average, have increased lending rates by 105-130 bps. The yield on advances is expected to rise further considering EBLR/MCLR-linked loans will start incorporating the upward repricing of interest rate changes in the past six months. Repricing of lending books will provide a higher yield on advances. The effectiveness of transmission under the EBR regime was reflected in the better-than-expected NIM trajectory in Q2FY23.

    The margin expansion cycle is expected to slow down in FY24.

    RBI is expected to raise its repo rate by another 50 bps in CY2023. As the deposit rates start catching up, banks can expect more money to come into the system. With higher interest rates, credit growth might slow down going forward. The current phase of NIM expansion will continue to be aided by growth in advances, albeit at a slower pace. Currently, net interest margins are at a two-year high.

    This is in line with the performance as the Nifty PSU Bank has risen 44.06% in the past three months. All PSU banks outperformed the Nifty 50 index. Reports suggest that Nifty PSU is outperforming the Nifty 50 index by a considerable margin. Nifty PSU Bank has risen 60% in the past year, while Nifty 50 rose 8%.

    This analysis by Trendlyne is meant for investor education - to help understand companies and make informed investment decisions on their own. It should not be considered an investment recommendation.

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    The Baseline
    19 Jan 2023
    Screener of the week: Stocks seeing mutual funds significantly raise stake in Q3FY23

    Screener of the week: Stocks seeing mutual funds significantly raise stake in Q3FY23

    By Abdullah Shah

    In this week’s edition, we take a look at new mutual fund stock picks of Q3. This screener identifies stocks where mutual funds have increased their stake by over 0.5% and have a Trendlyne durability score of more than 50. There are 38 stocks from the Nifty 500 index and three stocks from the Nifty 50. 

    The screener includes stocks from banking and finance, healthcare facilities, internet software & services and industrial machinery. Major stocks listed in the screener are GMM Pfaudler, Zee Entertainment Enterprises, Apollo Hospitals Enterprise, Affle (India) and Union Bank of India.

    GMM Pfaudler has seen the highest rise in its MF holding on a QoQ basis in Q3. Aditya Birla Sun Life Flexi Cap Fund, which bought a 1.2% stake in the company, is the largest buyer. The company’s promoters have sold a 11% stake, which FIIs and domestic funds picked up. The stock has a Trendlyne durability score of 70.

    Zee Entertainment Enterprises comes in next with a mutual fund holding rise of 4.5 percentage points QoQ in Q3. ICICI Prudential Bluechip Fund is the largest buyer with a 0.53% stake in the company. It has a Trendlyne durability score of 55. 

    Apollo Hospitals has seen its mutual fund holding rise 1.4 percentage points QoQ in Q3. HDFC Flexi Cap Fund becomes the biggest buyer with a 1.2% stake in this healthcare player. 

    You can find some popular screenershere.

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    The Baseline
    17 Jan 2023
    Five analyst picks this week

    Five analyst picks this week

    By Suhas Reddy
    1. Gujarat Gas: Motilal Oswal maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this utilities company with a target price of Rs 679, indicating an upside of 51.7%. According to analysts Swarnendu Bhushan and Rohit Thorat, the Russia-Ukraine conflict led to an increase in liquefied natural gas (LNG) prices, which in turn harmed Gujarat Gas. Higher prices forced consumers to switch to cheaper alternatives such as propane and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). The analysts believe that “the storm seems to be running out of steam with spot LNG prices declining 48% from their peak.” 

    After analysing historic prices of over eight years, Bhushan and Thorat revealed that  LNG, on average, has been cheaper than propane and LPG by 15% and 19% respectively, when the entire demand is met through long-term contracts. They said, “Barring the current flux in gas markets, LNG should continue to remain cheaper than alternate fuels by a similar magnitude, except for 3-4 months in a year.”

    They remain optimistic as Gujarat Gas can raise volumes through several avenues, in addition to the growth from the industrial and compressed natural gas pick-up in the existing areas.

    1. Bank of Baroda: Prabhudas Lilladher reiterates its ‘Buy’ call on this bank with a target price of Rs 220. This indicates an upside of 18.3%. Analysts Gaurav Jani and Palak Shah say that domestic corporate credit growth has touched an 8-year high of 13% YoY and is reviving. According to them, Bank of Baroda would be a key beneficiary as its corporate loan share is 40% and market share in overall advances is sizeable at 6.6% post-merger. The analysts also believe that the bank could expand net interest margins for half a year, while private bank margins peak in Q3FY22, due to a higher share of MCLR (marginal cost of funds-based lending rate) linked loans.

    Jani and Shah believe that the bank’s balance sheet is stronger than ever with net non-performing assets to equity ratio at a multi-quarter low of 10.5%, which gives it leeway to grow. Talking about the sector, the analysts said, “With sustained loan growth and benign asset quality environment, there could be further earnings upgrades across PSU banks.”

    1. Macrotech Developers: ICICI Securities maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this realty company with a target price of Rs 1,304. This indicates an upside of 27.8%. Adhidev Chattopadhyay remains positive on the realty firm as its Q3 sales bookings have outperformed the brokerage’s estimates. The analyst believes the company will exceed its FY23 sales bookings guidance of Rs 11,500 crore, given that it has “already achieved 9MFY23 sales bookings of Rs 90.4bn (79% of FY23 guidance)”. He adds that the robust sales are  “driven by a combination of monetization of ready/completed inventory and new launches”.

    Chattopadhyay believes that the company’s robust launch pipeline and expansion into new markets like Pune and Bengaluru provide healthy growth visibility in the medium term. The analyst is also upbeat on the sequential reduction in net debt on the back of higher collections and falling interest costs. He expects the firm’s net profit to grow at a CAGR of 36.3% over FY22-24. 

    1. VIP Industries: Axis Direct upgrades its rating on this luggage and travel accessories maker to ‘Buy’ from ‘Hold’ with a target price of Rs 750, indicating an upside of 7.2%. Analysts at the brokerage expect demand to rise on the back of the upcoming wedding season and robust pick-up in travel & tourism. They also see the company gaining market share as they expect demand for premium products to rise. Along with the uptick in travel, “increasing number of International departures of students to foreign universities shall help boost demand for Hard Luggage”, they say. 

    The analysts believe the company’s focus on adding depth and diversifying its product portfolio will make its products more appealing to a wider audience. They are hopeful that this will boost market share gains and sales. Overall, the analysts anticipate VIP Industries to capitalise on the improvement in demand, given its diverse product offerings. They expect the firm’s revenue to grow at a CAGR of 40.9% over FY22-24.  

    1. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS): ICICI Direct maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this IT consulting & software company with a target price of Rs 3,780. This indicates an upside of 12.7%. In Q3FY23, the IT giant’s net profit has risen by 4% QoQ to Rs 10,846 crore and revenue by 5.3% QoQ. 

    Analysts Sameer Pardikar and Sujay Chavan believe the company’s EBIT margin rising by 50 bps QoQ is a key positive. They expect “margins to improve from FY23 onwards due to utilisation improvement and moderation of sub-contractor costs''. They see margins growing by 110 bps over FY23-25, and expect cash flow to remain robust in the coming quarters.

    Pardikar and Chavan view the company’s new organisational structure, which is aimed at improving clients’ stickiness, as likely to enhance market share gains. The analysts say that increased outsourcing in Europe, vendor consolidation, and a healthy deal pipeline will drive growth. They expect TCS’ net profit to grow at a CAGR of 11.5% over FY22-25. 

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

    (You can find all analyst picks here)

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    The Baseline
    13 Jan 2023
    Five Interesting Stocks Today - Q3 Preview

    Five Interesting Stocks Today - Q3 Preview

    1. Tata Motors: This auto stock has outperformed its sector by 6.1% in the past week and rose 7%, according to Trendlyne’s technicals. The stock reaction comes after the company released its global wholesales number on January 9. Total global wholesales grew 13% YoY to 3.2 lakh units in Q3FY23. Its subsidiary, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), has also seen its wholesales increase 15% YoY and 5.2% QoQ to 79,591 units. The company’s domestic wholesales grew 17.7% YoY to 2.2 lakh units in Q3.

    Although JLR’s wholesales volumes have grown in North America and UK markets, its China volumes were impacted by COVID spread. Its order book stands at 2.15 lakh, led by the new order for the Range Rover series. Improvement in chip supplies has positively pushed JLR’s wholesales in Q3. The company says JLR’s free cash flow (FCF) will be positive and is likely to be over 400 million euros. The stock reacted positively to this news and rose nearly 6% in trade on Tuesday.

    Mitul Shah from Reliance Securities says that despite supply constraints and inflation, the company is likely to report net profit growth in Q3. However, Reliance Securities has not changed its target price and continues to hold its ‘Buy’ rating on the stock. Other brokerages like CLSA have upgraded their recommendation to ‘Buy’, while JP Morgan maintains ‘Neutral’. JP Morgan says that JLR needs to achieve the FCF guidance even in Q4FY23 to meet its full-year guidance since the FCF has been negative until H1FY23.

    Overall analysts expect the auto sector to revive from one of its worst slowdowns by FY23-24. Jefferies has a positive stance on the auto sector and expects 12-18% volume CAGR growth over FY23-25E for passenger vehicles and two-wheelers. Tata Motors shows up in a screener of stocks showing positive shifts in share price and rising delivery volumes ahead of its Q3FY23 results on January 25.

    1. Titan: This jewelry and watchmaker’s stock has fallen nearly 4% in the past four days till Thursday in reaction to the company’s Q3FY23 business update. Titan’s share price fell despite the company reporting a 12% YoY growth in combined sales across its standalone businesses. Q3 is generally a strong quarter for Titan due to festivals spread across the period. The company still managed to post double-digit growth on a high base but investors weren’t excited as the share price fell on Monday and Tuesday. One reason could be higher growth expectations. This is reflected in the company’s high TTM price-to-earnings ratio of 70. The TTM PE ratio is still below its historical averages, putting the stock in the PE Buy zone.

    The jewelry segment is Titan’s major revenue contributor. The company derived over 86% of its total revenues from this segment in Q2FY23. In Q3, jewelry segment sales rose 11% YoY. Healthy new buyer growth in the festive period and higher-value purchases in the studded category drove sales. While its watch sales (10% of total revenue) rose 14%, eyecare product sales rose 10%.

    Post the Q3FY23 business update release, brokerages like ICICI Securities and Prabhudas Lilladher maintain their ‘Add’ rating on Titan. However, ICICI Sec has reduced the target price by 5% to Rs 2,800, citing a possible demand slowdown due to macroeconomic factors. As a result, Titan features in a screener of stocks with recent broker downgrades in recommendation or target price.

    1. Godrej Consumer Products: Since announcing its quarterly update on January 5, this FMCG company has risen nearly 3% till Thursday and outperformed the Nifty FMCG by 2.4%. As a result of this uptrend in share price, the stock is above its short, medium and long-term moving averages.

    The management expects the company to deliver double-digit sales growth and single-digit volume growth amid softness in domestic demand. This comes after three consecutive quarters of YoY decline in volumes. The management indicated sales growth to be broad-based across segments, led by double-digit growth in the home care and personal care segments. Also, the household insecticides segment is expected to improve, according to reports. This is likely to aid performance as the segment has been weighing down the company’s topline performance for a few quarters.

    At a consolidated level, the firm anticipates double-digit growth in rupee terms with volumes being more or less flat. With palm oil prices declining, the company expects gross margin recovery and healthy sequential growth in net profit. Trendlyne’s forecaster estimates its net profit to rise by 27.5% QoQ. Godrej Consumer’s Indonesia business is finally showing signs of recovery as its sales decline has come down to single digits from double digits. The firm’s Africa, US and Middle East businesses are expected to maintain their robust sales growth momentum in Q3FY23.

    However, the management acknowledges that the demand environment has not yet completely recovered, as rural demand weakness still looms. The company’s ability to sustain this improvement in sales and volumes will be key for medium and long-term growth.

    1. Sobha: This realty company has been on an uptrend after it reported a strong business update on January 6, 2023. The company’s share price has risen over 3% in a weak market as it reported its highest-ever sales value of Rs 1,425 crore, a 36% YoY growth. Its average price realisation is up 21.9% YoY to Rs 9,650 per square foot. The company has also outperformed the Nifty Realty index by 7.1% in the past week.

    While Bangalore continues to contribute a significant share (60%) of its real estate sales, projects from other cities make up 40% of the total sales volume during the quarter. Gurugram clocked its highest-ever quarterly sale, backed by the launch of new towers. The management says, “Requirement for larger homes has been the consistent theme in the past couple of years. Adoption of our home designs to cater to this demand across cities has helped us in improved sales volume and higher realizations.”

    Besides, the company’s cash flows have been strong in Q3FY23 and led to a reduction in net debt. As a result, it features in a screener of companies with improving cash flow from operation for the past two years.

    Post this business update, ICICI Securities maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on the stock with a target price of Rs 808. The brokerage believes that Sobha is well on track to achieve its FY23 guidance with the 9MFY23 sales bookings up 35% YoY.

    1. One97 Communications (Paytm): This internet software & services company rose 2.3% on Monday in reaction to its Q3FY23 business update. Paytm’s loan disbursements have grown 357% YoY to Rs 9,958 crore in Q3FY23. But investors’ enthusiasm quickly waned on Thursday as the stock plunged 6.2% on the news of Alibaba selling 2 crore shares (or 3.1% stake) in the company, according to reports.

    In its business update, Paytm reported a  32% YoY rise in monthly transacting users (MTUs) and 190% YoY growth in devices deployed. These two factors aided the jump in gross merchandise value (GMV) by 38% YoY to Rs 3.5 lakh crore. The company says that, over the past few quarters, its focus has been on payment volumes that generate profitability, either through net payments margin or from direct upsell potential.

    According to reports, Morgan Stanley, on Thursday, stated that One97 Communications will be a major beneficiary of the government’s unified payments interface (UPI) incentive scheme. The cabinet has approved an incentive scheme of Rs 2,600 crore for the promotion of RuPay Debit Cards and low-value BHIM-UPI transactions. The brokerage estimates that the company will receive 5-7% of the incentive.

    Paytm has also signed a sponsorship deal with Zee Entertainment Enterprises for the DP World International League T20 on Thursday, according to reports. The company features in a screener of stocks which are efficient in managing their assets.

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

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    The Baseline
    13 Jan 2023
    Chart of the Week: FPIs exited Indian equities in the first half of 2022, but end on a high note

    Chart of the Week: FPIs exited Indian equities in the first half of 2022, but end on a high note

    By Abdullah Shah

    The Indian equity market saw an exodus of foreign portfolio investment (FPI) for seven of the 12 months in 2022. The first half of the year was particularly painful as global inflation rose with the Russia-Ukraine conflict, causing markets to fall worldwide. A rising dollar added to the pain for global markets, prompting investor wariness around equities.

    FPIs withdrew Rs 33,303 crore from the equity market in January, while mutual funds invested Rs 16,488 crore amid fears of interest rate hikes by the US Fed. The conflict between Russia and Ukraine resulted in foreign investors withdrawing Rs 35,592 crore more from the market in February. 

    March saw the rupee fall by 1% against the US dollar, crossing the Rs 77 mark. The first of many interest rate hikes by the US Fed triggered Rs 41,123 crore of share sales by foreign investors in the Indian market. The rate hike attracted investors to the US bond market, a less risky option compared to equities. April was comparatively better for the Indian market as FPI withdrawals eased to Rs 17,144 crore. 

    FPIs outflow was at Rs 50,203 crore in June, the most in 2022, as a result of another interest rate hike (75 bps) by the US Fed. July and August brought relief – Rs 4,898 crore was invested in July amid optimism of the US Fed easing interest rates and India's consumer price index (CPI) falling more than expected to 7.01% from 7.04%. This was followed by an investment of Rs 51,204 crore more in August. 

    Indian markets ended the year on a high note as FPIs invested Rs 11,119 crore in December. FMCG, consumer services and realty sectors saw the highest investments of Rs 4,019 crore, Rs 3,650 crore and Rs 3,248 crore respectively. FPIs are currently picking domestic-facing sectors like FMCG and banks, which are more immune to global upheaval. They withdrew Rs 2,784 crore and Rs 3,579 crore from oil & gas and information technology respectively.  

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    The Baseline
    12 Jan 2023
    Screener of the week: Bullish outlook stocks, with prices rising ahead of results and high analyst estimates for Q3

    Screener of the week: Bullish outlook stocks, with prices rising ahead of results and high analyst estimates for Q3

    By Abdullah Shah

    As companies gear up for the result season, we take a look at a screener for stocks that investors and analysts are bullish on. These stocks are rising ahead of their results, with analysts estimating revenue growth for Q3FY23. It lists 21 stocks from the Nifty 500 and four stocks from the Nifty 50 index with companies from the IT consulting & software industry dominating. 

    Major stocks in the screener are L&T Finance Holdings, Petronet LNG, ICICI Lombard General Insurance, Syngene International, HCL Technologies, Tata Motors and Havells India.

    L&T Finance Holdings has the highest revenue growth estimate of 127.5% YoY for Q3FY23. The holding companyhas risen 1.5% over the past week ahead of its results on Friday. According to KR Choksey, non-banking financial companies are expected to witness strong growth across all segments, thanks to high demand and a customer-centric approach. 

    Analysts have estimated Petronet LNG’s revenue to grow by 33% YoY in Q3FY23. The stock rose 0.9% over the past week, ahead of its results on January 20. ICICI Securities believes that the oil marketing & distribution company’s earnings have bottomed out, and that stronger volumes and lower LNG prices will drive earnings growth. 

    Tata Motors has a revenue growth estimate of 13.6% YoY in Q3FY23. The stock has risen 4.5% over the past week, ahead of its results on January 25. According to the commercial vehicles manufacturer’s business update for the quarter, it has witnessed a 13% YoY rise in its global wholesales, as the passenger vehicles segment and Jaguar wholesales improved by 23% YoY and 15% YoY respectively.

    You can find more screeners here.

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    The Baseline
    10 Jan 2023
    Five analyst picks this week

    Five analyst picks this week

    By Abhiraj Panchal
    1. InterGlobe Aviation: ICICI Securities maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this airlines stock with a target price of Rs 2,360. This indicates an upside of 14.4%. Analysts Ansuman Deb and Ravin Kurwa expect the company to post a profit in Q3FY23 on the back of rising daily passengers and a fall in aviation turbine fuel (ATF) prices. They expect an 18% QoQ growth in the number of passengers carried (PAX) by Indian airlines in Q3. “Accordingly, IndiGo could report total PAX of 22.5mn in Q3FY23, up 14% QoQ, based on market share assumption of 56% in December 2022,” they added.

    The analysts believe the company’s domestic passenger load factor (PLF) will maintain traction in Q3, in line with rising demand. They estimate its PLF to come in at 85% in Q3FY23. ATF prices are also likely to fall 8% QoQ, which will reduce margin pressure on the company. Deb and Kurwa expect Indigo’s revenue to grow at a CAGR of 59.1% over FY22-24. 

    1. Prestige Estates Projects: Motilal Oswal maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this realty company with a target price of Rs 675. This indicates an upside of 45.2%. Pritesh Sheth and Sourabh Gilda expect “CY23 to be a defining year for the company as it looks to grow its pre-sales on a strong base, provide growth visibility”, and allay concerns about high debt levels. The analysts believe the firm’s launch pipeline and robust pre-sales bookings will improve cash flow generation. Given stronger cash flows, they expect a large part of the firm’s capex to be funded through internal accruals, thus capping net debt. 

    Sheth and Gilda anticipate the firm’s pre-sales to rise further in FY24 on the back of higher-than-expected launches in the next 12 months. They believe its commercial portfolio will generate a rental income of Rs 3,200 crore in the next five-six years. The analysts estimate the company’s revenue to grow at a CAGR of 11% over FY22-25.     

    1. UNO Minda: Axis Securities recommends a ‘Buy’ call on this auto components manufacturer with a target price of Rs 571. This indicates an upside of 6.7%. Analyst Neeraj Chadawar says, “The company is well-diversified with an ICE-EV agnostic product portfolio and is constantly increasing kit value, leading to higher wallet share with existing and potential clients.” According to him, the company’s divisions are operating at optimum capacity and it has announced a critical capex growth pipeline to meet incremental demand. 

    Chadawar says that announcements made in Q2FY23—expansion of lighting (capex of Rs 400 crore) and alloy wheels (Rs 190 crore) capacity, total capex pipeline of Rs 1,664 crore, and joint venture with Buehler and Tachi-S—will further boost the company’s long-term growth drivers. With strong growth drivers and a strong order book, the analyst expects revenue and profit CAGR of 22% and 42% respectively over FY22-25.

    1. Can Fin Homes: ICICI Direct initiates coverage with a ‘Buy’ call on this housing finance company and a target price of Rs 625. This indicates an upside of 14%. Analysts Kajal Gandhi, Vishal Narnolia and Pravin Mule say,  “Can Fin Homes continues to focus on tier-2 and tier-3 cities where there is less competition from banks and it can benefit from pricing power with an increased focus on branch expansion.” With the government’s focus on affordable housing, the analysts think the company is poised to benefit in terms of an improved growth trajectory. They expect the loan book to grow at 17% CAGR in FY22-25. 

    Gandhi, Narnolia and Mule say, “Can Fin Homes has been a best-in-class housing finance player with a robust business model and underwriting practices.” The analysts are optimistic about the housing finance provider as it will have consistent growth with a focus on efficient operations, coupled with relatively lower cost and strong underwriting, which will in turn, benefit earnings and return ratios.

    1. KPIT Technologies: Ashika Research gives a ‘Buy’ call to this IT consulting and software company with a target price of Rs 800, indicating an upside of 11.5%. According to the analysts, “KPIT stands to benefit from the recent acquisition of four Technica Group Companies, as it will help it  create a unique one-stop shop for the automotive industry in its transformation towards Software Defined Vehicles.” They added that the acquisition will enable KPIT to retain clients, engage much earlier in client development programmes, be part of complex architecture, etc.

    According to the analysts, the company is a strong player in a high entry barrier segment as it operates in an area which is extremely complex and disruptive. Therefore, entry into such a segment is extremely difficult for new players. The analysts are positive on the back of soaring deal size, healthy balance sheet status, strategic end-to-end engagement model and strong demand. “All key growth levers in cumulation affirm the continuance of positive earnings growth trajectory,” they concluded.

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

    (You can find all analyst picks here)

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    The Baseline
    08 Jan 2023
    The winning themes of 2022 - Momentum superstars, Bruce Lee stocks, and top MF/promoter picks

    The winning themes of 2022 - Momentum superstars, Bruce Lee stocks, and top MF/promoter picks

    By Deeksha Janiani

    January is named after Janus – the Roman god of gates and doorways, who could see both forward and backward at the same time. And this month, we look back to understand what lies ahead of us.

    Although the absolute returns for Indian markets were low in 2022, they outperformed the MSCI Emerging Markets and MSCI World indices by more than 20% over the year. Indian equities performed better than these global peers for the third year in a row, thanks to retail investors and buying by domestic funds. 

    The story does not end here. According to Prashant Nair, Deputy Director at CNBC-TV18, Indian benchmark indices have now generated positive returns for the seventh consecutive year. 

    However, many market analysts feel this dream run is done. Indian markets face multiple challenges in 2023, including high valuations, slowdown in key export markets, chances of fresh Covid waves and additional interest rate hikes. 

    Before we draw up fresh trading strategies for 2023, let’s explore some themes that  delivered handsome returns for investors in a difficult year like 2022. These will give important cues to investors and prepare us for a volatile 2023. 

    In this week’s Analyticks:

    • Momentum superstars:: High momentum stocks which generated big returns in 2022
    • Bruce Lee stocks: Stocks delivering consistent returns and growth since the past three years
    • MF and Promoter favourites: Growth stocks bought by mutual funds or promoters in the past four quarters

    Let’s get into it.


    Momentum superstars screener: Fertilizer stocks and small banks fly high

    This momentum screener selects stocks with a Trendlyne Momentum score of over 70, which have generated superlative returns of more than 30% in the past year. Among these, Fertilisers and Chemicals Travancore (FACT) enjoys the highest momentum score and multiplied investors’ wealth by more than 2.5X in 2022.

    Fertilizer stocks have been buzzing in trade. Higher prices of agricultural commodities due to tight supplies helped the realizations of agrochemical and fertilizer makers. Reports suggesting that the government might increase the subsidy on urea in the upcoming budget have also worked in their favour. 

    FACT has enjoyed especially high buying momentum thanks to its stellar financial performance in H1FY23, and capacity expansion plans.

    Another stock riding high on its near-term store expansion plans is Kalyan Jewellers. Strong demand trends in the 2022 peak festive season also lifted the spirits of this counter.

    Westlife Development outperformed its larger QSR peers in 2022, owing to its superior quarterly growth and ambitious growth targets. The company hopes to triple its sales to roughly Rs 4,500 crore via healthy same-store sales growth and higher store expansions in the next five years.  

    Small-cap banks are another category seeing high momentum scores, with 35% returns to investors in the past year. Most of the stocks here are public sector banks, which gained mileage due to a strong revival in credit growth, cleaner balance sheets and attractive valuations in 2022. Banks like UCO Bank, Punjab & Sind Bank and South Indian Bank more than doubled investors’ wealth in the past year.  

    However, analysts like Ambit Capital and Dalal & Broacha are sceptical about the continued outperformance of PSU bank stocks in 2023. They have run up quite a bit, and valuations of some stocks are ahead of their expected growth and return ratios. 

    Bruce Lee stocks: Consistent growers like Tube Investments and Varun Beverages emerge as big wealth compounders

    American martial artist Bruce Lee once said that “long-term consistency trumps short-term intensity”.  The comment about martial arts holds true for stock markets as well. Consistent growth stocks have rewarded investors with higher returns time and again.

    Companies like Varun Beverages and Tube Investments of India have grown their profits at a CAGR of over 30% in the past three fiscal years. They multiplied investors’ wealth at a whopping rate of over 60% between 2019 and 2022 end. 

    Varun Beverages has steadily expanded its distribution reach into newer geographies, and added new products to its portfolio. The company also took advantage of the sudden jump in out-of-home consumption post the omicron wave. It more than doubled its profits on a TTM basis and also doubled investors’ money in 2022. 

    Tube Investments has been diversifying its product portfolio away from the auto sector, which is cyclical in nature. The company managed to post robust growth between FY19-FY22, a period of downcycle for the auto space. It staged a successful turnaround of CG Power in FY22, which is now driving its higher growth along with its export markets. 

    PI industries is another player which has benefited from the consistent growth of its export business over the past few years. It also clocked strong revenue growth in the past few quarters on robust volumes. The company was a top industry outperformer in the past year.

    Emerging as the dark horse in the telecom sector, Bharti Airtel staged a smart recovery post the slowdown in FY16-FY19, and returned to the black in FY22. Healthy subscriber addition, market share gain in 4G segment and the robust rise in average revenue per user aided its financial growth. 

    Smallcap capital goods stocks have also surprised investors with their consistent returns and net profit growth in the past three years. These companies benefited from strong order inflows as investments revived in railways, defence, infrastructure, metals and mining, and energy sectors. RHI Magnesita India and Timken India emerged as the fastest growers and wealth compounders within this group. 

    MF and Promoter favourites: Mutual funds and promoters picked auto and bank stocks in 2022

    Given the solid growth of passenger and commercial vehicle wholesales post April 2022, mutual funds and promoters picked up stakes across auto OEMs and auto ancillaries. Mutual Funds added the highest stake in Rolex Rings. This small-cap auto stock got listed in August 2021 and generated returns of over 50% in the past year. 

    Promoters also picked up auto ancillaries, based on the improved outlook of the sector. A promoter entity held by the Minda family picked up over 2.5% stake in UNO Minda in the September 2022 quarter. The company has a couple of capex projects in lighting and alloy manufacturing over the medium term. 

    Mahindra CIE Automotive was also among the top promoter picks in 2022 and has returned over 50% to its investors. Its Spanish promoter entity raised nearly 5% stake, while M&M cut over 2% stake in the company in 2022.

    Axis Bank, Bandhan Bank and HDFC Bank have emerged as the most bought stocks by mutual funds in the past four quarters, while Axis Bank has been the top industry outperformer in terms of financial growth in Q2FY23. It has grown its net interest income the fastest among larger peers and is the top analyst pick for 2023. 

    Even though the IT sector was battered in 2022, mid-tier IT company Coforge came out as the top pick by mutual funds. The company has maintained a robust QoQ revenue growth trajectory and also sustained its margins at 17% levels in a difficult period. 

    Thomas Cook (India) was among the most bought small-cap stocks by promoters in 2022. Healthy surge in travel demand to both domestic and international destinations may have prompted promoters to raise more than 6.5% stake in the company.  

    You can find some popular screeners here.

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    The Baseline
    06 Jan 2023
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Marico: This FMCG company rose 1.9% on Thursday following its Q3FY23 business update. The company’s Indian business has improved marginally as it posted mid-single-digit volume growth. The Saffola franchise sales, which contribute 20% of its revenue, increased in double digits with Saffola Oils putting up volume growth in the low teens.

    Premium personal care also witnessed double-digit growth in line with sectoral trends. The management expects the gross and operating margins to improve YoY and sequentially in Q3FY23 as raw material prices stabilise along with consumer pricing. According to analysts, FMCG companies are optimistic about growth in revenue with the aid of a rise in rural sales. They also expect inflation to drop and demand to rise. However, Pushan Sharma, director of research of CRISIL Market, says, “Volume growth for the sector will remain subdued owing to rising inflation and sluggish rural demand, which accounts for almost 40 per cent of overall FMCG demand.”

    The company has also launched ready-to-eat snacks under the brand name of Saffola Munchiez to expand its range of packaged foods, according to reports. The stock rose 2.6% on December 9, 2022, as its subsidiary, Marico South East Asia Corp (MSEA) signed a definitive agreement to acquire 100% shares in personal care brand, Beauty X, for approximately Rs 172 crore. The company also features in a screener of stocks with improving return on equity (RoE) over the past two years.

    1. Avenue Supermarts: This retailing company’s share price fell over 3% on Wednesday after it announced its standalone (D-Mart) Q3FY23 update. Revenue from operations has risen 24.7% YoY to Rs 11,304.6 in Q3, and the company has added four new stores, taking the total count to 306. But its share price has fallen as revenue growth and store additions slowed down compared to historical levels. Top-line growth in Q3 has been the slowest since Q4FY22. As a result of the share price fall, this company features in a screener of stocks with weak momentum: prices below short, medium and long-term averages.

    Brokerages like Motilal Oswal and Macquarie remain cautious about Avenue Supermarts amid slowing top-line growth, according to reports. Macquarie has an 'underperform' rating on Avenue Supermarts due to the company's worse-than-expected commentary on outlook and slow store additions in Q3. For reference, the company added 18 and 50 new stores in H1FY23 and FY22 respectively. However, mutual funds are positive about the company as they increased their shareholding in Avenue Supermarts last month.

    In its Q2FY23 earnings call, the management said that sales of discretionary items in the non-FMCG segment were recovering, but yet to match pre-pandemic levels. However, overall standalone revenue has risen 67% YoY in Q3FY23, when compared to pre-Covid levels or Q3FY20. Avenue Supermarts is yet to announce a date for its Q3FY23 results. According to Trendlyne’s forecaster estimates, both Q3FY23 and FY23 revenue are expected to rise nearly 30% YoY.

    1. NCC: This mid-cap construction & engineering company recently announced five order wins worth Rs 3,601 crore from state government agencies. The stock zoomed 9% in trade on Tuesday after it released the filing. Of the five orders, two pertain to the water and electrical division and are worth Rs 1,871 crore and Rs 993 crore respectively. Another order is from the irrigation division, costing Rs 738 crore. In the past six months, the stock has risen 71%, and 31% in one year. It is also trading near its 52-week high and rose 2.5% on Thursday in a weak market.

    NCC’s total order book stands at Rs 40,020 crore as of Q2FY23. ICICI Direct and Geojit BNP Paribas have raised their target price by 22% and 21% respectively. The brokerages expect the order book to improve with a 16% CAGR growth over FY22-25E. However, Geojit BNP Paribas has reduced its EBITDA margin guidance by 50 bps to factor in commodity prices.

    Vijay Kumar, Head & VP of Finance of NCC, says that the order book has been robust and H1FY23 saw an order inflow of Rs 6,800 crore. He adds, “We are one of the front runners in Jal Jeevan Mission and have orders from Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and other states. Going forward, these segments are going to contribute a good chunk of revenue to the top line of the company.” NCC has given a guidance of 30% revenue growth and margin guidance of 9.5-10% for FY23. It also plans to reduce its gross debt from Rs 1,985 crore in H1FY23 and bring it in the range of Rs 1,500 crore in FY23 due to rising cash flows.

    The stock ranks high on Trendlyne’s DVM score and shows up in a screener with negative to positive growth in sales and profit with strong price momentum.

    1. IndusInd Bank: This banking stock closed in the red on Wednesday, taking cues from the Nifty 50, despite reporting a strong business update. The lender has seen a steady increase in loans disbursed and deposits. In Q3FY23, its net advances have risen 19% YoY to Rs 2.7 lakh crore, and deposits 14% YoY to Rs 3.3 lakh crore. The bank’s advances stood at Rs 2.6 lakh crore and deposits at Rs 3.2 lakh crore in Q2FY23.

    Several analysts are bullish on the bank due to the strong trend in its loan and deposit growth. Foreign brokerage CLSA believes that 2023 would be a strong year for Indian banks. It has upgraded rating on IndusInd Bank to ‘Buy’ from ‘Outperform’ and also raised the target price to Rs 1,500. As a result, the stock features in a screener of companies where brokers have upgraded recommendations or target prices in the past three months. Consensus estimates show 27 analysts recommending a ‘Strong Buy’ on the stock with seven recommending ‘Buy’ and five recommending ‘Hold’.

    Meanwhile, on Thursday, IndusInd Bank announced a tie-up with two leading international airlines (Qatar Airways and British Airways) to introduce a co-branded credit card. Soumitra Sen, Head of Consumer Banking & Marketing of the bank said, “With this credit card, our aim is to shift the power of choice completely into the hands of the customers.”

    The stock features in a screener of stocks near their 52-week highs with significant volumes.

    1. APL Apollo Tubes: This iron & steel products manufacturer’s sales volume has grown 50% YoY in Q3FY23, led by robust demand in its structural and coated products categories. Since announcing its Q3 sales figures on Monday, the stock has been on an uptrend. This led to it showing up in the screener for stocks with strong momentum. It grew 6.4% over the past week till Thursday, outperforming the Nifty Metal index by 4.2% over the same period.

    The company’s sales volume growth has been led by the structural product segment’s volumes surging 61.9% YoY. Its structural/coated products are manufactured in its latest plant in Raipur, which has seen a 3.8X QoQ growth in sales volumes. The management expects an upswing in its sales volume in the coming quarters, as it plans to ramp up production in its new Raipur plant. According to reports, as the Centre prioritises infrastructure and construction, the company is expected to see further growth in volumes, with a surge in demand for its value-added products, which will lead to an improvement in margins. According to Trendlyne’s Forecaster, the company’s Q3 net profit is expected to surge by 77.2% YoY and the consensus recommendation from 12 analysts is ‘Buy’.

    The company has a healthy new product pipeline and it aims to expand its distribution reach in the coming quarters. The company seems to be well-positioned to capitalise on the expected rise in demand for steel given that it has a 55% market share in India’s structural steel tube industry. 

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

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    The Baseline
    05 Jan 2023
    The top analyst picks of 2022: how did they perform?

    The top analyst picks of 2022: how did they perform?

    By Suhas Reddy

    As the year comes to an end, we take a look at how brokerage analysts expected sectors and stocks to perform in 2022, and how they actually did. Hit by turbulence, Indian financial markets were very volatile in 2022. The war in Europe, supply chain disruptions, high inflation, economic slowdown and Covid-19 made for a bumpy ride.

    These external shocks …

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    As the year comes to an end, we take a look at how brokerage analysts expected sectors and stocks to perform in 2022, and how they actually did. Hit by turbulence, Indian financial markets were very volatile in 2022. The war in Europe, supply chain disruptions, high inflation, economic slowdown and Covid-19 made for a bumpy ride.

    These external shocks led to a divergence in how various sectors performed. Some of the best performing indices like the BSE BANKEX, Nifty FMCG and S&P BSE Industrials gained 23.2%, 19.9% and 20.9% respectively over the past year till December 30. But Nifty IT and Nifty Pharma fell 24.8% and 10.2% respectively over the same period.

    Given shifting macroeconomic conditions, brokerages reconsidered some of their picks and recommendations over the year. At the start of the year, the pharma sector, which took centre stage during the Covid era, was very popular among brokers. But as falling Covid-19 cases and the war in Europe changed the business environment for pharma companies, brokers shifted their focus to other sectors like automobiles, software and FMCG.

    Banking & Finance, Auto sectors most popular among analysts 

    Banking & Finance (BFSI) was a popular sector for analysts,  with the most companies tracked in 2022. While it had only 25 stocks covered at the beginning of 2022, the year ended with 34 stocks being covered by brokers. As the sector with the highest number of listed companies at 465 and comprising one-fifth of the Nifty 50 index, it’s not surprising that it was the most heavily followed.

    Software & Services, Automobiles & Auto Components, Cement & Construction and FMCG were other sectors where analysts increased the number of companies covered by the end of the year. Analyst interest saw the biggest jump, from 12 to 19 stocks, in the Software & Services sector. This was most likely due to an expected fall in attrition rates and a rise in demand from 2023 onwards.

    The Pharmaceuticals & Biotechnology sector saw the biggest fall in analyst interest in 2022. It began the year with 23 stocks being covered and ended with just 13 companies followed by analysts. The sector fell out of favour with investors as it was affected by falling covid-19 revenues, high input costs, and supply chain disruptions. 

    Large banks like ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank hog analysts’ attention in 2022 

    ICICI Bank began the year with the highest number of brokers covering it at 12 and ended at the top of the list again with 19.  Analyst interest in HDFC Bank also surged during 2022, from 10 to 19. 

    Overall, the top six most covered companies at the end of January didn’t see a drop in interest at the end of the year.

    BFSI, Software and Auto sectors end 2022 with the most buy calls

    The BFSI sector had the highest number of companies with a buy recommendation in 2022. While the number was 16 in January, it doubled to 32 in December. The sector had a good run this year, as credit demand grew despite repo rate hikes. The Nifty Bank was one of the best-performing indices in 2022, gaining 23% over the past year. Currently, brokerages are covering 34 banking stocks, of which 32 have one or more buy recommendations.

    Going into 2023, automobiles and IT sectors have 19 companies each covered by brokers and all of those stocks have one or more brokerage analysts recommending a buy call. Both sectors saw a jump in the number of stocks with buy calls by the end of 2022. The automobile sector had 14 stocks with buy calls in January and the software & services sector had five.

    The pharmaceuticals sector had 16 stocks with buy calls by the end of January but fell to 12 by December. Given the macroeconomic headwinds impacting the sector, analysts changed their stance on pharma stocks in 2022.

    HDFC Bank sees a jump in number of analysts with buy recommendations

    In January, ICICI Bank and Infosys had the highest number of analysts assigning them a buy rating; both had 10 each. Among the top seven companies with buy recommendations, five were from the banking sector, and two were from the software & services sector.  

    However, looking at the one-year price change, both Infosys and HCL Technologies declined. They missed the average broker target upside by a wide margin. This was  due to the IT sector being impacted by industry-wide headwinds like high attrition rates and lower demand from the US and Europe. Over the past year, BSE IT sector fell by 23%.

    Barring HDFC Bank, all other major banks beat the average broker target upsides they had in January. Federal Bank grew by 69.7% and beat its average target upside by the largest margin. IndusInd Bank was the second-best performer, which rose by 40.2% over the past year.  

    In December, the list of stocks with the most buy ratings from brokerages remained largely identical. While HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, IndusInd Bank and Federal Bank remained in the top seven list at the beginning and end of the year, the new entrants in December with multiple buy calls were State Bank of India and Ashok Leyland. Going into 2023, most brokers seem to be very optimistic about the growth prospects of major banks.

    The unlovely number 1: Auto sector leads with most sell calls

    The auto sector leads in the number of stocks with one or more analysts recommending a sell rating. It had eight stocks with sell ratings in January and the number remained the same by the end of the year as well. However the sector had many stocks with buy ratings as well.

    The retailing sector also witnessed a huge spike in the number of companies with sell ratings by the end of the year. In January, the sector had only one such company but it jumped to seven in December. However, each of the seven companies has only one brokerage analyst recommending a sell rating. The banking sector also saw a jump in the number of stocks with sell recommendations. The number went up to six from two.

    JSW Steel ends the year with four brokerages assigning it a sell call

    Berger Paints, Eicher Motors and Bharat Heavy Electricals had three brokerage analysts each recommending a sell. These companies had the highest number of analysts pessimistic about their prospects in January. They were followed by Ashok Leyland, Bata India and Balkrishna Industries, with two brokerages each. These companies were negatively impacted by pandemic-induced lockdowns, which lowered demand.

    Despite having low average broker target upside, companies like Eicher Motors, Bharat Heavy Electricals and Ashok Leyland beat expectations and saw strong gains. In fact, of the four brokers covering Bharat Heavy Electricals, three assigned it a sell rating. This stock grew 36.3% over the past year, led by robust order inflow.

    Berger Paints, Bata India and Balkrishna Industries, on the other hand, fell over the same time period. All of them missed the broker average target upside they had at the end of January. The average target downside for Bata India was 6.7% and the stock contracted by 8.9% over the year. All these stocks dragged as they were unable to completely offset the impact of high input costs and supply chain disruptions.

    The list of stocks with the most sell calls changed completely by the end of December. JSW Steel and Tata Elxsi led with 4 and 3 brokerage analysts respectively. Half the broker analysts following JSW Steel assigned it a sell rating. 

    Among the top 10 stocks analysts were most pessimistic on, three were cement players and two software companies. Despite the automobile sector having the highest number of stocks with sell recommendations, only one company from the sector made it to the top 10. All the other seven auto stocks had only one broker recommending a sell rating.  

    Recovery in growth expected across sectors in 2023

    Stepping into 2023, investors and analysts expect strong growth in many sectors on the back of a robust recovery in economic growth, falling commodity prices and strong domestic inflows. However, Goldman Sachs and Jefferies expect muted share price upside in 2023 given the expensive valuations of Indian equities.  

    However, it looks like most analysts are bullish on sectors like banking, automobiles, industrials and FMCG. Although major economic tailwinds are expected to aid the performance of Indian markets, outside risks such as the resurgence of Covid-19 remain. 

    This analysis by Trendlyne is meant for investor education - to help understand companies and make informed investment decisions on their own. It should not be considered an investment recommendation.

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