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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    18 May 2022
    Warning in key indicator as India's equity market cap soars past GDP

    Warning in key indicator as India's equity market cap soars past GDP

    In Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, a character warns the hero, "These violent delights have violent ends." Go slow, he tells Romeo.

    Like Romeo, the stock market may have moved too fast, especially when we compare it to India's real GDP growth. For the first time, India's total stock market capitalization (BSE) is at a record 165% of India's estimated real GDP for FY22. Pre-Covid, it was 108% of real GDP.

    This value (total market cap to GDP) is commonly known as the Buffett indicator - Warren Buffett once said that it is “probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment.” This helps us compare stock market sentiment against actual economic output - telling us when there is a mismatch in investor expectation and reality. 

    The high level of this indicator right now is a signal to investors to be very cautious about adding more money to equities, especially in the riskier smallcap and midcap stocks, and overvalued stocks. Especially with CEOs across industries talking about rising costs impacting their margins in earnings calls. Achal Bakeri of Symphony puts this well:

    "We cannot keep on repeating price increases over and over again. We have not been able to keep passing this. Even in the month of April, there were cost increases - commodity cost increases or basic raw material increases. You cannot just keep on changing your prices frequently in business like ours which is a consumer business. So we have absorbed quite a bit of cost increases."

    As the RBI raises interest rates and liquidity shrinks, companies will have to battle both costs as well as the rising price of debt. This is likely to impact valuations further. 


    Plenty of Nifty500 stocks in the PE Sell Zone

    Investors can check which stocks are in the PE Sell Zone (stocks that usually trade below their current PE most of the time). Even after the recent correction, 115 stocks in the Nifty500 are still in the PE Sell Zone, including Infosys, Adani Enterprises, Asian Paints and Bandhan Bank. 


    Results show some sectors turning wobbly

    The Results Dashboard tracks results as they come in, and the Q4 results are illuminating. Some sectors beaten down by the pandemic are finally delivering strong results - Hotels are seeing profit margins jump by double digits, Specialty Retail including PVR and Inox are seeing net profit recovery.

    Agrochemicals has so far also delivered a good quarter, although rising costs have put margins under pressure - this sector has limited capability of passing on costs to farmers, especially in India's price-sensitive rural market. 

    But over 50% of results declared so far have shown negative profit growth. 

    Sectors that have been weak include auto as well as the tyre industry, which are reeling under both demand and cost pressures. 


    Interesting reads

    HDFC Life, despite the challenges of FY22 has closed the year on a high, showing rising premiums and improving metrics.

    UPL delivered a strong set of results. But price hikes played a big part in this, as the company deals with rising costs.   

    FMCG bellweather HUL managed a difficult quarter well. But like others it has been hit by cost pressures. Does this threaten margins?

    1
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    The Baseline
    16 May 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. Dalmia Bharat: Motilal Oswal maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this cement company but cut its target price to Rs 1,915 from Rs 2,000, indicating an upside of 34.6%. Analysts Sanjeev Kumar Singh and Mudit Agarwal cut their target price as they expect high energy costs and freight costs to persist. However, the analysts “like the company owing to its growth plans, a locational advantage in East India and cost reduction measures”. Revenue rose 7% YoY to Rs 3,380 crore driven by improvements in realisations and sales volume and realisation improved 4% YoY to Rs 5,121 per tonne, as cement prices increased during Q4FY22. 

    The analysts expect demand for cement to grow at 8-9% over the next few years, driven by higher Infrastructure spending, low-cost housing and rural demand. They believe the company is well-placed to benefit from the rise in demand given its focus on capacity expansion and cost-efficiency measures. They expect the company’s operating revenue to grow at a 10.9% CAGR over FY22-24.

    1. Polycab India: BOB Capital Markets maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this cable and fast moving electrical goods maker with a target price of Rs 3,000, indicating an upside of 16.5%. Analysts Vinod Chari, Someel Shah, and Tanay Rasal remain positive about the company’s prospects given its robust Q4FY22 results, market leadership in cables and wires, and distribution presence. The company’s Q4FY22 net profit rose 20% YoY to Rs 320 crore and revenue rose 35% YoY to Rs 3,943.7 crore led by growth across the cables and wires segments.

    The analysts say that “being the market leader in cables and wires, we expect Polycab to not only pass on the higher raw material cost but also to gain market share given its superior product quality”. The company commands 22-24% market share in the organised market and 15-16% share in the fragmented market in India The brokerage take is that the ongoing revival in infrastructure and construction activities to benefit the cable and wire industry, especially organised market leaders like Polycab. The analysts expect the company’s revenue to grow at a 15.1% CAGR over FY22-24.

    1. Federal Bank: Axis Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this bank stock but reduced its target price to Rs 115 from Rs 125. The new target price indicates an upside of 35.2%. “Federal Bank reported a muted Q4FY22 with operational performance below our expectations,” says analyst Dnyanada Vaidya. In Q4FY22, Net Interest Income grew by 7% YoY to Rs 1,525 crore which was below the brokerage’s estimate of Rs 1,595 crore, he added  Vaidya says that lower than expected provisions for NPAs supported profit growth. Provisions were down 69% YoY to Rs 75 crore which led to profit rising 13% YoY to Rs 541 crore, he said. 

    Vaidya adds that the bank “has been taking a cautious approach in building the loan mix toward high-rated corporates and retail loans. The bank’s liability franchise remains strong with CASA plus Retail TD of 92% and the bank looking to improve its CASA deposits gradually over the medium term.” He expects that the bank’s focus on high-margin businesses such as microfinance institutions and credit cards will gradually aid in margin improvement.

    1. SRF: Edelweiss maintains its ‘Buy’ call on this chemical company’s stock and increased its target price to Rs 2,800 from Rs 2,700, indicating an upside of 24.9%. “SRF Ltd posted a strong beat on the top line and bottom line, underpinned by highest ever operating performance in Chemicals Business,” says analyst Anshul Verdia. In Q4FY22 the company’s consolidated revenue grew 36% YoY to Rs 3,549 crore, higher than the brokerage’s estimate. According to Verdia, the positive growth in the chemicals business was driven by the strong demand across the markets and new capacity addition in Hungary and Thailand.

    Verdia expects refrigerant gas prices to remain firm. He also expects the demand for specialty chemicals to continue to remain strong and packaging segment volumes to be driven by upcoming biaxially oriented polypropylene and aluminum foil capacity. Lastly, the brokerage remains positive as the company has also planned capex of about Rs 2,600 crore for FY23.

    1. Hindalco Industries: ICICI Securities maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this aluminium miner's stock with a target price of Rs 700, indicating an upside of 78.8%. Analysts Abhijit Mitra, Mohit Lohia, and Pritish Urumkar say that “progressively higher contract prices across product segments are also leading to an improved margin outlook in the medium term”. They expect the demand for beverage cans and automobiles to grow 5% YoY and 10% YoY in CY22, respectively. They believe the company is well-placed to benefit from the rise in demand given its capacity expansion and healthy balance sheet.

    The analysts expect the $2.5-billion greenfield investment in Alabama to improve EBITDA margins and reduce manpower costs by 30% through automation in the coming years. Furthermore, they see limited earning tailwinds from Novelis and expect its earnings to continue to benefit from cyclicality in FY23. The key risks for the company are lower aluminium prices, lower profitability at Novelis, and a reduction in LME spreads, according to the analysts.

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

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    The Baseline
    13 May 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Cipla: This pharmaceutical company’s stock rose 3% intra-day after it announced its Q4FY22 results on Wednesday despite its net profit declining 12.4% YoY to Rs 362.1 crore. This stock also shows up on the screener identifying companies that announced results in the past week with declining net profit YoY or QoQ. The screener includes 37 more companies from the Nifty 500 index.

    The net profit fell due to a one-time write-off of Covid-19 drugs inventory worth Rs 200 crore. Revenue grew 14.1% YoY to Rs 5,324.4, led by the One India and US business growing at 21% YoY and 17% YoY, respectively. The One India business growth is led by improved traction across segments, trade generics, and consumer health business. The US business posted its highest ever sales of $160 million (Rs 1,239.1 crore) while continuing to gain market share, driven by its respiratory portfolio and peptide assets. It continued its market-beating growth rate in large branded generic franchises in India & South Africa.

    The management expects complex product launches to drive EBITDA margin growth in the coming quarters and has guided for an EBITDA margin of 21-22% in FY23. The company also reduced its debt by 53% YoY to Rs 824 crore in Q4FY22 to maintain a strong balance sheet and drive free cash flow generation. 

    Brokerages like Axis Securities, ICICI Direct, and Prabhudas Lilladhar maintain a ‘Buy’ rating on the company. They remain positive about its prospects given its strong traction in the branded generic segment and respiratory portfolio, rich US business order pipeline, and healthy free cash flow generation. Motilal Oswal maintains a ‘Neutral’ rating on the company due to concerns regarding higher procurement and logistic costs.

    1. PVR: This multiplex company’s stock is falling since April 2022. It recovered slightly after it declared its Q4FY22 results on May 09, 2022, but that did not enthuse investors. Net loss narrowed to Rs 105.4 crore from Rs 289.1 crore YoY. However, the losses sequentially increased by 9.4X. This company also shows up in the screener including stocks that announced results in the past week with declining net profit YoY or QoQ. 

    Losses increased because of the third wave of Covid-19 as the government imposed capacity restrictions. Also, the lack of new content and a rise in movie releases on OTT platforms affected the multiplex industry in Q4FY22. However, March saw gradual improvement in occupancies and the release of strong content. This bodes well for growth in FY23.

    The management believes the business will recover in FY23. Motilal Oswal also expects business to normalize with a 57% growth in EBITDA next year. This is because of PVR’s plans to add 126 more screens in FY23. Its expansion plans extend to increasing the number of screens in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities. However, the brokerage continues to maintain a ‘Neutral’ rating on the stock as it is cautious about the projected growth in the cinema space as subscribers on OTT platforms increase. ICICI Securities is more positive about the company’s prospects, expecting the average ticket price (ATP) to reset to pre-Covid levels by H2FY23. Although the brokerage believes that EBITDA loss is large because of lower advertising, the management is positive about stabilizing its advertising revenue by Q1FY23. March 2022 saw advertising revenue reach nearly 40% of pre-Covid levels. With the INOX-PVR merger likely to happen in the coming quarters, the company might see better growth and earnings over FY23-24.

    1. Voltas: This consumer electronics company’s stock fell over 22% in the past week post its Q4FY22 results. Its net profit fell 23.2% YoY to Rs 182.7 crore, missing Trendlyne’s Forecaster estimates by 17.6%. Lower revenues from electro-mechanical projects (EMPS) and a sharp decline in profitability of unitary cooling products (UCP) affected Voltas’ Q4FY22 results. While revenue from EMPS fell 21% YoY to Rs 691.5 crore, revenue from UCP rose 9.9% YoY to Rs 1,818 crore on the back of strong demand. But EBIT margin of unitary products fell 5.2 percentage points to 10.6% due to high raw material costs. 

    Voltas earns around 69% of its revenues from the UCP segment, and is a market leader in room air conditioning (RAC) category. However, the company’s market share fell 200 bps to 23% in FY22. This is due to lower sales in South India, despite strong demand in the RAC segment due to early onset of summer in 2022. Its 9.9% growth in UCP revenues seems low when compared to its peers. Blue Star’s UCP revenue grew 32% YoY in Q4FY22 to Rs 1,034 crore whereas Havell’s Lloyd’s segment rose 62% to Rs 959.6 crore. 

    The management said that it took price hikes in the range of 12-15% in FY22 and would consider further price hikes if the commodity prices stay elevated. However, with the company losing market share due to pricing pressure, increasing prices may reduce demand in its UCP segment. 

    1. Navin Fluorine International:This chemical company’s stock rose 4.1% since Monday after it announced itsQ4FY22 results on Saturday, despite its net profit marginally rising 0.5% YoY to Rs 75.2 crore. Its net profit missed Trendlyne’s Forecaster estimates by 8.7%. EBITDA margin declined by 238 bps YoY to 23% due to rising raw material prices, employee costs and logistics costs. However, its revenue rose 17.1% YoY to Rs 421.3 crore driven by an expanding order pipeline, price hikes, and new customer additions across all its business verticals. According to the management, growth was largely driven by the high-value business segment which is made up of specialty chemicals and CRAM (contract research and manufacturing services) segments, which grew 21% YoY and 16% YoY, respectively. The high-value business segment contributed 62% of the total revenue in Q4FY22. Furthermore, the management expects to pass on high input costs to customers over the next couple of quarters in the specialty chemicals segment.

    Navin Fluorine Advanced Sciences, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the company, entered into a multi-year contract with a multinational company (MNC) to manufacture and supply a fluoro-specialty chemical. Management noted that this deal has a peak potential revenue of Rs 600 crore per annum and requires a capex of Rs 540 crore. The plant is expected to start operation by the end of CY23.  

    This company also comes up on a screener which shows stocks that received broker price or recommendation upgrades in the past month. 77 Nifty 500 companies saw an upgrade in broker price or recommendation.

    1. Gujarat Gas: This natural gas distribution company’s stock rose by nearly 9% on Thursday after it declared its Q4FY22 earnings. This company shows up in the screener that includes stocks that outperformed the Nifty 500 index over the past week. The screener shows 204 stocks in the Nifty 500 index. Its net profit rose 27.5% YoY to Rs 444.4 crore with total revenue increasing 12.6% to Rs 4,773.4 crore. The company even declared a dividend of Rs 2 per share. Total volumes rose 14% YoY to 42.7 million metric standard cubic metres per day (mmscmd) with CNG volumes surging 52% YoY to 7.9 mmscmd.

    The management continues its expansion plans as it adds a total of 155 new CNG (compressed natural gas) stations, taking the total to 711 stations. This is the highest number of CNG stations installed by any City Gas Distribution company in India. 

    However, the high price of LNG is hampering volume growth for Gujarat Gas. Industrial demand is falling, due to high spot LNG (liquefied natural gas) prices. LNG price in March was US $35.4 million British thermal unit (MMBtu), which fell to US $24.5 MMBtu in April 2022. Further cooling of these prices should aid in volume recovery. 

    Brokerage HDFC Securities believes that the company’s margins were protected because of weak demand for high-cost LNG and strong growth and high margin in low-cost CNG and domestic PNG (piped natural gas). EBITDA margin fell 120 bps YoY to 14.9% in Q4FY22. Resolution of the ongoing geopolitical tensions may help ease gas prices further and improve margins. The company’s recent successful bids for six geographical areas to set up city gas distribution centres should aid long-term growth. 

    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
    13 May 2022
    Bad Day for Britannia? And some sectors see earnings jump in Q4

    Bad Day for Britannia? And some sectors see earnings jump in Q4

    Dear Firstname,

    While western India reels under a heat wave, the eastern coast saw a storm. It's dark clouds for the stock markets as well, as the US indices experienced "carnage" and Indian stocks fell sharply. Outside stock markets, bad weather has also ravaged a key agri crop, adding to the woes of a major FMCG company.

    In this week’s Analyticks:

    • India’s wheat harvest wilts in the heat wave, could add to Britannia’s pain in H1FY23

    • Top scorers in a bad season: Companies, sectors which delivered growth in a difficult economic environment

     Let’s get into it.


    Global wheat shortage, damage to India’s wheat crop add to Britannia’s woes in upcoming quarters

    Amid the intensifying Russia-Ukraine conflict, India in April was hoping to ‘feed the world’ with a record wheat output. Cut to May 2022, and wheat production is set to fall for the first time in eight years. 

    The hottest March in 122 years has played a part in this, as it has affected both the quality of the wheat crop as well as the output per hectare (yield). What could be the impact of this for biscuit makers like Britannia? 

    Britannia beats volume growth expectations in Q4  and sustains margins

    Analysts like Motilal Oswal originally expected flat sales volume growth for Britannia in Q4FY22. Aggressive price hikes and resulting impact on rural demand were the underlying causes of flat volume growth.

    The company increased the prices of its products by nearly 13% in 9MFY22 and by 10% in Q4FY22. Britannia undertook these price hikes primarily by reducing the grammage of its products.

    This definitely impacted the price sensitive rural consumer. But Britannia reported a 4-5% sales volume growth in the quarter, despite sluggish rural demand. Expansion of its distribution channels, higher demand for biscuit brands like Tiger Krunch and Milk Bikis, drove volume growth. 

    However, will Britannia will be able to sustain volume growth in H1FY23? Varun Berry, Managing Director of the company, said that even if commodity prices stay at current levels in the near-term, Britannia will have to take additional price hikes of 10% in Q1FY23 to protect its gross margins. It might be challenging to maintain meaningful sales volume growth in coming quarters. 

    Britannia’s gross margins fell nearly 250 bps YoY to 38% due to steep cost inflation in inputs like palm oil, wheat, sugar, cashew and milk, which rose 17% QoQ on an average in Q4FY22. Still, the company managed to protect its margins on a QoQ basis aided by its long-term commodity contracts.

    Britannia to encounter high inflationary pressures in H1FY23

    Global wheat prices jumped 35%+ ever since the Russia-Ukraine war broke out. Russia banned wheat exports to protect its domestic supplies, while Ukraine’s wheat harvests have stalled. Another key reason is the disruption of wheat shipments in the Black Sea region due to the war - ports have closed along this route, and ships have been blocked.

    Interestingly, prices in India didn’t rise rapidly, since it is a wheat-surplus nation.

    The severe heat wave starting mid-March have killed India's hopes of being the world's saviour in wheat supplies. The Indian government's initial forecasts were of a record wheat output of 111.3 million tonnes in 2021-22. But wheat is extremely sensitive to high temperatures, especially when it is ripening in the month of March. As March 2022 witnessed a hot spell, the wheat kernels shrivelled i.e., reduced in size. 

    In fact, according to Bloomberg, the crop yield could fall anywhere between 10%-20% in 2021-22 (Crop yield basically means the amount of agricultural production harvested per unit of land area).

    Now, farmers are staring at a crop damage of at least 10-20% of their harvest in 2021-22, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization, a United Nations agency. They are trying to make up for the loss by seeking better prices for their produce. There are reports of farmers withholding their produce to sell their output to private traders or export it at a better price, in line with global market rates. This is why the government's wheat procurement may also fall by half to 19.5 million tonnes.

    With India expecting a fall in production and wheat supplies constrained globally, prices will head further north. And with Indonesia restricting palm oil exports, there is more pain in store for food companies like Britannia and Nestle. Even though analysts forecast a 14% YoY profit growth for Britannia in FY23, the real impact of spiralling commodity costs may become apparent in the coming months.   


    Screener:Companies seeing a big jump in net profit growth, operating margin improvement and revenue growth in Q4FY22

    As we are halfway into the current result season, some companies showed good earnings growth, while others didn’t. This screener throws-up a set of 60 stocks in total who are beating the averages, out which 31 are part of the Nifty 500.

    Notably, around 10 stocks are from the banking and financial services sector. Banking heavyweights like ICICI Bank and Kotak Mahindra Bank saw their net profits rise 50%+ on a YoY basis in Q4FY22. However, their revenues rose 11.7% YoY on average. Reversal of Covid-related provisions played a bigger part in the earnings growth here. Provisions also fell on account of better loan recoveries and lower bad loans in the quarter.

    Meanwhile home loans, personal loans, loans against property and credit card loans drove the overall net interest income growth for most banks. Financial performance of leading NBFCs like Bajaj Finance and SBI Cards also stood out in Q4FY22.

    Agrochemical and fertilizer companies like Astec Lifesciences and Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilizers witnessed over 80% YoY growth in their Q4 net profits. Higher sales realizations and volume growth in the exports segment worked in favour of this sector. 

    The hotels and realty sector put forth a commendable performance in Q4FY22. Hotels like Indian Hotels Company, EIH and Mahindra Holidays witnessed nearly 3X YoY rise in their net profits on an average driven by robust demand in the leisure travel segment. Operating revenues for Godrej Properties and Mahindra Lifespace Developers skyrocketed 3X YoY backed by robust sales bookings in value terms.

    The other major sector which saw profit growth in Q4FY22 was electric utilities. Favourable merchant power prices on higher electricity demand worked to the advantage of power generation companies like JSW Energy and Adani Power.

    You can find some popular screeners here.

    Signing off this week,

    The Trendlyne Team

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    The Baseline
    11 May 2022
    Chart of the Week: Despite an eventful six months, Reliance Industries’ stock doesn't see much upside

    Chart of the Week: Despite an eventful six months, Reliance Industries’ stock doesn't see much upside

    Reliance Industries made history last week after it touched the revenue mark of $102 billion. It announced its Q4FY22 results,  and FY22 revenue rose 47% to Rs 7.9 lakh crore led by strong growth in O2C (Oil to consumer) business and retail business. Net profit grew 26% YoY to Rs 67,845 crore but missedForecaster estimates by 11.3%.

    Investors were not too enthused by the results as the stock is falling for four consecutive sessions. Reliance's stock has been moving sideways for the past six months, with the uncertainty in global markets playing spoiler. During this time, some deals went sour and some went through. In November 2021, Reliance Industries and Aramco called off their $15 billion deal over valuation concerns.

    Reliance moved on and signed an agreement with TA’ZIZ for a $2 billion chemicals project. The stock rose for three consecutive sessions after that. The stock closed 2021 at Rs 2,368.2, and Reliance New Energy (RIL’s subsidiary) acquired a 100% stake in Faradion. This acquisition was worth Rs 935 crore.

    Reports suggest that Reliance has already spent almost $1 billion in 2022 from January – March, investing in industries like renewable energy, fashion, and e-commerce to diversify away from its fossil fuel business. It started 2022 with a $240 million investment in Dunzo. This deal was to strengthen Reliance Retail’s e-commerce platform.

    Right after the Dunzo deal, Reliance signed an MoU (memorandum of understanding) with the Gujarat Government to invest Rs 5.9 lakh crore in green energy projects in Gujarat. The stock rose to Rs 2,539 on January 14, 2022. It is also foraying into the fashion business with Reliance Retail acquiring an 89% stake in Clovia for Rs 950 crore.

    Although not an acquisition, Reliance Retail took over 947 stores of Future Retail. Reliance Retail now has access to more than 300 format stores which will strengthen its place in the retail business.

    Reliance Industries and Viacom 18 partnered with Bodhi Tree Systems to form one of the largest TV and digital streaming companies. TV18 Broadcast, also the controlling partner in Viacom 18 owns more than 50 channels in India. Network 18 (TV18 Broadcast’s holding company) will be helpful in the distribution of digital media, once the Jio Cinema OTT app is transferred to Viacom 18.  Reports suggest that Reliance is relying on acquisitions in various fields to fuel the company’s expansion. It’ll be interesting to see investor reactions as this strategy plays out.

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    The Baseline
    09 May 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. Mphasis: ICICI Direct maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this IT services company with a target price of Rs 3,410, indicating an upside of 26.7%. In Q4FY22, the company’s revenue increased 4.8% QoQ to Rs 3,245 crore and profit by 9.6% QoQ to Rs 392 crore. According to the analyst Sameer Pardikar the profit growth was aided by higher other income. 

    “Strategy to mine top 10-20 clients, adding high potential new logos, rise in deal sizes & expansion in Europe bodes well for long term growth” for the company, says Pardikar. The analyst expects improving deal size, market share gains via vendor consolidation, low legacy exposure, and exposure to lesser impacted verticals will drive 22% CAGR growth in direct revenues in FY22-24. The analyst also adds that improving revenue trajectory will boost EBIT margins by 70 bps to 16.0% in FY22-24.

    1. Titan: Motilal Oswal maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this jewellery maker’s stock with a target price of Rs 2,900. This indicates an upside of 31.9%. Analysts Krishnan Sambamoorthy, Kaiwan Jal Olia, and Aditya Kasat say the “Q4FY22 result was above expectations, led by healthy sales growth in the non-jewelry segments.” In Q4FY22, the company reported a profit of Rs 660 crore, up 16.7% YoY, and consolidated revenue of Rs 7,800 crore, up 4% (the brokerage estimates were Rs 490 crore and Rs 7,270 crore, respectively) 

    The analysts add that “new customer additions remain strong, indicating continued market share gains from the competition (and) despite the volatility in gold prices and COVID-led disruptions, its earnings CAGR has been stellar (24%) for the past five-years ending FY22.” They expect this trend to continue.

    1. Can Fin Homes: Edelweiss maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this mortgage lender’s stock with a target price of Rs 800, indicating an upside of 54.7%. The brokerage remains positive about the company’s prospects given its robust Q4FY22 results and improving asset quality. The company’s net profit grew 20% YoY to Rs 123 crore and its net non-performing assets (NNPA) ratio fell 31 bps YoY to 0.3%. Analyst Jigar Jani says “Can Fin Homes’ Q4FY22 results beat our estimates on the net revenue and PPOP (pre-provision operating profit) fronts by 10% and 9%, respectively”. 

    Jani said growth was recorded across the board, with AUM (assets under management) growing 21% YoY to Rs 26,711 crore, driven by a sharp rise of 35% YoY in disbursements. NII (net interest income) grew 28% YoY to Rs 237 crore, driven by an improvement in insurance income, which is linked to disbursements. The analyst expects the loan book to expand at a CAGR of 20% and net profit to grow at a CAGR of 20.6% over FY22-24.

    1. Housing Development Finance Corporation(HDFC): Prabhudas Lilladher maintains its ‘Buy’ rating on this housing finance company, but cut its target price to Rs 2,900 from Rs 3,228, indicating an upside of 34.5%. Analysts Gaurav Jani and Palak Shah say, “HDFC reported a good quarter with all core metrics beating estimates. Individual disbursals saw an accretion of 18% YoY. Affordable housing saw good traction. Individual loan disbursals saw a 37% YoY growth in FY22”. Net interest income grew by 14% YoY to Rs 4,600 crore and asset under management grew by 14% YoY to Rs 5.7 lakh crore. 

    According to the analysts, the company’s management indicated that home loan demand remains strong while construction finance could see an uptick and the management commentary also suggested that home loan demand remained strong while the pipeline in construction finance and lease rental discounting was healthy. In terms of the HDFC and HDFC bank synergies the analysts say, “post the merger, all bank branches would source home loans which could drive strong home loan growth”.

    1. Central Depository Services (India) (CDSL): HDFC Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this depository services provider’s stock but has lowered its target price to Rs 1,500 from Rs 1,800, indicating an upside of 26.6%. The brokerage cut its target price as CDSL’s Q4FY22 revenue missed its estimate by 14.6%. Analysts Amit Chandra and Vinesh Vala say “the estimates were missed due to a sharp fall in IPO/corporate action revenue”. However, they remain positive about the company’s prospects as they expect steady annuity revenue, growth in BO (beneficiary owner) accounts, and IPO revenue led by the LICIPO.

    The analysts expect CDSL’s growth rate to moderate to the pre-pandemic level of 16% CAGR, following two years of robust growth of more than 50% YoY. The analysts expect an EBITDA margin of 67% in FY24 over FY23, and revenue to grow at a 15.4% CAGR over FY22-24. They also expect the company to gain a market share of 70% due to steady growth in the addition of BO accounts.

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

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    The Baseline created a screener Top Gainers
    07 May 2022

    Top Gainers

    Stocks that are top gainers today
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    The Baseline created a screener All Stars: High Scorers …
    07 May 2022

    All Stars: High Scorers Across Metrics

    Stocks that score high across key metrics: DVM, Piotroski Score, Buy-Sell Zone, Consensus Estimates and SWOT
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    The Baseline
    06 May 2022

    More interest rate hikes are coming, as RBI plays catch-up on inflation

    Just one month ago, RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das was shrugging off India's rising inflation levels.  "I don’t see inflation going up beyond 6%," he said in mid-March, "In fact, our expectation is that it will moderate to 4.5%."

    But then March inflation numbers saw India's CPI (Consumer Price Index) jumping to 6.95%, the highest since October 2020. Economists are expecting it to go even higher in April, and hit an inflation range of 7.4-7.5%. Inflation in May may also breach RBI's 6% target, hovering around 6.8%.

    As the chart shows, the bank's main policy rate, the repo rate is now lagging inflation badly compared to historical levels. Since October 2021, consumer inflation has been steadily rising while the RBI held its repo rate unchanged at 4%. The RBI has not in recent history, left the repo rate unchanged for so long. 

    As inflation broke RBI's acceptable ceilings, the Central Bank opted for an out-of-cycle rate hike of 40 bps this week. But it's not enough. We can now expect significant rate hikes in the June and August meetings of the Central Bank. The Indian economy will have to endure some pain in the short-term via rate hikes, to (hopefully) stabilize markets in the long term. 

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    The Baseline
    05 May 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Maruti Suzuki India: This carmaker’s stock has plunged 4% after it announced its wholesale numbers for April. Total wholesales fell 1.6% YoY to 1.57 lakh units while passenger vehicle wholesales fell 2.9% YoY to 1.52 lakh units. However, the company posted robust Q4FY22 results, as its net profit rose 51.1% YoY to Rs 1,875.8 crore, beating Trendlyne’s Forecaster estimates by 23.7%. Revenue grew 12.7% YoY to Rs 27,191.9 crore, even though the company sold 0.7% lower vehicles in Q4FY22 compared to Q4FY21. The rise in margins, despite the fall in volumes, is due to price hikes, lower discounts and softening of input costs. However, the company’s wholesales grew 14% QoQ in Q4FY22.

    The management expects demand for the passenger vehicles for the industry to grow to 34-35 lakh units in FY23 driven by robust demand despite the Covid-19 headwinds. The company increased its focus on high-end compact and utility vehicles to regain its lost market share in this space. The demand momentum looks stable as the order book as of April, 2022 stands at 3.2 lakh units, up 21.2% from the end of December 2021. However, the shortage of semiconductors and electronic components will most likely affect production in FY23. Though raw material costs dipped in 4QFY22 as metal prices softened, the management expects inflation to kick in during H1FY23 led by high steel prices.

    Brokerages like Axis Securities and Prabhudas Lilladher maintain a ‘Buy’ rating on the stock as they expect margins to expand on healthy demand and reduction in input costs. ICICI Direct maintains a ‘Hold’ rating due to the shortage of semiconductors despite healthy demand prospects.

    1. Tata Chemicals: This chemical company’s stock surged 11.7% after it announced its Q4FY22 results on April 29. Net profit surged 39X YoY to Rs 462.9 crore and revenue rose 32.8% YoY to Rs 3,586.9 crore. The company’s profit growth was driven by a revival in demand, a rise in export prices, absorption of high input costs, and lower taxes. EBITDA grew 133% YoY to Rs 657.4 crore due to improved realisations, despite high costs of gas, coal and freight.

    The basic chemical segment accounts for 75% of the company’s revenue and the segment also saw the highest growth in Q4FY22 – grew 37.5% YoY to Rs 2,902 crore led by favourable soda ash market conditions. Globally, demand for soda ash is rising, led by demand for lithium carbonate batteries and solar panels. Motilal Oswal expects demand for soda ash to stay robust for the next 18-24 months due to supply constraints and container freight issues. The brokerage expects the tight demand-supply situation to benefit the company.

    The highest revenue growth came in from the North American and Indian regions at 35.3% YoY and 31.8% YoY, respectively. The company has earmarked Rs 2,000 crore for capex to expand capacity in its India business during H2FY24. This capacity expansion will be spread over 5 years, which will increase the company’s production capacity of soda ash by 30%, soda bicarb by 40%, and silica by 5X.

    1. TVS Motor: This auto maker’s two-wheeler wholesales for the month of April 2022 rose 24% YoY to 2.8 lakh units, surpassing the growth rates of all other peers. The low base effect caused by the second Covid wave had a part to play here. This 20%+ YoY growth was primarily driven by TVS Motors’ scooter segment, the wholesales for which jumped over 50% YoY. The motorcycle segment on the other hand, posted lacklustre growth of just 4% YoY in April. Most two-wheeler makers except Bajaj Auto reported a YoY rise in their monthly wholesales for the first time in 2022 buoyed by the wedding and festive season. If we also consider the wholesales reported by TVS Motors for Q4FY22, it fell by just 8% YoY to 8,14,682 units, lower than the double-digit fall witnessed by all other competitors. Hence, its performance on the sales volume front was fairly resilient.  According to HDFC Securities, TVS Motors also gained market share on YoY basis in FY22 for both motorcycles and scooters segments.

    The company reported a 7.4% YoY rise in its operating revenues while its profit fell over 10% YoY to Rs 278 crore. Higher input costs and semi-conductor shortages hit the profitability of the two-wheeler industry in FY22. But top players expect a strong pick-up in demand in next two months on improved rural sentiment. Outlook for TVS Motor is especially positive since it has a strong pipeline of 2W and 3W electric vehicles to be launched in the next 2 years.

    1. Alembic Pharmaceuticals: This pharma company’s stock fell over 8% intraday on Monday after it announced its Q4FY22 results. Its profit fell 86% YoY in Q4FY22 to Rs 35.6 crore mainly due to a Rs 188 crore worth of non-recurring expenses related to its wholly-owned subsidiary Aleor Dermaceuticals. As a result, the company’s net profit missed Trendlyne's Forecaster estimates by 76.6%. However, revenue rose 9% YoY in Q4FY22 to Rs 1,426 crore on the back of 17% growth to Rs 557 crore in the generic US business.

    Alembic Pharma’s US business grew despite the prevailing pricing pressure in the US market, due to one-time sale opportunities, market share gain in a few products, and stock adjustments. The company also launched its first inhalation product in the US in Q4FY22. Alembic Pharma has invested about Rs 1,800 crore over recent years, geared towards US formulations including acquiring Aleor Dermaceuticals on March 29. Given the intense competition in the US market, pricing pressure will continue to impact the company’s margins in FY23. In Q4FY22, EBITDA margin (pre-research & development expenses) fell 12 percentage points YoY to 30% due to an increase in logistics costs, raw material costs, and pricing pressure.

    Brokerages like ICICI Direct, BoBCaps, and Yes Securities maintained their ‘Hold’ rating but reduced the target price because of the margin pressure and additional integration costs for Aleor Dermaceuticals. The brokerages have a neutral outlook on the company because of the slow growth outlook in US generics and delay in its new product launches.

    1. Godrej Properties: This realty company’s stock fell by more than 5% on the bourses on Thursday even after its Q4FY22 results show a strong recovery. The company is back in the black with a net profit of Rs 260 crore against a loss of Rs 192 crore in Q4FY21. The booking value also sees a 111% jump sequentially to Rs 7,861 crore.

    With demand picking up, the company’s collections in Q4 were its highest ever rising 44% YoY increase to Rs 2,900 crore. Brokerage Motilal Oswal is quite optimistic about the stock and expects the business momentum to continue over the next three years. It expects pre-sales CAGR to grow by 23% over FY22-24. On the other hand, Godrej Properties is also facing the brunt of inflation as its input costs see a 1.2X surge to Rs 1,166.2 crore. However, the company hiked its prices by 5-7% across its portfolio to mitigate margin pressures. However, with the recent repo rate hike by the Reserve Bank of India, home loans will get expensive soon. With most of its project pipeline of premium residential projects to be completed by H1FY23, it’ll be interesting to see if demand holds up.

    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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