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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    07 Jul 2022
    Chart of the week: Analysts are positive on banks, NBFCs and packaged foods industries

    Chart of the week: Analysts are positive on banks, NBFCs and packaged foods industries

    With the new earnings season about to start, investors are trying to figure out which stocks are likely to see a good result, despite rising inflation and a volatile global economy. We checked the Trendlyne Forecaster estimates to identify the companies and industries analysts are most bullish on.

    Here we first take a look at industries that have a ‘Strong Buy’ and ‘Hold’ stance from analysts. We then check revenue growth expectations within these industries for some Nifty 50 companies. 

    Banks, NBFCs and packaged foods industries are among those  that the street is bullish on. Analysts have a ‘strong buy’ stance for these three industries. 

    Within banks, Bajaj Finance has the highest expected revenue growth of 35.6% in Q1FY23. But on a QoQ basis, the expectation is of a muted 0.6% revenue growth. HDFC Bank andState Bank of India’s Q1FY23 expected YoY revenue growth, according to Trendlyne’s Forecaster estimates are 11.6% and 8.4%, respectively. Tata Consumer, part of the packaged foods industry, is expected to post revenue growth of 13.7% YoY, and  7.8% on a QoQ basis in Q1FY23.

    If we look at the industries which have consensus stance of ‘Hold’ from analysts, these are pharmaceuticals, iron & steel/intermediate products, cement & cement products, 2/3 wheelers and marine port & services. Trendlyne Forecaster’s consensus estimates show that the street expectsAdani Ports & SEZ Q1FY23 revenue to fall by 5.6% YoY, but on a QoQ basis, the street expects a near 12% rise in revenues. 

    In Iron & Steel, JSW Steel is expected to post revenue growth of nearly 73% YoY in Q1FY23, indicating that it will probably continue its stellar run of revenue growth, despite recent export restrictions. On a QoQ basis, revenue growth is expected to be a more moderate 6.5%. 

    In the auto industry, Eicher Motors’ Q1FY23 revenue is expected to grow by 69.2% YoY (on a low base) and 4.6% QoQ. And in pharmaceuticals, Sun Pharmaceuticals and Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories’ revenues are expected to grow 8.6% YoY and 12.8% YoY, respectively, and 11.7% QoQ and 2.1% QoQ, respectively. 

    With many headwinds affecting industries across the board, let’s see if these companies meet or beat these consensus expectations in Q1FY23.

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    The Baseline
    04 Jul 2022
    Five stocks beating their industry in analyst sentiment

    Five stocks beating their industry in analyst sentiment

    By Abhiraj Panchal

    1. Bharat Electronics: This defense public sector firm has 21 consensus recommendations from analysts of a ‘Strong Buy’, which is better than the industry consensus (which analysts rate as ‘Buy’). Out of 21 analysts, 17 have ‘Strong Buy’ recommendations on Bharat Electronics, as well as one ‘Buy’, ‘Hold’ and ‘Sell’. The company has a Trendlyne Durability score of 70, indicating strong financials. In FY22, the company’s revenue grew 9.6% YoY to Rs 15,599.7 crore and profit by 14.3% to Rs 2,398.9 crore. 

    According to Nilesh Soni from Prabhudas Lilladher, Bharat Electronics has a substantial order backlog and tender pipeline, and it is also diversifying into business verticals like EV batteries, medical equipment, etc. He further states, “order pipeline stands strong from the Akash weapon system, QRSAM, LRSAM, Naval equipment like a surveillance system, radars, and navigation systems”. Chirag Shah and Vijay Goel from ICICI Direct are also optimistic about the company’s prospects as it is diversifying into non-defense businesses and focuses on increasing exports. 

    1. Birlasoft: The consensus recommendation from 11 analysts on this IT consultancy services company is a ‘Strong Buy’. 10 analysts have a ‘Strong Buy’ ratings, while one analyst has a ‘Hold’ rating. The consensus recommendation on this company is better than the overall industry rating of ‘Hold’. The company has a Trendlyne Durability score of 75. In FY22, its revenue grew 16.2% YoY to Rs 4,130.3 crore ($523.4 million) and profit grew 44.5% YoY to Rs 463.6 crore.

    The company guided for $1 billion revenue in FY25, out of which it expects $800-$850 million to be contributed by organic growth. The remaining $150-$200 million will be contributed by inorganic opportunities. The company expects to meet its FY25 revenue target by winning more large contracts. Sameer Pardikar of ICICI Direct says “revenue growth is expected to be achieved via client mining, cross-selling, multi-year deals, expansion in Europe & APAC and focus on niche verticals”. He also estimates dollar revenue to grow at a 13.7% CAGR and margin to expand by 50 bps to 16% over FY22-24. 

    1. DLF: The consensus recommendation from 19 analysts on this real estate company is a ‘Buy’. Out of these 19, 14 analysts recommended a ‘Strong Buy’, two recommended a ‘Buy’, two a ‘Hold’ rating, and one had a ‘Strong Sell’ rating on this Gurgaon-based real estate developer. The consensus recommendation on this company is better than its industry’s rating (of ‘Buy’) and has a Trendlyne Durability score of 85. In FY22, the company’s revenue rose by 5.6% YoY to Rs 5,717.4 crore and its profit rose by 37.2% YoY to Rs 1,500.9 crore.

    The company’s pre-sales in FY22 grew 2.4X YoY to Rs 7,270 crore and beat its presales guidance of Rs 6,000-6,500 crore. The company’s overall sales margin grew by 15 percentage points to 51% in FY22. Brokerages like HDFC Securities and Edelweiss expect the occupancy rates in its office, retail, and residential portfolios to improve in the coming quarters and they both have a positive outlook on the company’s prospects. Amit Agarwal and Manan Shah of Edelweiss say the company “has aggressive launch pipelines to scale up the current portfolio and will be a key beneficiary when the commercial cycle recovers”. The management has guided robust exit rentals of Rs 4,400 - 4,500 crore for FY23, driven by new launches, higher retail yields and an increase in occupancy levels.

    1. Apollo Hospitals Enterprise: This healthcare company, with 21 analyst recommendations, has a consensus call of ‘Strong Buy’, better than the overall industry’s ‘Buy’ rating. 15 analysts have a ‘Stong Buy’ on the business, five have a ‘Buy’ rating, and one ‘Hold’. The company has a Trendlyne Durability score of 85. In FY22, the company reported revenue growth of 39% YoY to Rs 14,740.8 crore and profit growth of 601.9% YoY to Rs 1,055.6 crore. 

    Param Desai and Sanketa Kohale from Prabhudas Lialladher say, “Apollo Hospitals pursued aggressive expansion in the past few years, which has created a strong growth platform”. According to the company’s Q4FY22 earnings call,  it expects a total of $3 billion of gross merchandise value from its offline pharmacies ($2 billion), Apollo 24*7 ($500-700 million), and companies partnership with amazon ($500 million) in the next 3-4 years. The company also expects its offline pharmacy to continue to grow at 20% in FY23 due to store expansion for its diagnostic business. It expects the business to grow to Rs 1,000 crore within three years. Apollo 24*7 has earmarked Rs 400 crore marketing expenditure for FY23. 

    1. Tech Mahindra: This IT consulting and software company has a consensus recommendation of ‘Buy’ from 41 analysts, better than the industry consensus rating. Out of the 41 analysts, 25 have a ‘Stong Buy’ call, seven have a ‘Buy’, five a ‘Hold’, and two are at ‘Stong Sell’. The company has a Trendlyne Durability score of 75. In FY22, the company’s revenue grew by 18.4% YoY to Rs 45,758.3 crore and profit grew by 25.7% to Rs 5,566.1 crore. 

    According to the Q4FY22 earnings call transcript, the company’s new deal wins have amounted to $1 billion, constituting $366 million from the Enterprise segment, and the rest from communications, media, and entertainment (CME). The company has announced partnerships with Bharti Airtel to set up a joint 5G innovation lab to co-develop and market 5G in India. Tech Mahindra’s other recent collaborations include conversational-AI solutions with Yellow.ai, and collaboration with Cisco, and Celonis, among others, for the advancement in technology. 

    Analysts from ICIC Direct, IDBI Capital and Geojit BNP Paribas, among others, believe that Tech Mahindra’s new deal wins and its capabilities in new technology, like 5G, automation and AI could drive its future revenue growth.

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    The Baseline
    01 Jul 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Macrotech Developers (Lodha): This real estate developer’s stock outperformed the Nifty 500 index by over 20% in the past month. It is also one of the top picks of foreign brokerage house Jefferies in the real estate sector.

    On June 23, the company announced its foray into the Bengaluru residential market by acquiring a 100% stake in G Corp Homes. Macrotech will be launching a housing project of 1.3 million sq ft area in the next 6-12 months in Bangalore. According to its press release, this Bengaluru-based project has a sales potential of roughly Rs 1,200 crore. Mumbai Metropolitan Region and Pune are the main markets of the Lodha Group and this will be the third major city it will be entering into. It will be competing with players like  Prestige Estates and Sobha who already have a strong presence in the city. Macrotech’s stock rose by 5% since this announcement. The company additionally plans to launch 8.7 million sq ft (msf) worth of projects in Mumbai and Pune in FY23, with a sales potential of over Rs 13,000 crore.

    However, real estate consultant Anarock said there was a 15% QoQ fall in home sales across the top seven cities in India in Q1FY23. The rise in property prices and interest rate hikes have impacted the sentiments of prospective homeowners. Nearly 75% of Macrotech’s homes in volume terms are taken on a mortgage. Hence, if the home loan interest rates rise beyond 8.5% p.a. from 7.5-7.9% p.a., its sales bookings could be impacted in FY23 and beyond.

    1. Reliance Industries: The oil refinery stock fell 7% in trade on Friday, one of the top losing stocks, after the government imposed an export duty on petrol, diesel, and ATF (aviation turbine fuel). An excise duty of Rs 6 per litre on petrol and ATF, and Rs 13 per litre on diesel has been imposed. It will be interesting to see how the company plans its earnings as this means private oil players will be paying an additional $40.6 per barrel in duties.

    The stock had also fallen on Tuesday after reports that the company’s plans of acquiring Boots UK, a pharmacy retailer, fell through after Wallgreens Boots Alliance decided to not sell the business. Reliance wanted to acquire Boots UK’s pharmacy retail chain as it was looking for growth opportunities in global markets and made a bid for its UK pharma retail business. The company says that no third party has been able to bid adequately for Boots. Boots UK was valued at 7 billion euros and Reliance made a bid for 5-6 billion euros, according to reports.

    The company’s telecom business recently appointed Akash Ambani, aged 30, as the new Chairman of Reliance Jio Infocomm after Mukesh Ambani stepped down on June 27. Akash Ambani was involved with Reliance Jio since its inception as its Chief Strategy Officer earlier. He was also involved in Jio’s acquisitions related to digital space like the acquisition of Saavn - a music platform, American tech firm Radisys, among others, according to reports. The major challenge for the new Chairman would be unlocking the potential of the digital business and steering Jio to an expected IPO.

    1. Hikal: This pharma company’s stock has been highly volatile this week. It rose 5.4% on Monday after the Bombay High Court directed the Maharashtra Pollution Control Board (MPCB) to grant permission to re-start manufacturing activities at the company's Taloja manufacturing unit. Previously on April 22, MPCB had ordered Hikal to shut its Taloja unit due to non-compliance issues. The Taloja manufacturing unit contributed Rs 260 crore or 15% of total revenues in FY21. In an eventful week for Hikal, Smallcap World Fund sold a 2.03% stake in the company worth Rs 62 crore on Wednesday. Following this, the stock fell over 4%.

    The company’s stock price is on a downtrend since hitting its all-time high in July 2021. In the past month, the stock fell over 25%. With such a steep fall in its share price, it comes up in the screener that lists stocks with big falls from their 52-week highs.

    Hikal gets 61% of its revenues from the pharmaceutical segment and the remaining 39% from the crop protection segment. While revenue from its pharma segment rose marginally by 3% YoY to Rs 308 crore in Q4FY22, crop protection’s revenue fell 17% YoY. In the Q4FY22 investor presentation, Executive Chairman of Hikal, Jai Hiremath, said “we expect FY23 to be a challenging year, one of consolidation, and the following year we will return to sustainable and profitable growth”.

    However, brokerages still have a positive outlook on the company. As a result, it shows up in this screener which lists stocks with high analyst ratings and have an upside of at least 20% from their current price. In addition, mutual funds increased their holdings in this company last month.

    1. Mahindra CIE Automotive: This auto component maker’s stock gained more than 35% in the last three months. The company is one of the top forging players globally with its customers spread across Europe and India. According to a report from brokerage Geojit, most of the company’s global customers are outperforming their industry’s average revenue growth. This shows that the company has a good pipeline of orders in place. According to Geojit's report, the current order book is likely to remain strong till October.  An increase in business with existing customers, and the shifting of the production centre to India to enhance exports is good value-addition for the company.

    Auto companies are facing a shortage of semiconductor chips for the past year now, and despite these issues, Mahindra CIE’s European business margin came in at 10.2% in Q4FY22. The improvement in margins is likely to continue on a YoY basis with a revenue growth estimated at 14% CAGR over CY 21-23. The company is focused on bringing in a favourable product mix to improve profitability, especially in the EV market. The stock has an average brokerage target price of Rs 236, implying a 20% upside.

    1. UltraTech Cement: This cement stock fell 37.4% from its 52-week high till June 17 and since then it has risen 8.3% till Jun 30. The stock’s rise is due to brokerages like ICICI Direct and Motilal Oswal having a positive outlook on the company. The brokerages also expect cement demand to grow in the next 3-5 years. IDBI Capital expects the demand for cement to rise at a 6.3% CAGR over FY 22-25. It also believes UltraTech is best placed to see long-term growth, and is trading at attractive valuations. The company also shows up on this screener with stocks in the buy zone based on days traded at current PE and P/BV (price-to-book value).

    Recently the company announced a capacity expansion of 22.6 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) at a capex of Rs 12,886 crore. It expects to complete this capacity expansion by FY25. This management expects an EV/tonne (enterprise value/tonne) of $76, meaning the company would be spending $76 to set up one tonne of cement capacity. According to ICICI Direct, the company’s capex allocation efficiency is the best among its peers, as the industry average EV/tonne is $125-130/tonne.

    This new capacity expansion will take the company’s total India grey cement capacity to 159.2 mtpa in FY25 from the current 119.9 mtpa, implying a CAGR of 9.9% over FY22-25. The management expects demand for cement to be driven by the housing and road infrastructure segments in India. However, the risk of lower demand and a sharp increase in input costs remains, which may lead to lower cash flows available for its capacity expansion plans.

    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
    01 Jul 2022
    Copper as recession predictor, and FIIs buy options instead of stocks

    Copper as recession predictor, and FIIs buy options instead of stocks

    When it comes to the stock market, we love mental shortcuts. Take for example, the link investors make between the price of copper and economic growth. Because copper is so widely used across industries, the up or down movement in the copper price tells us whether the global economy is going to boom or crash.

    In recent months, copper has fallen sharply, along with other metal prices like aluminium, zinc, and steel. And expectations are that economic growth is slowing. This global slowdown is expected to impact future demand for all metals.

    In this week's Analyticks,

    • Investors in metal stocks sweat over growth concerns
    • Foreign investors continue selling, but are buying in the F&O market

    Let’s get into it.


    Metal stocks struggle as investors see economic slowdown

    Tariffs are notoriously bad at managing a rapidly changing economy. A little over a month ago India, worried about rising costs for infrastructure projects, imposedexport duties on steel.

    The Centre couldn’t have predicted the crash in global metal prices that arrived soon after, which hit metal stocks badly and made these export duties an overreaction.

    While its arguable that these duties on exports have reduced inflation in India, the demand for steel, aluminium, copper, and other metals is now falling due to concerns of a global recession.

    Copperfell to its 16-month low last week. The fear of a fast-moving US Federal Reserve pushing the US into a recession is upending prices across assets and commodities. But despite thepessimism among traders, there is more than one way to look at this churn in metals.

    Carmakers have faced acute cost pressures due to steel prices that were rising till recently. Cable makers were also hit by a rise in input costs, especially in metal. Wholesale price inflation reached 15.88% in May, a 30-year high for the WPI. But since its peak, this is how the Nifty Metal index has corrected—

    This will certainly impact listedmetals and mining companies, which were expecting the surge in demand in 2021 to last longer. What’s causing the pain?

    Valuations are shrinking everywhere

    ICICI Securitiessays asset valuations globally are in reset mode. This will not leave metals unscathed, and the fear of a demand slowdown has led the brokerage to downgrade its ratings onTata Steel,Hindalco, andJSW Steel.

    This is more bad news after the Centre imposed export duties on steel and iron ore prices, which led to asell-off in metal stocks. Most of these companies’ shares are down 15%-50% down from their year highs.

    Kotak Institutional Equities alsodowngraded Tata Steel and JSW Steel to ‘Reduce’. It expects demand slowdown to impact margins at these steel makers.

    If these export duties are just a temporary measure to curb rising prices (like in 2008), an eventual rollback could improve the margin outlook for metal stocks.

    Metals companies fortunately also have cash in the bank to get through this crisis. In the months before, a commodities boom delivered high profits that helped them reduce their debt, and this keeps them on strong footing to weather the storm.

    JSW Steel, Tata Steel, Hindalco andVedanta posted huge profits, with their FY22 net profit seeing at least a 4X rise from FY20. Vedanta swung to a huge Rs 15,000 crore profit in FY21 from a Rs 4,700 crore odd loss in FY20 and rose nearly 58% YoY to Rs 23,709 crore in FY22.

    As all metals saw a surge in demand, evenHindustan Zinc posted higher profits, but its growth was not as rapid as other metal miners and product makers.

    However, Trendlyne’s Forecaster shows that there might be some slowdown in demand growth going forward. The average revenue estimate in Forecaster’s consensus estimates indicate only JSW Steel seeing steady revenue growth over the next two financial years.

    Analysts expect Hindustan Zinc to see a growth in revenue and profit in FY23, according toTrendlyne’s Forecaster estimates. But in FY24, this could taper off.

    There are concerns over future demand for metals this year, and this is expected to impact most companies in the listed space. LME aluminium prices are down 36% from its peak seen in April as there is a surplus of aluminium in the market.

    Analysts are taking cues from falling copper prices - a price correction in this metal is usually followed by an economic recession, and that’s what the market is pricing in. But a recession in Europe and the US might not be the calamity that it is expected to be, with many predicting a mild recession rather than a serious one.

    China’s economy reopening is also a silver lining. China consumes nearly a third of the world’s steel and imports a lot of iron ore. Over the past couple of years, the country has been trying to cut carbon emissions from steel mills at home, and import steel instead. Investors in metal stocks will be hoping that there is a surge in demand for metals, as the Chinese economy comes back to life.


    FII/DII flows: FII investors switch from equities to options

    This week saw the rupee fall to a new all-time lowagainst the dollar, ending below Rs 79 on Wednesday. This is because foreign investors have been selling Indian shares and other assets. Over the past six months, we have seen a trend of FIIs pulling out cash from equities and putting them mainly in index and stock options. By contrast, domestic mutual funds are pumping cash into equities, as MFs see record SIP flows every month. 

    In the last month,  FIIs pulled out a total of Rs 16,329.9 from the Indian stock market as a whole. They invested Rs 34,106.4 crore into index futures, but sold Rs 46,954.9 crore worth of shares during the same period. Indian mutual funds bought some of these shares foreign investors sold, with a Rs 20.712.9 crore investment.

    In the past two weeks, FIIs sold shares worth Rs 21,587.2 crore. Mutual funds bought shares worth Rs 9,119 crore over the same period.

    With SIP flows remaining steady, mutual funds may continue their buying despite foreign investors withdrawing in droves. MFs are not making up the shortfall completely, and there is volatility expected ahead for Indian markets.

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    The Baseline
    30 Jun 2022
    Chart of the Week: HDFC Bank’s credit card business gains ground over peers

    Chart of the Week: HDFC Bank’s credit card business gains ground over peers

    With credit demand bouncing back in India, there is hope that consumer sentiment will turn positive. There is fierce competition among players as people have resumed eating out, shopping and traveling. This has led credit card spends to reach Rs 1.14 lakh crore at the end of May 2022 as increased incentives from banks boosted customer spends.

    ICICI Bank was slightly ahead of SBI Cards in transaction market share at the end of May 2022. HDFC Bank maintained a steady lead over everyone else, with a 27.7% market share in the same month. HDFC Bank processed a total of Rs 31.75 thousand crore, up 113% YoY and 8% MoM. ICICI Bank’s total transaction on credit cards also rose over the past few months. At the end of January, the bank had processed Rs 18.8 thousand crore, and this rose 16% to Rs 21.9 thousand crore at the end of May 2022. Despite the rise in transactions, ICICI Bank saw a decrease in market share from 21.4% to 19.2% in the same time period.

    While HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank are ahead in transactions, their market share in "credit cards issued" is down,Axis Bank has gained ground here in the past few months. At the end of December 2021, HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank had 162.7 lakh (22.9% market share) and 127.7 lakh credit cards issued (19.27% market share), respectively. This fell to 149.1 lakh (22.4% market share) and 107.2 lakh (17.35% market share), respectively at the end of May 2022. 

     The rise in transactions for HDFC Bank and ICICI Bank despite the market share decline indicates the differences in customer profile between banks. While banks issue as many cards as they can, eventually the real win is about having customers that make the most number of transactions. Right now HDFC Bank gets the cream, in terms of transaction value.

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    The Baseline
    27 Jun 2022
    Five stocks with the highest dividend yields

    Five stocks with the highest dividend yields

    By Suhas Reddy

    With the stock market witnessing huge amounts of volatility over the past few weeks, many stocks lost a lot of their value. In these unpredictable times, investors have been picking high dividend yield stocks. Here we take a look at stocks with the highest dividend yields over the past three years. Not surprisingly, many of them are government-owned.  

    1. Bharat Petroleum Corp: This state-run oil-marketing company has one of the highest dividend yields in the past three years among the Nifty 500. Its three-year average dividend yield stands at 12.3%. The company increased its dividend payout in FY22. Over the last three years, it has declared eight dividends and in the past 12 months, declared six dividends. Its one-year dividend yield is 22.1%, which is higher mainly due to the special dividend of Rs 35 that got added to the final dividend of Rs 23, taking the total to Rs 58 per share. 

    In FY22 the company declared four dividends worth Rs 68 per share, and in FY21 two dividends worth Rs 21 per share. In FY20 it declared two dividends worth Rs 24.5 per share. Overall, in three financial years the company declared dividends worth Rs 113.5 per share. However, the company’s stock fell 8.1% in the same period. Being a public sector company, Bharat Petro is required to pay a minimum annual dividend of 30% of net profit or 5% of net worth, whichever is higher subject to the maximum dividend permissible under law.   

    1. Power Finance Corp: This state-run NBFC’s three-year average dividend yield stands at 10.2%, and during the same time period it declared seven dividends worth Rs 31.5 per share. The company increased its dividend payout in FY22. The frequency of dividend pay-outs rose in the last 12 months, as it declared five dividends amounting to Rs 14 per share. 

    In FY22, Power Finance declared four dividends amounting to Rs 12.75 per share, while in FY21, the company declared one dividend worth Rs 8 per share and one dividend worth Rs 9.5 per share the year before. Despite a rise in dividend payouts the stock is down 5.9% over the past three financial years. 

    1. REC: This infrastructure public sector NBFC’s three-year average dividend yield stands at 9.7%. During FY22, the company declared four dividends worth Rs 12.2 per share, increasing its dividend payout in FY22. In FY21 the company declared two dividends worth Rs 11 per share and one dividend worth Rs 11 per share during FY20. The company has maintained a consistent dividend payout over the past three years. However, the stock fell 15.2% over that period. The company’s net profit in the last two years rose significantly, up 20.1% and 71.1% YoY respectively in FY22 and FY21. 

    2. NMDC: This state-owned miner’s three-year average dividend yield stands at 8.8% and it declared four dividends totaling Rs 27.8 per share between FY 20-22. The company has been increasing its dividend payout annually over the past three financial years. During FY22, it declared two dividends amounting to Rs 14.7 per share,  and one dividend worth Rs 7.76 per share in FY21, In FY20 it declared just one dividend worth Rs 5.29 per share. While the company’s stock was volatile during FY 20-22, as a whole its stock rose 51.1% during the same period. Its annual net profit in FY22 rose 49.4% YoY to Rs 9,379.6 crore and in FY21 it rose 75.7% YoY to Rs 6,277 crore. 

    3. Indian Oil Corp: This oil marketing company’s three-year average dividend yield stands at 8.1% and over the same period it declared seven dividends amounting to Rs 26.25 per share. The company’s dividend payout has been increasing annually over the past three financial years. In FY22, the company declared three dividends totaling Rs 10.5 per share, another two dividends worth Rs 10.5 per share in FY21 and  two dividends worth Rs 5.3 per share in FY20. However, during these three years the stock fell an overall 26.1%. The company turned profitable on an annual basis in FY21, after incurring a loss in FY20 and FY19. 

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    The Baseline created a screener Internet Platforms
    27 Jun 2022

    Internet Platforms

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    The Baseline
    24 Jun 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Vinati Organics: This chemical manufacturer company’s stock rose 3.2% intraday on Thursday after the company announced capex plans of Rs 580 crore. Out of this, Rs 300 crore is set aside to expand the manufacturing capacity of 2-acrylamindo 2-methylpropane sulfonic acid (ATBS) from 40,000 metric tonnes to 60,000 metric tonnes. This will be funded through internal accruals and is expected to be commissioned by December 2023. The remaining part of the Rs 580 crore capex (Rs 280 crore) is planned to be invested in Vinati Organics’ arm Veeral Organics for the manufacturing of products like Guaiacol and Iso Amylene. These products are used in polymerization inhibitors, flavors, fragrances, pharmaceuticals, and pesticides.

    The ATBS segment contributed 40% of the total revenues in FY22 and Vinati Organics has a market share of 80% in this segment. With this expansion, it looks to further increase the market share in this space. In Q4FY22, the chemical manufacturer posted its highest-ever revenue of Rs 501 crore on the back of strong demand in the ATBS segment. Its five-year revenue CAGR till FY22 was 21% at the end of FY22. This helped the company enter this screener that lists companies with good financials, high returns, and high return on equity. In addition, mutual funds also increased their holdings in the past month. 

    1. FSN E-Commerce Ventures (Nykaa): This e-commerce company held an investor and analyst day on Thursday where it outlined its future. Its stock rose 5.6% on Thursday with its average delivery volumes this week rising above its monthly average.

    During the investor and analyst discussions, Nykaa emphasized its plan to diversify its product mix. Women’s products contributed 100% of its gross merchandise value (GMV) in FY20 whereas, in FY22, it constitutes 76% with men’s products GMV rising 17%. In addition, Nykaa is focusing on an omnichannel strategy and expanding its physical store footprint. The company’s physical store count now stands at 105 across 49 cities in FY22 against 34 across 21 cities in FY19. Physical stores’ GMV share also increased from 4.5% of GMV in FY19  to 6.6% in FY22. The management believes that there’s a big opportunity in this segment and plans to expand both footprint and store concentration within cities. The company is also increasing its warehouse capacity -  in FY22, its warehouse capacity rose 40% YoY to 8.2 lakh square feet, enabling the average order to delivery time to reduce to 2.8 days against 3.5 days in FY21. 

    Despite a consistent YoY quarterly revenue growth in the past four quarters, a slowdown in key discretionary categories due to elevated inflation levels can impact Nykaa in the short term. 

    1. Chambal Fertilisers & Chemicals: This fertiliser company’s promoter entities’ pledged shares are rising over the past 4-6 weeks. Zuari Industries (earlier Zuari Global), Simon India and Master Exchange & Finance pledged shares equal to 3.35% stake in the company after April 28. All of these pledges are for loans taken by these promoter entities for investments in other KK Birla Group companies. This comes after the company’s stock hit a lifetime high of Rs 516 on April 19 before the Indian markets entered the current downtrend. 

    On April 20, lenders released the pledge on around 0.08% of shares held in the company by Zuari Industries. But as the company’s stock lost nearly 46% of its value over the past 6-9 weeks, the four promoter group entities started pledging more shares to lenders as collateral for the loans they raised. This brings the proportion of promoters’ pledged shares out of the total shares of the company to 14.75%. Out of the promoters’ shareholding of 60.46%, the pledged proportion of their shareholding is now at 24.4%, up from 18.86% at the end of March 2022.

    1. InterGlobe Aviation: This airline’s market share in the domestic market rose in May by 261 bps to 57.9% YoY, and the number of passengers carried rose nearly 6X to 69.9 lakh passengers. This exponential rise is mainly due to a lower base in May last year when travel restrictions were in place. On an MoM basis, the airline saw a 9% rise in the number of passengers carried, but its market share fell by 42 bps. The airline’s passenger load factor rose by 230 bps MoM and by 29.8 percentage points YoY to 81% in May. The company saw demand for air travel rise despite an increase in ticket prices.

    Although demand for air travel is growing, elevated aviation turbine fuel (ATF) costs will continue to hurt the company’s margins. The company’s margins will be under pressure in Q1FY23 as well, due to rising fuel costs and the depreciating rupee according to Prabhudas Lilladher. In Q4FY22, the company’s total debt rose 23.5% YoY to Rs 36,877.8 crore and shows up on this screener for companies that have high-interest payments compared to earnings on a yearly basis.

    In FY23, the management expects that capacity deployment could grow by 55- 60%,  largely led by an increase in operations. Over the long term, the management expects demand to grow on the back of a recovery in domestic and international travel, an increase in cargo volumes, and a reduction in commodity costs.

    1. Vedanta: This mining company’s stock fell 12% in intraday trade on Monday after the company put on sale its arm Sterlite Copper’s plant in Tamil Nadu. It invited expression of interest (EoI) for its Tuticorin-based smelter, which has been shut since mid-2018 following a Tamil Nadu government order. After facing several legal and political hurdles in trying to reopen the smelting plant the company has decided to sell. The smelter accounted for 40% of India’s copper output before it was shut over alleged violations of environmental norms. 

    Although the company’s stock has had a rough time in the market over the past month, the street still has a positive outlook on it. The stock shows up in a screener with companies that have a high analyst rating with at least a 20% upside. Going forward, Vedanta announced a capex of $2 billion for FY23, primarily focusing on the vertical integration of its aluminium business.

    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
    24 Jun 2022

    Chart of the Week: Inflation rises across the world, with some exceptions

    When Indian consumers get a price shock while buying the humble tomato, which is now going at Rs. 100 per kg in some cities, at least they are not alone. Prices have shot up across many parts of the world, with few exceptions. India was one of the few countries where inflation fell in May compared to April - the Indian government has intervened in some areas like oil, with excise duty cuts in May, and in steel.

    China has been an exception with a very low inflation rate  - the lack of a pandemic stimulus and continued lockdowns may have resulted in the country's muted May inflation rate of 2.1%. 

    Elsewhere, like the US, UK and EU, inflation is still rising, forcing central banks to get much more aggressive with interest rate hikes. Interest rate increases take some time for their effects to be felt, but in the meantime global prices of key commodities like crude oil, edible oil and wheat have fallen, giving analysts hope that inflation rates will fall back to earth.  

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    The Baseline
    20 Jun 2022
    Earning in dollars as rupee depreciates: five companies with high exports

    Earning in dollars as rupee depreciates: five companies with high exports

    By Abhiraj Panchal

    With the Indian rupee depreciating against the dollar, we take a look at companies with high exposure to the international markets, giving them a relative cushion in revenues. We identified companies that meet three key criteria - high export revenues, a high Trendlyne Durability Score and a high Piotroski score.

    1. UPL: This agrochemicals company’s revenue grew 19.5% YoY to Rs 46,240 crore, out of which exports contributed 87.7% of total revenue. This company is currently in the PE Buy zone and has a high piotroski score. It also has a high Durability score of 80. In FY22, the company’s total revenue rose 19.4% to Rs 46,521 crore. The majority of revenue comes from Latin America (Rs 18,040 crore), followed by North America (Rs 7,810 crore), then Europe (Rs 6,890 crore) and the rest of the world (Rs 7,810 crore). The growth in these regions was driven by herbicides and insecticides. The company plans to make new investments in 22 countries which will lead to 1.5-3% CAGR revenue growth over next five years. 

    2. Tata Consultancy Services: This IT services company’s revenue grew 17.9% YoY to Rs 1.95 lakh crore  in FY22, and exports contributed nearly 95% to the total. Majority of revenues come from the Americas (52.2%), then Europe (31.9%) and the rest from Asia Pacific and West Asia. Although the stock is currently in the ‘PE Sell zone’, according to Trendlyne’s Check Buy or Sell feature, it has a high Piotroski score of 7 and high financial strength with a  Durability score of 70. Key themes expected to drive client spending, and continued business momentum (which will drive revenue growth) for the company in FY23 are new products and services aligned to sustainability, and AI-led transformation of IT/business operations.

    3. Dr. Reddy's Laboratories: In FY22, this pharmaceutical company’s revenues grew 13.1% YoY to Rs 21,545.2 crore and profits grew 11.8% YoY to Rs 2,182.5 crore. Exports generated $1.8 billion, which made up 64% of its total revenue. The company’s biggest market is in North America, which contributed $987 million to its revenue in FY22. This drug maker lies in the ‘PE Neutral Zone’ and is financially robust with a high Piotroski score and a Durability score of 75.

    In FY22, the company launched 20 products in the US and plans to launch another 20 in FY23. The management says it has a robust pipeline of 90 ANDAs (abbreviated new drug applications), which it expects would support its long-term aspirations in the US. In Europe, the company launched 34 new products during FY22 and expects strong growth in sales in FY23. 

    1. HCL Technologies: This IT company earns more than 90% of its total revenue of Rs 86,718 crore from exports in FY22. Nearly 62% of its revenue comes from the Americas, 29.1% from Europe and the remaining 8.9% from the rest of the world. According to the company’s FY21 annual report the company’s exports made up 97% of its total revenue. HCL Technologies signed a total of 52 significant large services and product deals in FY22, led by life sciences and healthcare, technology, financial services, manufacturing and oil & gas. All round growth across verticals and geographies YoY was led by Telecom, Media, Publishing & Entertainment, Lifesciences & Healthcare, Manufacturing, Technology & Services, and Financial Services. The stock is in Trendlyne’s ‘PE Neutral Zone’ with a Piotroski score of 8 and a Durability score of 95.

    2. PI Industries: In FY22, the company’s revenue grew 15.8% YoY to Rs 5,299.5 crore and profit grew 14.3% YoY to Rs 843.8 crore. Exports contributed 75.3% to its total revenue. The company’s exports rose 20% YoY to Rs 3,990.2 crore, on new customer additions and product launches. The company lies in Trendlyne’s  ‘PE Buy Zone’ with a Piotroski score of 7 and a Durability score of 70. The company added 8 new clients during FY22 and its export order book at the end of March 2022 stood at $1.4 billion. It guided a 20% growth in exports in FY23, driven by new and green technology products. The company also increased its capex to Rs 500 crore for FY23 from Rs 300 crore in FY22.

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