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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    18 Apr 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. PCBL: ICICI Securities retains a ‘Buy’ call on this chemicals company with a target price of Rs 160, indicating an upside of 35.9%. “PCBL is the leading manufacturer of carbon black, which is used as a reinforcing material in tyres,” say analysts Chirag Shah and Shashank Kanodia. They add that carbon black fetches high margins and finds application in paints and plastics among others, and the company derives 6% of its sales volume from carbon black. 

    The analysts are positive on the stock due to healthy double-digit growth. They expect the company’s revenue and profits to grow at 23% and 16% CAGR respectively, in FY 21-24, building in 11.4% volume CAGR. The analysts say, “With greenfield expansion under execution and successful strides made in the speciality carbon black domain, long term growth prospects are robust with limited competition in overseas markets.”

    1. PSP Projects: Axis Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this construction company and a target price of Rs 620, indicating an upside of 13.9%. The brokerage is bullish on the company’s prospects due to its “robust and diversified” order book and track record of successful and timely project execution. At the end of December 2021, the company's order book stood at Rs 4,008 crore comprising both public and private sector projects, according to Axis Securities, and it believes that “this reflects healthy revenue growth visibility for the next 2-3 years”. The company has built a diversified order book including institutional, industrial, government, and private residential projects located in six different geographies.  

    As of the end of December 2021, the company’s cash and cash equivalent along with Fixed Deposits stood at Rs 215 crore, indicating a strong liquidity profile, Axis Securities said. The brokerage expects the company’s profit to rise 16.1% CAGR over FY22-24.

    1. Tata Consultancy Services (TCS): Prabhudas Lilladher maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this IT services company but reduces its target price to Rs 4,221. This indicates an upside of 19.6%. The company reported a 3.5% QoQ growth in revenue to Rs 50,591 crore, which is 0.5% higher than the brokerage's estimates, but the profit of Rs 9,926 crore was 1.9% below estimate. “Margins are expected to remain under pressure in the near term due to high manpower costs and return of travel and facility costs,” says analyst Aditi Patil but expects “supply pressures to ease in H2FY23, as quarterly attrition cools off.” 

    The company has implemented a new organization structure dividing the business into four groups: acquisition, relationship incubation, enterprise growth, and business transformation. This will help focus more on clients and their changing digital needs and improve delivery times. The brokerage expects this new structure to drive the next phase of growth.

    1. Infosys: HDFC Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this IT services player, but reduces its target price to Rs 2,140 from Rs 2,230, indicating an upside of 32%. The cut in target price is a result of disappointing Q4FY22 results.  However, analysts Apurva Prasad, Amit Chandra, and Vinesh Vala maintained their ‘Buy’ rating as they are confident about the company’s growth prospects. The analysts  “remain confident in the company’s prospects of growth leadership within the tier-1 IT space”. They also expect the company’s investments to scale cloud services to accelerate growth and improve margins in the near term. 

    The bullish stance is also because the analysts expect accelerated net-new large deal wins (H2FY22 at $ 2.2 billion compared to $1.6 billion in H1FY22), the addition of 13 new large clients, and recovery in the life science vertical to provide near-term growth visibility. They also expect the company’s revenue to rise 13.74% CAGR over FY22-24.

    1. Hindustan Unilever (HUL): ICICI Securities maintains an ‘Add’ rating on this FMCG company with a target price of Rs 2,450, indicating an upside of 12.5%. According to the analysts–Manoj Menon, Aniket Sethi and Karan Bhuwania–HUL’s underperformance of 60% vs the Nifty over Q4FY22 may be potentially interpreted as the stock already factoring in concerns like rural slowdown-led demand pressure and inflation. They also feel, “large players (in commodity-sensitive categories) are beneficiaries of inflation in the medium term.” 

    The company’s strategy of price cuts, efforts to improve affordability, and focus on protein nutrition are positive for long-term category development, say the analysts at ICICI Securities. They also expect the company to deliver on steady premiumisation, enhancing digital capabilities including e-commerce salience, D2C brands, and a fair share in newer distribution models.

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

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    The Baseline
    13 Apr 2022
    Forecaster: Some sectors set for strong FY23 growth despite global weakness

    Forecaster: Some sectors set for strong FY23 growth despite global weakness

    Now that we are in the Q4 earnings season, investors will want to know expectations for the upcoming results. We looked into Trendlyne’s Forecaster data to see which sectors analysts predict will do well in Q4 and FY23.

    The key sectors analysts are bullish on (in terms of growth and share price targets) are IT - specifically mid-tier IT companies - capital goods, agrochemicals, capital markets, and banking. The rise in capital spending, digitization push and opening up of export opportunities are driving growth for these sectors. 

    In this week’s Analyticks:

    • Growth in the middle: Demand outlook for mid-tier IT companies looks strong in FY23
    • Revival in private capex: Spending to go up for capital goods sector
    • Export surge: Agrochem players will gain in current geopolitical situation
    • Mid-sized banks to grow at a faster pace in FY23
    • Steady ship for capital market players: Earnings growth to moderate, but remain steady in FY23

    Let’s get into it.


    Mid-tier IT cos likely to outrun larger peers in growth 

    The IT sector is likely to see strong demand in the coming quarters, despite the slowing global economy. According to analysts like Prabhudas Lilladher and Axis Securities, deal momentum will be robust in Q4FY22. Interestingly, mid-tier IT companies like Coforge, Persistent Systems and Mphasis may grow at a faster pace vis-à-vis top tier companies  like Infosys and HCL Technologies. 

    Analysts expect this mid-tier group to see 3.9%-8.5% QoQ revenue growth in Q4FY22 on a constant currency basis. On the other hand, top-tier IT companies  may only see a 1.4%-5.5% revenue growth sequentially.

    Notably, the Jan-Mar quarter is a seasonally weaker quarter for IT services. Despite this, mid-tier companies are expected to shine, as they were able to consistently win small-sized deals in Q2FY22 and Q3FY22, while large deal momentum dried-up for the top players. Analysts at HDFC Securities and Axis Securities expect Persistent Systems to lead top line growth in Q4FY22 owing to a ramp-up of large deals. 


    Capital goods makers may gain from healthy order books

    The government’s thrust on higher infra spending along with rising private capex via the PLI scheme drove the growth for the capital goods sector in 9MFY22. In fact, according to ratings agency ICRA, the order book for both original equipment manufacturers (OEM) and EPC companies is at the highest levels in six years. OEMs also have healthy revenue visibility for Q4FY22 and FY23 with their order book to order inflow ratio at 0.87X as on December 31, 2021. 

    Back in Q3FY22, ABB India and Siemens saw strong traction for short-tenure projects. The demand for ABB India’s products were driven by sectors like renewables, water and wastewater, data centres and railways. ABB India's focus is also to invest more capital in highly efficient electric motors and drives, which optimise energy utilisation. Hence, the demand from the renewables segment will continue to be strong in FY23. 

    Siemens saw robust demand for waste heat recovery systems from end-user industries like steel, cement, chemical, pharma and fertilisers in Q3FY22. Interestingly, the metals and mining sector is still in a favourable cycle, which bodes well for the company in the coming quarters.


    Agrochemical players may gain from a bumper Rabi season in Q4FY22

    Harvesting for the rabi season (April to May) is in full swing and farmers are getting better prices for crops like wheat, soyabean, mustard and barley, among others. The prices of these commodities jumped over 35% YoY in April 2022 due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine crisis and export demand. This is likely to boost farm incomes in H1FY23. Notably, Russia and Ukraine are major exporters of wheat, sunflower, barley, rapeseed, millets and maize. Trade sanctions on Russia and fall in exports from war-torn Ukraine are likely to open up export opportunities for Indian farmers.

    Agrochemical players like PI Industries, UPL and Sharda Cropchem may see higher demand for their products as farm incomes and cash flows are set to rise in coming months. Notably, these companies manufacture formulations and active ingredients that are used in fungicides, herbicides and insecticides. 

    Philip Capital expects agrochemical companies to sustain their EBITDA margins, as they will be able to transfer the burden of higher input costs to farmers in H1FY23 (post rabi season).

    Moreover, Kotak Securities believes that these agrochemical exporters are likely to benefit more from the positive global agri products cycle compared to their domestic counterparts. The net profits of these players may rise close to 19% YoY (on an average) in FY23, backed by higher export demand and sales realisations. 


    Banks to report better incomes, lower provisions and higher net profits in FY22

    For most banks, loan advances picked up pace in Q4FY22. With the earnings season coming up, this growth in loan advances will show up in the net interest income (NII). ICICI Securities’ suggests that private banks’ NII is likely to grow 20% YoY in FY22.

    Brokerages like Axis Securities, ICICI Securities, and Motilal Oswal expect loan growth to boost NIIs for IndusInd Bank, Bank of Baroda, and CreditAccess Grameen Bank in Q4FY22E. According to Trendlyne’s Forecaster results, these mid-sized banks are set to grow at a decent rate both in Q4FY22 and FY23.

    Reducing provisions to boost profits 

    Provision norms have to be followed by all banks to safeguard their assets, in case they turn into non-performing assets (NPAs). The pandemic forced banks to allocate an additional provision for the Covid-19 event. This ate up the earnings of most banks, which reflected in the fall in net profits, and in some cases, losses.

    However, with economic activity picking up pace and business returning to normal, banks are reducing these additional provisions. Emkay Global suggests that with the reduction in NPAs and better recovery rates, net profit numbers may get a boost in Q4FY22.

    With the mild effects of Omicron and Q4 being a seasonally busy quarter for the sector, earnings are likely to be strong for Q4 and continue into FY23 as well.


    Capital market players to benefit from higher retail activity and IPO issuances in FY23

    Easy liquidity in markets, low interest rates and attractive equity market returns added to the market frenzy in 2020-21. The primary beneficiaries of these trends were capital market companies like BSE, Central Depositary Services (India) (CDSL), and Crisil. 

    The above companies are set to finish FY22 on a happy note with over 50% YoY growth expected in Q4FY22 revenues on an average, according to Trendlyne’s Forecaster data. However, rating agency ICRA believes that the earnings growth for this space is set to moderate in FY23. Analysts see the average YoY net profit growth for Crisil, BSE, CDSL to taper off to 15% in FY23 from 60%+ in FY22. 

    Interestingly, the outlook for the primary market (IPO) looks robust for 2022 and is set to pick-up further after the LIC initial public offering opens (around April-May 2022). According to news reports, close to 35 companies already have SEBI’s approval to raise Rs 50,000 crore, while another 33 companies will apply to the stock market regulator to raise another Rs 60,000 crore in 2022 (excludes LIC). 

    Although the growth forecasts are lower for FY23, capital market companies (including broking companies) will continue to witness steady growth in the longer-term. India still has a long way to go in terms of stock-market coverage. According to HDFC Securities, only 5.8% of the Indian population had demat accounts at the end of February 2022, while this figure is 13.5% for China. 

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    The Baseline
    12 Apr 2022
    Chart of the week: Bank credit advances grow, as economic activity sees momentum

    Chart of the week: Bank credit advances grow, as economic activity sees momentum

    The quarterly business updates from banks ahead of earnings announcements, indicate that loan growth was strong in Q4FY22. According todata released from RBI, total advances grew 9.6% YoY to Rs 118.9 lakh crore in Q4FY22 with private banks contributing 50.4%, over half of total advances, while public sector banks lagged behind with a contribution of 44.7%. Brokerages likeICICI Securities, andEmkay Global attribute this to an increase in economic activity and healthy business growth in Q4FY22. 

    Loan growth will remain steady going forward, and growth will be mostly driven by loans to SMEs and retail loans, according to ICICI Securities. This trend is pervasive across banks.HDFC Bank’s Q4FY22 loanadvances grew 21% YoY to Rs 13.7 lakh crore with retail loans growing 15% YoY at the end of Q4FY22. Similarly,Federal Bank’s grossadvances grew 9.5% YoY to Rs 1.5 lakh crore, and retail advances grew 10.4%, higher than the remaining segments.

    Corporate credit growth has picked up pace and is contributing well to loan growth for banks. HDFC Bank’s corporate loan growth was higher than retail loan growth at 17.5% YoY. EvenIDFC First Bank’s corporateloans grew 6% YoY. With industrial growth picking up, this segment is likely to report better growth than FY21. This, according toICICI Securities, can lead to a 20% YoY growth in net interest income for banks in Q4FY22.

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    The Baseline
    12 Apr 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. Macrotech Developers: ICICI Securities upgrades its rating to ‘Buy’ from ‘Hold’ on this realty company with a target price of Rs 1,348, indicating an upside of 17.9%. The company’s Indian business sales booking rose 37% YoY to Rs 3,460 crore against the brokerage's estimate of Rs 3,250 crore. “We believe that the sales were largely sustenance driven with no major launches during the quarter and the company has achieved its FY22 sales guidance of Rs 9,000 crore,” says analyst Adhidev Chattopadhyay. The company added new projects with a total saleable area of 8.8 million square feet that are slated to launch in FY23. 

    Considering the strong launch pipeline and momentum in sustenance sales, the brokerage expects a sales booking of Rs 11,010 crore.  The company’s net debt reduced 20.6% QoQ to Rs 9,930 crore in Q3FY22 and further reduced by 6.2% QoQ to Rs 9,310 crore which the brokerage believes is driven by improved collections and may enable further debt reduction over FY 23-24.

    1. Tata Steel: Axis Securities initiates coverage on this steel-maker with a ‘Buy’ rating and a target price of Rs 1,700, indicating an upside of 30%. The brokerage is bullish on Tata Steel as it expects steel prices to remain high in the coming quarters due to the Russia-Ukraine conflict. This bodes well for the company as it could drive strong cash flows in the upcoming quarters and allow it to continue deleveraging, while pursuing its growth capex. Analyst Aditya Welekar says “strong steel prices, disciplined capex outflow, and working capital management has put the company’s balance sheet on a solid footing”. 

    The brokerage expects high international steel prices and China’s decarbonisation leading to lower steel exports, to create export opportunities for Indian steelmakers like Tata Steel. A 40% MoM jump in steel prices in Europe incentivises Indian steelmakers to export to the EU. Although higher coking coal prices would impact margins in H1FY23, the analyst expects the margin trajectory to be above the historical average due to strong steel prices, thereby driving profitability higher.

    1. Oil And Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC): HDFC Securities gives this oil and gas explorer a ‘Buy’ rating with a target price of Rs 275 indicating an upside of 62.1%. ONGC “outperformed the Sensex by 74/42% over the last twelve months, as Brent crude price increased by 68%. We expect the outperformance to continue,” say analysts Harshad Katkar, Nilesh Ghuge, Akshay Mane, and Rutvi Chokshi. 

    Domestic administered pricing mechanism gas price was revised upwards by 110% to $6.1 per metric million british thermal unit in H1FY23 and the brokerage expects it to rise further by 45%. The brokerage also expects the company to produce 20.8 million metric tonnes of oil and 22.3 billion cubic metres of gas in FY23. It also expects oil and gas production to grow at a CAGR of 3% and 1% respectively in FY23. The analysts add, “ONGC should also benefit from the increase in gas production from the Krishna Godavari basin, with an estimated production target of 3 billion cubic metre and 3.8 billion cubic metre in FY23 and FY24.” 

    1. HDFC Bank: Prabhudas Lilladher maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this bank stock and raises its target price to Rs 2,000. This indicates an upside of 34%. The brokerage maintains its stance as HDFC will merge with HDFC Bank. As of December 2021, the total loan size of the merged entity would be Rs 18 lakh crore with the share of mortgages expected to increase from 11% to 33%. “Post the merger, the Bank would be the second-largest entity in terms of loan advance share,” say analysts Gaurav Jani and Palak Shah. HDFC was prohibited from taking CASA Deposits, however with the merger, CASA accretion would be possible resulting in lower funding cost that would improve spreads in the mortgage business.” 

    The brokerage expects HDFC to benefit from lower funding cost of HDFC Bank and large distribution franchise, while the bank would gain from the former’s expertise in real estate and efficient loan processing.  The merger would also provide both entities to cross-sell opportunities to their respective customers.

    1. Transportation Corporation of India: Motilal Oswal reiterates its ‘Buy’ call on this logistics company with a target price of Rs 880, indicating an upside of 27.5%. “The company has developed robust capabilities in multimodal logistics via its presence across major transportation modes,” say analysts Alok Deora and Dhirendra Patro. 

    The company diversified its service offerings into road freight, integrated supply chain solutions, sea freight, etc. The brokerage expects these capabilities to enable consistent growth in volumes and earnings for the company. Easing of Covid-19 restrictions led to a strong pick-up in volumes from the start of Q2FY22 which are expected to continue in FY23. The company recorded margins of 13% each in Q2 and Q3FY22. 

    The analysts say, “Road freight will benefit from the impact of reforms like GST and e-way bill, which will result in a shift in market share towards organised players, and improved road connectivity, reducing the turnaround time.” The brokerage expects the company to clock profit, revenue, and EBITDA CAGR of 36%, 18%, and 28%, respectively over FY21-24.

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

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    The Baseline
    08 Apr 2022, 05:41PM
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Marico: The stock of this FMCG major fell nearly 6% after it released its Q4FY22 business update on April 5. According to the company, its Q4 revenue grew in ‘low-single digits’ while there was a marginal rise in the sales volumes. What this means is that the revenue growth was primarily driven by the growth in sales realisations in the quarter gone by. This is understandable as the company hiked prices of products in its value-added hair oils segment, Saffola Edible Oils segment and the FMCG segment in the wake of the current cost inflationary pressures.

    What disappointed the street in general was the YoY fall in sales volumes reported by the company’s flagship product segment Parachute Coconut Oil. This segment’s volumes grew a mere 1% YoY back in Q3FY22 as well. Another interesting trend here is softening copra prices, a key raw material for Marico, since February 2021. In fact, the company cut prices for Parachute Oil back in October 2021, December 2021 and January 2022 in order to pass the benefit of lower copra prices to customers. Volumes were still subdued in the past two quarters. A possible reason for this could be market share gains by Dabur in the coconut oil segment. While the overall volumes for the FMCG sector fell in January 2022 and February 2022 (according to Neilsen), Marico’s flagship segment particularly seems at a saturation point even though product prices remain benign.                                                                        

    1. Titan: This jewellery and watchmaker’s stock fell over 3.3% on Thursday after it released its Q4FY22 business update. Titan’s jewellery segment revenue fell 4% YoY in Q4FY22 despite the quarter usually being a strong one for the jewellery industry. The disruption due to partial lockdowns in many states across India due to the Omicron wave in January 2022, which started in December 2021, hit revenues. In addition, the volatility in gold prices due to the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war also impacted jewellery sales.

    The jewellery segment is a major revenue generator for the company as it contributes over 85% of total revenues. But network expansion continued to progress in Q4 in anticipation of an upbeat Q1FY23, which is expected to be a normal quarter after two years of intermittent lockdowns. Titan added 16 new jewellery stores in Q4FY22 compared to 14 stores in Q3FY22. This takes the total number of jewellery stores to 444.  Revenue from the jewellery segment rose 37% YoY in Q3FY22 to Rs 8,563 crore on the back of festive purchases in October and November.

    Titan gets 9% of its total revenues from the watches and wearables segments. This segment clocked a 12% YoY rise in revenue in Q4FY22, despite a challenging external environment with sales increasing across offline channels. Smartwatches and headphones also saw brisk business on the back of new launches like ‘Titan Smart Pro’ in Q4FY22. Eyecare segment’s revenues grew 5% YoY in Q4 while other businesses’ (fragrances and fashion accessories) revenues rose 23% YoY, driven by a strong performance by the fashion accessories businesses.

    1. Zee Entertainment Enterprises: The stock of this media and entertainment company slipped nearly 2% in trade on April 7, 2022 after its single largest investor, Invesco announced its intention to sell nearly 7.8% stake in the company, according to news reports. Invesco will continue to hold around 11% stake in the company even after this stake sale. This comes shortly after Invesco decided not to pursue its demand for an extraordinary general meeting to remove Managing Director Punit Goenka and two independent directors. In fact, Invesco believes that the corporate governance issues that persisted earlier will get resolved once the board gets reconstituted after the merger of Sony Pictures and Zee Entertainment.

    Notably, Invesco had picked up a 11% stake in Zee Entertainment for Rs 4,224 crore back in May 2019 to rescue its promoters as they were in dire need of funds. The average price of the stock as on May 27, 2019 was Rs 357.45. Hence, it is quite intriguing that Invesco now is willing to offload its stake at a loss of roughly 20% now, even though it reiterated its faith in the Sony-Zee merger deal. Invesco is reducing its stake in Zee Entertainment in accordance with their overall ‘portfolio construction approach’ for Asian markets. With Invesco cutting its stake to 11%, the merger deal going through is almost assured.

    1. Bandhan Bank: This bank’s Q4FY22 business update indicates that its fortunes are turning for the better after three painful quarters in FY22. Its loan book grew 16% YoY to Rs 1.01 lakh crore, while its deposits grew 24% YoY to Rs 96,331 crore and retail by 21% YoY to Rs 74,441 crore. This is due to a strong recovery in credit demand as lockdowns eased. With economic activity picking up, the prospects for improvement in asset quality look promising as the overall collection efficiency ratio (CER) was 96% in Q4FY22 compared to 93% in Q3FY22. Collection efficiency ratio indicates the total  loans recovered to total loans to be recovered during the same financial period. Emerging Entrepreneurs Business’ (EEB) collection efficiency was 98% in Q4FY22, close to its pre-covid level of 99%. “Improving trends in collection efficiency should continue to moderate credit cost and support earnings,” said analysts at Motilal Oswal.

    Also, the bank's parent company-Bandhan Financial Holdings-led consortium is set to acquire IDFC Asset Management Company (AMC) Rs 4,500 crore. The acquisition brings the group closer to its goal of diversifying its product portfolio to expand its presence in the financial services sector. Through this acquisition, the group will be able to offer financial products such as mutual funds. For the bank though, this is an opportunity to boost its fee income through cross-selling of mutual fund products, as currently the share of non-interest income of the overall income for the bank is less than 25%. The holding company wants to scale up the business (post-acquisition) by strengthening the product portfolio. It plans to add more equity-based funds targeted toward retail investors and enhance the distribution footprint by tying up with banks and small finance banks.

    1. Hindustan Aeronautics (HAL): This aerospace company’s stock rose 6.1% in five consecutive sessions, till Thursday, after it announced record high revenues. In FY22, revenue grew 6% YoY to Rs 24,000 crore. This was led by production and delivery of 44 new helicopters, 84 new engines, and the overhaul of 203 aircraft and 478 engines in FY22. Recently, the company bagged a contract to make aircrafts worth Rs 3,887 crore for the Indian Air Force and the Indian Army. Additional orders are expected for helicopters and the LCA (Light-Combat Aircraft) in the coming quarters.

    With a robust order pipeline, the company's Chairman and Managing Director R Madhavan said revenues will grow 6-7% in FY23. The order inflow is expected to grow as the Centre pushes for more indigenisation of its defence needs to reduce dependence on imports. The Ministry of Defence has fixed timelines for indigenisation, after which certain products will be procured domestically. The share of domestic procurement in the total defence capital outlay is estimated to rise from less than 60% in FY20 to 68% in FY23. HAL’s order at the end of Q3FY22 stands at Rs 79,230 and the order pipeline for the next two years looks strong at Rs 50,000 crore. A strong order book and healthy business outlook bodes well for HAL.

    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
    06 Apr 2022
    Chart of the Week: Truck sales rise with ramp up in infrastructure spending

    Chart of the Week: Truck sales rise with ramp up in infrastructure spending

    Post-pandemic, there are still grey clouds that are hampering the Indian auto sector's growth. But if you look at commercial vehicle dispatches, there is a silver lining. Companies likeTata Motors,Mahindra & Mahindra,Eicher Motors,Ashok Leyland, andMaruti Suzuki have seen steady growth in CV wholesale volumes from December 2021 to March 2022.

    The rise in wholesales of medium and heavy-duty trucks (medium & heavy commercial vehicles, M&HCV) has been the biggest contributor to the volume growth of commercial vehicles.Ashok Leyland’s M&HCV volumes jumped 38.6% YoY to 12,161 units, whileTata Motors saw 33% YoY growth to 14,499 units for March 2022. This is because of a pick-up in construction and mining activities leading to an increase in demand for trucks.  

    Eicher Motors' heavy-duty vehicles’ wholesales has also risen 41% YoY to 2,006 units in March 2022. According to a report fromDolat Capital, the demand for medium and heavy-duty trucks will continue to stay strong because of high fleet utilisation and freight availability, as construction and industrial activities will be on an uptrend in FY23.

    Demand for light commercial vehicles (LCV) has increased as chip supplies improved.Mahindra & Mahindra’s LCV wholesales jumped 132% YoY to 3,806 units in March 2022. But heavy-duty truck wholesales has grown slowly. The surge in e-commerce sales rubbed off onMaruti Suzuki’s LCV wholesales - it gained 15% YoY to 3,797 units in March 2022. 

    According toEmkay Global, the volume momentum for CVs will continue as chip supplies for LCVs and tippers improve.Nirmal Bang expects demand drivers to remain intact in coming months. However, it’ll be interesting to see how long demand sustains. A recentreport suggests that even though the Centre is going full throttle to meet its capital expenditure targets, it will most likely fall short of meeting its revised capital expenditure target of Rs 6 lakh crore for FY22. If this continues into FY23 as well, then the party for commercial vehicle makers might end early.

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    The Baseline
    04 Apr 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. Tata Consumer Products: ICICI Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this packaged foods company with a target price of Rs 925. This indicates an upside of 17.4%. The company in a conference call said that it is in the process of creating a simplified corporate structure for its consumer businesses. “Post acquiring 100% stake in the international tea business and Tata Coffee, Tata Consumer Products has created a simplified structure to sell commodity/ low-growth/ low-profit businesses,” say analysts Manoj Menon, Aniruddha Joshi, and Karan Bhuwania. 

    The brokerage expects some revenue synergies, especially in the coffee extraction business. The analysts believe there is further scope to reduce the complexity of the company’s structure and are positive on the stock hoping for further restructuring of the corporate structure in FY23.

    1. Emami: Motilal Oswal maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this FMCG company, but cut its target price to Rs 540 from Rs 650. This indicates an upside of 19.3%. The brokerage reduced its target price as FY22 sales of Rs 3,200 crore were lesser than its domestic peers like Marico, Britannia, and Dabur. However, its revenues grew at a CAGR of 9.3% over FY20-22, compared to 3.7% in the preceding 5 years.

    The brokerage is bullish on the company’s new acquisition of the Dermicool brand from Reckitt Benckiser India. It expects the acquisition to make the company a market leader in the category. “The acquisition of Dermicool, the third-largest player in the ‘Prickly Heat and Cool Talc’ category, gives Emami market leadership in this category,” say analysts Krishnan Sambamoorthy, Dhairya Dhruv, and Kaiwan Jal Olia. The acquisition will give the company a combined market share of 45%, making it the largest player in the category. The company’s Navratna Cool Talc is the second-largest brand in the market. Through this acquisition, the company expects its geographical reach to expand as both businesses have common distribution channels.

    1. Aptus Value Housing Finance India: Axis Securities has initiated coverage on this housing finance company with a ‘Buy’ rating and a target price of Rs 400. This indicates an upside of 14.4%. The brokerage believes the company is well placed to benefit from the rapidly growing affordable housing finance segment, with its deep rural penetration in South India and improving asset quality trends. Although the company operates in a ‘high-risk’ self-employed segment, where repayments are not regular during times of disruptions, it managed to maintain robust asset quality. 

    The company has maintained its asset quality due to its focus on risk management. “Over the years, Aptus has successfully developed expertise in serving self-employed and new-to-credit customers alongside maintaining robust asset quality,” says analyst Dnyanada Vaidya. Deep penetration and a strong customer connection have given the company pricing power that enables it to generate superior RoA (Return on Assets). The company is already operating at its pre-covid levels, and with improving traction in collections the brokerage expects the loan book to report healthy growth of 27% CAGR over FY22-24.

    1. Balaji Amines: Edelweiss maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this specialty chemicals maker and has increased its target price to Rs 4,150, indicating an upside of 29.7%. Analysts from Edelweiss visited the plant in Solapur to meet the management to discuss the company’s business operations, pricing trends, and capital expenditure plans. The company’s management said they are hiking prices, to offset sharp increases in raw material costs, which continued to rise in 4QFY22. The company plans to commercialise captive coal-based power plants to reduce reliance on purchasing high-cost electricity. The management expects healthy top line growth, driven by the ramp-up of ethyl amines,  dimethyl carbonate, and dimethylformamide plants.

    The management took a cautious approach in announcing capex and prioritising capital deployment in import substitution projects. The analyst Anshul Verdia says, “Our estimate suggests over Rs 600 crore of capital expenditure in the next two to three years.” After the recent plant visit, the brokerage remains confident on the company’s prospects on the back of execution quality and the company’s product mix.

    1. PVR: Prabhudas Lilladhar has given a ‘Buy’ rating to this multiplex chain with a target price of Rs 2,224, indicating an upside of 16.4%. “The PVR and Inox merger will create a multiplex behemoth with a network of 1,500+ screens across India,” say analysts  Jinesh Joshi and Shweta Shekhawat. The company plans to add an additional 200 screens each year. The merger would not require Competition Commission of India’s approval as revenues of the combined entity will be below the threshold of Rs 1,000 crore for scrutiny by the competition watchdog. The analysts add that the merger will give the company an ‘invincible’ size advantage. They expect the merger to result in material revenue and cost synergies by improving bargaining power with film distributors, real estate developers, advertising networks, and ticket aggregators. For the merged entity, the analysts expect profit, revenue and EBITDA of Rs 660 crore, Rs 7,260 crore and Rs 1,460 crore in FY24, respectively. 

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

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    The Baseline
    02 Apr 2022
    The financial year just ended. Is FY23 going to be better?

    The financial year just ended. Is FY23 going to be better?

    FY22 has been a difficult financial year for corporate India. Companies across most sectors saw their margins come under pressure as India Inc felt the double-punch of higher inflation and supply chain shortages.

    Commodity prices jumped with the conflict in Europe. As a result, agencies like Fitch, ICRA, and Morgan Stanley have slashed India’s FY23 GDP growth estimates by over 100 bps, to 7.9% on average.

    Are things going to get better in FY23?

    In this week’s Analyticks, we look back on the performance of major consumption-driven sectors in FY22 and discuss what we can expect from them in FY23. 

    • Seeing red: Paint makers’ margins may stay under pressure even as demand jumps 
    • People are packing bags: Hotels expect a bumper 'Summer of '22' with strong bookings for next 100 days
    • Unlocking profits: Fashion retailers plan for growth as shoppers return 
    • The cookie crumbles: FMCG companies hit by rising input costs, which see no signs of ebbing

    Paint makers’ margins under pressure, even as demand looks positive

    Cost pressures for paints companies began in Q2FY22, and EBITDA margins of the top players contracted by over six percentage points YoY that quarter. The prices of inputs like crude oil and titanium dioxide (TiO2) were up 40-50% YoY in Q2FY22. And it continued to rise, as titanium dioxide costs spiked another 29.5% QoQ in Q3FY22.

    The paints sector (top 6 companies) underperformed the Nifty 500 by 9.56% in FY22. Only one paint stock made it to the relative outperformance screener.

    These inflationary trends have caused paint makers to undertake double-digit price hikes, of 18-27% in the nine months ended December 2021. In fact, according to ICICIDirect, paint makers will have to raise prices by another 5-6% to offset the 30% QoQ rise in price of crude oil derivatives in Q4FY22. 

    However, there is a silver lining. Sales jumped, as the festival season had people sprucing up their homes for visiting family and friends. Paint makers like Asian Paints and Berger Paints reported double-digit rise in sales volumes in Q2FY22 and Q3FY22, driven by decorative paints. Asian Paintsexpects to maintain its volume growth trajectory in Q4FY22 as consumer demand revived February 2022 onwards. 

    But current inflationary trends have led analysts to cut FY23 earnings estimates for paint makers by 13-16%. This might be the first of many cuts in estimates if crude oil levels continue to hover near $110/bbl levels.


    Sunny outlook for hotels, as summer travel jumps

    We are pretty sure that almost everyone you know is planning a holiday. After a long, lean time, when you could book a room in the ITC Gardenia for under Rs, 5000, the hospitality sector finally raked in some profits in Q3FY22. This came after six back-to-back quarters of net losses.

    Market leader Indian Hotels saw its occupancy levels for domestic properties rise to 94% of FY20 levels due to higher leisure travel. The hotels sector (top 10 listed players) outperformed the Nifty 500 by 83.6% in FY22. Two hotel stocks made it to the relative outperformance screener. 

    Both Indian Hotels and EIH reported a profit for the first time after six quarters in Q3FY22. 

    Interestingly, revenues generated from Indian Hotels’ properties in Goa and Rajasthan in Q3FY22 exceeded Q3FY20 levels. 

    For EIH, hotels in Udaipur, Chandigarh, Shimla and Bengaluru grew by over 35% on an average over Q3FY20 levels. 

    While January was a washout month for the sector, it saw a swift recovery from February 2022 onward. In fact according to Indian Hotels, travel bookings for March to May 2022 have surpassed March to May 2019 levels. It's not just leisure travel that is seeing strong traction - corporate bookings are also up with a rise in offsite events and conferences. 

    The quality of holidays is also a focus for Indian travelers now. According to Easy Trip Planners, bookings for business class seats on flights and five-star hotels for the summer of 2022 have doubled compared to pre-pandemic levels. 

    According to a recent survey by Deloitte, pretty much no one is planning on staying home in April. Over 80% of Indian consumers plan to undertake leisure/business travel in the next 3-4 weeks. With international travel opened up from March 27, 2022, hotels certainly await a bright summer in 2022. 


    Fashion retailers see growth on the horizon

    After two forgettable quarters, the festive and wedding season brought some shine back for fashion retailers in Q3FY22. The retailing sector outperformed the Nifty 500 by 25.48% in FY22. One stock made it to the relative outperformance screener.

    Trent and Shoppers Stop saw strong traction in the beauty, personal care and innerwear segments in Q3. According to Motilal Oswal, Q3FY22 revenues from Trent’s value format ‘Zudio’ grew almost 3.7X over FY20 levels. 

    Aditya Birla Fashion’s Madura segment or lifestyle brands’ Q3 revenue grew over 20% compared to FY20. Pantaloons’ revenues reached 98% of pre-Covid levels and athleisure brands saw over 30% YoY jump in Q3 sales. 

    Although January was disappointing for the retailers, demand revived from February according to Shoppers Stop’s management. Shoppers Stop has claimed that its March 2022 revenues are likely to cross the pre-pandemic levels, seeing early trends. 

    Shoppers Stop aims to double its revenues in the next 3-4 years. This sales growth CAGR of 19% will be driven by the high-margin private labels segment and by achieving same store sales growth of 9-11% for existing outlets. 

    Aditya Birla Fashion, on the other hand, not only has aggressive store expansion plans, but is also looking to build a separate digital platform for its direct-to-consumer (D2C) business.

    ABFRL is looking to have around 25-30 D2C brands in its digital portfolio over the next 3-5 years which will contribute over 10% share to its top line. The company sees a market opportunity of $100 billion in the D2C business by FY25.

    ABFRL investedin four companies between January 2021 and January 2022 to strengthen its ethnic wear, sports and athleisure business segments. It plans to scale up the annual revenues of its ethnic wear subsidiaries to Rs 1,500 crore from Rs 400 crore on a trailing 12-month basis in next 4-5 years. 

    All in all, Indian fashion retailers are set to begin FY23 on a highly positive note. 


    FMCG sector struggles, as costs pinch hard

    If those Good Day biscuits have been tasting more like Ok Day biscuits recently, you can blame rising costs of inputs like vegetable and palm oil. The FMCG space has been dealing with rising raw material costs since the start of FY22.

    In Q1FY22 the sector was battling not just raw material cost inflation but also the second wave of pandemic. There was some improvement in Q2FY22. According to Prabhudas Lilladher, FMCG sales grew 2.95% YoY to Rs 4,040 crore in Q2FY22, with EBITDA growing 2.2% YoY to Rs 4,020 crore. EBITDA margins averaged around 15-20%.

    This was because of stabilizing sales of consumer staples like packaged foods, biscuits and beverages, as the pandemic waned.

    Hindustan Unilever(HUL) and Tata Consumer Products’ (TCPL) EBITDA margins rose 40 and 70 bps to 25.4% and 14.6%,  respectively, in Q3FY22. Nestle and Dabur’s Q3 margins were impacted because of an increase in staff costs. Britannia’s rise in other expenses by 7.3% QoQ to Rs 687.75 crore affected its margins.

    Input costs pressures may shrink margins

    Q3FY22 showed signs of improvement as the festive season boosted demand. HUL and Britannia captured this as their gross margins improved that quarter.

    As crude oil, vegetable, and palm oil prices cooled down in December 2021 because of import duty reduction, the cost of raw materials fell for most companies.

    TCPL and Dabur’s cost of raw materials fell 10% QoQ and 9% QoQ, respectively. Nestle’s raw material cost increased in Q3FY22 by 11% QoQ to Rs 1,662 crore because of commodity price inflation. 

    Most companies are now hiking prices to offset the margin hit. Companies have hinted at further price hikes in Q4FY22. Britannia might hike prices by 10-11% in Q4FY22 to offset inflation. The management of these companies expects inflation woes to wane in FY23, depending on the global supply available to meet rising demand.

    Two stocks in the FMCG sector made it to this relative outperformance screener. Nifty FMCGunderperformed Nifty 500 by 15.3% in FY22.

    We'll visit a second set of sectors in the next Analyticks instalment.

    Signing off this week,

    The Trendlyne Team

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    The Baseline
    01 Apr 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    1. Bharti Airtel: This telecom company’s stock surged over 5.5% after it held its analyst day on March 25, 2022. Brokerages across the spectrum are bullish on the company’s future prospects and see an average target price upside of over 20% to Rs 892 levels. The company is mulling 2-3 hikes in its tariff plans over the next few years to boost its average revenue per user (ARPU) to sustainable levels. However, it will be successful in this endeavour only if Reliance Jio follows suit.

    Bharti is looking to grow its ARPU to Rs 300 in the medium-term from Q3FY22 levels of Rs 163. At the current levels, the company clocks RoCE of just 6% which is lower than its cost of capital. Even if Bharti is able to make average revenues of Rs 250 per user, it can see an RoCE of 20%+. Hence, any future tariff hikes should be a key monitorable for investors.

    The next leg of growth will come from its digital products and services, according to the company. The cumulative market opportunity for cloud communication, data centres, security, IoT and network as a service (NaaS) is around Rs 36,000 crore as of FY22. This market will grow at 25% CAGR to reach almost Rs 70,000 crore by FY25. The company's key products for its enterprise segment (B2B) such as Airtel IQ (CPaas), Nxtra (data centres), Airtel Secure and Airtel Ads could see stellar growth in the next 3-4 years. Another potential growth driver for the company will be the Airtel Payments Bank. This business already broke even in July 2021, and clocks a gross merchandise value of Rs 37,000 crore per quarter.

    1. Aurobindo Pharma: This pharmaceutical company acquired Veritaz Healthcare for Rs 171 crore on March 28 to foray into the domestic formulations business. Aurobindo Pharma derives about 90% of its total revenue from international markets. Given the intense pricing pressure in the US and with export costs increasing, Aurobindo Pharma has turned towards domestic markets (India) to diversify its revenue mix. Veritaz Healthcare is an Indian pharma company specializing in branded generic formulations with a turnover of Rs 133 crore in 9MFY22. This 10-year-old company has around 40 brands across acute and critical care segments. The addressable market for its current product portfolio is Rs 26,775 crore.

    Brokerages like Geojit BNP Paribas and Axis Securities have a long-term positive outlook on the company. However, a flash report by BOB Capital Markets released on Wednesday isn’t too optimistic on the acquisition. The brokerage says the strategy behind the acquisition is unclear and it is also sceptical on the financial planning post the acquisition. Hence, BOB Caps did not include the Veritaz acquisition while modelling its target price and stance. The brokerage believes that the low-value products of Veritaz in highly competitive segments aren’t compelling for Aurobindo Pharma. The investors reflected the same sentiment as the stock price has fallen over 5% since the announcement of the acquisition.

    Like other pharma companies, Aurobindo Pharma witnessed significant price erosion in the US markets in Q3FY22. The operating profit margin decreased by over 450 basis points in Q3FY22 to 16.93%. The operating profit margin is on a downtrend since the start of FY22 owing to the intense competition globally. The company struggled to post YoY revenue growth for the past four quarters. Given these weak cues, the company has turned towards Indian markets to drive revenue growth.

    1. G R Infraprojects: This infrastructure company’s stock rose 7.4% in five consecutive sessions till March 31, 2022 after it announced that it received Letter of Award (LoA) for five projects worth Rs 5,774 crore from the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI). All the projects to be constructed are under hybrid annuity mode (HAM). As of Q3FY22, the company’s order book stood robust at Rs 14,599 crore, which is twice its FY21 revenue. Its order book comprises road projects and metro projects and its order book mix is as follows - 67% HAM projects, 28% EPC (engineering, procurement, and construction) projects, and 5% railway and metro projects. According toICICI Securities, the focus on HAM projects bodes well for the company as HAM projects have a 20%+ operating margin, whereas EPC projects have a 14-15% operating margin. The company has also diversified into the power transmission segment to widen its opportunity landscape.

    According to reports, NHAI has undertaken measures aimed at preventing excessive and aggressive bidding. It has reinstated the earnest money deposits (EMD) requirements and raised the net worth requirements for HAM projects to ensure that the successful bidder does not falter on achieving financial closure and leaving the project incomplete. These measures are expected to lead to a reduction in competitive intensity in FY23 and benefit financially sound players. G R Infraprojects will benefit from these measures due to its strong balance sheet and access to growth capital. According to Axis Securities, the company is well placed to capitalise on opportunities in the construction segment by leveraging its healthy financial position, healthy order inflows, and timely execution prowess.

    1. Hindalco: This aluminium miner’s stock touched an all-time high of Rs 634.95 this week, as LME (London Metal Exchange) prices of aluminium are soaring due to a supply crunch caused by the Russia-Ukraine conflict. With the aluminium supply deficit and strong demand for aluminium from major segments like beverage cans, automotive body sheets, specialities, and aerospace, the management expects higher LME prices to prevail through FY23 and FY24.

    The management announced a growth capex of nearly $8 billion over 5 years. Of the total capex, $4.5-4.8 billion would be incurred at Novelis while $3.37 billion would be spent on the India business.The company expects $2 billion of free cash flow (FCF) post sustaining capex and has created a roadmap to allocate 75% of FCF toward growth projects. The company plans to increase the capacity of Novelis by 1.3 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) to 5.8 mtpa, to meet the growing demand for auto parts and beverage cans in North America. The management sees a growing demand-supply gap for beverage cans in the next 7-8 years in North America as an opportunity to expand. As for its India operations, the company plans to expand its upstream and downstream further to raise its aluminium capacity to meet growing demand in the Indian market. Better realisations can be expected in the Indian operations as Hindalco obtains a majority of its coal requirements from Coal India and its captive mines. The company plans to increase production in captive mining to enhance its coal security and reduce energy expenses. So far, the business environment is favourable for Hindalco, the only headwinds being supply-chain disruptions which may impact its margins.

    1. Axis Bank: This private banker’s stock rose 2% on Thursday after it announced the acquisition of Citibank India’s consumer business for Rs 12,235 crore. Citibank’s Indian businesses include credit cards, retail banking, wealth management, and consumer loans.

    Citibank is the seventh-largest player in the outstanding credit card segment with a customer base of 26 lakh and a market share of 3.6% in February 2022. Analysts at Motilal Oswal expect that Axis Bank’s acquisition of Citibank’s consumer business will help it increase its credit cards market share to 15.6% from 12% giving tough competition to ICICI Bank which has a market share of 17.8%. The acquisition will also boost Axis Bank’s loan book by 4.1% to Rs 6.9 lakh crore with the retail loan mix increasing 177 bps to 57%. The retail loan mix for Q3FY22 stands at 55% in Q3FY22.

    The acquisition seems like a welcome change. However, some analysts are sceptical about the move. HDFC Securities didn’t revise its target price after this deal was announced. Motilal Oswal reduced its target price as it expects the benefits of the acquisition to show up only after two years. A Jefferies report suggests that Citibank’s standalone business growth is modest and this might not add up to Axis Bank’s earnings until FY26.

    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
    29 Mar 2022
    Chart of the Week: Airlines ready to soar, but will high crude prices slow takeoff?

    Chart of the Week: Airlines ready to soar, but will high crude prices slow takeoff?

    It has been a turbulent couple of years for the Indian aviation sector. And despite revenge travel, the recovery hasn't been a quick one. Airlines are yet to hit pre-pandemic levels on the number of passengers ferried, with the load still lower than FY21.

    Pre-Covid, average daily fliers were 4 lakh passengers. The latest data suggests that daily traffic reached 3.6 lakh fliers as of March 26, 2022. Although the average number of travellers surged to 137 from 126 in March 2022, the third wave dampened this trend, the Director General of Civil Aviation’s monthly data shows.

    In February 2022,Interglobe Aviation (IndiGo), Air India, Go First (formerly GoAir), Spicejet, and Vistara saw a substantial rise in passengers carried. However, IndiGo’s market share fell by 411 bps MoM, to 51% as competitors Air India, SpiceJet and Vistara ate into its market share. Vistara in particular has seen an increase in market share by 226 bps MoM to 9.73%.

    However, an increase in the price of aviation turbine fuel (ATF) might pose a problem for all airlines. Unlike other sectors, where price hikes are taken to offset the rise in input costs, aviation companies cannot increase fares indiscriminately. According to a report by ICICI Securities, revenue per available seat-kilometre (RASK) in Q3FY22 was Rs 3.51, which is already higher than Rs 2.70 in FY11, when fuel prices were $100-$110 per barrel. So the option of increasing fares is very limited.

    With the government re-starting international flights from March 27, 2022, demand is set to go up, causing a surge in the number of passengers carried.Reports suggest that since daily traffic increased in March 2022, DGCA approved 25,309 departures every week starting the last week of March. If the demand continues to jump, airlines might be able to mitigate the rise in ATF cost and come out of the red in FY23. 

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