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    The Baseline

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    The Baseline
    09 Mar 2022, 06:49PM
    Chart of the week: Steel production sees muted growth, with some recovery in demand

    Chart of the week: Steel production sees muted growth, with some recovery in demand

    With the re-opening of economies globally, and construction activities gaining traction, demand for steel has seen a steady rise in Q3FY22.  However, while steel production for listed steelmakers increased it was below expected levels. While JSW Steel’s production rose 8% QoQ to 4.4 million tonnes, Jindal Steel’s production rose a mere 2% QoQ. Analysts from Geojit BNP Paribas reckon JSW Steel’s new plant at Dolvi helped boost production in Q3FY22. Jindal Steel’s production rose to 1.96 million tonnes helped by its leasing of Kasia iron ore mine from Odisha government in September 2021.

    Tata Steel’s production rose a mere 1% QoQ in Q3FY22, weighed down by its acquisition of Tata Steel BSL, which is now delisted. Analysts from Motilal Oswal reduced their production volume estimate for Tata Steel BSL to 1.1 million tonnes for FY22 from 4.6 million tonnes. This could be one of the reasons for Tata Steel’s management expecting volumes to be flattish in Q4FY22 as well. 

    Steel Authority of India’s (SAIL) production rose  5% QoQ to 4.5 million tonnes. The company expects demand to revive in Q4FY22, however, production may remain flat as input costs stay high.

    Even with a muted rise in production, steel companies have scope to grow further. A report from ICRA suggests that the steel industry’s capacity utilization is likely to touch 80% by the end of FY23 and steel production capacity is likely to increase to 40 million tonnes per annum by FY22-26. This is double the steel production levels of FY17-21.

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    The Baseline created a screener Biggest value creators and …
    07 Mar 2022

    Biggest value creators and destroyers over the past week

    This screener tracks stocks that saw significant value creation or destruction with shift in share prices.
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    The Baseline
    07 Mar 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. Pricol: Hem Securities initiates a ‘Buy’ call on this auto parts company with a target price of Rs 165, indicating an upside of 54.7%. In Q3FY22, the company posted a profit of Rs 17.3 crore, down 19% YoY, while revenues were down 11.6% YoY to Rs 394.7 crore. The company has adapted to the growing electric vehicle (EV) market and has started supplying components for EVs to original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). Analyst Chinmay Bhandari says the “company significantly reduced its long term borrowing to 100 crore from 230 crore as of December 31 and will repay the entire debt by the end of FY23”. The auto part maker is a supplier to most major OEMs like Hero MotoCorp, TVS Motors, among others, and is a sole supplier to Tata Motors’ PV models. The company in recent years acquired businesses outside India in order to mark its international presence. The analyst adds, “we believe Pricol can be a turnaround story in the medium-to-long term and it can be a good investment bet in the auto ancillary space.” The brokerage expects the revenues to grow 12% YoY in FY23.

    2. TVS Motor: Axis Securities recommends a ‘Buy’ on this two and three-wheeler maker with a target price of Rs 720 and an upside of 35.8%. The motor company is “leveraging its strong product portfolio, and gained market share in both scooters and premium motorcycles segments,” said analysts at Axis Securities. The company’s market share in scooters increased 21%, and 19% in premium motorcycles. The management of the company expects to sustain higher volume and margins owing to the success of new products, cost rationalisation initiatives undertaken by the company and its improving brand equity. TVS is also turning more aggressive on electric vehicles and plans to launch new electric vehicles over the next two years. The company has earmarked Rs 1,000 crore investments for products and capacity expansion. The brokerage expects the company’s volumes to grow by 9.5% CAGR over FY21-24 and robust revenue CAGRs of 16%. 

    3. Easy Trip Planners: ICICI Securities maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this online travel portal company with a target price of Rs 335 indicating an upside of 23.3%. The brokerage expects the online travel market in India to double over the next five years to $31 billion in FY25E, growing at 14% CAGR from FY20 levels. “Easy Trip Planners is the fastest growing and only profitable company in the online travel portal space in India,” says analyst Pankaj Pandey. With travel resuming, the company is well-positioned to benefit from its lean cost model and no convenience fee strategy. This has also led to a healthy repeat transaction rate of 86% in the B2C (business-to-customer) channel. Now, with airlines allowed to operate their full capacity, the brokerage expects further traction in the company’s revenues and profitability. Further benefits would accrue from segments like international air, hotels, and bus booking over the next three to four years.

    4. Muthoot Finance: Motilal Oswal recommends a ‘Buy’ on this NBFC (Non-Banking Financial Company) with a target price of Rs 1,750, indicating an upside of 29.4%. The brokerage expects 13%-15% CAGR in gold loans over the next five years, with the company best positioned among its peers to deliver across economic cycles. “Around 55% of its gold loan portfolio has a ticket size of over Rs 1 lakh, which leads to higher stickiness and lesser churn feeding into gold loan growth,” say analysts Abhijit Tibrewal and Nitin Agarwal.  A strong brand presence and deep penetration, have enabled the company to enhance customer confidence in the franchise, according to MOswal. The company’s effective risk management will enable it to further scale up its gold lending business, and lower cost of borrowings will enable it to offer competitive interest rates to customers. The brokerage expects 15% AUM and net profit CAGR over FY22-24E on operating efficiencies.

    5. Balaji Amines: CD Equisearch retains a ‘Buy’ call on this specialty stock with a target price of Rs 3,916 and an upside of 42.4%. Despite a fall of 13.8% YoY in consolidated sales volume to 27,589 metric tonnes, the company’s revenue from operations increased leading to 44.1% YoY to Rs 564.9 crore in Q3FY22. Its subsidiary Balaji Specialty delivered a stellar performance by clocking revenues of Rs 130 crore compared to Rs 57.1 crore in the previous year. “Factoring in the sustainability of higher margins, we have upped our FY23 EPS estimates by some 25%,” says the brokerage .The brokerage also believes that the initiation of DMC plant, development in new ethylamines plant and increased productions of acetonitrile in acetic acid along with increased offtake from the subsidiary will lead to better growth. Lastly, with a favourable pricing environment, the brokerage expects the revenues to boost by 69% in FY23.

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    The Baseline
    04 Mar 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    Five Interesting Stocks Today

    • Hero MotoCorp: This two-wheeler maker’s stock fell 10% in the past five sessions after the Russia-Ukraine invasion escalated. The already weak demand situation in this sector is worsened by the semiconductor shortage that has been affecting all auto manufacturers. The semiconductor shortage is set to intensify with the Russia-Ukraine war. Russia is a major exporter of palladium, which is used for the pins that conduct electricity on a chip. Palladium prices have soared close to 16% in the last four days fearing a supply chain disruption. Ukraine is a major supplier of neon gas, constituting about 95% of US supply. Neon gas is used in the critical laser lithography process in semiconductor manufacturing. The company is also affected by this shortage mainly in the motorcycle segment, which constitutes around 94% of total units sold. Hero MotoCorp's Q3FY22 net profit fell 31% YoY to Rs 703.7 crore and revenue fell 18.5% to Rs 8,133.3 crore. The company’s sales volumes fell 30% YoY to 12.92 lakh units owing to subdued consumer demand. With weak demand in the domestic market, the two-wheeler manufacturers are diversifying their revenue mix by focusing more on exports.  In  February 2022, domestic wholesale volumes fell 21% YoY to 3,31,462 units owing to weak demand from rural areas. However, exports rose 48% YoY to 26,792 units. Hero plans to launch a wide range of premium two-wheelers in FY22 and is currently set to launch its first-ever electric two-wheeler in March. However, the semiconductor shortage may hamper production.
    • Hindalco: The aluminium manufacturer’s stock bucked the fall in markets, rising 17% in four consecutive sessions. Hindalco’s revenue grew 60% YoY to Rs 50,453 crore and net profit jumped 96% to Rs 3,675 crore in Q3FY22 on strong volume growth in its aluminium and copper businesses. The aluminium business’ revenue rose 55.7% YoY to Rs 8,243 crore, and revenue from the copper business rose 67.2% YoY to Rs 10,255 crore in Q3FY22.

    Aluminium prices have increased 40% in the last two-and-a-half months initially due to a drop in output triggered by power problems and recently hit new highs amid the Russia-Ukraine conflict. With prices hitting an all-time high of $3,560 per tonne, the company stands to benefit as its integration would limit the cost increase.

    The company was well-positioned to capitalize on the steady rise in aluminium and copper prices as it is the largest integrated primary producer of aluminium in Asia. It expects the domestic demand for aluminium and aluminium FRP (flat-rolled products) to grow by 10% and 6% respectively in Q4FY22. The demand surge will be led by sectors like packaging, consumer durables, electronic products and building & construction demand will improve due to government projects. A favourable macro-environment, demand driven by a resumption in economic activities and rising prices are likely to aid further growth of the company.

    • Ambuja Cements: Shares of this cement maker were down 3% on Wednesday, and nearly 22% in a month. Rising fuel prices  are happening even as the company was already reeling under rising costs of raw material and energy, which doesn’t bode well for margins. Power and fuel costs of the company rose 58% and raw material costs 7.9% in Q4CY21. Energy and logistics costs together make up around 60% of the overall costs of cement makers. Due to rising input costs, the company had a disappointing Q4CY21, with revenues rising 2% YoY to Rs 7,709.6 crore and net profit falling 60.3% to Rs 290.6 crore due to the headwinds from hikes in raw material prices, power, and fuel costs.

    Ambuja currently has a cement capacity of 31 million tonnes and plans to enhance its capacity to 50 MTPA (million tonnes per annum). With the current Rs 3,500 crore investment, it expects to achieve 40 MTPA by 2024. The long-term demand for the cement industry is on strong footing driven by growing urbanisation. In the short-to-medium term, key cost items like coal, crude, and metals continue to increase in international markets and the prices of fuel are expected to move up post assembly elections in India. With the conflict in Ukraine bearing unpredictable consequences and having an indirect effect on most sectors, the business is in treacherous waters for the time being.

    • Sun Pharmaceuticals: This pharmaceuticals company’s stock fell 10% after reaching a one-year high of Rs 902.8 last month. Sun Pharma derives about 18% of its revenues from the emerging market segment that includes Russia, Romania, South Africa, and Brazil. Previously, the company had acquired Biosintez Russia in 2016 for $ 24 million to enhance local manufacturing capability. Sun Pharma also has a finished dose manufacturing unit in Russia. Revenues from these markets may be affected by the Russian invasion and sanctions,  with two major factors in play. One factor is the supply chain disruption and the second is the depreciation of the Russian ruble. After Russian troops entered Ukraine on Feb 24, the ruble fell more than 20% against the dollar.

    Sun Pharma beat Trendlyne’s Forecaster revenue and profit estimates in Q3FY22. Sun Pharma’s revenue rose 12% to Rs 9,863.1 crore and its profits increased by 7.6% to Rs 2,058.8 crore. Its operating profit margin remained flat despite the prevailing pricing pressure in the US formulations business. The company’s management believes that emerging markets continue to be the key focus area to grow in order to diversify its geographical mix and to move towards higher-margin products. ICICI Securities has a ‘BUY’ rating on Sun Pharma with a target price of Rs 1,075, indicating an upside of 30%. The brokerage expects the company’s revenue to grow at a CAGR of 10.5% over FY21-24E. However, in the short term, the Russia-Ukraine war might slow revenue growth.

    • JSW Steel: This steel maker's stock was up by 2.4% on Wednesday as the Russia-Ukraine conflict intensified. The Nifty Metal index rose 4% on Monday, as analysts from Edelweiss predict a positive upturn for steel stocks.

    Russia and Ukraine constitute around 10-11% of the global steel export market. If the conflict extends, it may hamper short to medium-term supplies in the European markets. This may prove beneficial for Indian steel makers as Europe imports almost 12% of steel from India. JSW Steel commenced commercial production at its Dolvi plant and is on the way to ramp up production in FY23. The company plans to increase its domestic production to 350 lakh tonnes per annum. The company’s steel production was up 15% YoY to 16.5 lakh tonnes in January 2022.

    Analysts from BOB Capital Markets expect robust cash flows to help reduce its net debt by 1.2X by FY24. BOB Caps is positive on the stock and raised its target price by 22% to Rs 810 maintaining a ‘Buy’ rating. However, analysts from ICICI Securities and Prabhudas Lilladher are sceptical because of lower EBITDA in Q3FY22 as consolidated EBITDA fell 12% QoQ to Rs 9,132 crore. Another hiccup is the rising cost of coking coal which may shoot up the cost of raw material consumption. However, the management says the rise in price is well within the company’s guidance.

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    The Baseline
    03 Mar 2022
    Chart of the week: Some auto part makers and IT stocks outperform their industry

    Chart of the week: Some auto part makers and IT stocks outperform their industry

    After the recent turbulence in markets, it is interesting to look at some pockets which are holding on to their gains.Asahi India Glass and Schaeffler India outperformed their industry stock price rise in FY22, till date. Asahi India Glass’ stock price increased by 55% and Schaeffler India’s stock price rose 80.3%. L&T Technology ServicesandTata Elxsi also performed better than their industry average. L&T Technology Services' stock price increased by 70.2% in 1 year while Tata Elxsi’s price jumped 157%. 

    The fact that these companies’ Q3FY22 results saw them post decent margin gains could be the reason for their outperformance. Asahi India’s operating profit margin is up by 270 bps YoY to 26% and Schaeffler India’s margin rises 90 bps YoY to 18.9% in Q3FY22. This is because of improved sales and an increase in price realizations.

    L&T Technology and Tata Elxsi provide end-to-end engineering solutions. This gives these companies the advantage of earning higher margins. L&T Tech’s operating profit margin increased 210 bps YoY to 21.8% and Tata Elxsi’s operating profit margin rose 310 bps YoY to 33% in Q3FY22.

    Companies are working on improving their financial metrics as we near the end of FY22. However, the Russia-Ukraine conflict escalating into a full-blown war has scared stock markets across the world. The Russia sanctions have also caused ripple effects in oil prices, supply chains and consumer sentiment, potentially hampering the performance of various industries in Q4.

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    The Baseline
    28 Feb 2022
    Five analyst stock picks this week

    Five analyst stock picks this week

    1. National Aluminium Company: AxisDirect initiates coverage on this mining company with a ‘Buy’ rating and a target price of Rs 150, indicating a 27.23% upside. Aluminium is expected to remain in deficit for a second consecutive year in CY22, supporting higher prices. “The company is the only pure equity play on Aluminium and Alumina commodities in India,” says analyst Aditya Welekar. The recent geopolitical tensions in Europe have pushed prices to a 13-year high, above $3,300 per tonne and the company is well placed to benefit from higher prices. In response to the surge in aluminium prices, the company started optimising its aluminium production by targeting 100% utilisation of its 460ktpa (kilo tonnes per annum)smelter. With higher aluminium prices, Axis Direct forecasts revenue and net profit CAGR of 23% and 50% respectively over FY21-23. According to the analysts, with capacity utilisation and higher prices, the company looks to benefit well in the current market situation.

    2. One97 Communications (Paytm):ICICIDirect initiates coverage on the digital payments company with a ‘Buy’ rating and a target price of Rs 1,352, indicating a 72.78% upside. “Paytm has built a sizable two-sided digital ecosystem with proven leadership in payments,” say analysts Kunal Shah, Chintan Shah and Vishal Singh. The company amassed a sizable base of 64.4 million MTUs (monthly transacting user base) and 24.4 million merchants on its platform. It claims it now commands more than 40% market share in mobile payments. The brokerage expects the digital payments industry to expand a lot more as P2M (person-to-merchant) digital payments are expected to grow six-fold from Rs 22 lakh crore in FY21 to Rs 130 lakh crore ($1.8 trillion) by FY26. The online transacting user base is estimated to grow three-fold to 70-75 crore by FY26. The brokerage expects Paytm’s monthly transacting user base to double to 12 crore over FY22-26 and the company’s gross merchandise value (GMV) to grow at 30% CAGR. It estimates 18-19 million consumers and 1.2 million merchants to avail lending products through the company’s platform by FY26. The brokerage expects financial services revenue for the company to grow at a CAGR of 57% over FY 22-26.

    3. Ambuja Cements: Prabhudas Lilladher maintains a ‘Buy’ rating on this cement company’s stock but reduces its target price to Rs 390. This indicates an upside of 27.4% on the stock. The cement company reported a 49.4% YoY fall in profit to Rs 251.7 crore. The increase in fuel and power cost was 58% YoY to Rs 576, higher compared to peers. “High-cost inventory and restrictions on usage of cheaper high-sulphur pet coke in Gujarat operations resulted in a steeper increase in Ambuja Cements’ energy cost,” say analysts Kamlesh Bagmar and Amit Khimesra. The company is expanding its capacity by 9.4 million tonnes in the east and 1.5 million tonnes in Punjab. According to the brokerage, with multifold increase in volumes under measurement systems analysis, acceleration in investments in waste heat recovery plants, and new expansion plans the company showed a positive earnings growth in the last couple of years. “Given the better visibility on volume growth and improved margins trajectory,” the analysts said. 

    4. Deepak Fertilisers & Petrochemicals Corporation (DFPCL): AUM Capital recommends ‘Buy’ on this chemicals company with a target price of Rs 627 and an upside of 11.6%. “Market leadership in key segments and astounding demand outlook would strengthen top line growth, EBITDA & profitability, perpetually,” say analysts Rajesh Agarwal and Tanya Kothary. Going forward the company is expected to benefit from increased Tantalum Nitride and Nitric Acid off-take, a trend that the brokerage believes will likely continue. In Q3FY22 the company attained a topline of Rs 1,956 crore, revenue growth of 35%, the operating profit increased 63% YoY to Rs 369 crore and EBITDA margins expanded 300 basis points to 18% YoY. The analysts are positive on the stock as the company’s “net profits virtually doubled owing to significant margin expansion in the chemicals segment”.

    5. Mahindra CIE Automotive: Motilal Oswal maintains a ‘Buy’ call on this automotive parts maker, but reduces its target price to Rs 245 which indicates an upside of 40.7%. “Mahindra CIE Automotive’s weak performance in Q4CY21 was a reflection of high raw material/energy cost and operating deleverage in both geographies,” say analysts Jinesh Gandhi, Vipul Agrawal, and Aniket Desai. The analysts further added, “there is good progress on order wins in EVs/hybrids in both geographies.” The company’s adjusted profit fell 20% YoY to Rs 89.3 crore while consolidated revenues grew 5% YoY to Rs 2,060 crore. The brokerage expects the private and commercial vehicles (CV) business to grow on strong demand, subject to semiconductor availability. CVs are seeing good demand in Europe, contributing 39% to total European revenues.  The analysts say, “The company’s growth story is on track, driven by its organic initiatives. This, coupled with cost-cutting initiatives in both India and the EU, will drive margin expansion.”

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    The Baseline created a screener One Year Outperformers: Stocks …
    25 Feb 2022

    One Year Outperformers: Stocks outperforming their sector in one year returns

    Stocks that outperformed their sector performance
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    The Baseline
    25 Feb 2022
    Several stocks enter PE buy zone with market correction, diagnostic companies look for new ways to grow

    Several stocks enter PE buy zone with market correction, diagnostic companies look for new ways to grow

    It's often said that those who can bend with the wind, will weather the storm. The sharp volatility in markets amid Putin's invasion of Ukraine and rising oil prices, has shifted investors’ focus back to fundamentally strong companies that are now priced competitively.

    This week, we look at such newly affordable stocks, and also at how Indian businesses are bracing themselves for the post-pandemic world.

    In this week’s Analyticks:

    • Waning Covid-19 business forces diagnostic companies to look for new sources of growth
    • China+1 strategy drives exports jump for agrochem major PI Industries
    • Screener: Which stocks are in the PE Buy Zone post the market correction?

    Let’s get into it.


    Diagnostic labs are changing their strategy post-Covid

    Diagnostic companies were in the spotlight for around two years with the pandemic.Covid-19 related testing helped these companies post strong revenues and profits. However, with the end of the pandemic's third wave and falling Covid testing, diagnostic companies are looking at different growth strategies.

    Diagnostic labs saw modest YoY revenue growth in Q3FY22, missing Trendylne’s Forecaster Estimates. The overall revenue trend is still upward: Dr Lal Pathlabs’ Q3FY22 revenue rose 9% YoY to Rs 509 crore driven by robust growth in non-Covid revenues while Vijaya Diagnostics’ revenue grew 11% to Rs 114 crore. Only Thyrocare Technologies’ Q3 revenue fell 19% YoY to Rs 118.8 crore due to a reduction in Covid testing volume from government contracts.

    In terms of non-Covid revenue growth, Dr Lal Pathlabs leads the pack with an increase of 28% YoY to Rs 438 crore. Metropolis Healthreported a modest 7% growth to Rs 243 crore in non-Covid revenue in Q3 due to lesser revenues from government contracts. 

    However, the net profit numbers across the sector tell a different story. While Metropolis Healthcare’s revenue in Q3FY22 increased by 6% YoY to Rs 295.7 crore, its net profit fell 30% to Rs 41 crore. This fall in revenue is not limited to Metropolis Healthcare alone, Dr Lal Pathlabs’ net profit fell 39% YoY to Rs 57.3 crores as well. Only Vijaya Diagnostics managed to report a marginal increase in net profit by 2% to Rs 25.3 crore. 

    The operating profit margin of all four companies decreased YoY in Q3FY22. While Dr Lal Pathlabs operating margin shrank by 870 bps YoY to 22%, Metropolis Healthcare’s margin fell 580 bps to 31.53%. Comparatively, Vijaya Diagnostics performed better with a decrease of 300 bps in operating profit margin YoY to 43.6%. The revenue per patient and per test fell for these diagnostic labs. For Metropolis Healthcare, revenue per patient fell 13% YoY to Rs 898, and revenue per test decreased by 14% to Rs 462. 

    There are a lot of moving parts responsible for this fall in profit margins in the sector. A drastic decrease in the operating profit margin from Covid revenues is a major contributor. According to Dr Lal Pathlabs’ management, the price of a Covid test for international passengers at Mumbai airport fell 44% to Rs 1,975 in Q3. The introduction of price ceilings by governments on Covid tests played a big part in this. In addition, the acquisitions by the diagnostics company pulled down overall operating profit margins as well. 

    However, when we look at the bigger picture in terms of annual revenue growth, the growth story for the diagnostic sector remains intact. The diagnostic industry is expected to grow at a CAGR of 12.1% over FY21-FY23E.

    Only 15-20% of the overall market share of the diagnostics business is captured by listed companies. Given this fact, acquisitions of established private diagnostic labs has been the primary growth strategy for the top companies in this sector. While Dr Lal Pathlabs acquired Suburban diagnostics in Mumbai in Q3, Metropolis Healthcare acquired HiTech labs, which has a strong presence in South India.

    Interestingly, both acquired companies have lower operating margins, resulting in a lowering of the overall profit margin. However, the increase in the number of patients is what these acquisitions are aiming for. The number of patients increased by 21% to 66 lakh and 22% to 33 lakh for Dr Lal Pathlabs and Metropolis Healthcare, respectively. The strategy of these companies is to leverage this increase in patients and top line growth, while normalising profit margins by offering a wider diagnostic test menu to new patients.

    However, revenues can come under pressure with large healthcare service providers expanding aggressively into integrated digitised healthcare services. All these developments are happening after phenomenal Covid-led growth, as diagnostic companies try to keep flying high post pandemic.


    Rising input costs spoil the party (a little) for PI Industries

    The rise in input costs hurt almost all sectors, especially manufacturing companies. From auto to chemicals and coal, rising cost is a shared thorn in everyone's side. The story with PI Industries is no different.

    Total expenses for PI Industries increased 18.8% YoY to Rs 1,123.4 crore in Q3FY22. Although the company tried to pass this on by increasing their product prices, the management says that the full effect will be visible from Q4FY22.

    Net profit rose 14% YoY to Rs 222.6 crore. Analysts at ICICI Direct believe this was because of lower taxes in Q3FY21. Revenues grew 17% YoY to Rs 1,356 crore.

    Growth in revenue is mainly because of growth in the CSM (custom synthesis and manufacturing) segment. This segment recorded a growth of 19% YoY to Rs 1,076 crore in Q3FY22.

    EBITDA grows but margins take a hit

    The rise in costs hurt EBITDA margins, which fell 210 bps YoY to 22% in Q3FY22. It also affected gross margins which fell 49 bps YoY to 46%. Cost of materials rose 13.8% YoY to Rs 671.3 crore (however this fell sequentially by 12.5% in Q3FY22). The sequential drop suggests that the company is tackling the problem of rising input costs.

    EBITDA is up 8% YoY to Rs 297 crore. A favourable product mix helped absolute EBITDA grow in Q3FY22. However, the increase is very subtle as overhead costs surged by 24% YoY to Rs 333 crore. The rise in overhead cost is because of a spike in fuel prices, shipping costs, and expenses related to strategic initiatives.

    Exports rise because of the China+1 strategy

    PI Industries’ exports rose 19% YoY to Rs 1,076 crore in comparison to 8% YoY (Rs 280 crore) growth in the domestic market. This is because China is losing out on market share in the global chemicals sector. China had the lion’s share in this market for almost three decades until its unsustainable environmental practices led to the closure of most of its chemical manufacturing hubs. 

    As Chinese manufacturing tries to comply with new environmental rules, they are facing high operational and capital costs resulting in production cuts and supply-chain disruptions. This has caused most global companies to shift their procurement away from China and choose other alternatives, including India. This strategy is commonly known as the ‘China+1 strategy’. It is one of the main drivers for rising Indian chemical exports, and PI Industries has cashed in well on it.

    Brokerages enthused by PI Industries prospects

    Brokerages like Chola Wealth, Geojit BNP Paribas, and ICICI Securities are positive on the company with ‘Buy’ calls for this stock. They expect a strong order backlog in the CSM (custom synthesis and manufacturing) segment to drive growth as most of PI's revenues came from this segment in Q3FY22. Currently, the order book of the company stands at Rs 140 crore. The company is also diversifying into the pharma segment to improve its product mix and presence in the market.

    PI Industries' is already working on scaling up its biochemical processes for both pharma and non-agrochemical segments in Q4FY22 and Q1FY23. The company expects 15-20% of revenues to come in from the non-agrichemical space for FY23-25. For now, its strategies put it on track to clock total revenue growth of 15% for FY22.


    Screener:Stocks in PE buy zone with reasonable durability and quarterly growth rates

    While the Nifty 50 index was resilient over the past month, BSE Small Cap and Nifty MidCap 100 indices lost nearly 10% and 7%, respectively.

    This screener (subscriber) shows a list of stocks that are now trading in the PE Buy Zone, but also saw decent topline and bottomline growth in an otherwise difficult Q3FY22. These stocks are also on analysts’ radar given their robust business prospects. 

    Among 27 companies, heavyweights like Hindustan Unilever, Axis Bank, ONGC, Hindalco Industries, and Indian Oil Corp are currently trading in the ‘Buy Zone’. Given that Q3FY22 was a weak one for the FMCG sector, HUL continues to stay resilient in the face of inflationary cost pressures. Oil companies’ Q3 sales realisations got a boost owing to a nearly 70% YoY rise in global crude oil prices. These stocks still have steam left, given the sustained uptrend in oil prices on account of geopolitical concerns. 

    Axis Bank’s Q3 performance has been buoyed by higher growth in the home loan segment and lower provisioning. The favourable real estate cycle also worked in the favour of NBFCs like Home First Finance, Aditya Birla Capital, and CreditAccess Grameen.  

    Interestingly, while most mid-tier IT companies are out of investors’ reach owing to their sky-high valuations, Intellect Design Arena is currently trading in the PE Buy Zone. 

    Leading specialty chemicals player Aarti Industries and healthcare services company Narayana Hrudayalaya were other notable stocks in this list. Aarti Industries plans to demerge its pharma business as "Aarti Pharmalabs" in the next 6 months or so. Coal India, also in the Buy Zone, has gained out of the intermittent energy crises in India occurring in October and November 2021.

    Broking companies ICICI Securities and IIFL Securities also find their place in this screener. However capital markets are likely to stay volatile for some time with instability in Europe and rising inflation, so the breakneck growth of the past few quarters for brokerages may not be as visible in Q4.

    You can find some popular screeners here.


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    The Baseline
    24 Feb 2022
    Five Interesting Stocks Today: Russia Ukraine Edition

    Five Interesting Stocks Today: Russia Ukraine Edition

    This instalment of Five Interesting Stocks looks at the potential impact of the Russia-Ukraine war and global sanctions on five stocks.

    • Dr Reddy’s Laboratories: This pharma company hit a new one-year low on Thursday with Russia invading Ukraine. In Q3FY22, Dr Reddy’s got about 13.2% (Rs 710 crore) of its total revenues from Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), including Ukraine.

    The company’s revenue from this region may be greatly affected with the tensions, and as sanctions on Russia can disrupt the supply chain. The company’s forex losses may also rise with the rapid depreciation of the Russian Ruble.

    Dr Reddy's had posted decent Q3FY22 results but missed Trendlyne’s Forecaster estimates. Dr Reddy’s Q3 net profit rose 14% YoY to Rs 709 crores and the revenues increased by 8% to Rs 5,394 crore. Since the company derives more than half its revenue from the US and India, it has been focusing on expansion in the emerging markets (mainly Russia). Revenue from Russia grew 5% YoY in Q3FY22 to Rs 470 crore (about 9% of the total revenues) on the back of new product launches, favorable forex rate, and increase in prices. In Q3FY22, Russia and Emerging Markets provided the company with growth opportunities in a time of high pricing pressure in the US, where it derives 35% of the total revenues. According to the management, the company is careful in allocating capital across geos and has been reducing the R&D expenditure towards the US markets to focus more on Indian and emerging markets. This Russia-Ukraine crisis comes as a roadblock for the management to carry out its long-term strategy to diversify its geographical revenue mix. 

    1. Indraprastha Gas: As the Russia-Ukraine conflict intensified, the stock of this city gas distributor witnessed an over 7% intraday correction in today’s session. On Thursday, crude oil prices shot up to over $103 per barrel, the highest since August 2014. While this works to the advantage of upstream oil and gas companies, downstream companies like IGL could face further heat. Stocks of City Gas Distributors (CGDs) were already under pressure as higher oil prices caused domestic gas prices to be hiked by 62% to $2.9/mmbtu in October 2021. Notably, the government also reduced the domestic gas allocation to CGDs which ultimately drove them to rely on spot gas/imported gas which is pricier. HDFC Securities initially expected gas prices to rise by another 37% to $4/mmbtu in April, 2022. However, the current geopolitical situation could brew fresh uncertainty.  

    Indraprastha Gas’ stock corrected over 20% ever since the Delhi Government released a draft EV policy note for cab aggregators on January 18, 2022. Acceleration in transition to EVs would sooner or later impact its sales volumes. Cut to the present, and IGL faces heightened risk of soaring oil prices as it will negatively impact the company's gross margins. Higher gas prices mean higher input costs for IGL. Once the company hikes prices to pass on higher costs, its volume could face downward pressure if the price differential with petrol/diesel reduces. Investors should watch out for IGL’s Q4FY22 performance and the upcoming gas price revisions in April, 2022.

    1. Kajaria Ceramics: The stock of this ceramic and vitrified tiles manufacturer fell by 5.6% on Thursday with the sharp rise in crude prices, as Russia-Ukraine fighting intensifies. Rising prices of crude can hurt the company’s margins, playing spoilsport to otherwise steady volume growth. Kajaria's Q3 results were good considering the rise in fuel costs and supply chain bottlenecks. Net profits increased 2.6% YoY to Rs 122 crore, and revenue from operations increased 27.4% YoY to Rs 1,068.2 crore. In order to offset increased input costs, the company hiked prices across tiles product segments.The company aims to achieve 15% CAGR growth in volumes over the next 2-3 years on rising demand from urban India. The company has announced a capex of Rs 250 crore to increase its tile capacity by 17% to 85 MSM (million square meters) by Q1FY23. It further outlined Rs 290 crore capex towards tiles and bath-ware segment.

    However, these plans of expansion were made with the expectation that fuel prices would eventually decrease and demand will increase. With the Russia-Ukraine conflict intensifying and geopolitical tensions rising, it is hard to predict how long the ramifications of the conflict and sanctions on Russia will last. One thing is clear, oil and gas prices will shoot up and supply chains will be further disrupted.

    1. Kansai Nerolac: This paint maker’s stock hit a 52-week low of Rs 453.4 today, continuing to fall after the company posted weak Q3FY22 results. The stock has been falling after the company’s profit fell 34.7% YoY to Rs 132 crore because of low volume growth and raw material inflation. Although revenues grew 13% YoY to Rs 1,694 crore because of an increase in demand in the decorative segment, low demand from the industrial paints segment hit growth. This is because of reduced demand from the auto sector as it is facing production issues because of the ongoing semiconductor shortage.

    High raw material cost and delays in raising product prices hit EBITDA margins of the company, falling 721 bps YoY to 12.4%. A recent price increase will sustain the decorative paints segment. Industrial segment prices however need a further increase to offset the sharp rise in raw material cost. With the ongoing Ukraine-Russia conflict, and most of the raw material for the paint sector being petroleum-based, input costs are set to soar even more. Kansai Nerolac needs to take quick decisions on its pricing techniques to avoid significant margin pressure.  

    1. Petronet LNG: This liquified natural gas re-gasifier’s stock hit a new 52-week low on Thursday. The stock fell nearly 7% in trading after Russia announced military operations. Oil and gas prices may rise further as sanctions against Russia are announced.

    The company’s Q3FY22 results were good with net profit up 30% YoY to Rs 1,143.5 crore and revenues up 71.9% to Rs 12,597 crore. However, volume growth was down 11.5% YoY at 208 trillion British thermal units. Analysts at Geojit BNP Paribas believe the company’s ramp-up with capacity expansion will bode well for future opportunities that may come in with an increase in demand for natural gas. Analysts at Prabhudas Lilladher expect the Kochi plant’s increased capacity utilization to 30% from 19% in FY23 to help in increasing production. 

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    The Baseline
    23 Feb 2022
    Chart of the Week: Hotels, upstream oil and internet platform companies deliver stellar performance in an otherwise weak quarter

    Chart of the Week: Hotels, upstream oil and internet platform companies deliver stellar performance in an otherwise weak quarter

    In Q3FY22, companies across sectors such as cements, consumer durables, building materials, automobile, and FMCG witnessed the double whammy of muted demand and high input costs. Only sectors which saw a meaningful rise in their topline due to structural reasons escaped this situation unscathed. 

    The Hotels sector sprung a positive surprise in Q3 by riding the wave of higher leisure travel, which news pundits fondly call ‘revenge travel’. Many hospitality players such as Indian Hotels and EIH returned to black after six consecutive quarters of losses, led by material improvement in occupancy rates. The FY23 outlook for this sector looks bright as the world returns to normalcy. 

    Buoyed by higher transaction volumes in the stock markets, higher mutual fund SIPs and record IPOs in Q3, brokerage firms like ICICI Securities and Angel One saw their revenues and profits jump by over 50% YoY. However, higher market volatility and downward pressure on market returns could hit revenues for the capital market sector going forward. 

    Defence companies also posted a robust performance in Q3 led by a strong order pipeline thanks to the Center’s thrust on indigenization of defence products. 

    Performance of internet services companies like Tanla Platforms, Affle (India) and Brightcom Group continued to impress investors, with the increased usage of digital media and digital channels to conduct commerce and engage with customers.  

    While rising crude oil prices worked to the detriment of most manufacturing companies, it worked wonders for sales realizations of upstream oil companies like ONGC and Oil India. Notably, global oil prices might rise to US$120/bbl levels should the conflict between Russia and Ukraine escalate further. Russia is the third largest crude oil producer after the United States and Saudi Arabia.

    Given the occurrence of the third Covid wave in January 2022 and the unabated upward trend in energy costs, it will be interesting to see which sectors hold their ground and which ones face the heat in Q4FY22.

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