02 November 2008

Some bright spots amid gloom, Result analyis of BL

Some bright spots amid gloom

The 30 per cent rise in sales and 12 per cent profit growth managed by leading Indian companies (320 of the BSE 500) for the September quarter may only reaffirm the gloomy earnings picture that the market is factoring into stock prices today.
In a bear market, such as the present one, while negative news is magnified by the lens of pessimism, positive aspects are often ignored. That a good 152 of the 320 companies recorded earnings growth of over 15 per cent could possibly come as a surprise for those who expected a sweeping profit slump.

This article discusses the divergence in performance of companies and sectors in the September quarter and highlights the possible reasons for such variations. A compact universe of companies from the BSE-500 (that represent 93 per cent of the exchange market cap) was chosen to analyse various drivers of costs and income for Corporate India. The set consists of stocks with a market capitalisation range of Rs 100 crore to Rs 1,90,000 crore. Also in focus are key sectors and companies that are conspicuous for their exceptionally good, or particularly poor, performance. Sales zoom, but margins pressured

Before moving to specifics, here’s a look at what the averages suggest. Sales, possibly ignited by an inflationary environment, clocked a far higher growth rate of 30 per cent (year on year) than the 19 per cent growth seen in September 2007.

However, the same inflationary trend, reflected in raw material costs ensured that operating profit growth halved to a moderate 15 per cent. Drastic reduction in ‘other income’ and losses on extraordinary items (as against profits from this segment in the previous year) dragged net profit growth down to 12 per cent.

A study of the key cost components suggests that the impact of the commodity price meltdown is yet to trickle down to corporate margins. Raw material costs were up by 43 per cent in the September 2008 quarter over a year ago. The similar increase in September 2007 was a mere 8 per cent.

However, raw materials as a percentage of sales (leaving out companies in the services space, with no raw material costs), was a whopping 56 per cent — 5 per cent over last year. The comparable number in September 2006 was 55 per cent, only 100 basis points lower than the latest figures.
In other words, the current proportion of cost to sales is not too different from 2006 levels, suggesting that selling prices may have offset input cost hikes. The operating profit margin too, at 27 per cent, was similar to the 2006 levels.

Earnings quality improves

Employee expenses as a percentage of sales declined marginally to about 8.2 per cent for the latest quarter, on the back of sedate hiring activity in the service sectors. However, for public sector companies such as BHEL, Bharat Electronics or SAIL, the pressure on profitability following implementation of the Sixth Pay Commission’s recommendations was discernible.
Despite rising interest rates and tightening liquidity, interest cost as a percentage of sales saw a mild dip to about 14 per cent, the ratio helped mainly by the cash-rich or low-debt companies in the universe. However, specific sectors, discussed later, have shown a steep increase in interest costs.

Windfall ‘other income’, primarily driven by forex gains (arising from revenue as well as borrowing transactions) in September 2007, gave way to extraordinary losses, either from forex hedging or the lack of it in the past quarter. Net profits, adjusted for such losses, nevertheless, grew at a modest 12 per cent. While the above averages provide some cues on India Inc’s growth trajectory, they only offer a sketchy picture. A break-up into sector and stock-specific trends makes things clearer.

Revenue growth remained robust in most sectors, barring interest-sensitive segments such as auto and auto ancillaries or sectors with weakening demand and price, such as cement. While the former took a mild dip in operating profits in the latest quarter, compared to a year ago numbers, cement companies bore a sharp 9 per cent fall in operating profits. Most of the companies in this universe, located in the Northern region, have been witnessing sharp declines in cement prices, compared to early 2008.

Metal margins slide: Manufacturers of another key commodity, steel, had a different story to recount. While volumes could have remained robust, as suggested by a 40 per cent increase in revenues, the average operating profit margins dipped sharply to 29 per cent from 35 per cent a year ago. With steel prices coming off sharply in recent months, the coming quarters may pose a real challenge for these companies.

Banking, IT stable: Sectors such as banking and IT have turned in far more stable results than expected, despite being boxed in by concerns. While banks faced a liquidity crunch, escalating costs and concerns about lower credit off-take on the back of high interest rates, the software sector was engulfed by its share of concerns arising from the global turmoil.
Both sectors have shown more moderate revenue and net profit growth, though profit margins did not throw up negative surprises.

Surprise from infrastructure: Interestingly, infrastructure, among the most beaten-down sectors in the recent fall, put up a respectable show, with a 39 per cent growth in sales and a 62 per cent growth in net profits.
Stocks from these sectors were beaten down on the back of concerns about high raw material and borrowing costs and an order-book slowdown.

However, price escalation clauses in most projects have allowed these companies to partly cope with rising costs. Order inflows, too, have been robust, especially for the larger infrastructure companies.

Less fortunate: The engineering and capital goods sector was, however, less fortunate as both operating and net profits grew at a noticeably slower pace. Neither infrastructure nor engineering was spared a sharp spike in borrowing costs, which rose by over 50 per cent.Beating expectations: Overall, banking and infrastructure sectors featured several companies that demonstrated better results than the market expected. Software, aided by a sliding rupee, too registered comfortable growth. These sectors, with their respective average earnings growth at over 20 per cent, have clearly done better than market expectations (the BSE-500 price earnings multiple is at about 11 times).


Stand-out performers
A few other trends, not specific to sectors, also emerged from the analysis. For instance, among the companies that notched up higher sales and net profits, 105, or one-third of the universe, saw net profits grow at a faster pace than sales. Were these companies supported by ‘other income’ outside of operations? Not really, as the other income declined in this universe as well.
The average operating profit margins for these companies jumped 300 basis points to a whopping 40 per cent in the latest quarter compared to a year ago, suggesting that volumes, pricing power and cost management could have been the key factors for superior performance, rather than any freak “other income.” See Table ‘ Strong show’ for a few such companies.
Interest costs, although stable, forms about a fifth of sales for these companies — far higher than the ratio of 13-14 per cent of sales for the whole universe. This suggests that these could be highly leveraged companies, starting to reap the benefits of expansion.
To balance the above with some negative trends, about 18 companies in the universe reported a decline in sales on a year-on-year basis.
About 11 of them also skidded into losses in the recent quarter, from net profits a year ago. These companies account for 3-5 per cent of our universe of 320.
Interestingly, both the above categories were part of the under-Rs 2,500 crore market capitalisation segment, once again reiterating the ability of larger companies to manage tough times better.

Source:BL

RBI cuts CRR by 100bps, repo rate by 50bps

RBI cuts CRR by 100bps, repo rate by 50bps

After infusing Rs 1,85,000-cr liquidity into the banking system, the RBI today effected yet another 100 basis points cut in cash reserve ratio (CRR) and a 0.5 % reduction in key short-term lending (repo) rate, signaling softening of interest rates to prop up growth.

The one percentage point cut in CRR, the amount which banks have to park with the apex bank, has been brought down to 5.5% to infuse additional liquidity of Rs 40,000 cr into the system. The CRR cut will be in two tranches and the first one of 0.5% will be effective retrospectively from October 25 and the second from November 8.

The RBI also cut the repo rate, the rate at which it lends to banks, by 0.5 per cent to 7.5% with effect from November 3. The central bank has also reduced the statutory liquidity ratio (SLR), the amount which banks are mandated to park in government securities, by 100 basis points to 24%. Welcoming the decision, ICICI Bank Joint Managing Director Chanda Kochhar said, "it will release much needed liquidity into the system and signal reduction in interest rates."
-------------------------------------------------
RBI cuts CRR, SLR and Repo; lending and deposit rates to fall

Mumbai: Home, consumer and corporate loan rates are likely to ease in the near future, with RBI today announcing a slew of monetary measures including a one per cent cut in cash reserve and stautory liquidity ratios besides a 0.5 per cent cut in its short term lending rate. The CRR, the percentage of amount banks are required to keep with the apex bank, has been cut in two tranches of 0.5 per cent effective from October 25 and November 8 to infuse Rs 40,000 crore in to the banking system. The central bank had already cut CRR by 2.5 per cent to 6.5 per cent last month injecting Rs one lakh crore in to the system. With this cut, the apex bank could have injected Rs 1.4 lakh crore through CRR cut which is now pegged at 5.5 per cent. The SLR, which is the amount banks have to keep with the RBI in the form of cash, gold or approved securities, was cut temporarily by one per cent earlier to 24 per cent and this cut has been made permenant effective from Novebmber 8. The RBI also cut its key short term repo rate, the rate at which Reserve Bank lends overnight funds to bank, by 0.5 per cent to 7.5 per cent. Last month repo rate was cut by 1 per cent from 9 per cent to 8 per cent.


With today's measures along with several monetary steps taken last month, the apex bank has so far injected over Rs 2.5 lakh crore in to the system. Hailing the policy measures, bankers today said that they would soon look at reducing their lending and deposit rates in the near future. Economists said the slew of measures would help to prop up growth, particulalry considering that the inflation has started falling drastically on the back of declining global crude oil and other commodity prices.


Industry welcomes RBI move; but says more needed
RBI cuts repo rate by 50 bps
RBI cuts rates to induce Rs 85,000 cr; signals interest cut
RBI complements govt efforts to boost growth
RBI opens liquidity tap again; signal for rate cuts

Source:ET,BS,BL