Friday, March 10, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

Agriculture: Tight supplies from Australia (ING Bank)

In its first estimates for 2023/24, ABARES estimates Australia’s agriculture supply to drop significantly next year due to dry weather as a result of El Nino.

Among major crops, the department expects total wheat output to drop from 39.2mt in 2022/23 to just 28.2mt in 2023/24 whilst exports will also decline from 28mt to 22.5mt. Among other crops, sugar exports could fall 6% YoY to 3.5mt whilst canola exports could fall from 6.9mt in 2022/23 to 4.9mt in 2023/24.

The latest trade numbers from Chinese Customs show that cumulative imports of soybean in China rose 16.1% YoY to 16.17mt over the first two months of the year, a record high for this time of the season. Healthy demand for soybean and concerns over a delayed harvest in Brazil pushed up imports of soybeans in the country.

Meanwhile, the latest data from Ukraine’s Agriculture Ministry shows that the nation exported around 33mt of grains as of 6 March so far in the 2022/23 season, a decline of 27% compared to the 44.8mt of grain exported during the same period last year. Total corn shipments stood at 19.1mt (-6% YoY), while wheat exports fell 38% YoY to 11.4mt as of Monday this week.

Aluminium outlook healthy but limited price upside in FY24E (BoB Capital)

Aluminium price has fallen 9% since Jan’23, with industry experts attributing the correction to the need for a more aggressive US Fed and the possibility of higher interest rates for longer.

H1CY23 pricing to be range-bound...: Our channel checks suggest global aluminium prices will remain in a tight range of US$ 2,300-2,500/t amid a continued surplus in China which is facing a sluggish demand recovery and the risk of below-mandated supply cuts. Outside China as well, demand is likely to be under pressure in H1CY23 even as exports from China are likely to fill any supply gaps. The levy of higher import duty on Russian aluminium by the US will not affect market flows much.

...with similar trends through CY23 as markets regain balance: Key drivers for potentially flattish aluminium pricing through CY23 include (a) the return of modest demand growth across both China and the rest of the world, (b) adequate Chinese supply with the likelihood of lower production cuts, (c) slower return of curtailed European production, and (d) easing of energy inflation.

Long-term price expectations softer but still healthy: With demand in China maturing, the need for new primary aluminium capacity beyond the government’s mandated production cap of 45mt decreases. The focus is likely to shift to more scrap generation to increase secondary production of aluminium. Outside China as well, new smelters with coal-based power generation sources are unable to arrange financing. Hence, the probability of pricing breakeven for a new smelter from a high-cost existing producer is reducing, lowering the potential price range in the long run.

Implications for Indian aluminium players: With aluminium price movement likely to be limited in the near-to-medium term, we believe margins for Indian aluminium players will be dependent upon domestic coal availability and international coal prices. Given Coal India’s concerted efforts to raise coal production and the allocation of coal blocks to producers, the competitive position of Indian aluminium players is likely to improve over the medium term, in our view.

IT Services: Cuts to Client Estimates Suggest Further Risks 9Jefferies Equity Research)

Top-clients an important indicator for growth in IT services firms: The top-10 clients constitute 19-36% of revenues for Indian IT firms, and have been an important growth driver for Indian IT firms during 9MFY23. IT services firms with lower growth in Top-clients have also lagged in-terms of overall growth. The aggregate revenue growth of top clients we have identified have a strong 84% correlation with aggregate revenue growth of our covered IT firms.

Stabilizing growth expectation but profitability pressures for CY23: At an aggregate level, CY23 revenue estimates for top clients of IT firms have not seen any meaningful changes YTD, with only a 20bps moderation to CY23 revenue growth. However, concerns around profitability have persisted and aggregate margin/PAT estimates for CY23 have been downgraded by 50bps/4%. At a company level, CY23 revenue estimates for top clients of TechM, Wipro & LTIM have been downgraded by 1-2%. However, CY23 revenue estimates for top clients of Infosys, Coforge & HCLTech has been revised upwards by 2% each.

Concerns seem to be shifting towards CY24: At an aggregate level, CY24 revenue estimates of top clients have been cut by 1% YTD with CY24 growth forecast witnessing a cut of 45bps. Among companies, consensus revenue growth estimates for CY24 have been lowered for top clients of all IT firms, barring Wipro, with the highest cuts of 80-180bps for HCLT & TechM. Additionally, profitability pressures are visible in CY24 as well, with aggregate margin/PAT estimates for top clients being revised downwards by 30bps/3%. Downward revisions in CY24 estimates suggests that concerns are now shifting towards CY24.

Client weakness despite improving macro trends: While macro expectations for CY23 seem to have improved YTD, evident from upward revision in GDP estimates of US/EU/UK, the corresponding impact does not seem to have reflected into the CY23 outlook of top clients of Indian IT firms. Unless the improvement in macro expectations flows into improvement in expectations of revenues of top-clients, IT firms could see pressures on growth in FY24.

Consumers: RM softens; searing summer; early days for rain deficit (Nomura Securities)

After four years of normal monsoons, there could be a possibility of El Nino in 2023. Various meteorological agencies have increased the probability of El Nino to over 50% for 2023 which can potentially lead to a deficit monsoon.

However, it is also highlighted that apart from El Nino conditions and its timing, India’s monsoon also depends on other factors like: (1) Indian Ocean dipole; (2) Eurasian snow cover; and (3) local weather given India is a tropical country. Further, experts suggest it is still early days to call out an El Nino, a deficit monsoon and impact on FMCG volumes / rural demand. A more accurate forecast will be made available by April.

Over the past 20 years (2002-2022), there have been six instances of El Nino, of which only in three instances there were below normal rainfall in India. Indeed, despite El Nino occurrence in 2007 and 2019, rainfall in these years was above the Long Period Average (LPA) levels.

Over the past 70 years, there have been only 16 instances of El Nino, of which only in nine instances there has been a case of deficient monsoon, as per IMD.

1.    The correlation between deficient monsoons and high food inflation has been weakening over time with the rise in irrigation.

2.    The correlation of El Nino leading to low FMCG volumes (HUL as a proxy) is not so strong. FMCG industry volumes still grew in low single-digit in two out of three severe El Nino years over the past 20 years (2002-2022).

3.    There is a strong correlation between high food inflation and low FMCG volume growth.

4.    Nonetheless, what is more certain, experts suggest, is a searing summer in 2023 with heat waves / elevated temperatures likely from March to May which could potentially have an impact on rabi crop output.

RGO: Government’s supply side boost to renewables (JM Financial)

The government continues to take policy and regulatory measures to incentivise both demand and supply of renewable power; this has been a key driver of rapid growth of the sector.

The latest incentive that it has announced for RE is on the supply side, in the form of mandatory Renewable Generation Obligation (RGO). This notification makes it compulsory for coal/lignite-based power plants with COD on or after 1st Apr’23 to establish/procure 40% RE capacity within a certain timeframe or procure and supply RE power equivalent to such capacity within the specified period. Around 28GW of thermal capacity is currently under construction and is expected to be progressively commissioned over the next 2-4 years. As per the terms of the RGO, this translates into around 12GW of addition/procurement of equivalent renewable capacity. The RGO is thus a shot in the arm for India’s energy transition to renewables.

A captive coal/lignite-based thermal generating station will be exempt from the requirement of RGO subject to its fulfilling Renewable Purchase Obligations (RPO).

Cement: Price hikes not supported; 4Q prices flat QoQ (IIFL Securities)

All-India average cement price was flat MoM in Feb’23, despite price-increase attempt by companies during mid Feb’23. Regionally, except for the Central region (+2.6% MoM), prices were largely flattish elsewhere.

Compared to 3Q average prices – highest decline is seen in southern markets (down 5.6% QoQ) followed by Eastern markets (down 2.1% QoQ). We note that these two regions also saw the highest in 3Q, based on our dealer checks; and to that extent there is some price normalisation. Price increase in other regions varies from 1-2% QoQ.

Per channel checks, commentary on pricing remains underwhelming for Mar’23, as dealers expect temporary weakness due to Holi festivity (especially in North and Central India) and focus on pushing volumes in second half of March, to meet year-end targets. Dealers suggest prices to increase from April’23 onwards.

On demand, although dealers commentary was mixed, the overall bias was positive (we note that monthly cement production run-rate in Jan’23 is up 5% YoY and 10% vs 3Q23). In fact, dealers are optimistic on the near-term demand outlook and are confident to achieve their annual targets in March’23. Robust housing and large infrastructure project — aided by increased government spending —is driving overall volumes in a seasonally strong construction period.

In periods of such robust demand, we believe that companies are targeting higher volumes rather than price hikes. As such, we believe profitability would be supported by operating leverage benefits and falling fuel prices (petcoke and international coal prices are down 1% and 5% QoQ; – benefits would accrue based on inventory levels).

Power: Growth Endures (Emkay Equity Research)

Strong power generation pre-summer: Power generation in the past two months (Jan-Feb ’23) has seen double-digit growth (10.6% YoY), though some moderation has happened in Feb ’23 (8.3% YoY). On a three-year CAGR basis, it stands at ~5% CAGR. Demand continues to grow from January to June of the year, owing to summer demand.

Generation from thermal units for the months (Jan-Feb ’23) was up 8.7% YoY, while RE generation was up 31.3% YoY, leading to overall generation growth of 10.6%. On a three year CAGR basis, generation increased by 5.1%, with thermal/RE growth at 4.5%/15%, respectively. No major growth is seen in hydro generation during the three-year period.

On 11M basis, power-generation growth stood at 10.3% YoY, supported by 9.1%/22% growth from thermal/RE sources.

Data for several years suggest that H2 is usually favorable for thermal units because of a typically-strong Q4. Thermal generation in any H2 in the past has been 106% of the H1, while RE/Hydro H2 generation has been 77%/58% of the H1. We believe that as demand sees traction, companies with large under-utilized capacity (such as NTPC) would benefit

Manufacturing Growth at 4 Months Low (Centrum Economic Research)

India’s manufacturing PMI data released on Wednesday showed a slowdown in the index from 55.4 in January to 55.3 in February. This pointed to the 20th straight month of expansion in the manufacturing activities in the economy. This was largely attributed to significant increases in new orders and output, reflecting resilience in demand, though the input costs seem to be on the higher side.

The new orders and output rose sharply, which indicates that the underlying domestic demand still strong. The index for the month of February continues to remain above 55 for the 7th consecutive month. Firms continued to hire people for the 12th month in a row, as production levels ramped up in the month of February.

On the other hand, China’s manufacturing PMI expanded at the fastest pace in more than a decade for the month of February. The country’s Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.6% from 50.1 in the month of January. India’s PMI continues to be on an expansion track and outshines compared to ASEAN economies.

On the other hand, recently released GST collections for the month of February remains robust and continues to be above 1.4 lakhs crore for the 12th straight month on the back of increase in IT filings and high inflation.

Hope floats for Sweltering Summer (Elara Capital)

Ceiling fans in a wait-n-watch mode; cables & wires on high We recently met representative of consumer electricals companies, including Polycab India, RR Kabel, Finolex Cables, KEI Industries, Cords Cables, Symphony, and KWW electricals at ELECRAMA 2023 exhibition.

The following are key takeaways:

Demand stagnates in the FMEG space (ex-cables & wires) Post strong pent-up demand over April-May 2022, fast-moving electrical goods space (ex-cables & wires [C&W]) remains soft to date, due to 1) inflationary environment, 2) lower spend on discretionary goods, and 3) consumer spending in travel & healthcare. Currently, FMEG companies (ex-C&W) are cautiously optimistic on demand recovery. The only variable which can drive demand is a good Summer while price hikes are largely ruled out. It implies continued margin pressure in Q4FY23. In terms of differentiation, Polycab India (POLYCAB IN, CMP: INR 2,996, Not Rated) showcased a green portfolio of electrical goods, in fans, water heaters, wires, switchgears, lights, and home EV chargers, which consumes less energy.

Capex bazooka in the works by states (Antique Stock Brokers)

FY24 state capex likely to grow at 17% YoY: Eleven states (comprising ~57% of state GDP) have announced their budgets so far. Key takeaways are: a) Expect state fiscal deficit to consolidate from 3.3% to 3.1% of GDP driven by Uttar Pradesh, Telangana, and Bihar; b) Tax revenue is expected to grow at 15.4% YoY, looks aggressive, especially for Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Telangana, Kerala; c) 17.4% YoY growth in capital expenditure driven by Gujarat, Haryana, Telangana, Jharkhand, and West Bengal; and d) 10.1% growth in revenue expenditure mainly driven by Telangana, Uttar Pradesh, and Bihar.

Macros favor rural revival, barring...: We believe that rural recovery is likely in near term given a) Improvement in farm income due to rise in food grain production on a high base and higher price growth (namely wheat and rice); b) Higher agriculture exports; c) Uptick in rural wages; d) Accelerated government capital spending; e) Pick-up in remittance as Covid-19 related disruptions are behind us; f) Easing inflationary pressures; g) Receding rural stress as is evident from declining MGNREGA employment; h) Resilient tractor demand; and i) Low base as is evident from two-wheeler registration.

...rising risk of El Nino: Australian metrological department’s latest climate update suggests weakening of La Nina with estimate of being near El Nino by July with neutral Indian Ocean Dipole. Our analysis suggests that the past four events of El Nino has resulted in deficient rainfall in India (thus impacting agriculture income with no conclusive evidence on prices). Also, the current heat wave (especially in North and Central India) may impact yields of wheat crop.

All eyes on the upcoming US macro data before Fed’s March meeting: Recent US growth parameters remain strong along with higher than expected inflation, which resulted in the narrative of interest rate being “higher for longer”. Current market expectation in terms of rate hike is equally divided between another 75 bps and 100 bps. All focus will be on upcoming US macro data points namely CPI, retail sales, payroll addition, and consumer sentiment before the next US policy meet (21–22 March) in which economic forecast will also be shared.


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