Showing posts with label Indian Economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Economy. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 28, 2023

FY23 – A year of normalization

After two years of disruptions, uncertainty and volatility, FY23 appeared a rather normal year. Both the markets and the economy regained a semblance of normalcy in terms of the level of activity, trajectory of growth, direction, and future outlook. Though, it would be inappropriate to say that skies are blue and bright; it can be reasonably stated that we have reverted to a market that is no longer euphoric.

Pendulum swinging back to equilibrium

The global economy that witnessed two years of extreme pessimism followed by a period of steroid stimulated exuberance began to normalize in FY23. Central bankers began the process of normalizing monetary policies by withdrawing liquidity and hiking rates. The broken supply chains have been mostly restored. Inflated asset and commodity prices are returning to more reasonable levels. The organs of the global ecosystem which were infected badly by the excessive liquidity, irrational exuberance and unsustainable stress are now getting amputated. For example, we have already witnessed in FY23—

·         A large number of tech startups built on unrealistic assumptions and traded at astronomical valuations materially downsized, downgraded or weeded out of the system.

·         Energy and metal prices revert to pre Covid prices, commensurate with the economic activity.

·         The global shipping freight rates that had jumped to unsustainable levels have actually corrected back to below pre Covid levels.

·         Central bankers hiking rates from near zero levels to the highest levels in a decade.

·         Some financial institutions that thrived purely on easy liquidity, without forming a strong commercial base, facing the prospects of getting eliminated or downsizing.

The Russia-Ukraine conflict that dominated the headlines during the first half of 2022 has been mostly relegated to the inner pages of the newspapers. The energy and food grain markets that witnessed huge disruption due to the conflict have mostly normalized.

Following the law of physics, the pendulum may be swinging from one extreme to the other extreme in many cases. Of course it will settle in a state of equilibrium over the next couple of years.

Indian economy normalizing

Most spheres of the economic activity in India have recouped from the sharp decline due to the pandemic induced lockdown. Vehicle sales, mining, construction, travel, hospitality, cement and steel sales, power generation, freight movement, port activity etc. are all at or above pre Covid levels. The Indian economy is expected to grow ~6% in FY24, on a normalized FY23 base.

The bank credit growth that was languishing for almost five years has picked up. The financial sector has mostly recovered from the debilitating asset quality issues.

The capacity building, especially in the core infrastructure sector, is showing signs of accelerated growth. Many key infrastructure projects that have faced material delays, e.g., Dedicated Freight Corridors, are now closer to completion.

Market performance for FY23

For equity markets, FY23 was a year of consolidation. The benchmark Nifty50 yielded a marginally negative return (down 3%); whereas Nifty Midcap was mostly unchanged and Nifty Smallcap lost 14.5%. Thus, the abnormal gains made in the past couple of years have been normalized to some extent.



Some highlights of market performance in FY23 could be listed as follows:

·         Underperformers of the past three years, PSU Banks, FMCG and Auto sectors were the top outperformers for FY23; whereas Media, IT, Realty, Metals, Pharma and Energy sectors were notable underperformers.

·         For a period of 3yrs, Metals, Auto and IT are still the top performing sectors in the Indian markets.

·         Nifty50 yielded negative returns in 8 out of 12 months in FY23 – Jul '23 being the best month and Jun’23 being the worst month. A monthly SIP in Nifty50 during FY23 would have yielded a negative return of 2.1%.

·         India’s performance was mostly in line with the Asian peers like Indonesia, South Korea, Singapore, Japan etc. in local currency terms.

·         The market breadth was negative in 9 out of 12 months in FY23. Overall, the market breadth was negative.

INR weakened against USD & EUR

Despite challenges on macro (higher fiscal and current account deficit and inflation) INR remained mostly stable. It weakened ~8% against USD and ~6% against EUR, and was mostly unchanged against GBP and JPY.

RBI hiked aggressively, transmission pending

RBI hiked the policy rates aggressively from 4% at end of FY22 to the present 6.5%. However, the rate hikes have not been fully transmitted to the markets so far. The Average Base Rate of scheduled commercial banks has increased around 140bps from 7.25% - 8.8% to 8.65% -10.1%. Similarly the term deposit rates have increased from 5%-5.6% in March 2022 to the present 6%-7.25%. There is no change in savings deposits rate of 2.7% -3%.

Foreign investors remained net seller

Foreign portfolio investors (FPI) remained net sellers in Indian equities for the third consecutive year, selling over Rs626bn worth of equities in the secondary market.

The domestic institutions (DII) remained net buyers. With highest ever annual net buying of Rs251bn. DIIs were net buyers in 10 out of 2 months.

The net institutional flows (DII+FPI) in Indian markets were positive in 11 out of 12 months; even though the market yielded negative return in 9 out of 12 months in FY23.

Valuations more reasonable now

Nifty EPS is expected to grow ~15% in FY24, over and above a similar growth in FY22 and FY23. Negative in movement in FY23, has thus moderated the one year forward valuation of the benchmark Nifty50 closer to its long term average of 18x. Mid and smallcap valuations have also corrected accordingly.

The premium of Indian markets as compared to the global emerging market peers has also somewhat rationalized after the recent underperformance; though it still trades at a decent premium.































Friday, March 17, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

FY24-25 Macro and Strategy Outlook (Phillips Capital)

The Indian economy will go through a phase of softness and consolidation in FY24 due to the higher base of the last two years, steeper interest rates, and a global slowdown. Supportive government policies and the long-term potential of the Indian economy will continue to augur well for capital formation, but other GDP components like consumption and exports are expected to weaken in FY24. Corporate earnings are currently estimated to be extremely strong but we expect disappointment and cuts ahead. So far, growth and inflation have been fairly resilient, but we anticipate weaker trends in FY24; weak demand should dent pricing power, keeping inflation under control in FY24.

Key advanced economies are not yet showing meaningful signs of slowdown/recession; so, elevated inflation and rising growth will lead to more interest rate tightening followed by rates being held higher for longer, which should lead to growth slowing down in 2023 in these economies.

As a result, equities should continue be under pressure in the near/medium term (we have been cautious to negative since Nifty was at 18.2k and as latest as last week. In case, Indian and global central bankers call out peaking of interest rates at current levels, equities will respond positively. For India, we assign a PE of 18.0-18.5x to our FY24-25 Nifty-50 earnings estimates (assuming a 6% discount to current EPS growth estimates of +18%/+15% in FY24/25), and forecast a Nifty target of 18,500-19,500 for March-September 2024. While the Indian economy should fundamentally be on a strong footing in FY25, the return of a formidable BJP in 2024 elections and controlled inflationary and interest environment can induce markets higher (19,500-20,000), ceteris paribus.

While medium-term challenges will mar stock returns across the board, from a long-term perspective, we remain positive on cyclicals vs. discretionary; sector preference – industrials, cement, defence, financials, and logistics. For others, we will adopt a bottom-up approach in stock selection.

Our base-case scenario for FY24 (India/globe) assumes stable/lower commodity prices, lower inflation trends, higher interest rates (followed by a pause), weaker economic growth (not a steep recession), and stable geo-political conditions.

More evidence of growth emanating from capex and credit cycle (ICICI Securities)

Q3FY23 GDP growth of 4.4% was largely supported by GFCF (gross fixed capital formation) growth of 8.3% while consumption (PFCE – private final consumption expenditure) lagged at 2.1%.

Central government capex spends picked pace in Jan’23 and stands at Rs7.2trn on a trailing 12-month (TTM) basis (43% YoY growth) although state capex growth is lagging at Rs5.5trn on TTM basis (10% YoY growth). Corporate capex of listed space is showing signs of improvement with TTM aggregate capex rising above Rs7trn level.

Non-food credit growth for Feb’23 was robust at 16.5%. Other high-frequency indicators supporting the ‘investment cycle’ include robust core sector growth, electricity demand, thermal PLF and diesel consumption (table-1).

Household investment in real estate, which is a significant portion of GFCF (25% share of GFCF in FY21), is showing signs of a cyclical upswing.

Momentum in Industrial Output Continues (CARE Ratings)

IIP growth improved further to 5.2% in January from 4.7% in December on account of broad-based expansion across sectors. Positive contributions to growth came from manufacturing (2.9 percentage points (PP), mining (1.2pp) and electricity (1.0 pp). Further decomposition showed that the positive momentum effect continued to support industrial activity for the third consecutive month. Core sector output also accelerated to 7.8% in January compared with 7.0% in the previous month led by coal, natural gas, fertiliser, steel, and electricity sectors.

Delving deeper into the manufacturing sector showed that 13 out of 23 categories recorded a y-o-y growth in output. However, weak external demand continued to weigh on the performance of output of some export-intensive sectors like Textile, Apparel and Leather products. Mining and electricity continued to register healthy growth of 8.8% and 12.7% respectively. Moreover, healthy growth over the pre-pandemic level (January 2019) was witnessed in all three sectors.

Analysis of use-based classification showed that consumer non-durable goods continued to record an encouraging performance for the third straight month with a growth of 6.2%. However, output of consumer durable goods remained in the contractionary zone for the second straight month and also remained 14.8% lower when compared to the pre-pandemic level (January 2019). Capital and Infrastructure goods continued to register healthy growth with 11.0% and 8.1% growth respectively in January. Thrust on capital spending and an uptick in new investment projects announced will remain supportive of industrial activity going forward.

India’s sharp outperformance in CY22 has started waning (MOFSL)

Impaired by relatively muted corporate earnings season and severe FII selling (USD2.5b CYTD), India’s sharp outperformance in CY22 has started fading CYTD. Corporate earnings were below our expectations in 3QFY23 led by weak demand and macro headwinds, with Financials and Autos holding the fort once again.

Slowdown in consumption is a material concern if trends do not reverse immediately. However, markets are trading flat YTD and valuations are in their fair value zone with Nifty trading at ~18x FY24E EPS and thus offering room for modest upside if corporate earnings do not see material downgrades ahead.

As the third earnings season of FY23 has culminated, we examine the top-100 stocks by market cap from a consensus perspective and gauge their popularity.

Decoding deposit growth (Nirmal Bang Institutional Equities)

Incremental deposit market share for PVBs continues to be below FY20 levels: Over the past few years, PVBs have gained significant deposit market share, which stood at 31% for FY22 vs 22% in FY16. Moreover, PSBs have lost market share during the same period at 60% for FY22 vs 71% in FY16. Notably, on an incremental basis, the PVBs’ market share before FY20 was ~66%, which declined significantly in FY20 to 33% after the RBI imposed moratorium on YES Bank. As a result, majority of the deposits went to the PSBs and large PVBs. However, the PVBs’ incremental market share post that did not pick up pace significantly and stood at ~43% while PSBs’ incremental market share stood at ~48% for FY22.

Household deposit growth moderates: Households’ deposits continued to contribute the highest towards total deposits at ~63% while corporate, government and NRI deposits contributed 22%/9%/6%. Households’ deposit growth moderated to ~8% in FY22 vs 13% in FY21 (this was induced by covid-19), and stands below the pre-covid growth of 9% in FY20. Notably, since FY19, PSBs have lost market share in household deposits and their market share stood at 66.8% in FY22 vs 71.2% in FY19 while PVBs have captured market share at 26.5% as on FY22 vs 22.7% in FY19. Also, SFBs have registered an increase in household deposits’ market share, which stood at 0.8% as on FY22.

Composition of deposits from Metro regions continues to remain the highest: Deposits from Metro regions has registered a CAGR of 10.1% over FY16-FY22 and constitutes ~52% of the total deposits. Non-metro regions (urban/semi-urban/rural regions) have registered a CAGR of 9.2%/10.8%/10.1% over FY16-FY22 and constitute 21.4%/16.1%/10.6% of total deposits. Moreover, post covid-19, deposit growth from Metro regions has picked up pace and consequently their composition in total deposits has inched back to pre-covid levels at ~52%.

Focus of banks shifts towards branch expansion: Branch expansion registered a CAGR of 3.5% over FY16-FY20. However, during FY20–FY22, branch expansion was muted due to covid-19 and recorded 0.8% CAGR as most banks focused on digital infrastructure. Moreover, FY22 onwards, banks have again shifted their focus towards branch expansion and registered growth of 2.21% YoY in 3QFY23. Banks are largely focusing on Semi-Urban/ Metropolitan regions with branches in these regions clocking a growth of 2.7%/ 2.4% YoY.

Credit Growth Flattens a Tad but Continues to be Robust (CARE Ratings)

Credit offtake rose by 15.5% year on year (y-o-y) for the fortnight ended February 24, 2023. In absolute terms, credit offtake expanded by Rs.15.6 lakh crore to Rs.134.5 lakh as of February 24, 2023 from March 2022. The growth has been driven by personal loans, robust growth in NBFCs, higher working capital requirements due to inflation and an Indian currency depreciation (INR) and lower borrowings from overseas markets.

With a larger base, deposit growth witnessed a slower growth at 10.1% y-o-y compared to credit growth for the fortnight ended February 24, 2023. Deposit rates have already risen and are expected to go up even further due to elevated policy rates, intense competition between banks for raising deposits to meet strong credit demand, a widening gap between credit & deposit growth, and lower liquidity in the market. The short-term Weighted Average Call Rate (WACR) has reached 6.72% (as of February 24, 2023) increasing by 104.0% y-o-y and 86.0% from March 31, 2022, due to a rise in policy rates and lower liquidity in the system.

Credit growth has remained robust even amid the significant rise in interest rates, and global uncertainties related to geo-political, and supply chain issues. The growth has been broad-based across the segments and is expected to be in the mid-teens in FY23. Personal Loans and NBFCs have been the key growth drivers for FY23. Meanwhile, a slowdown in global growth due to rising interest rates, and rate hikes in India could impact credit growth.

CPI remains above RBI’s upper band, WPI cools down (BoB)

CPI inflation eases marginally: CPI inflation data edged down modestly to 6.4% in Feb’23 after moving up to 6.5% in Jan’23. For the second-month in a row, CPI data came in above RBI’s upper tolerance band. Food inflation virtually remained steady at 5.9% in Feb’23. Stickiness of core inflation persists.

Modest changes in Food inflation: CPI food index continued to remain elevated at 5.95% in Feb’23 against 6% in Jan’23, on YoY basis. Amongst major food items, sharpest pace of increase was led by fruit prices which moved up to 6-month high at 6.4% in Feb’23 from 3% in Jan’23. Cereals continued to clock double digit inflation (highest in this series) in line with expectation at 16.7% from 16.3% in Jan’23. Even milk prices also rose to 9.6% (8-year high) in Feb’23 from 8.8% in Jan’23. Pace of disinflation in vegetable prices went down from -11.7% in Jan’23 to -11.6% in Feb’23. Notably, 5 out of 12 broad group of food and beverage noticed inflation above 6%. However, inflation of eggs, meat & fish, spices and pulses registered a fall in Feb’23.

Core CPI (excl. food and fuel) remained sticky at 6.1% in Feb’23 as well. Amongst major items of core, housing inflation accelerated to more than 3-year high to 4.8% in Feb’23 from 4.6% in Jan’23. Health inflation also rose to 10-month high at 6.5% in Feb’23 from 6.4%. However, some comfort has been seen with lower prices of gold contributing towards personal care and effect inflation going down to 9.4% from 9.6% in Jan’23. Amongst the 8 major broad group of core inflation, 4 of the items have remained above 6%.

Fuel inflation: Fuel prices eased further to 9.9% in Feb’23 from 10.8% in Jan’23. On sequential basis though, fuel inflation had inched up to 0.1% in Feb’23.

Headline WPI moderated to 25-month low of 3.9% in Feb’23 (BoB est.: 4.1%) from 4.7% in Jan’23. Food inflation eased only a tad to 2.8% in Feb’23 from 2.9% in Jan’23. Amongst these, inflation eased in food grains (11.8% versus 13%), eggs, meat & fish (1.5% versus 2.2%) and spices (12.5% versus 16.1%).

Within food grains, cereal inflation moderated (13.9% versus 15.5%) on account of wheat (18.5% versus 23.6%). However, paddy inflation continued to inch up (8.6% versus 7.2%). Inflation in pulses was also seen ticking up in Feb’23 (2.6% versus 2.4%). At the international level, World Bank’s pink sheet data shows that global paddy prices have begun to moderate in Feb’23 (15% versus 18% in Jan’23) and wheat prices are seen contracting (-3% versus 0%). Domestically, in case of vegetables, contraction in prices was slower (-21.5% versus -26.5%), while in case of fruits, pressure is seeing building up with inflation at 7% in Feb’23 versus 4.1% in Jan’23.

Aluminum—bleak demand and fading cost support (Kotak Securities)

Aluminum—bleak demand environment: Aluminum prices have been on a roller coaster ride, with an 8% decline in the past one month after a strong 25% rally in the previous two months. Demand environment continues to disappoint, with the world ex-China demand witnessing a 9% yoy demand decline in 4QCY21 and similar de-growth is expected in 1QCY23, mainly led by weakness in Europe and North America. In China, there is no evidence of strong demand pickup after the new year holidays, with all hopes of recovery now from 2QCY23. MJP, the Japanese physical premium (the most relevant physical premium benchmark for Indian aluminum producers), remains on a downtrend at US$85/ton in 1QCY23 versus US$99/ton in 4QCY22 and US$177/ton in 1QCY22, which reaffirms the bleak demand environment.

Cost support is fading with declining thermal coal and gas prices Aluminum spreads remain near a 6-month high, despite the recent metal price correction. Thermal coal prices have corrected 30% CYTD 2023 and underperformed aluminum prices. Furthermore, with the declining European gas prices, the supply risk from Europe is behind us. We note that the spot aluminum spreads are at US$900/ton, 16% higher than 5-year average of ~US$775/ton. We see limited risk of further supply curtailments on declining cost support, as spot prices are above 90% percentile of the cost curve.

Market deficit is behind us We marginally cut our demand and increase our supply estimates for CY2023-25E and now estimate a surplus of 142/73/69 k tons in aluminum market in CY2023/24/25E versus a deficit earlier (refer Exhibit 2). We expect prices to remain range-bound at current levels, with a forecast of US$2,450/2,400/ton for FY2024/25E. A combination of weak demand and reducing supply risk has increased global inventory to 10.3 mn tons, +9% yoy at a 20-month high.

Remain cautious on aluminum plays in equities Indian aluminum producers should benefit from higher spreads, sequentially in 4QFY23 on improved domestic coal supply and higher metal prices. However, we expect margins to remain range-bound along with LME prices over FY2024-25E.

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

Checking portfolio for monsoon worthiness

This is further to “No clouds on the horizon” posted last week.

I made a rudimentary assessment of the potential impact on the financial market, assuming the monsoon rains are inadequate and/or prolonged heat wave conditions persist over a large part of north and central India, as anticipated by the weather experts. In my view, investment strategy needs a tweak to make it ready for a hotter and drier summer.

Asset allocation

An inadequate monsoon would essentially mean (i) persisting higher food inflation; (ii) higher fiscal support to the rural sector; (iii) high food credit demand; and (iv) higher short term yields.

Raise some tactical cash

I shall therefore like to raise some tactical cash from my equity allocation and deploy it in short term or liquid funds. I however do not see any case for changing the strategic allocation at this point in time. A sharper than presently anticipated correction in equity prices will motivate me to increase my equity allocation to “overweight” from the present “standard”.

Sectoral impact

I am no expert in equity research or economics. I mostly manage my investment strategy by applying learnings from my travels; observation of behavioral patterns and public information about economic trends. From my experience of working with rural communities and traveling to hinterlands, I have observed some broad sectoral impact of a deficient monsoon. Few examples are listed below.

It is pertinent to note that inadequate monsoon usually does not mean a pan India drought. Hence, it is more likely that different regions (and regional players) experience a divergent impact of a deficient monsoon.

Farmers’ economic behaviour

In case of a deficient monsoon, farmers quickly adapt to “drought mode” – deferring discretionary spend, e.g., on marriages, jewelry, vehicle, pilgrimage etc. and changing to shorter cycle crops. In the past two decades a tendency is growing amongst farmers (especially the young ones) to defer paying their dues to government and lenders etc.

It is pertinent to note that as per the latest NSSO statistics over 50% agriculture households are indebted with an average outstanding debt of Rs74121. More critically, only 57.5% of loans taken by agriculture households are for agricultural purposes, the rest are for personal purposes.

Given that most of the rural population is now assured of free/highly subsidized food under various government schemes, the sustenance farming (growing for self-consumption) is gradually reducing. A substantial number of small and marginal farmers is moving to cash crops that have usually higher input cost. A crop failure thus causes more stress to small and marginal farmers as compared to a decade ago. The insurance coverage to these farmers is highly ineffective due to a variety of reasons; unclear land title being one of the major reasons.

Energy intensity of water

In case of deficient monsoon, the energy intensity of water rises materially, as farmers rely on exploitation of ground water. Though the use of solar power for ground water extraction has increased materially in the past few years; the reliance on the grid is still very high. If we add to this the increased household (mostly urban) demand for cooling, the demand for power usually rises significantly. The demand for diesel (and diesel genset) could also be higher to meet the additional load of water extraction.

Livestock

Livestock is worst affected due to rain deficiency. Poor winter rains have already created severe fodder shortages and rise in milk prices. The dairy and meat production could be further impacted by deficient rains – impacting the income of farmers and food inflation adversely.

Important to note that about 25% of agriculture GDP is contributed by livestock.

Labor migration

The demand supply equilibrium for farm labor usually shifts down during deficient monsoon seasons. The real wages could see a sharp decline. The labor migration towards non-agriculture jobs is also higher. The availability of unskilled labor for construction in particular rises materially.

Food transportation

Traditionally, deficient monsoon years used to witness significant rise in the quantity of food transported across the country as part of the drought relief work. However, given the fact that the public food distribution system is now adjusted to free food for almost 800 million people, the incremental food transportation may not be as significant as it used to be a decade ago. Nonetheless, there could be some additional food movement in case of a material divergence in spatial distribution of monsoon.

I would therefore consider the following in my overall investment plan:

Negative List

Farm input – agri chemical, fertilizers, seeds.

Rural consumption – jewelry, gold, footwear, alcohol, home upgrade, personal vehicles, etc.

Dairy, poultry and edible oil production

Cotton yarn

Close watch

Rural lending, especially microfinance

Farm equipment, especially tractors

Crop insurance

Construction

Water intensive industries like paper, alcohol

Sugar

Positive List

Short term bonds

Diesel genset

Air cooling appliances like Fans, Coolers, Air conditioners

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.


C

Thursday, March 9, 2023

No clouds on the horizon

 In a press release issued last week, the Indian Meteorological Department (IMD) cautioned that during the upcoming hot weather season (March to May (MAM), above normal maximum temperatures are likely over most parts of northeast India, east and central India and some parts of north west India. Normal to below normal maximum temperatures are most likely over remaining parts of the country. IMD forecasts show an enhanced probability for the occurrence of heat wave over many regions of northwest and central India. As per the latest forecast of IMD, the currently prevailing La Nina conditions are likely to weaken and turn into a o El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) neutral condition during the pre-monsoon season.

It is pertinent to note that La Nina conditions are known to cause normal to above normal rains in India, while El Nino conditions are known to cause rain deficiency in India. Neutral ENSO conditions help a normal (+ 10% of long term average) monsoon.

In India La Nina conditions have prevailed during the past three monsoon seasons (2020-2022), resulting in good overall rains; though spatial (regional) and temporal (time wise) distribution of the rains was erratic causing floods in some regions and drought in some other regions. The most populated Gangetic plains are suffering from severe drought conditions since last summer.

Kharif (monsoon) crop sowing suffered due to delayed or deficient rains in many parts of the country. Besides, the 2022-23 Rabi season has witnessed deficient rainfall in most parts of the country (see here).

Even though so far El Nino conditions have not developed for India, some professional forecasters have predicted development of these conditions as early as June 2023, resulting in deficient monsoon rains in India. For example, the US government weather agency, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), has said that El Niño is expected to begin within the next couple of months and persist through the Northern Hemisphere spring and early summer.

Skymet Weather has said that “El Nino threat during the Indian monsoon 2023 is growing big.” It further said, “El Nino projection based on initial conditions of Feb 2023 is finding semblance with Feb 2018. Both are evolving El Nino, albeit 2023 appears to be stronger than 2018.  El Nino share starts with 30% in June, reaches 50% by July and climbs to >/= 60% during 2nd half of the season.”

Admittedly, it may still be early to conclude about a deficient monsoon this year. Nonetheless, the erratic weather pattern and early onset of summers across north, central and western India is indicating prevalence of unusual weather conditions over the next few months. Obviously, this will have implications for the economy and therefore financial markets.

Economy and monsoon

Over the past seven decades the share of agriculture and allied activities in the overall GDP of India has consistently declined. Agriculture and allied services accounted for almost two third of India’s GDP at the time of independence; and now it accounts for less than one sixth. The proportion of population relying on agriculture and allied activities for their livelihood has also declined from about three fourth to two fifth. The declining importance of the agriculture sector in the overall economy has resulted in under investment in the sector over the past 3 decades in particular.



The importance of monsoon for the Indian agriculture sector has seen a steady decline. Self-sufficiency in the area of food grains broadly means that impact of a deficient monsoon is mostly limited to (i) temporary food inflation; (ii) financial stress for small and marginal farmers’; (iii) additional burden on fiscal condition (loan waiver and food subsidy); and (iv) consumption demand of the affected population. Adequate food grain stock and an effective public distribution system minimises the cases of starvation in case of drought.


Besides, in the past seven decades the crop area fully dependent on rains for irrigation has fallen from ~80% to 50%. Out of a total of 141 million hectare net sown area, only about 70million hectare is rain fed; the rest of the area uses water supplied by irrigation channels. (see Under the Shadow of Development: Rainfed Agriculture and Droughts in Agricultural Development of India, R. S. Deshpande, NABARD)



Regardless, drought can hurt some areas and some crops disproportionately. For example, in the state of Maharashtra still over 81% agriculture area is rain fed. Besides, rain-fed areas produce nearly 90% of millets, 80% of oilseeds and pulses, 60% of cotton and support 60% of our livestock.

Adequate water in reservoirs

As per the latest bulletin of the Central Water Commission (CWC) as on 02 March 2023, , the live storage available in 143 reservoirs is 93% of the live storage of corresponding period of last year and 116% of storage of average of last ten years. States of Odisha (-20%), Bihar (-38%), UP (-21%) and West Bengal (-44%) have water availability in reservoirs which is below normal range; while most other states have large surplus.

Regardless, the current storage is significantly lower than the total reservoir capacity in all the regions. Thus in case of a severe drought the hydro power generation as well as area irrigated through channels could also suffer.

 


I would like to review my investment strategy in light of the probability of a poor monsoon. I shall share my thoughts on this coming Tuesday.

Friday, February 24, 2023

Some notable research snippets of the week

FY24 Economic Outlook (India Ratings)

India Ratings and Research (Ind-Ra) expects GDP to grow 5.9% yoy in FY24. Although National Statistical Organisation’s (NSO) first advanced estimate (AE) of FY23 GDP is 7.0%, it does not expect the growth momentum witnessed in 1HFY23 to sustain in 2HFY23. NSO estimates GDP growth to drop to 4.5% in 2HFY23 from 9.7% in 1HFY23. The pent-up demand which had provided thrust to the growth is normalising, exports which had been buoyant are facing headwinds from the global growth slowdown and credit growth is facing tighter financial conditions. The International Monetary Fund expects the global GDP growth to fall to 2.9% in 2023 from an estimated 3.4% in 2022.

Ind-Ra expects PFCE to grow 6.7% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 7.7%). Yet, it may not lead to a broad-based consumption demand recovery, because the current consumption demand is highly skewed in favour of the goods and services consumed largely by the households belonging to the upper income bracket. The goods and services of mass consumption have yet not shown a sustained pick-up. This to some extent is reflected in the way the recovery in consumer durables and non-durables in terms of Index of Industrial Production has so far panned out in FY23. While consumer durables grew 3.4% yoy during 9MFY23, non-durables contracted 1.2% yoy.

After PFCE, GFCF is the second-largest component (FY23AE: 29.4%) of GDP from the demand side. Ind-Ra expects GFCF to grow 9.6% yoy in FY24 (FY23:11.5%), due to the sustained government capex. Expenditure on the capital account and grants-in-aid for the creation of capital assets together in the union budget FY24 have been pegged at INR13.71 trillion. This is INR3.17 trillion higher than FY23 revised estimate (RE), an increase of 30.1%. This will push the government capex (including grants-in-aid for creation of capital assets)/GDP to 4.54% (FY23RE: 3.86%). GFCE had been providing the much-needed support to the economy for a while, averaging 7.9% growth during FY16- FY20. However, due to the government’s focus shifting towards capex, the size of the revenue expenditure in the union budget FY24 has been kept at INR35.02 trillion, only INR0.43 trillion higher than the FY23RE of INR34.59 trillion. Ind-Ra therefore expects GFCE to grow at 2.5% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 3.1%).

The fourth demand-side driver - net exports (exports minus imports) - has been negative over the years and thereby not contributing positively to the aggregate demand. Thus, a reduction in the size of negative net exports would be a positive for aggregate demand. However, with merchandise exports losing steam due to the global growth slowdown and merchandise imports not moderating proportionately, Ind-Ra expects the share of net exports to GDP to increase to negative 9.2% in FY24 from negative 7.1% in FY23.

On the supply side, the agricultural sector has been doing well, and Ind-Ra expects it to grow 3.1% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 3.5% yoy) on the assumption of a normal monsoon in 2023. However, industrial growth is expected to remain tepid because of the ‘K-shaped’ recovery, which is neither allowing the consumption demand to become broad based nor helping the wage growth especially of the population belonging to the lower half of the income pyramid. Ind-Ra therefore expects the industrial sector to grow 3.9% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 4.1%). Services, the largest component of GVA, is estimated to grow 7.3% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 9.1%). Services sector may face some headwinds from the tightening financial conditions, but some upside may come from the roll-out of 5G which is expected to increase the reach of online commerce, education and telemedicine to remote regions, and create new-age business and associated employment.

Ind-Ra expects the current account deficit to narrow down to 2.5% of GDP in FY24 (FY23: 3.3%) in response to the evolving domestic and global demand conditions. Due to the uncertain external demand, merchandise exports are expected to grow just 0.5% yoy in FY24 (FY23: 1.8%).

Insolvency Cases Rise by 25% in Q3, but Recoveries Still on Downtrend (CARE Ratings)

After slowing in the pandemic period of FY21 and FY22, the number of insolvency cases increased by 25% y-o-y in Q3FY23. However, despite the increase, the number of cases admitted to the insolvency process continued to be lower compared to earlier quarters in FY19/20. The distribution of cases across sectors continues to remain broadly similar, compared to earlier periods given the extended resolution timelines.

The overall recovery rate till Q3FY23 was 30.4% implying a haircut of approximately 70%. The cumulative recovery rate has been on a downtrend, decreasing from 43% in Q1FY20 and 32.9% in Q4FY22 as larger resolutions have already been executed and a significant number of liquidated cases were either BIFR cases and/or defunct with high resolution time, coupled with lower recoverable values.

The status of the cases has largely remained constant compared with the previous period. Of the total 6,199 cases admitted into CIRP at the end of December 2022:

·         Only 10% have ended in approval of resolution plans, while 32% remain in the resolution process vs. 35% as of the end of March 2022.

·         1,901 have ended in liquidation (31% of the total cases admitted). Meanwhile, 76% of such cases were either BIFR cases and/or defunct. These cases had assets which had been valued at less than 8% of the outstanding debt.

·         Around 14% (894 CIRPs) have been closed on appeal /review /settled, while 13% have been withdrawn under Section 12A. A significant number of withdrawn cases (around 54%) were less than Rs.1 crore, while the primary reason for withdrawal has been either the full settlement with the applicant (306 cases) or other settlement with creditors (210 cases).

3QFY23: New quarter, old challenges (BoB Capital)

Q3FY23 was a tepid quarter which saw Nifty 50 earnings rise 11% YoY led by the BFSI sector. Investment-led sectors such as capital goods and cement posted a healthy topline while consumption-driven sectors such as FMCG and durables found their pricing abilities put to the test. BFSI had a good quarter with margin expansion and improved asset quality. Exports were steady in both services and manufacturing sectors led by tier-I IT and electronics manufacturing services (EMS) players, though the pharma sector saw continued generics price erosion in the US.

Capital goods and cement spring topline surprises: We note clear outperformance among investment-driven sectors, such as capital goods which posted strong numbers and robust order inflows. The recent capex-heavy budget lends a further fillip to these sectors. Cement saw 18% YoY topline growth but muted margins and profits.

Consumption sector slows: Staples and durables players had a dull quarter as inflationary pressures weighed on demand. Rural consumption remained sluggish though commentary points to some respite in Q4, a view echoed by auto majors.

Exports shine: Tier-I IT companies posted 1-5% CC growth despite a seasonally weak quarter due to furloughs and also reversed their underperformance vis-à-vis tier-II players (seen over the past 4+ quarters).

Agriculture – Sugar spread strength (ING Bank)

There are reports that the Indian government has decided not to allow further sugar exports this season beyond the already approved 6mt. There have been growing concerns for several weeks now that the government would not allow further exports, given worries over the domestic crop. The government will once again evaluate the domestic balance in March, at a time when cane crushing nears its end before deciding on exports. The move does raise concerns over tightness in the global market, which is reflected not only in the strength in the flat price, but also the March/May spread, which is trading in deep backwardation of more than USc1.60/lb. Worries over tightness should ease once the CS Brazil harvest gets underway in the second quarter.

Indian Pharma (IIFL Securities)

Although pharma companies and the government are focusing on NCDs mainly cardiac, diabetes and respiratory through new launches as well as price caps through NLEM, volume growth in the domestic pharma market is not picking up meaningfully given the limited coverage of quality healthcare infrastructure for the diagnosis of these diseases and subpar availability of doctors in several rural markets. While the India Pharma Market (IPM) has grown consistently at 10-11%, volume growth currently drives only 2-3% of market growth vs 6-7% growth 10 years ago.

The doctors in India have been prescribing a higher no. of products in supporting therapies (such as vitamins, nutraceuticals, etc.) vs 10-15 years ago. This, along with price hikes, is driving a meaningful portion of the overall market growth, thereby masking weak volume growth in many of the underlying core diseases.

While lower prices can supposedly drive higher volume growth, NLEM-led price caps have not aided IPM’s volume growth meaningfully, given that there have been very limited initiatives by pharma companies and government to expand the accessibility of essential medicines across all pharmacies and hospital formularies.

However, the government and pharma companies have been focusing on driving penetration beyond Metro/Tier-1 towns, where the availability of qualified doctors seems to be an issue. A strong OTC policy could make the most commonly used medicines widely available in such smaller markets and towns. Additionally, innovative portable, digital point-of-care diagnostic testing devices can help accelerate the detection of NCDs and diagnose early conditions of NCDs (such as pre-diabetes). These two initiatives, along with focus on patient awareness and counselling, can aid accelerating volume growth in the IPM.

Banking sector (JM Financial)

Given the substantial rate hikes since May’22, it is imperative to look at the benefits that have accrued and incremental gains left from NIMs perspective. For large banks (ICICIBC, AXSB, HDFCB, SBIN, KMB, BOB, CBK, IIB), the average increase in loan yields has been 109 bps (vs RBI’s repo rate hike of 250 bps – and time weighted repo rate hike of 119bps between Apr22-Dec22). Avg NIM expansion for the above set has been 37 bps with CoF increasing by 63bps.

Avg floating rate portfolio of above banks is 69% (~38% Repo/EBLR-linked and ~31% MCLR-linked). As a result, ~3/4th of yield increase on the portfolio can potentially be attributed to repo/MCLR changes. While repo/EBLR linked loans reprice almost immediately, avg 1-yr MCLR hike for large banks was 123bps (as of Dec22) which implies that a sizeable upward repricing of MCLR-linked loans is likely to come through incrementally as well, thereby supporting NIMs. This implies continued tailwinds on yields aiding NIMs (or ability to attract deposits by offering higher rates). We note that PSU banks’ share of floating rate portfolio is reasonably higher than private banks (~80% vs ~62% for pvt banks). As a result, we expect most large banks to sustain health NIMs – though it is desirable that incremental yield gains should be passed to drive deposit growth.

With regards to NBFCs, the NIM performance has been relatively healthy (avg NIMs +34bps ex-NBFC-MFIs), contrary to expectations of meaningful negative impact of the rate hikes on NBFC margins. Avg yield expansion for NBFCs in our coverage has been 111bps (though 68bps excluding NBFC-MFIs wherein yield increases have been quite sharp at 240bps). Of these, HFCs and diversified lenders have seen yield increase of 94 bps and 120bps resp., while vehicle financiers have seen lower hike of 46bps given higher share of fixed rate portfolio. Cost of funds increase has been 53bps over this period. Incrementally, as banks re-price their MCLR-linked loans higher, the pass through to NBFCs should see stabilization of NBFCs NIMs – which would still be a healthy outcome in light of the sharp rate upswings.

Asset Quality Improvement Continues in December 2022 (CARE Ratings)

Gross Non-Performing Assets (GNPAs) of Scheduled Commercial Banks (SCBs) reduced by 19.7% y-o-y to Rs.6.1 lakh crore as of December 31, 2022, due to lower slippages, steady recoveries & upgrades, write-offs, and transferred to Asset Reconstruction Companies (ARCs). SCBs GNPA ratio reduced to 4.5% as of December 31, 2022, from 6.6% over a year ago and is likely to reach the pre-Asset Quality Review (AQR) levels. Robust growth in advances by 18.5% y-o-y is also supporting this reduction.

Net Non-Performing Assets (NNPAs) of SCBs reduced by 32.5% y-o-y to Rs.1.5 lakh crore as of December 31, 2022. The NNPA ratio of SCBs reduced to 1.1% from 2.0% in Q3FY22 which is significantly better than pre-AQR levels of 2.1% (FY14).

SCBs credit cost stood at 0.7% in Q3FY23. Besides, it has been ranging 0.7-0.9% over the last six quarters with improvement in overall credit quality and level of economic activities.

Overall, the SCBs stress level has reduced as their outstanding SMAs and restructuring book have reduced significantly in Q3FY23, indicative of improving asset quality. This comes after covid pandemic and associated business disruptions have led to an increase in restructured standard assets over the past two years.

Liquidity: Can it be a devil in disguise? (BoB Capital)

Liquidity has been quite a pertinent issue of late when financial conditions remained stringent on account of tightening policy response to higher inflation. In this context, we look at how banking system liquidity is going to evolve in the coming year. In India’s context, relatively well placed macro fundamentals and pent up demand contributed to faster pace of credit growth, which outpaced deposit growth where transmission to rates have been relatively slower as the new rates apply to fresh or renewed deposits while the existing ones remain unaffected. This has widened deficit significantly in context of liquidity in the current fiscal.

Even in the coming year, with anticipation of moderation in pace of nominal growth, we expect a considerable gap between demand and supply of funds to the banking system. Further, significant quantum of LTROs/TLTROs are maturing in FY23 and FY24, which will put additional strain on liquidity.

This can be corrected through conduct of RBI’s long term variable rate repo operations, with the frequency being increased. Or there could be OMOs to induce liquidity in the system on a permanent basis if required. Also, since Banks’ net profit have improved significantly they are well placed in terms of capital. Thus, to continue with the higher pace of lending, they could consider digging into their own capital or reserves and surplus going forward.